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She was a farmworker during the Delano Grape Strike. Her grandson is a Lyft driver. A fight for workers' rights unites them. https://t.co/SuLIRGwDRQ
— Ericka Cruz Guevarra (@NotoriousECG) October 15, 2020
She was a farmworker. Her grandson is a Lyft driver. A fight for workers' rights unites them. #NoOnProp22 https://t.co/aqWh7cEAs0
— United Farm Workers (@UFWupdates) October 15, 2020
Carlos Ramos has led the fight against Prop 22. When he told his abuela about it she told him about how she also fought a Prop 22 in 1972 put forward by the farm owners.
— Gig Workers Are Voting No On Prop 22 (@GigWorkersRise) October 15, 2020
The fight is the same ~50 years later.
This is their story: https://t.co/qtPBT4hp8k @kari_paul #NoOnProp22
"This fight for rights – it never goes away." I interviewed a Lyft driver who was organizing against Prop 22, only to find his grandmother organized against a similar measure almost 50 years ago. On the ties between farmworkers and gig workers across time: https://t.co/ibwg6Iw6as
— Kari Paul (@kari_paul) October 15, 2020
Here is a powerful story of two different different Prop. 22s — 48 years apart but both bad for workers — and how two different generations of the Ramos family stepped up to fight them. #NoOnProp22 @GigWorkersRise https://t.co/FHbd6VZYvD
— Doug Bloch (@TeamsterDoug) October 15, 2020
Generations of workers are united against Prop 22 and for workers #NoOnProp22 https://t.co/cL1OUCrLs1
— Fight for $15 LA (@Fightfor15LA) October 15, 2020
“She was a farmworker. Her grandson is a Lyft driver. A fight for workers' rights unites them.” #NoOnProp22
— Matt Ruscigno (@MattRuscigno) October 15, 2020
https://t.co/kB0bKXNM2E
Hey @guardian, read your own story. This guy quit his driving gig in early 2020. He’s not a Lyft driver, which means Prop 22 won’t affect him at all.
— Kim Kavin (@thekimkavin) October 15, 2020
Good grief, the lies being told to advance a political narrative...#YesOnProp22 #RepealAB5 https://t.co/C2pd3YmzMv
“Since he began driving in 2017, he has watched the wages, bonuses, and other incentives get lower and lower. #NoOnProp22 She was a farmworker. Her grandson is a Lyft driver. A fight for workers' rights unites them | California | The Guardian https://t.co/v6OJIPeSci
— KayAitch (@KayAitch68) October 15, 2020
BREAKING: The @FresnoBee joins @latimes and @nytimes in urging Californians to vote #NoOnProp22: "Prop. 22 simply represents special-interest politics at their worst. The Bee recommends a no vote." #SickofGigGreed https://t.co/morKfewaH1
— California Labor Federation #NoOnProp22 (@CaliforniaLabor) October 14, 2020
"#Prop22 simply represents special-interest politics at their worst. The Bee recommends a no vote." #NoOnProp22 https://t.co/YlwU9FA0Yd
— Steve Smith (@ssmith_calabor) October 14, 2020
“But Prop. 22 simply represents special-interest politics at their worst. The Bee recommends a no vote.”
— Ash Kalra ? (@Ash_Kalra) October 14, 2020
Thank you @FresnoBee for formally opposing Proposition 22!#VoteNoOnProp22
Prop. 22 only helps app-based companies like Uber, Lyft https://t.co/vk2vPmwmA2
California’s Prop. 22 only helps companies like Uber, Lyft. Why we recommend a no vote https://t.co/6tQHD7UIvW
— Black Lives Matter San Jose (@blmsanjose) October 14, 2020
"Prop. 22 simply represents special-interest politics at their worst. The Bee recommends a no vote."https://t.co/EK1TgIlhS2
— Gig Workers Are Voting No On Prop 22 (@GigWorkersRise) October 14, 2020
Vote #NoOnProp22
Uber is spamming users with political push notifications ahead of a key gig worker vote https://t.co/ST9AD1VKjK pic.twitter.com/D1CeAICdre
— The Verge (@verge) October 15, 2020
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I am #NoOnProp22 because exploitation is at the core of these gig companies’ business models.https://t.co/WrRTOsEd9B
— Jackie Fielder (@JackieFielder_) October 15, 2020
“Uber is paying drivers poverty wages and continues to slash wages while executives make millions.” #DefeatCorporateMonopolies #NOonProp22 #SickofGigGreedhttps://t.co/KROreAYKIO
— Our Revolution (@OurRevolution) October 15, 2020
Truly it’s an amazing story, read about it here.#NoOnProp22 https://t.co/qtPBT4hp8k
— Gig Workers Are Voting No On Prop 22 (@GigWorkersRise) October 15, 2020
pretty depressing feature of California's ballot system that the same family had to fight against two different Prop. 22s—48 years apart—b/c corporations could just pour money into changing the lawhttps://t.co/saDhmftqbp
— Joe Rivano Barros (@jrivanob) October 15, 2020
I always think of "la lucha continua" as the struggle by workers and the poor for justice and dignity.
— Kate Chatfield (@ChatfieldKate) October 15, 2020
Reading this article reminds me that the fight is also one continually waged by big business and the wealthy against the poor and marginalized.https://t.co/j6OzrLo6UW
Uber is spamming users with political push notifications ahead of a key gig worker vote https://t.co/I9pgsKyVH2
— Tony B (@Anthony23Bryant) October 16, 2020
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