Yesterday, thrice former Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz made an appearance in front of the Senateโ€™s Health, Labor, Education, and Pensions Committee to discuss the companyโ€™s labor practices, particularly as they relate alleged anti-union activity.

You may have already seen videos leaking out online of the hearing, where committee chair and union advocate Senator Bernie Sanders can be seen taking Schultz to task over what he calls โ€œthe most aggressive and illegal union-busting campaign in the modern history of our country.โ€

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As reported by NBC News, the face-off between Sanders and Schultz has been highly anticipated, with Starbucks spending much of the weeks-long hearing urging the panel that Schultzโ€”who stepped down from the CEO position for the third time recently, before his planned exit dateโ€”didnโ€™t need to appear. But after Sandersโ€™ refusal and a threat of subpoena, Schultz ultimately agreed to testify.

At the hearing, titled โ€œNo Company is Above the Law: The Need to End Illegal Union Busting at Starbucks,โ€ Schultz defended the companies labor practices with the aid of testimony from a Starbucks barista, a former Starbucks employee, and โ€œother witnesses.โ€ Schultz states that the company has done nothing illegal and that โ€œWe do nothing that is nefariousโ€ฆ And thatโ€™s why Starbucks doesnโ€™t need a union.โ€

Schultz, who took umbrage with being labeled a billionaire and stated, “Yes I have billions of dollars. I earned it. No one gave it to me,โ€ went on to state that the company is committed to negotiating in good faith on contracts at each store that has chosen to unionize. As noted by Senator Sanders, nearly 300 US-based company-owned Starbucks locations have successfully voted to unionize since the end of 2019 and not a single contract has yet to be ratified.

Coming to the aid of the former CEO and one-time Democratic presidential nominee hopeful, panel Republicans decried the hearing as a smear campaign and a witch hunt, quoted Ayn Rand, and claimed that because Senator Sanders was worth $8 million (which he flatly denied, stating that the accusing senator was “probably looking at some phony right-wing internet stuff”), he shouldn’t criticize fellow wealthy people.

After the hearing, Starbucks Workers United took to Twitter to challenge the veracity of some of the Schultz testimony.

Currently, over 500 charges of unfair labor practices have been brought against Starbucks, and the National Labor Relations Board has filed over 80 complaints against the company.

Zac Cadwaladerย is the managing editor at Sprudge Media Network and a staff writer based in Dallas.ย Read more Zac Cadwaladerย on Sprudge.