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2026 FIFA World Cup
6JUN

SoFi workers vote on a strike

3 min read
12:17UTC

Roughly 2,000 SoFi Stadium hospitality workers began voting on strike authorisation this week, a step beyond the spring rallies, with a possible picket at the 12 June USA v Paraguay opener.

SportDeveloping
Key takeaway

SoFi catering staff are voting to strike, and only FIFA can answer the data-sharing demand at the dispute's centre.

UNITE HERE Local 11, the hospitality workers' union covering southern California, began a strike-authorisation vote this week among its roughly 2,000 cooks, servers and bartenders at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood 1. The vote is the step beyond the letters and rallies that defined the dispute through May. If it passes, a picket could meet the USA v Paraguay opener at the venue on Friday 12 June, with around 70,000 fans crossing the line to get in.

The staff have been without a contract for about a year, and the stalemate is with food-service operator Legends Global, not FIFA. That distinction is the obstacle to a settlement. The dispute has widened past wages: after the 19 May rally and the NLRB (National Labor Relations Board) charge naming FIFA as co-respondent , the union filed a CCPA (California Consumer Privacy Act) complaint over FIFA sharing accreditation data, including nationality and home address, with ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) .

That filing is what locks the deadlock. Legends Global controls wages and rostering; it does not control accreditation. Only FIFA does, so a pay deal with the contractor leaves the data-sharing demand untouched, and FIFA has put no response on record. Union co-president Kurt Petersen has framed the choice for the governing body plainly: settle the privacy question or watch the picket reach its own showpiece opener.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Around 2,000 cooks, servers, and bartenders who work at the SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles are voting on whether to go on strike at the start of the World Cup. The workers have been without a new contract for about a year. Their dispute is with the company that runs the stadium's food and drink operations, a firm called Legends Global. But the dispute has grown bigger than pay. The union is also complaining that FIFA, football's governing body, collects personal details from stadium staff, including their nationality, home address, and Social Security number, and shares those details with US immigration authorities. For workers who are immigrants, the data-sharing creates direct personal risk: the World Cup could put their home addresses in the hands of the agency that conducts immigration raids. Only FIFA can change that practice, and FIFA has not responded.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The immediate root cause of the strike threat is the gap between UNITE HERE Local 11 and Legends Global on wages and contract terms after roughly a year without a settlement.

But the CCPA complaint introduces a second root cause that is structurally unresolvable by Legends Global: FIFA's accreditation system, which requires workers to provide Social Security numbers, home addresses, nationality and country of birth, and which authorises sharing that data with federal authorities including the Department of Homeland Security and ICE.

For a union whose members are predominantly immigrant workers in a city that recorded over 13,000 ICE arrests in its metropolitan area between January 2025 and March 2026, the data-sharing provision is not an abstract privacy concern. It functions as a direct operational threat to their members' continued residence in the United States. A catering operator cannot address that structural feature, only FIFA can.

Escalation

The dispute has followed a documented escalation sequence: letter to FIFA (7 April), NLRB charge naming FIFA as co-respondent (8 May), rally with a California gubernatorial candidate (19 May), CCPA complaint (27 May), and now strike authorisation vote in early June. Each step has been larger than the last. A passed authorisation vote is the next escalation, and the first one with an operational consequence for the tournament itself.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    A picket at the 12 June SoFi opener would produce the first broadcast image of the 2026 World Cup in the United States showing a labour dispute rather than football, at the very match the US team is playing its first game.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Precedent

    The CCPA complaint establishes the first legal challenge to a global sports governing body's accreditation data-sharing practices under a state consumer privacy law. A finding against FIFA would set a precedent applicable to all future US-hosted major events.

    Long term · Suggested
  • Consequence

    FIFA's silence through eight weeks of escalating legal filings has left Legends Global, the party with actual contractual authority to settle wages, unable to offer a package that resolves the CCPA demand. A two-track settlement is now the minimum path to ending the dispute.

    Short term · Assessed
First Reported In

Update #13 · USA settle, the machinery does not

UNITE HERE Local 11· 3 Jun 2026
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FIFA
FIFA
FIFA remains publicly silent on every open dispute touching the tournament: no response to the UNITE HERE ICE-moratorium demand since April, no on-record comment on the Iran visa reversal, no intervention on the FIGC election. Its governance architecture, which routes bilateral matters to governments and domestic federation matters to national bodies, structurally precludes a direct answer on all three.
Andrea Abodi / Italian Sports Ministry
Andrea Abodi / Italian Sports Ministry
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Mauricio Pochettino / USMNT
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US State Department / UNITE HERE Local 11
US State Department / UNITE HERE Local 11
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