In the heart of Cambridge, Massachusetts, over 4,000 graduate student workers at Harvard University have walked off the job, marking one of the largest labor actions in the institution's recent history. The indefinite strike, launched on April 22, 2026, follows 14 months of tense contract negotiations between the Harvard Graduate Students Union-United Auto Workers (HGSU-UAW Local 5118) and university administrators. These workers—teaching fellows (TFs), course assistants (CAs), and research assistants (RAs)—play pivotal roles in Harvard's academic ecosystem, grading papers, leading sections, and advancing cutting-edge research. Their absence has already rippled through labs and lecture halls, raising questions about labor equity at one of the world's wealthiest universities.
The strike underscores a growing wave of union activity across U.S. higher education, where graduate students increasingly demand recognition as essential employees deserving livable wages and robust protections. With Harvard's endowment surpassing $56 billion, the disparity between institutional wealth and worker compensation has fueled frustration, especially amid Boston's soaring cost of living—where average rents exceed $3,700 monthly.
From Union Formation to Bargaining Impasse
The roots of this conflict trace back to 2018, when HGSU-UAW was certified following a high-stakes election. The union's inaugural contract, ratified after a monthlong strike in late 2019, secured gains like paid sick leave and dental benefits. A shorter three-day walkout in 2021 further advanced dispute resolution processes and childcare funding. Yet, as the latest agreement expired in June 2025, bargaining stalled despite 23 sessions totaling over 60 hours.
By early 2026, HGSU members voted overwhelmingly—95.8% in favor, with 2,052 ballots cast—to authorize a strike if no fair deal emerged by April 21. Tensions peaked when Harvard unilaterally excluded nearly 1,000 workers from union coverage in June 2025, prompting accusations of bad faith. Recent sessions on April 9 and 13 yielded tentative agreements on minor articles like holidays but left 23 proposals unresolved, including core demands on pay and protections.

At the Core: Demands for Livable Wages and Pay Equity
Central to the strike is compensation. Many TFs earn just $26,300 annually—qualifying for food stamps in Massachusetts—while RAs receive around $50,000 in stipends, plus tuition and health coverage totaling $425,000 over five years per doctoral student. The union seeks a uniform $55,000 minimum stipend across roles, hourly rates rising from $21 to $25, and annual increases of 5% or inflation (whichever higher). Full dental coverage and expanded funds for childcare, healthcare emergencies, and legal aid are also priorities.
Harvard countered with a 10% raise over four years (about 2.5% annually), lifting TF pay to $27,024 and RA stipends to $50,340 by 2029—below peers like MIT ($50,000+), Stanford, Yale, and Princeton. Union leaders argue this ignores real wage erosion since 2021 and Boston's 85% above-national-average housing costs.
- Current TF: $13,150/semester (~$26k/year)
- RA stipend: ~$50k/year
- Union demand: $55k min + COLA for all
- Harvard offer: 10% over 4 years
Protections Against Harassment and for International Workers
Beyond pay, strikers demand reformed grievance processes for harassment, discrimination, and bullying—issues affecting one in five members. They seek union representation, anti-retaliation safeguards, and independent third-party arbitration, criticizing Harvard's internal system as inadequate.
For non-citizens (40% of members), proposals include 120 days paid leave for immigration issues, refusal to collaborate with ICE absent a warrant, and boosting the legal fund from $30,000 to $225,000 annually. Harvard rejected most language, citing federal constraints like Title IX, after ignoring it for nine months.
Immediate Disruptions: Labs Halted, Classes Scrambled
The strike's bite is felt acutely. Labs in the Vertex Science Center and beyond stand empty, stalling experiments in microbiology, physics, and more—potentially delaying publications and grants. Undergraduate classes like Government 1090 were canceled, Economics 1011B shifted online, and faculty now cover sections amid finals crunch.
Over 100 faculty pledged no strikebreaking, refusing replacements or retaliation. Undergrads report mixed impacts: some disrupted, others supportive, echoing solidarity in past actions. Pickets block entrances, deliveries, and events like Garber's Visitas.
Harvard's Response: Good Faith or Stonewalling?
Administrators like Provost John Manning affirm commitment to bargaining, scheduling sessions through June. They tout total support packages and recent anti-bullying policies but deem union asks unfeasible, conflicting with academic freedom and federal law. Critics, including lawmakers like Rep. Mike Connolly, decry the stance given Harvard's riches.Christian Science Monitor analysis highlights timing amid Trump pressures on Harvard.
Solidarity Grows Amid Broader Union Momentum
Support swells: Elected officials rally, past leaders picket, and UAW backs via strike pay ($500/week after one week). This fits a national surge—133% union growth since 2012—with recent wins at Yale, MIT, and UC's 48,000-worker 2022 strike.
Photo by Clay Banks on Unsplash

Looking Ahead: Path to Resolution?
Next talks: April 28 and beyond. Past strikes resolved quickly post-walkout; history suggests leverage from disruption. Yet, with exams looming and research timelines tight, prolonged action risks academic fallout. Union vows indefinite holdout sans fair deal.
For U.S. higher ed, this spotlights grad labor's evolution—from trainees to workers—amid affordability crises. Resolutions here could benchmark peers, advancing equity in elite academia.
For job seekers eyeing Ivy roles, explore Ivy League opportunities or faculty positions.
