Weeklong women's strike starting on Mother's Day met with praise, pushback

Looming abortion law changes prompt digital privacy worries for clinics

A weeklong women’s labor strike set to begin Sunday, on Mother’s Day, in support of a proposed federal abortion rights bill has gained online traction, as well as criticism from people who say the strike has been poorly planned and that it is not inclusive enough.

Allison Kolarik, of Asbury Park, New Jersey, got the idea for the strike, meant to pressure the government to enact the Women’s Health Protection Act, after having learned that the Supreme Court was set to overturn Roe v. Wade, the landmark 1973 decision that established a constitutional right to abortion nationwide.

“My gut reaction was one of ‘Of course they did’ … and then rage,” said Kolarik, 38, an apparel company owner who uses gender-neutral pronouns.

Kolarik took to TikTok, where they have more than 62,000 followers, and made a video in reaction to the news, which was leaked in a draft opinion from the court's majority.

“It’s May 2nd, and it’s a dark day,” Kolarik said in the video, “and there are going to be darker days ahead.”

When a commenter suggested that people who would be affected by the possible decision strike in response, Kolarik ran with the idea. They posted another video, calling for a national women’s strike. The bill the strike aims to promote would codify abortion rights protections into federal law. Democrats have pushed for a vote but do not have the support for Congress to pass it.

Kolarik also set up an official website, and the idea has gone viral among supporters and critics. Hundreds of users have posted TikTok videos about the strike, and the #MothersDayStrike2022 hashtag has been viewed more than 554,000 times. At least 600,000 people have reached out through the website to express support and to say they want to get involved, Kolarik said.

Kolarik said inspiration came from the 1975 Women’s Day Off in Iceland, where 90 percent of women went on strike to push for full women’s rights, according to the Global Nonviolent Action Database. Banks, factories and schools were forced to close, and the strike sparked a movement that led to the first democratically elected female president in the world. Vigdis Finnbogadottir, a divorced single mother, broke the glass ceiling five years after the strike, according to the BBC.

“By all accounts, it made a gigantic difference in Icelandic history,” said Erik Loomis, an associate professor of history at the University of Rhode Island and the author of “A History of America in Ten Strikes.”

Other protests were planned across the U.S. on Mother’s Day. The abortion rights group Ruth Sent Us called for people to protest at Catholic churches because of the faith’s anti-abortion doctrine, even though more than half of U.S. Catholics say abortion should be legal in all or most cases, according to Pew Research.

But Kolarik and supporters say a large-scale economic action could be particularly effective.

“We’re a capitalistic nation — hit ’em where it hurts, in their coin purses,” said Tamara Strzelecki, 37, a mother of two who owns a small business in Fenton, Michigan, who plans to strike. “I’m hoping that makes a big enough impact that they’re like, ‘We screwed with the wrong people.’”

Women’s paid labor contributes $7.6 trillion to the nation’s gross domestic product every year, according to a 2017 report from the Center for American Progress, a liberal policy institution. If all women in the U.S. who had paid jobs took a day off, it would cost the country’s GDP almost $21 billion, the group said.

The figures do not include the value of women’s unpaid domestic labor, the feminist economist Nancy Folbre has noted. A 2015 report by the McKinsey Global Institute, the research arm of McKinsey and Co., the giant business consulting firm, found that women’s unpaid work was valued at about $10 trillion a year, or 13 percent of global GDP.

Kolarik said that context is part of what could give the strike an impact. “This actually hurts the power structure — to stop the [circulation of] money.”

But critics on TikTok argue that the strike was too hastily organized and that it excludes the perspectives and leadership of working-class people and people of color.

“I don’t hate the strike altogether. I just wish there was more planning,” said Leila Bryant, 21, a barista in Virginia. “I understand the urgency, but at the same time, we really need to take care in making sure if we’re going to do something extremely drastic and sacrificial. We have to make sure that everybody is taken care of and that our goals are solidified.”

Kat Holitik, 21, a server in Arkansas, said she supports the strike’s mission but fears tipped workers and small-business owners could lose income and that that the effort ignores the work of community-based organizations led by Black and Latino women that have long been fighting for abortion rights.

“If you look at change over time, it takes planning, it takes organization, and it takes people working together, and right now there’s not a lot of unity from different groups of people in this, and to have that you have to work at a local level to build support systems,” she said.

After seeing similar criticisms on TikTok, Kolarik added links on the website to mutual aid resources and more ways to participate for people who cannot afford to take time off work. The alternatives include spreading the word about the strike and not spending money. They also set up a page on the website of Open Collective, a nonprofit group that hopes to distribute funds to people who have lost income from the strike.

“So many people live hand-to-mouth, paycheck to paycheck, and cannot afford to miss a day of work, let alone a week of work,” Kolarik said.

Chelsea Merritt, 35, a warehouse worker in Indianapolis, said she is one of those people, but she plans to participate in the way that she can.

“I’m a single mom, so I have to work, but I don’t have to purchase nothing,” she said. “My money is the thing I can take from the government, the country right now. You want to control my uterus? Well then, guess what? I control my money.”