VW's Tennessee workers vote against union representation
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[June 15, 2019] By
Nick Carey
CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. (Reuters) - Workers at
Volkswagen AG's assembly plant in the state of Tennessee narrowly voted
against union representation, dealing a fresh blow to the United Auto
Workers' (UAW) efforts to unionize a foreign automaker's plant in the
U.S. South.
The German automaker and the UAW said on Friday that workers at the
Chattanooga plant voted 833 to 776 against union representation, the
second time in five years they have rejected collective bargaining.
"Our employees have spoken," Frank Fischer, president of Volkswagen
Chattanooga, said in a statement. "Pending certification of the
results... Volkswagen will respect the decision of the majority."
Speaking to reporters in Chattanooga, UAW spokesman Brian Rothenberg
claimed that Volkswagen had engaged in "threats" and "intimidation" that
had affected the outcome of the vote.
"The company kept playing a lot of games and we are not going to abandon
the workers who supported a union," he said.
Rothenberg said it was too early to tell whether the UAW would appeal
the election results, or whether the union would support another vote at
the plant.
The fresh defeat comes at a pivotal time for the UAW, which has been
struggling to move beyond a federal corruption probe and faces
contentious contract talks this year with General Motors Co, Ford Motor
Co and Fiat Chrysler Automobiles NV.
The loss also raises renewed questions about whether the UAW can gain a
toehold in the U.S. South and organize workers at a foreign automaker.
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Cars are seen at the Volkswagen Chattanooga Assembly Plant in
Chattanooga, Tennessee November 4, 2015. REUTERS/Tami Chappell
The union's membership peaked at 1.5 million in 1979 and despite gains this
decade, it fell to below 400,000 last year.
The UAW narrowly failed to organize VW's Chattanooga plant in 2014. The vote
this week was closer than the one five years ago, which was 712 against to 626
for unionization.
In 2017, workers at a Nissan Motor Co Ltd plant in Canton, Mississippi, voted
nearly two to one against union representation.
Ahead of the vote, prominent Republican elected officials in Tennessee,
including U.S. Senator Marsha Blackburn, had argued publicly against
unionization at the Chattanooga plant.
Harley Shaiken, a labor expert at the University of California-Berkeley, said
without "heavy political pressure" from those officials, the union could
possibly have won.
"The UAW will absolutely have to try again in Chattanooga," Shaiken said. "The
vote was too close not to."
(Reporting by Nick Carey; editing by Sandra Maler and Christian Schmollinger)
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