But that effort could soon end.
“Having that kind of name with us and knowing that they want to support us and knowing that they are willing to do anything to make sure we get the victories we so rightly deserve, is such a great honor and privilege.” Said Fuentes, who is part of the negotiating committee of Hearst Magazines Media Union. “Feeling that some people aren’t so happy that we’re involved … it’s a little bad because we just want to help each other.”
A “bright spot” that gets dark
“It’s been a really bright spot throughout the labor movement,” said Nolan, who is now a labor reporter for In These Times magazine and the WGAE board.
The WGAE, founded in 1954, had about 4,000 members during the 2007-2008 strike. But in recent years, that number has grown to more than 6,000, largely due to the incorporation of more than a thousand workers in digital media.
Christopher Kyle, a longtime board member who participated in the Inclusion & Experience ticket and ran unopposed for secretary-treasurer, told CNN Business that for every $ 1 in fees paid by digital members, the guild spends $ 3 to organize and service them. Some union members, including those on the solidarity board, would argue that it is a worthwhile investment.
“I think this is just a cynical short-sighted way of looking at how to run a union, measure the dollars in the book sheet to see if what we’re doing is succeeding or not,” said David Hill, vice president of the National Writers Union and a former organizer of the WGAE and other unions.
“We don’t succeed or fail if we get more revenue,” Hill continued. “We succeed or fail in the labor movement if we really hold the bad bosses to account, if we really raise the standards, the standard of working and living of professional media workers.”
Michael Winship, a board member with the Inclusion & Experience ticket and running unopposed for the presidency, served as WGAE president from 2007 to 2017 and at the time approved Gawker joining the guild. He then oversaw the digital union boom at the WGAE.
“I blamed myself among others for that,” Winship told CNN Business. “We thought it was a good idea to increase our membership a little bit, but it became such an avalanche of people as overwhelming.”
Lisa Takeuchi Cullen, a board member who holds the Inclusion & Experience ticket and is running unopposed for vice president, said the guild wants to be more transparent and communicative with members than during the rise of the digital organization.
“None of this is the fault of our members of the digital media. You can’t blame them for thinking the organization would continue at a breakneck pace,” Cullen said. “That’s the guild’s fault.”
The “strongest model” for organized work
The July email informing WGAE members of the organization break and the election campaign has been a wake-up call for grassroots members unaware of the turmoil.
“I was surprised,” Alison Herman said. writer of the sports and cultural site The Ringer. “My experience working with WGA staff members, the East and even meeting with some board members has been nothing more than full support and enthusiasm.”
Simon, who has been a member of WGAE since 1985 and is the creator of the hugely successful show “The Wire,” told CNN Business that he believes the interests of current members are at odds.
Unions are “stronger when they target the industry they are trying to influence,” Simon said. “Merged unions are in many ways, while capable of self-sufficiency and providing basic services to members, they are not the strongest model for what collective bargaining and organized labor can achieve.”
One of Simon’s concerns is that digital store board members would vote against a strike in the future.
Sara David, astrology editor at Vice Media, who is running for the Slate Solidarity board, told CNN Business that she plans to be on the side of her peers.
“I don’t understand all the rhetoric about journalists coming in to steal their power and mess up their priorities when we literally just want to be by their side,” David said. “I would link the guns to a janitor, a nurse and a teacher if that would strengthen my negotiation.”
Inclusion & Experience ticket members, however, see a future in which digital media workers will become their own independent union or function as a local WGAE division. Simon suggested that some stores might be more suitable for NewsGuild, another union he was part of when he worked as a journalist at The Baltimore Sun. The board has set up a subcommittee to conduct a member evaluation and propose options.
Josh Gondelman, a comedian and television writer who serves on the Slate Solidarity board, argued that growing membership in the WGAE, including digital media workers, is “good for general power and the end result of the union in the long”.
“We find it short-sighted to set these limits based on the ways we deliver news and entertainment,” Gondelman wrote in an email to CNN Business. “This is what studies do to avoid paying fair rates to streaming entertainment writers in many cases.”
Nolan, the former Gawker writer who is also a member of the Solidarity blackboard, stressed that the election result should not further divide the union.
“We can’t get out of this election by acting like we’re enemies of each other,” Nolan said. “We have to work together and that makes us stronger.”