USA vs Australia hit by protest with strike staged before World Cup kick-off

Striking Hilton union workers picketed outside Seattle Stadium just hours before the USA took on Australia in their second World Cup group game
Striking hotel workers brought their protest directly to the gates of Seattle Stadium on Friday. Unionised Hilton employees picketed outside the venue just hours before the United States faced Australia in one of the most anticipated matches of the 2026 World Cup group stage.
The strike by Unite Here Local 8, which represents approximately 7,000 hospitality workers across Washington and Oregon, began on Thursday outside the Embassy Suites by Hilton Seattle Downtown Pioneer Square, a five-minute walk from the stadium. Workers were visible at the ground itself on match day as tens of thousands of fans arrived for the noon local kickoff.
It comes after hospitality workers at SoFi Stadium threatened to stage a walkout days before the World Cup. One striker, Aspen Demare, a bartender at the hotel’s Zephyr restaurant, spoke with Mirror U.S. Sports at the front of the picket line at Seattle Stadium on Friday morning.
“I am paid minimum wage and it’s because I am in a tipped position, but I do not make enough tips to equate to getting more money,” she said. “This strike started because they won’t sign our union contract.”
“The union contract is to get increased wages for every worker, protections for our immigrant workers when it comes to ICE — so that they can skip out on work and not get a point for it because they’re scared for their lives — and we’re also trying to get year-round healthcare, because right now we’re month to month and God forbid something happens.”
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Asked when she expected the strike to end, her answer was unambiguous: “It will end when they sign the contract.”
The 117 unionised workers are demanding raises, a return to pre-pandemic staffing levels, year-round healthcare coverage, and, critically for a majority immigrant workforce, a requirement that management notify employees if Immigration and Customs Enforcement or Department of Homeland Security personnel are on the property. The union contract expired at the end of May.
Workers voted overwhelmingly to authorise the strike on June 5 after the hotel offered what Local 8 described as unsatisfactory raises and rejected the ICE notification request outright.
Local 8 president Anita Seth put the core demand plainly: “Hotel workers who are welcoming visitors from around the world to Seattle shouldn’t have to work second and third jobs to support their families or worry about whether they will have healthcare over the slow months in winter.”
The timing maximises visibility. Seattle is hosting six World Cup matches at the adjacent Lumen Field, and Friday’s USA versus Australia clash is the highest-profile fixture yet staged at the venue.
It’s a top-of-the-table Group D meeting between two nations who both won their openers, with the head-to-head result now the primary tiebreaker. The stadium was surrounded by tens of thousands of fans from both nations as Demare and her colleagues marched.
Hilton confirmed contingency plans were in place and said it remained “committed to negotiating in good faith.” The union’s message to visitors was simple: do not sleep, eat or meet at Embassy Suites Pioneer Square until the dispute is resolved.
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