UAW
members went on strike on Sept. 16 seeking higher pay, greater
job security, a bigger share of the leading U.S. automaker's
profit and protection of their healthcare benefits.
"Negotiations will resume first thing Monday morning and we will
continue to look for solutions to reach an agreement," said UAW,
a union that represents the automaker's 48,000 striking hourly
workers in the United States.
GM said it would continue the talks aimed at reaching an
agreement that "builds a stronger future for its employees and
business".
The strike is the first nationwide walkout at GM since a two-day
work stoppage in 2007.
The UAW has been careful about deploying strikes to gain
leverage in bargaining since a 54-day walkout that occurred in
Flint, Michigan, in 1998 that cost GM more than $2 billion and
accelerated the loss of UAW-GM jobs.
(Reporting by Rama Venkat in Bengaluru and Joseph White in
Detroit; Editing by Aditya Soni)
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