KEY POINTS
  • Amazon workers at a Staten Island warehouse voted Friday to join a union, the first time that's happened at one of the company's U.S. facilities.
  • The outcome represents a landmark win for organized labor, which has for years tried to organize Amazon warehouse and delivery workers.
  • By voting in a union, Staten Island workers stand to disrupt Amazon's current labor model, which is the backbone of its Prime two-day shipping promise.

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Amazon labor organizers and supporters celebrate outside the National Labor Relations Board offices in the Brooklyn borough of New York, on Friday, April 1, 2022.

Employees at an Amazon warehouse on New York's Staten Island voted Friday to join a union, a groundbreaking move for organized labor and a stinging defeat for the e-commerce giant, which has aggressively fought unionization efforts at the company.

The tally was 2,654 votes in favor of joining the union and 2,131 opposed. Approximately 8,325 workers were eligible to vote whether to become part of the Amazon Labor Union. There were 67 challenged ballots, a gap that's too narrow to change the outcome of the election. The results still need to be formally certified by the National Labor Relations Board.

In this article