Scalawag is a new progressive Southern journal. Its reporter Rachel Garringer talked to the strike leaders and learned how they were able to organize a statewide wildcat strike in a right to work state.

She writes:

“While the work stoppage has ended, the decentralized, 55-county-wide, cross-sector strike in the heart of ‘Trump Country’ offers crucial insight into the contemporary South and the future of labor organization. What does it mean for a state that voted Republican in the most contested national election in decades to lead one of the largest labor uprisings in recent United States history? What can we learn from the ways in which teachers organized themselves across a mostly rural, geographically isolated state? How did they communicate with one another after they refused to follow statewide union leadership? How does this strike fit into a long history of radical labor organizing in West Virginia? And what were the personal motivations driving teachers, from the coalfields to the eastern panhandle and every county in between, to risk their jobs fighting for justice?

“In their own words, teachers explain why they went on strike, how this fight was about more than education, and what it means for a largely socially conservative state to tap into its deep roots of radical anti-corporate organizing.”

This is MUST reading.