Market Basket CEO on Paid Leave Over Allegedly Plotting Work Stoppage

Family drama atop the famed New England grocery chain is spilling into public view again, more than 10 years after an employee- and customer-led boycott nearly crippled the company.

In 2014, a long-simmering fight between Arthur T. Demoulas and Arthur S. Demoulas, his cousin, devolved into a company-wide boycott and employee walkouts.
In 2014, a long-simmering fight between Arthur T. Demoulas and Arthur S. Demoulas, his cousin, devolved into a company-wide boycott and employee walkouts.
NHPR file photo
Share
In 2014, a long-simmering fight between Arthur T. Demoulas and Arthur S. Demoulas, his cousin, devolved into a company-wide boycott and employee walkouts.
In 2014, a long-simmering fight between Arthur T. Demoulas and Arthur S. Demoulas, his cousin, devolved into a company-wide boycott and employee walkouts.
NHPR file photo
Market Basket CEO on Paid Leave Over Allegedly Plotting Work Stoppage
Copy

The CEO and public figurehead of Market Basket, one of the region’s most popular grocery store chains, has been put on administrative leave, rekindling memories of a different intra-family squabble in 2014 that shook the company to its core.

Arthur T. Demoulas, as well as several other top employees, are being investigated for what the executive committee of the grocery chain’s board of directors is calling “credible allegations” that he was planning “a disruption of the business and operations of Market Basket with a work stoppage.”

The company’s board alleges that “Demoulas has also resisted an appropriate succession plan for Market Basket, asserting that he has the unilateral right to appoint his children to succeed him without any consideration of the view of the board or the majority owners of Market Basket.”

A spokesperson for Arthur T. Demoulas didn’t immediately respond to NHPR’s request for comment but told the Boston Globe that the board’s actions were a “farcical cover for a hostile takeover.”

Operations at the company’s 90 stores will not be immediately affected by the actions, the board said, including wages and benefits for employees, as well as the company’s profit-sharing plan.

The board warned that any employee work stoppage would significantly harm the company’s operations and the lives of both employees and customers who rely on the low-cost grocer.

In 2014, a long-simmering fight between Arthur T. Demoulas and Arthur S. Demoulas, his cousin, devolved into a company-wide boycott and employee walkouts. Employees, delivery drivers and customers largely sided with Arthur T., who had a reputation as friendly to workers. Shelves in many Market Basket stores went empty as trucks wouldn’t unload and customers shopped elsewhere.

After negotiations that included the governors of both Massachusetts and New Hampshire, Arthur T. eventually retained a minority ownership stake, ending the power struggle. The company remains privately owned.

It isn’t clear if this latest family drama will again spill outside of the boardroom.

On Thursday afternoon, the majority of customers at the Portsmouth store on Woodbury Avenue were unaware of the latest family flare-up. But Sharon Goodwin said that she boycotted in 2014, and if asked to, would do so again in support of Demoulas.

“He’s been an excellent boss from what I heard from all the employees,” she said as she loaded groceries into her trunk.

But two parking spots over, Jenna Anzelmo said she had no interest in shopping elsewhere.

“I’m not going to Hannaford. It’s so expensive,” she said. “Come on — people aren’t going to stop shopping here.”

On Reddit and other social media sites, there are already calls for empty shopping carts until Demoulas is reinstated.

“I’m boycotting, starting now,” said a commenter on Reddit who uses the name Buddaycousin. “I can get everything I need at Costco and Aldi. It’s an inconvenience, but it’s the right thing to do.”

This story was originally published by NHPR. It was shared as part of the New England News Collaborative.

This cabbage roll soup has all the comforting flavors of traditional cabbage rolls — tender cabbage, hearty turkey, warm spices, and rich tomato broth — but without the fuss. It’s a one-pot, simmer-until-cozy kind of meal that makes the whole kitchen smell incredible.
This sweet potato casserole is classic comfort made wonderfully simple. With pantry staples and just a few minutes of prep, you’ll have a creamy, cinnamon-spiced dish that bakes up beautifully and fills the kitchen with the smell of maple and vanilla. A guaranteed crowd-pleaser.
Meet the quesadilla you didn’t know you needed: turkey, cheese, and bright cranberries folded into a warm tortilla and cooked until perfectly crisp. It’s a cozy, kid-friendly recipe that feels both comforting and unexpected.
Meet your new brunch hero: a sweet-and-savory plantain breakfast hash topped with fresh chimichurri. It’s easy to make, packed with bold flavor, and perfect for feeding a crowd or meal-prepping a few breakfasts ahead of time.
If you’re craving something cozy, flavorful, and easy to make, these sweet potato empanadas check every box. A cheesy yam dough wrapped around a spiced black-bean filling? Yes, please. They fry up beautifully in just a few minutes and disappear even faster.
Looking for a quick treat that feels gourmet but requires almost no effort? Enter: maple-candied pecans. They’re crunchy, cinnamon-kissed, and dangerously munchable — perfect for topping salads, gifting to friends, or eating by the handful while you “wait for them to cool.”