- Text
Protests at Walmart stores on Black Friday
(CBS News) LOS ANGELES - Walmart is the nation's biggest retailer -- and Black Friday is extremely important to the company's bottom line. It is why workers at some Walmart stores chose Friday to protest for higher wages and better benefits.
From overnight protests in Wisconsin; to dawn demonstrations in Maryland; to those taking to the streets in the California fog -- what was billed as a nationwide protest against the nation's biggest retail employer didn't quite live up to the hype.
"This is huge," said protester and Walmart employee Dan Hindman. "I don't care how anybody looks at it."
We first met Hindman earlier this week. A sales associate in electronics, he was once the employee-of-the month.
But on Friday, he walked off his job to protest what he says are Walmart's low wages and high health insurance premiums.
Asked for what is risking by being out here, Hindman said: "I'm not worried about no risk because I'm protected. I have the right to stand up for what's right, and so does everyone else."
It's that "everyone else," though, that has Walmart suspicious. The company says few of the demonstrators were actually striking employees, but rather outside supporters pressuring Walmart to unionize.
Wamart's Duncan MacNaughton: "In many of those locations, no Walmart associates took place, we had roughly the same number of calls-ins that we had last year."
While there were a handful of arrests, Walmart says the protests had no effect on Black Friday sales. In fact, the company said it was the best Black Friday on record.
Dan Hindman said it's time the employees get rewarded for at least some of Walmart's success.
"We're not trying to hate Walmart," he said. "We don't hate Walmart. We hate the way their practices are, that's all, that's all it is."
Organizers say this isn't the end of the planned protests. But Walmart is making sure it is the end. The company complained to the National Labor Relations Board, arguing the protests are an illegal attempt to disrupt business. The company is still waiting for the board's decision.
- Okla. tornado survivor finds dog buried alive under rubble
- Teacher injured in Okla. tornado takes first steps
- Survivor of Bangladesh factory collapse speaks out
- 5/23: Obama: The war on terror, "like all wars, must end"; baby born as tornado struck
- Oklahoma miracle baby -- born amidst tornado chaos
- CBS News goes undercover in a Bangladesh clothing factory
- Man killed in brutal London attack
- Storm spotter: Oklahoma tornado "a nightmare"
- Resentment over wars may have motivated London terror attack
- Injured third-grade teacher tells of trying to protect students
- Did Obama admin. know of IRS targeting during campaign?
- 16-year-old finds a new way to detect cancer
- Angry Pakistanis fight to end U.S. drone strikes
- Parents ask why Okla. schools don't have tornado shelters
- President Obama defends drone strikes
- Survivors pulled from Okla. school hit by tornado


















