After years of declining union influence in America, 2021 saw a historic resurgence in labor organizing, with a wave of strikes across numerous industries contributing to a resurgence to public attention to labor activism. Despite this newfound relevance, Media Matters found that cable news failed to cover the full scope of strikes across America in 2021, with the vast majority of strikes left unmentioned and most discussion concentrated in a one-month span. Print news largely did a better job than cable at producing thorough reporting on labor strikes, with some notable exceptions.
Key Findings
- Cable news networks CNN, Fox News Channel, and MSNBC made no mention of specific strikes for the first four months of 2021 and spent only around 11 minutes discussing those strikes at all prior to October.
- Cable coverage throughout 2021 focused on just 18 workplace strike locations, with hundreds of strikes left entirely unmentioned.
- Cable coverage often failed to quote workers and organizers involved in the strikes, with Fox News quoting them in only 38% of its strike segments.
- Print coverage of labor strikes fared a lot better than cable coverage:
- Among five major U.S. newspapers, 74% of all articles about strikes quoted workers or labor organizers.
- The New York Times printed 39 articles on strikes in a year, more than the number of segments any of the cable networks aired (and more than CNN and Fox News had combined).
- Print coverage still had some failures, such as USA Today publishing only three articles on labor strikes for the entire year.
2021 was considered to be the “Year of the Worker,” producing unionization victories at outposts of major companies like Starbucks and a historic union vote at Amazon. Workers won significant gains as a result of labor strikes last year, including 10% wage increases, paths to full-time employment, and health subsidies.
There are currently 14 million unionized employees in the U.S, thousands of whom went on strike in 2021. However, cable largely failed to cover the unprecedented year of labor actions.
Cable news outlets did not mention any specific strikes for half the year. When they did cover the topic, they discussed only a select few strikes – largely concentrated in a single month
The study, which took into account strikes that occurred in 2021, found CNN covered specific strikes the least, making only 20 mentions and airing only 11 segments focused on the year’s strikes. Fox News followed with 33 mentions and 24 segments and MSNBC aired 55 mentions and 36 segments, for a total of 108 mentions and 71 segments about labor strikes across all three networks. However, this coverage was far from evenly distributed across the year.
From January through September, cable news mentioned active, ongoing, or future strikes only eight times, amounting to only around 11 minutes of discussion across all three networks. There were six months this past year – January, February, March, April, June, and September – when cable networks made no mention of these strikes whatsoever. CNN, which ultimately proved to be the network with the sparsest coverage in our study, mentioned a specific strike only once in the first nine months of 2021, during one 30-second segment.
In October, when workers at several large corporations went on strike in what was dubbed “Striketober,” cable news coverage exploded, mentioning specific strikes 76 times and devoting 49 segments to coverage of the workers’ actions. The quality of this coverage varied starkly depending on the network.
MSNBC hosts Ayman Mohyeldin and Chris Hayes ran segments on strikes that were rarely mentioned in other outlets’ coverage, such as the Alabama coal miners strike and the hospital workers strike in Buffalo, New York.
The October 7 edition of Fox & Friends positively covered the Kellogg’s workers strike – but only through the framing of attacking President Joe Biden, with anti-union guest and Fox Business host Stuart Varney suggesting that the company’s outsourcing of jobs, one of the catalysts for the strike, would not have happened “if President Trump were still the president of these here United States.” (The outsourcing of U.S. jobs likely increased during the Trump presidency.)
Fox prime-time host Tucker Carlson’s only mention of a specific strike in 2021 was when he applauded a group of General Electric workers for walking out over vaccine mandates during his October 27 show.
When workers’ impetus for striking conflicted with Fox News’ preferred narratives, such as when Netflix employees walked out over the streaming company’s platforming of hateful anti-trans content, shows like Gutfeld! expressed decidedly anti-labor sentiment, with Fox News contributor Emily Campagno claiming it was “a luxury to treat work like a school where you get to roll out whenever you want.”
Despite this boom in labor strike segments in October, the vast majority of cable news segments concentrated on only three strikes – those at John Deere and Kellogg’s and the Netflix walkout (the latter of which was rarely framed as a labor issue). These strikes, while justifiably earning widespread coverage due to their size or cultural relevance, comprised only 18 strike locations of the 370 workplace strikes that occurred in 2021, according to Cornell University’s Labor Action Tracker.
In fact, only a handful of the hundreds of strikes that occurred in 2021 received any mention on cable news. Notable strikes that received no coverage over the course of the year were the United Brotherhood of Carpenters strike, which saw 2,000 contractors in Washington demand fair wages, and the strike at a Volvo plant in Virginia, which involved nearly 3,000 workers.