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Starbucks faces pressure as workers escalate strike across 120 stores ahead of Black Friday

Starbucks is facing mounting pressure as its workers’ union escalates an ongoing strike to more than 120 US stores across 85 cities, marking what could become the longest labour interruption in the coffee chain’s history.

The walkout, which began on November 13 on Red Cup Day with 65 stores participating, has grown in scale heading into Black Friday — a high-value retail period that typically delivers one of Starbucks’ busiest weeks of the year.

The timing amplifies the risk. Black Friday and the surrounding weekend draw some of the heaviest footfall of the year, and the strike places additional stress on the company’s operations at a moment when service speed and customer engagement are critical to driving seasonal revenue.

Similar labour mobilisation was seen in Europe, where Amazon warehouse workers in Germany staged a protest on the same day in an effort to disrupt operations and seek collective bargaining rights.

In Spain, Zara retail locations also faced demonstrations, reinforcing a broader pattern of global labour assertiveness during holiday peak demand.

While Starbucks maintains that the majority of its US stores are operating normally, the implications of a protracted standoff are beginning to surface.

More than 11,000 baristas represented by Workers United are calling for higher pay, greater staffing and a resolution to hundreds of unfair labour practice accusations ranging from union retaliation to scheduling constraints.

Starbucks Workers United has frequently targeted marquee dates — in particular, Red Cup Day — in order to generate visibility and leverage public attention during high-traffic promotional events.

The company stated that approximately 99% of its US stores remain open and said it anticipated little operational disruption.

But academics suggest the broader reputational effect, rather than immediate store closures, may prove influential if negotiations fail to progress.

Labour law experts note that Starbucks has the ability to hire temporary replacements, limiting the union’s bargaining power — a factor that could lengthen the dispute if neither side finds a pathway to compromise.

Turnaround efforts meet external strain

The strike arrives just as Starbucks pursues a renewed turnaround strategy designed to restore sales momentum after several quarterly setbacks.

In August, the company rolled out its Green Apron Service initiative across all US company-operated cafés, expanding labour hours, increasing staffing rosters and adjusting store opening times to accelerate service speed.

The program is aimed at rebuilding customer connection — a metric Starbucks has flagged as essential to driving repeat visits and ticket volume.

The early impact has been encouraging. Starbucks posted a 1% increase in global comparable store sales in its fourth quarter, ending a six-quarter run of declines.

Management said transaction growth continued through October, crediting operational improvements under Green Apron Service.

Even so, the road ahead appears challenging. Higher labour spending, inflation and the cost of execution have put pressure on margins, and investors are watching closely to gauge whether operational gains can withstand labour unrest and competitive pressures.

Starbucks will issue first-quarter 2026 results in late January, a release that is likely to set expectations for the remainder of the year.

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