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EXPLAINED: The real reason Swiss supermarket Migros doesn’t sell alcohol

Swiss supermarket Migros has never sold alcohol or tobacco since being founded almost 100 years ago. Here's why.

The familiar orange sign of Swiss supermarket Migros.
Swiss supermarket Migros doesn't sell alcohol. Why is this and what does it mean for the future. Photo:Fabrice COFFRINI / AFP

Migros was founded in 1925 by Swiss businessman Gottlieb Duttweiler.

One of the founding principles of the organisation was that the health of customers was paramount – and as a result, outlets would not sell alcohol or cigarettes.

Almost 100 years later and despite significant expansion across the country, Migros outlets still uphold this core promise – although things look set to change from June 2022 (or more likely the start of 2023), as we outlined here

However, there’s a little more to Duttweiler’s stance than a pure dedication to the health of his customers. 

In reality, the supermarket’s refusal to sell alcohol has more to do with marketing and good business sense than genuine concern about his customers’ health. 

Here’s what you need to know. 

Why Migros doesn’t sell alcohol, according to Migros

Despite being one of Switzerland’s most prominent and successful supermarkets and arguably one of its most prominent brands, Migros’ identity is grounded in community values rather than just the pursuit of profit. 

After Duttweiler created the company 100 years ago, he sold food to workers at lower prices and launched a program which promoted cultural diversity

He also gave female members the right to vote at cooperative meetings, which was quite an advance at the time considering women could not vote federally in Switzerland until 1971 (and until 1990 in all cantons). 

EXPLAINED: What happened after Swiss women got the right to vote in 1971?

Another aspect of this social pledge was a promise not to sell alcohol or tobacco in any of its stores – a pledge that it has kept until this day, although alcohol is available with the company’s subsidiaries Denner, Migrolino, Alnatura and Voi, as well as online. 

But why did it really happen? 

Swiss tabloid Blick this week delved into the company’s history, showing that the company’s founder had an eye on appealing to Switzerland’s puritanical consumers when putting the ban in place. 

In 1928, Duttweiler took over a cider brewery on the verge of bankruptcy in Meilen, on the shores of Lake Zurich. 

While Duttweiler’s initial plan was to add another production plant to help his expanding business, he noticed that the founders had a special pledge of upholding public health “against excessive consumption of cheap brandy and fruit schnapps”. 

Finding himself in debt and in “urgent need of money”, as Blick writes, Duttweiler sees a market opportunity by taking the fight to the “popular drug alcohol”, which was increasingly demonised on both sides of the Atlantic. 

By “making a virtue out of necessity”, Duttweiler – a man who was not averse to a good glass of wine or a cigar, as Blick writes – lay down battle lines, pitting “isolated, lone Migros against the colossi of alcohol capital and the food industry” as he actually said in Brücke magazine at the time. 

The rhetoric caught on and Swiss consumers flocked to Migros, allowing it to grow into what is now the country’s major supermarket. 

Will this change? 

Former Migros CEO Mario Bonorand told Swiss media earlier in 2021 that the company could make an additional CHF2 billion if it decided to sell alcohol in its stores. 

Migros will hold its delegate assembly in November and is set to vote on whether or not to keep the ban in place.

READ MORE: Is Swiss supermarket Migros about to start selling alcohol and cigarettes?

Migros spokeswoman Christina Maurer told 20 Minutes that several Migros stores want to start selling alcohol and tobacco.

“Many delegates have raise the issue recently” Maurer said.

In order to allow the sale of alcohol and tobacco, the delegates would need to vote to change the underlying rules drawn up by Duttweiler so long ago.

Maurer said she would consider the issue “through a democratic ballot of all members of the cooperative”. This will take place in June 2022, with each of the company’s ten regional collectives voting on the matter. 

Some on social media spoke out against the change and said it represented a departure from the organisations core values for profit.

Others however point out that it is not the first time the company has made money from selling booze and smokes.

