Wayfair employees leave offices to protest furniture sales to migrant detention centers

Employees at the headquarters of the online furniture retailer Wayfair left their offices on Wednesday to protest the company’s $200,000 furniture sale to a government contractor that manages migrant detention centers at the border.

In footage shared online, employees at the Boston-based headquarters were seen exiting the building with signs reading phrases like “#WayfairWalkout” and “Don’t look away.” One bystander on the street even reportedly yelled at the workers, “Get back to your desks!” 

Another video showed a larger crowd of protesters and some Wayfair workers protesting in Copley Square, a public square in the heart of Boston. 

The protests come shortly after employees with the furniture retailer learned of the company’s $200,000 sale of bedroom furniture to BCFS, a nonprofit contractor of migrant detention centers.

Shortly after the employees discovered the sale, more than 500 staffers signed onto a letter calling on the company to cease doing business with the contract.

After the letter was sent to the company’s leadership team, executives reportedly told the employees that, as a retailer, “it is standard practice to fulfill orders for all customers and we believe it is our business to sell to any customer who is acting within the laws of the countries in which we operate.”

According to a Twitter account set up for the walkout, employees have since asked that Wayfair donate all profits made from the sale to the advocacy group Refugee and Immigrant Center for Education and Legal Services (RAICES).

It is unclear how the company plans to respond to the request. The retailer has not yet returned a request for comment from The Hill.

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