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EDITORIAL: Squeeze play hurts workers

Apr. 6—While Major League Baseball certainly has the right to hold its All-Star Game wherever it wants, its decision to yank this year's game out of Atlanta will likely hurt the very people it purports to support — the employees of color of restaurants and hotels who don't have multimillion-dollar contracts, the workers of concession stands who get paid by the game or on how much beer and peanuts they sell, the private parking attendants and street vendors who lack a powerful players union, and so on and so on.

MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred said Friday that he made the decision to relocate the July 13 game because of a new voting law in Georgia that limits ballot drop-boxes to early-voting sites and requires that absentee ballot envelopes contain a driver's license number, while prohibiting partisans (not poll workers) from handing out food and drink to voters waiting in line, among other provisions.