Dolores Huerta on organizing, motherhood and ‘sexual coercion’ in her labor rights movement

She co-founded a union that changed history. Huerta tells ‘Art of Power’ how her organization handled sexual abuse allegations.

Dolores Huerta 2
Courtesy Dolores Huerta Foundation
Dolores Huerta 2
Courtesy Dolores Huerta Foundation

Dolores Huerta on organizing, motherhood and ‘sexual coercion’ in her labor rights movement

She co-founded a union that changed history. Huerta tells ‘Art of Power’ how her organization handled sexual abuse allegations.

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She helped organize one of the largest labor movements in history, but her name is often left out of the narrative. As an organizer in the 1960s, Dolores Huerta says it was not always easy to assert her power.

“As a woman, I had to do something about the way the women were being treated,” she told Art of Power’s Aarti Shahani.

Huerta explains how she raised 11 children in voluntary poverty while leading a nationwide civil rights battle (01:45). She dissects the mechanics of the famous 1965 Delano grape boycott, including how she allied with some of America’s biggest leaders (13:50). And for the first time, she reveals how higher-ups within the organization handled an alleged case of what she calls “sexual coercion” less than gracefully (30:40).