There are now union drives at more than 300 Starbucks cafes across the country. How did a campaign that started in Buffalo, New York, get so big, so fast?
By Saurav Sarkar, The Progressive Magazine
The recent wave of Starbucks workers seeking to join a union shares many characteristics of a mass movement.
With union drives now reaching more than 300 Starbucks stores across the country, organizers are grappling with questions of national structure and tactics. But the organizing push wasn’t always envisioned as a countrywide campaign.

“[We weren’t] initially looking at Starbucks as a national project but as a geographic upstate New York restaurant [one],” says Richard Bensinger, an organizer with Workers United and senior adviser on the Starbucks Workers United (SBWU) campaign.
To understand how the union shepherded SBWU into being, one needs to go back to Ithaca, New York, in 2017. There, Workers United—an 86,000 member affiliate of the Service Employees International Union—got its start in the coffee industry, organizing a small chain called Gimme! Coffee.
“Our union represents food service and hospitality, but we hadn’t represented baristas until Gimme! Coffee,” explains Gary Bonadonna, the elected leader of Worker United’s Rochester, New York, branch.
Recent Posts
Are You on the Trump Regime’s Domestic Terror Watch List?
June 18, 2026
Take Action Now An editor’s essay on dissent, surveillance, and NSPM‑7By Liberty’s Lens Do you consider yourself anti‑fascist? Do you…
Trump’s War on Iran Ends with a “Triumphant” Tehran and a Diminished U.S.: Vali Nasr
June 18, 2026
Take Action Now “The United States is more eager for this war to end than Iran is,” says professor Vali Nasr, who teaches at the Johns Hopkins School…
The Secret ‘Doomsday Book’ That Enables Trump’s Abuses of Power
June 17, 2026
Take Action Now Presidential Emergency Action Documents have a long history, but Trump’s invocation of them on immigration betrays their…
Green Shoots of Hope in the Labor Movement
June 16, 2026
Take Action Now Spring has brought green shoots in the labor movement. Here are some causes for hopeBy Alexandra Bradbury, Labor Notes Gardeners…




