UAW votes overwhelmingly to authorize strike at Detroit Three automakers
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[August 26, 2023] By
Joseph White, David Shepardson and Shivansh Tiwary
(Reuters) -The United Auto Workers (UAW) union on Friday said members
voted overwhelmingly in favor of authorizing a strike at the Detroit
Three automakers if agreement is not reached before the current
four-year contract expires on Sept. 14.
The authorization was approved by 97% of voting members at General
Motors, Ford Motor and Stellantis, said UAW President Shawn Fain, who
leads the union that represents about 150,000 workers.
Fain reiterated that the union did not plan to extend the deadline to
get a new labor contract. "The deadline is Sept. 14. We have a lot of
options that we are looking at but extension on the contract is not one
of them."
Separately, President Joe Biden, who met with Fain last month, told
reporters in Nevada he is concerned about a potential UAW strike.
"I think that there should be a circumstance where jobs that are being
displaced are replaced with new jobs" for UAW members "and the salaries
should be commensurate."
Some senators want national UAW agreements to cover jobs at battery
joint ventures that currently pay less.
Fain said workers had made numerous concessions over the last two
decades including giving up wage hikes, defined benefit pensions and
post-retirement health care benefits.
"We're fed up," Fain said, listing a series of demands. "We've sat back
for decades while these companies continue to just take and take and
take from us."
Fain has outlined an ambitious set of demands, including wage hikes of
46%, an end to the tiered wage system that pays new hires less than
veterans, reinstating cost-of-living adjustments and restoring
defined-benefit pension plans for new hires that the automakers ended in
2007. At Stellantis, just 30% of hourly U.S. workers are eligible for
defined benefit pensions.
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UAW President Shawn Fain chairs the 2023
Special Elections Collective Bargaining Convention in Detroit,
Michigan, U.S., March 27, 2023. REUTERS/Rebecca Cook/File Photo
Fain said he expected the Detroit Three to come to the bargaining
table next week with counter proposals to the UAW demands. He said
talks were "still going slow" after opening in July. Analysts
estimate a more than 50% chance of a strike.
It was not clear how long it would take a strike to significantly
reduce Detroit Three inventories. Through July, Stellantis U.S. Ram,
Jeep, Chrysler and Dodge each had more than 100 days’ inventory but
many specific popular models have less.
The vote does not guarantee a strike will be called, only that the
union has the right to call a strike if there's no agreement by
Sept. 14.
GM, Ford and Stellantis have said they want to reach a deal that is
fair to workers but also gives the companies flexibility, as the
industry shifts to electric models that have fewer parts and require
less labor.
Ford shares were up 1%, while General Motors were unchanged in
afternoon trade.
(Reporting by Shivansh Tiwary in Bengaluru, Joe White in Detroit and
David Shepardson in Washington, Additional reporting by Nathan Gomes
and Steve Holland in Nevada; Editing by Arun Koyyur and Emelia
Sithole-Matarise and David Gregorio)
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