UAW president meets with Biden as union opens automaker contract talks
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[July 20, 2023] By
David Shepardson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -United Auto Workers (UAW) President Shawn Fain met
on Wednesday with President Joe Biden at the White House as the union
briefed staff on contract talks with the Detroit Three automakers.
Fain, who was on Capitol Hill meeting with lawmakers to discuss the
labor talks and the union's push for higher wages and benefits, has not
yet endorsed Biden for re-election and has criticized some
administration electric vehicle policies. Most other major unions have
already endorsed Biden.
The UAW leadership had asked for time to brief White House senior staff
on the Detroit Three contract negotiations, a White House official said.
That meeting took place on Wednesday in the West Wing, and when Biden
learned of it, he asked to also talk directly with Fain and the two had
a brief meeting, the official added.
Last month, Fain harshly criticized the U.S. Energy Department plan to
lend $9.2 billion to a joint venture of Ford Motor and South Korea's SK
On to build three U.S. battery plants.
Asked about his message for Biden on how he could boost auto workers
given the federal incentives, Fain said: "We just really discussed what
options are out there. We just have to see where things go."
Fain said last week the UAW was not ready to endorse Biden. "We have
expectations and that's why we haven't made endorsements yet. We expect
people to be there for us if they want our endorsement," he said.
Fain was in Washington in April and met with White House Chief of Staff
Jeff Zients.
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United Auto Workers President Shawn Fain
greets workers at the Stellantis Sterling Heights Assembly Plant, to
mark the beginning of contract negotiations in Sterling Heights,
Michigan, U.S. July 12, 2023. REUTERS/Rebecca Cook
Fain, who represents 150,000 U.S. hourly workers at General Motors,
Ford and Chrysler parent Stellantis, has not ruled out striking all
three U.S. automakers if new contracts are not reached by the Sept.
14 deadline.
Fain told lawmakers what members were seeking in new contracts. He
said the Detroit Three had earned nearly $250 billion in profit over
the last decade in North America. "It's a very uneven playing field
right now," Fain said. "Our workers have regressed. We've got to do
better."
Fain said Stellantis CEO Carlos Tavares did not attend the opening
of contract talks last week and Stellantis' chief operating officer
for North America, Mark Stewart, was late.
"The fact that Tavares couldn't even show up for the beginning of
bargaining, the most critical set of negotiations in this company's
history, is shameful," Fain said.
Stellantis said Tuesday in response that it believed the opening
session with the UAW "went well and we intend on continuing to
approach these discussions in a respectful manner."
The UAW said in a memo Wednesday that during the opening of talks
with GM the day before that the union made clear the Sept. 14
contract expiration "is not a suggestion, it is a deadline."
(Reporting by David Shepardson in WashingtonEditing by Leslie Adler
and Matthew Lewis)
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