Global Alliance Puts Mondelēz International on Notice

The International Union of Food Workers (IUF) has sent a message of International Solidarity with workers of Mondelēz International, the maker of Nabisco products, around the world. BCTGM represents about 4,000 Mondelēz workers throughout North America. The company has asked for massive concessions from BCTGM Local 300 members – which would amount to

Read More »

Hillary Clinton Meets with Nabisco Workers in Chicago

In the BCTGM Local 300 office located across Kenzie Avenue from the Chicago Nabisco bakery, Hillary Clinton met with union members ‘to figure out how we can stop’ the impending relocation of 600 American jobs to Mexico. According to BCTGM International Vice President Jethro Head, who facilitated the meeting, “She

Read More »

June 20: Where to Find the Nabisco 600 Tour this Week!

The Nabisco 600 team, composed of laid-off Local 300 members from the Nabisco bakery in Chicago, set out on a national tour last week to spread the word that the Mondelez offshoring of Nabisco jobs to Mexico will not stand. With appearances on Union Edge Radio in Pittsburgh, the Rick Smith

Read More »

Where is the Nabisco 600 Tour this Week?

Representatives for the Nabisco Tour will be educating consumers outside major retailers throughout the country and addressing labor functions. This is where they will be THIS WEEK:   Monday, June 27: Steelworkers Organization of Active Retirees, Gary, Indiana Wednesday, June 29: Maricopa Area Labor Federation, Phoenix, Arizona

Read More »

Retirees Join AFL-CIO Boycott of Mexican-Made Nabisco Products

Alliance for Retired Americans members have joined the AFL-CIO in a boycott of Mexican-made Oreos and other Mexican-made Nabisco products. The boycott is a result of Nabisco’s announcement last July that it would invest an additional $130 million in a Mexican plant rather than its American factory in Chicago. As

Read More »

RSVP for an Exciting Nabisco 600 Digital Day of Action: March 23

March 23rd marks one year since Mondelēz/Nabisco began laying off workers from the Chicago bakery and sending their jobs to Salinas, Mexico. Now, workers toiling under exploitive conditions in Mexico produce the formerly made-in-the U.S. Nabisco products that are shipped back to American consumers. The Nabisco 600 and the Check the Label campaign

Read More »

Don’t let Mondelez sell out American middle-class jobs for foreign poverty-wage jobs!