UAW strike decision day comes as bargaining heats up
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[October 06, 2023] By
Joseph White
DETROIT (Reuters) - United Auto Workers President Shawn Fain is
scheduled to say later on Friday whether recent intensified bargaining
with the Detroit Three automakers has produced enough progress to
forestall more walkouts.
A video address by Fain is scheduled for 2 p.m. EDT (1800 GMT) and will
cover substantive bargaining updates, people familiar with the UAW's
plans said. That timing is a departure from the previous two Fridays in
which Fain addressed union members at about 10 a.m. Detroit time (1400
GMT), and ordered walkouts at additional Detroit Three factories to
start at noon.
Fain kept automakers guessing with a social media post on Thursday
afternoon that showed an image of three men in suits, their faces
obscured by the logos of the Detroit automakers, standing in front of a
table with roses on it. "Tune into @UAW's Facebook page at 2pm on
Friday, October 6th to see who gets the rose!" Fain tweeted, a reference
to the television reality show "The Bachelorette," in which the week's
winners get a rose.
In the UAW version, the winner offers richer contract terms, and gets a
week without a new strike.
People familiar with the bargaining among the UAW and Detroit automakers
General Motors, Ford Motor and Chrysler parent Stellantis said talks
have heated up this week after days of little movement.
Ford, GM and Stellantis have made new proposals in an effort to end the
escalating cycle of walkouts that threaten to undercut profits and
cripple smaller suppliers already strained from months of production
cuts forced by semiconductor shortages.
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Striking United Auto Workers members from the General Motors Lansing
Delta Plant picket on a street corner in Delta Township, Michigan
U.S. September 29, 2023. REUTERS/Rebecca Cook/File Photo
Ford said its latest wage offer would provide raises in excess of
20% over the life of a contract. Combined with proposed
cost-of-living-adjustments, workers could see close to 30% increases
in pay, people familiar with the proposal said.
Fain's Friday video addresses have become must-see events since he
launched coordinated strikes at GM, Ford and Stellantis plants
shortly after midnight on Sept. 15.
Each Friday since, Fain has kept the automakers in suspense as to
whether he would order additional plants shut down, or give an
automaker a pass because they had offered new concessions. So far,
the union has ordered walkouts at five assembly plants and 38 parts
depots operated by GM and Stellantis.
Fain passed over Ford on the Friday that he called for strikes
against parts depots.
Last Friday, Fain called off a strike planned at one of Stellantis'
assembly plants after the automaker delivered new proposals minutes
before the scheduled start of his talk.
(Reporting by Joe White in Detroit; Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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