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2026 FIFA World Cup
12JUN

SoFi Workers Return to Table After Strike Vote

3 min read
09:25UTC

UNITE HERE Local 11 and Legends Global resume bargaining on Monday 8 June after a 96% strike authorisation vote, with a separate data-privacy complaint running alongside the labour dispute.

SportDeveloping
Key takeaway

A 96% strike mandate at SoFi puts the most visible labour action of any venue four days from its opener.

UNITE HERE Local 11, the southern California hospitality workers' union, and stadium operator Legends Global are scheduled to resume contract bargaining on Monday 8 June after Local 11 members voted 96 percent for strike authorisation 1. Running alongside the labour dispute is a separate complaint under the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA), which Local 11 filed over FIFA's sharing of worker accreditation data .

SoFi Stadium in Inglewood hosts eight World Cup matches, including the venue's opener on Friday 12 June. A walkout by the roughly 2,000 cooks, servers and stand attendants Local 11 represents there would be the most visible labour action at any tournament venue. The union's chosen demand is what makes the dispute distinctive: it has pressed for a commitment that federal immigration enforcement will not take part in tournament operations, framing the fight around its largely immigrant workforce rather than wages or hours.

FIFA controls venue-access authority and the accreditation data at the centre of the CCPA filing, yet it has not replied to Local 11 since 8 May. That silence is the structural fault line: the union can bargain with Legends Global over pay and conditions, but the two demands that drew the strike mandate, ICE exclusion and data handling, sit with a governing body that is not at the table.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

About 2,000 workers at SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles, the staff who cook, serve, and clean during events, voted with 96% support to authorise a strike on 6 June. Their union, UNITE HERE Local 11, is in a contract dispute with Legends Global, the company that runs the stadium's food and drink operations. Both sides are returning to the bargaining table on Monday 8 June. SoFi Stadium hosts eight World Cup matches, starting with the USA vs Paraguay opener on 12 June. A walkout on opening day would be one of the most visible labour stories in World Cup history. The union has also filed a separate legal complaint arguing that FIFA shared workers' personal data, including their addresses and nationalities, with immigration enforcement agencies.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

UNITE HERE Local 11's base contract demand is wage parity with comparable hospitality roles at non-stadium venues in Los Angeles County. The CCPA data-privacy complaint is structurally separate but tactically linked: by filing against FIFA's accreditation data-sharing with ICE, the union widened the dispute from a bilateral wage negotiation into a multi-party rights conflict that draws in California's privacy enforcement agency as an independent institutional actor.

FIFA's silence since 8 May, confirmed in the prior editorial, creates a specific legal exposure: under California employment law, an organisation that is a named co-respondent in a pending NLRB charge has an affirmative duty to bargain in good faith. FIFA's prolonged non-response may itself constitute a procedural violation that strengthens Local 11's position going into Monday's talks.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    A walkout by 2,000 workers at SoFi's USA vs Paraguay opener on 12 June would be the most visible labour dispute at any World Cup. The broadcast images, a picket line outside the venue hosting the host nation's first match, would reach an audience of hundreds of millions and frame the US World Cup's global reputation.

  • Precedent

    FIFA named as co-respondent in a US National Labour Relations Board (NLRB) charge is without precedent in World Cup history. If the charge proceeds, it creates a jurisdictional test for whether a non-US-incorporated international sports federation can be held to US collective bargaining law at domestic venues.

First Reported In

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Different Perspectives
FIFA
FIFA
The 48-team tournament opened on schedule with 104 matches and a $13.1 billion projected revenue cycle, but three of the first weekend's most consequential stories, Iran's fan lockout, SoFi's embedded strike clause, and Malagò's eligibility suspension, were each decided by domestic legal systems operating outside FIFA's authority.
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Mohamed Ouahbi takes charge of his first senior match in football management against the five-time world champions, with the full-strength defensive structure that reached the 2022 semi-finals intact and facing a Brazilian lineup missing its three most celebrated attackers.
Brazil
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Brazil open Group C on Saturday at MetLife without Neymar, Estêvão or Militão against a Morocco side managed by a first-time senior coach, making their opener the most consequential group-stage fixture of the opening weekend in terms of pre-tournament expectation versus squad availability.
FIGC / Italy
FIGC / Italy
CONI's referral of the Malagò eligibility question entirely to ANAC means Italy's federation enters the group stage without a confirmed president-elect, with the anti-corruption regulator holding the power to remove the Serie A-backed frontrunner from the ballot ten days before the 22 June election.
United States
United States
The co-host avoided its worst opening image when SoFi workers ratified a deal averting a strike before Friday's Paraguay opener, though the contractual walkout clause means the threat is deferred not dissolved. Pochettino named his XI with Tillman over Reyna, signalling he will manage risk rather than chase headlines against Paraguay.
FFIRI / Iran
FFIRI / Iran
Iran's squad trains in Tijuana with 14 staff still barred from the US, and learned on 9 June that their entire 8% supporter ticket allocation for all three Group G matches was revoked under OFAC sanctions. FFIRI is preparing an Article 4 FIFA complaint over the conditions of participation.