MLK Labor leads demonstration to Seattle’s Palantir HQ on Labor Day

Labor Day Protesters Target Palantir Over Surveillance Tech and Worker Rights

SEATTLE – Labor Day took on a more confrontational tone in the Seattle area Monday, as hundreds of protesters moved between two locations to denounce what they called connected systems of surveillance and worker exploitation. The day’s actions began outside data analytics company Palantir Technologies in Seattle’s South Lake Union district before continuing at Immigration and Customs Enforcement offices in Tukwila.

The demonstration, held on the federal holiday that has celebrated American workers since 1894, featured two particularly compelling speakers: a former Palantir graphic designer who quit after connecting their work to military operations, and a labor organizer who drew parallels between the company’s practices and historical struggles for worker rights in Washington state.

Historic Roots of Worker Solidarity

Labor Day itself emerged from 19th century labor organizing, first celebrated in New York City in 1882 through efforts by the Central Labor Union and Knights of Labor. The holiday became federal law in 1894 under President Grover Cleveland, notably chosen over the more radical May Day commemoration to avoid association with the bloody Haymarket affair in Chicago.

The choice of Labor Day for Monday’s protest carried symbolic weight, as speakers explicitly connected their fight against modern corporate surveillance to the historical labor movement that established the holiday. One organizer noted how their family’s three generations of timber work in Washington represented the same struggle against corporate elites that Labor Day was created to honor.

From Designer to Whistleblower

The former employee, who worked as a graphic designer illustrating surveillance technologies, described a jarring awakening after the Gaza conflict began. “I started looking into what I was really illustrating and working on, and what I found out horrified me,” they told the crowd. “Simple illustrations that I sent with proposals and that the Pentagon saw in real life, they look like dead babies near mosques and parks in public places in Gaza.”

The speaker criticized not only Palantir’s military applications but its expansion into commercial surveillance, arguing these “dragnet” technologies violate First and Fourth Amendment rights by monitoring where people go, who they meet, and what they say.

Generational Fight Against Corporate Power

Executive Secretary-Treasurer or Laborers Local 242, Katie Garrow, connected Palantir’s practices to Washington’s labor history, drawing from three generations of family experience in the timber industry. “East Coast elites like Peter Thiel, other oligarchs like Friedrich Weyerhaeuser, owned our forests,” they said, “but my family and thousands of other timber workers over those three generations, fought. They won their unions and they won middle class lives despite incredible odds.”

Garrow argued that current workers face similar challenges to those their grandmother fought, including environmental destruction and corporate control over workers’ lives. They specifically noted that federal workers have lost union protections and that Black workers face unemployment at twice the rate of white workers.

Tech Industry Transformation

In a striking proposal that echoed Labor Day’s original vision of worker empowerment, the labor speaker suggested that “security guards and janitors in these big tech offices can join…apprenticeship programs and become the programmers of big AI and tech.” This vision would fundamentally reshape the current hierarchy in South Lake Union, where service workers clean offices while tech employees develop increasingly powerful surveillance tools.

Connecting Corporate and Government Surveillance

The decision to hold actions at both Palantir’s offices and the ICE facility in Tukwila underscored protesters’ argument that corporate surveillance technologies and immigration enforcement represent interconnected systems of control. Speakers had emphasized how companies like Palantir profit from government contracts while developing tools that affect both immigrant communities and broader worker organizing efforts.

Broader Movement

The demonstration was part of what organizers described as a nationwide effort targeting Palantir offices across multiple cities. Speakers emphasized the need for in-person organizing beyond social media platforms, which they argued are themselves part of the surveillance apparatus they’re fighting against.

The protesters connected various issues – immigration rights, healthcare access, worker protections, and civil liberties – under the umbrella of opposition to what they see as Palantir’s expanding influence in both government and commercial sectors.

Labor Day’s evolution from a 19th-century call for worker solidarity to Monday’s tech-focused protest reflects how labor organizing has adapted to confront new forms of corporate power. As the holiday traditionally marks the unofficial end of summer and return to work and school, this year’s demonstrations suggest labor activists are preparing for intensified organizing efforts in the fall.

Seattle Activists Block Palantir Offices In South Lake Union

7/14/2025

Seattle activists with Jewish Voice for Peace staged a sit-in at the Palantir offices in South Lake Union to demand that Washington state sever financial ties with Palantir, accusing the tech giant of profiting from human rights abuses. “We demand that the Washington state investment board and our elected officials divest from genocide by cutting ties with Palantir,” organizers declared at the demonstration.

Speakers said Palantir’s software directly aids Israeli military operations in Gaza. “Palantir is selling surveillance technology to corporations and government, fueling fascism at home and the genocide in Gaza,” one protester said. “Palantir profits off the genocide in Gaza by providing advanced training artificial intelligence to the Israeli Government and the Israeli occupation forces. This means Palantir provides the technology to kill people…individual citizens who are starving and standing in lines trying to get aid and food for their families. More aid workers have been killed during this genocide than in all the wars of the last 30 years.”

Hossam Nasr, a former Microsoft worker who said he was fired “for organizing a vigil on campus to honor the lives of Palestinians,” spoke out about how major tech companies have become “effectively…weapons manufacturers.” Nasr, now an organizer with No Azure for Apartheid, said, “These tech companies have deepened the relationship with the genocidal Israeli military. They saw an opportunity in death and destruction and killing of Palestinians to make profits.”

Nasr singled out Palantir as “leading the charge…the most brazenly, the most explicitly, the most violently.” He added, “Their CEO is publicly saying they’re happy and proud that their technology is killing Palestinians, that their technology is being used to track and detain and kidnap our neighbors.”

He detailed how Palantir built its business by embracing government defense contracts. “Palantir said to hell with that. We are evil and we’re proud, and we’re going to partner with the government because we want to dominate, because we want to kill, because we want to achieve the government’s aims of imperialism,” Nasr said. “Their first…contracts were actually with the US government and the DOD to help them with the war in Iraq. And since then, they have deepened their partnership.”

Protesters warned that these surveillance systems now reach beyond war zones. “Most people don’t know that Palantir is here, let alone that it profits from death and surveillance,” one speaker said. Nasr pointed to Palantir’s $30 million contract with ICE, which he said is creating “a centralized database across the IRS, ICE, other government agencies…to make it easy for us to track and surveil and target people. It’s completely heinous, dystopian, Orwellian, and it is happening with our tax dollars.”

He added, “For them to identify what they claim are immigrants or refugees or whatever, they have to surveil everyone. Your data is in that system, even if you’re a law-abiding legal citizen.”

For two hours, activists blocked entrances and left just before police arrived to arrest them. Protesters pledged to keep organizing. “For far too long, these tech companies have wreaked havoc upon the world. With unity, we must pay our tribute to the Palestinian people and to all victims of US imperialism, and say no more,” they said. “We will not rest until Palestine is free from the river to the sea.”