Migros subsidiaries Migrolino and Denner both sell alcohol and cigarettes, while Migros itself currently sells alcohol and tobacco via the internet under the Le Shop banner.

In fact, the Luzerner Zeitung reported in June 2021 that there are so many loopholes to Migros’ position, that it is difficult to argue the company remains consistent with the pledge of its founder. 

“The retailer has now moved far away from its self-imposed alcohol ban. Migros eagerly looks for loopholes, repeatedly approaches the topic and ultimately lies to herself.”

“Because wine, beer and schnapps have long been on the shelves of the group, with the subsidiaries Denner, Migrolino, Alnatura and Voi. The branches of the discount subsidiary Denner are conveniently often right next to a Migros and are not stingy with their high-priced range.”

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PROTESTS

How free are people to protest in Switzerland?

As a centre of international diplomacy and cooperation and with its unique system of direct democracy, Switzerland enjoys a reputation for upholding fundamental human rights—but how free are the Swiss to express their opposition to power?

How free are people to protest in Switzerland?

In its recently released 2024 report, Amnesty International criticised Switzerland for imposing restrictions on the right to protest and for dispersing protests violently. 

So what’s the problem? 

While not an explicit ban on protest, Amnesty International considers the obligation in some Swiss cantons for protest organisers to gain official approval and shoulder potential costs to be a repressive measure—essentially a ‘workaround’ in cooling dissent.

Amnesty International’s criticism comes on the heels of other concerns.   

In 2024, Amnesty International joined with the United Nations in criticizing moves by some Swiss cantons and cities to ban protests regarding the Middle East conflict as ‘disproportionate’. 

Read More: How ordinary citizens can try to change the law in Switzerland

The organization has also highlighted the continued use of rubber bullets by Swiss police in dispersing protests as a serious area of concern. 

Furthermore, any changes to protests are controlled or permitted in Switzerland must be made through individual cantons due to the country’s devolution of specific powers – a process that could take years. 

So what restrictions have been introduced in Switzerland?

In early March, the ‘Anti-Chaoten’ initiative put forward by the right-wing Swiss People’s Party (SVP) youth wing, which would have placed significant legal and financial burdens on protesters, was rejected in a Zurich cantonal referendum. However, a counterproposal by cantonal authorities was accepted at the polls.

The successful counterproposal requires explicit permission from authorities to hold a protest or rally, as well as passing on the cost of the police operation, as well as any intentional damage, to protest organizers. Failure to gain approval for protests can result in charges being laid. 

Following the success of the Zurich measure, the Basel SVP intends to introduce a similar proposal to be voted on in August – with the same likely result.

Which protests have been dispersed violently in Switzerland? 

Due to global events, protests have become increasingly common in Switzerland over the last five years. Most have been peaceful, but there have been exceptions.

Measures introduced to limit the spread of the coronavirus between 2020 and 2022 led to violent protests being dispersed in BernZurich and Lucerne

Read More: Switzerland to impose tougher penalties for violent protesters

Climate change protests have also been violently dispersed by police, using pepper spray and rubber bullets – such as in Basel in February 2023.

Amnesty International has also raised serious concerns regarding the police dispersal of an International Women’s Day protest in Basel on March 17th of this year, in which rubber bullets were also used. 

Most recently, opponents of the Eritrean regime were dispersed with tear gas and water cannons at a demonstration in Gerlafingen, Aargau, on March 31st. 

What right do the Swiss have to protest? 

The right to peaceful protest is enshrined in the Swiss federal constitution—Article 16 provides for freedom of expression, while Article 23 protects the right to free association. 

Indeed, in 2020, the country successfully introduced a resolution to the United Nations Human Rights Council, calling for world governments to protect the right to protest and not use the coronavirus pandemic as a reason to curtail freedoms. 

Read More: What foreigners should know about the Swiss constitution

Furthermore, the country is a signatory to the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment, as well as the Optional Protocol to the Convention Against Torture, which could have some bearing on how protests are dispersed.  

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