
The fallout from The New York Times’ allegations of sexual assault against Cesar Chavez was swift and wide-ranging. Now, some in the industry are hoping the revelations about the deceased farm labor leader open doors for systemic changes, including reforms aimed at advancing the rights of women farmworkers.
‘It creates an opportunity for those without scruples’
The allegations, largely made by Chavez’s co-labor leader, Dolores Huerta, represented a massive fall from grace for a man who was a beloved figure in the Latino community. One so cherished that former President Joe Biden placed a bronze bust of Chavez in the Oval Office in 2021. The “sexual abuse allegations raise a difficult question: How do you reckon with the man without losing the movement?” said KCRA-TV Stockton.
Some are concerned that the focus on Chavez could “leave today’s farmworkers more vulnerable,” farmworker advocate Luis Magaña said to KCRA, since people will be paying less attention to the bigger picture and more on the specifics of Chavez’s allegations. The current system, which Magana says can elicit violence against these workers, “creates an opportunity for those without scruples” to “freely commit some type of abuse, such as not paying them.” Magaña worked alongside Chavez in the early days of the movement but believes the cause must “continue beyond the man.” The time to have a conversation about this issue of sexual abuse among farmworkers documented in the Times exposé is “overdue.”
The farm labor movement itself was “always about the people — the thousands who marched, organized and fought for fair wages and dignity,” Magaña said to KCRA. Many are now trying to reconcile the revelations about Chavez with modern changes. Union organizers, for example, are “trying to push forward the farmworker movement and continue the work that many women — not just Chavez — spearheaded,” said The 19th. This includes “investing resources and support to improve the culture that has protected perpetrators in organizing spaces over victims.”
‘We must continue to engage and support our community’
Huerta, now 95, is also standing by the assertion that her allegations against Chavez should not downplay the victories made by labor unions. Farmworker labor movements have “always been bigger and far more important than any one individual,” Huerta said in a statement. Chavez’s actions “do not diminish the permanent improvements achieved for farmworkers with the help of thousands of people. We must continue to engage and support our community, which needs advocacy and activism now more than ever.”
And many say that the current advocacy for women’s rights in the fields, regardless of Chavez, doesn’t go far enough. Do “women feel safe at work? It’s not just the labor movement … there’s assholes everywhere,” Olga Miranda, president of SEIU Local 87, a union for San Francisco service workers, told The San Francisco Standard. The floodgates will open because of the allegations, Miranda believes, as there are “women who will stand up and speak out and say, ‘I’m not gonna take your shit.’ Watch out for that force.”
The discourse should shift “from one man to the conditions farmworkers still face today, including a reality many say has long gone unheard: sexual violence against women in the fields,” said KCRA. Many women in these environments, Magaña told KCRA, “stay silent — not for a cause, but out of the need to survive.”
‘The farmworker is now more defenseless,’one farm advocate said



