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Salon Follows Gawker’s Lead In Unionizing

Betsy Rothstein Gossip blogger
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Salon is following in Gawker‘s footsteps. The liberal news site announced today that it will unionize with the Writers Guild of America.

The question is: will management recognize their union?

Can Politico, even with his fancy new newsroom, be too far behind?

The editorial staff released a memo stating why they’ve taken the plunge.

And yes, the white-hating Joan Walsh has signed on.

Salon’s editorial staff is unionizing. Here’s why

We, the editorial staffers at Salon Media, Inc. have decided to organize. Every single one of the editorial employees at Salon supports unionizing with the Writers Guild of America, East, and today we’re asking the management of Salon to recognize our union.

We are doing this because we believe in our publication and want it to be successful. We’re especially proud to work for a media organization that has championed progressive values for nearly twenty years. We believe this organizing campaign is a positive and public way for us to put those values into practice, right here at home. In the wake of the Gawker staff’s vote to organize with the WGAE, we see an opportunity to help establish standards and practices in Internet journalism. It’s an exciting moment for our field, and we want Salon to be at the forefront of change.

We also fervently believe that an employee union is in the best interests of Salon, in the short and long term, and will yield benefits of many kinds. It will solidify Salon’s position as a progressive leader, generate tremendous employee goodwill, and transform the workplace environment in positive ways. We suspect that over the long haul it will also be good business. We want Salon to be an even better place to work and a stronger company, and that by organizing, we will strengthen our mission, our vision and our productivity.

As the surprising example set by the management and editorial staff of Gawker has made clear, the process of collective bargaining can commit management, editors and writers to work together in a new way. That’s a critically important first step, and we are here to make it together.

Signed,
The Salon editorial staff:
Lindsay Abrams, staff writer
Luke Brinker, politics editor
Peter Finocchiaro, deputy editor
Colin Gorenstein, assistant editor
Ruth Henrich, associate managing editor
Sarah Hepola, personal essays editor
Nassir Isaf, community editor
Elias Isquith, staff writer
Scott Eric Kaufman, assistant editor
Erin Keane, culture editor
Jenny Kutner, assistant editor
Simon Maloy, staff writer
Laura Miller, senior writer
Jim Newell, staff writer
Liam O’Donoghue, social media editor
Andrew O’Hehir, senior writer
Joanna Rothkopf, assistant editor
Matt Saccaro, assistant social media editor
Sonia Saraiya, TV critic
Anna Silman, deputy entertainment editor
Jacob Sugarman, cover editor
Sophia Tesfaye, deputy politics editor
Scott Timberg, staff writer
Joan Walsh, editor at large
Benjamin Wheelock, art director
Mary Elizabeth Williams, staff writer

UPDATE: A newly released corrected memo has the following changes. Given this unequivocal support, Salon’s editorial staff and the WGAE asked management to voluntarily recognize the Guild as their collective bargaining representative. Also…added name to the list: Nassir Isaf, community manager.