March 14, 2026

Harmony Thrive

Superior Health, Meaningful Life

Kaiser healthcare strike enters second week as new walkouts loom nationwide

Kaiser healthcare strike enters second week as new walkouts loom nationwide

The strike by 31,000 Kaiser Permanente healthcare workers has entered its second week. The walkout coincides with a three-week strike by 15,000 nurses in New York City. Meanwhile, several thousand pharmacy and laboratory workers in Southern California, members of the United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW), have voted to authorize a strike beginning February 9 after being kept on the job for months without a contract.

A nurse from Taiwan supporting striking nurses in Baldwin Park, February 2, 2026.

The convergence of these struggles reflects a deepening militancy among healthcare workers nationwide, driven by intolerable working conditions, chronic understaffing, falling real wages and the indifference or outright hostility of corporate healthcare systems and the political establishment. It also highlights the need for a broad, working class movement in defense of public health, which the union officialdom is doing everything it can to prevent.

Despite expired contracts, the UFCW has deliberately prevented pharmacy and lab workers from joining their coworkers already on strike. A Kaiser nurse told the World Socialist Web Site on Monday that negotiations between UNAC/UHCP (United Nurses Associations of California/Union of Health Care Professionals) and Kaiser Permanente are expected to resume imminently. A top priority in restarting such discussions is to shut the strike down before the UFCW strike begins.

The urgency of unity is underscored by events in New York. Nurses at New York-Presbyterian, Montefiore and Mount Sinai are being threatened with mass firings if they do not return to the job in two weeks, and the union has issued a “streamlined” proposal to shut the strike down without nurses’ demands being met. Democratic Governor Kathy Hochul has strengthened hospital management by issuing Executive Order 56, declaring a state of emergency and suspending licensing requirements for out-of-state nurses, effectively facilitating strikebreaking.

Kaiser is seeking through its legal team to reclassify the strike as an “economic strike,” narrowing its scope to wages. If successful, the company could permanently replace striking workers.

But Kaiser nurses are objectively positioned to unite with their counterparts in New York. Such unity cannot be entrusted to union bureaucracies with long records of isolating struggles and cutting deals behind workers’ backs. It must be organized through rank-and-file committees based on workers’ democratic control.

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