The 1919 Workers’ Collective organizes for the political independence of the working class. We engage in workplace organizing to rebuild the power of the strike and recover it as a tool for asserting political power.
The 1919 Workers’ Collective organizes for the political independence of the working class. We engage in workplace organizing to rebuild the power of the strike and recover it as a tool for asserting political power.
Assemblies happen on the second Tuesday of each month at First Mennonite Church at 922 Notre Dame Avenue in Winnipeg, Manitoba.
They start at 6:00 pm.
The assembly is open to everyone and is your chance to vote on proposals and have your voice heard. Attend assemblies and get involved with 1919's organizing committees.
To punish its workers in Laval for unionizing and to avoid having to negotiate a collective agreement, the multinational has laid off 1,700 warehouse workers, as well as nearly 3,000 additional workers whose jobs depend on the company.