UAW reaches deal with GM, ending strike against Detroit automakers
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[October 31, 2023] By
David Shepardson and Joseph White
(Reuters) - General Motors and the United Auto Workers (UAW) struck a
tentative deal on Monday, ending the union's unprecedented six-week
campaign of coordinated strikes that won record pay increases for
workers at the Detroit Three automakers.
The accord follows deals the union reached in recent days with Ford
Motor and Chrysler-owner Stellantis - significant victories for auto
workers after years of stagnant wages and painful concessions following
the 2008 financial crisis.
"We wholeheartedly believe our strike squeezed every last dime out of
General Motors," UAW President Shawn Fain said in a video address. "They
underestimated us. They underestimated you."
The union officially suspended its strike against the Detroit Three. UAW
local leaders will come to Detroit on Friday to consider the deal with
GM, before taking terms to all union workers for ratification.
"We are looking forward to having everyone back to work across all of
our operations," said GM CEO Mary Barra.
The new contracts will significantly raise costs for the automakers. The
companies and some analysts have said the deals will make it harder for
the Detroit Three to compete with electric-vehicle leader Tesla and
nonunion foreign brands such as Toyota Motor.
The UAW won from GM roughly the same package of wage increases agreed
with the other two automakers. Pay for veteran workers will rise by 33%
and GM will give $2,500 in five payments to retirees through 2028.
Sources have said pension benefits were a sticking point in the UAW's
negotiations with GM, which has more retirees than Ford or Stellantis.
Fain said the union's move on Saturday to strike a key GM engine factory
in Spring Hill, Tennessee, "landed the knockout blow" that got the deal.
The contract reverses years of efforts by GM to create lower-paid groups
of UAW workers at units such as component plants, parts warehouses and
electric vehicle battery operations. It puts workers at GM's battery
joint-venture with South Korea's LG Energy under the national agreement.
Fain said some workers at GM's component operations will get pay
increases of as much as 89%.
The contract also restricts use of lower paid temporary workers. "We
have slammed the door on having a permanent underclass of temporary
workers at GM," Fain said.
The UAW also gained more sway over the companies' investment decisions
by securing the right to strike over future plant closures.
All three companies have said they do not plan to close existing
factories as they shift to EVs. Yet the contract could force them to
keep unprofitable plants open during a recession or period of slow sales
for new models.
HIGHER COSTS
A series of walkouts began on Sept. 15, and nearly 50,000 workers out of
nearly 150,000 UAW members at the Detroit automakers eventually joined.
The strategy of escalating strikes cost the Detroit Three and suppliers
billions of dollars.
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An independent contractor hauls vehicles made at the Spring Hill
General Motors (GM) manufacturing plant as Union members picket
General Motors (GM) in the midst of a tentative deal being reached
with the United Auto Workers (UAW), which expanded its strike over
the weekend to the General Motors (GM) engine plant in Spring Hill,
Tennessee, U.S. October 30, 2023. REUTERS/Seth Herald
UAW leaders called their contract fight part of a larger movement to
reverse decades of economic setbacks for working-class Americans.
Some analysts agreed.
"This is more than an auto industry story; it is a signal to the
entire country that unionized workers can demand and get big wage
increases," said Patrick Anderson of the Anderson Economic Group.
The new contract will cost GM $7 billion over 4.5 years in higher
labor costs, two sources told Reuters. Ford said last week it would
add $850 to $900 per vehicle in labor costs.
"Consumers will bear some of the cost burden over time ...
automakers will not have an easy time passing along all of the costs
... and will have to seek efficiencies in other ways, or further
limit production to more expensive vehicles that can absorb higher
labor costs," Cox Automotive's chief economist, Jonathan Smoke,
said.
PRAISE FROM BIDEN
U.S. President Joe Biden and politicians from both parties weighed
in to support the UAW as the union's fight gained popularity with
voters. Michigan will again be a crucial swing state in the 2024
presidential election, and Fain made support for the union's fight a
condition of winning his endorsement. The UAW still has not formally
endorsed Biden's re-election.
"This historic contract is a testament to the power of unions and
collective bargaining to build strong middle-class jobs while
helping our most iconic American companies thrive," Biden said in a
statement. His aides had worried that a prolonged strike would
damage the U.S. economy and the Democratic president's chances of
re-election in 2024.
The UAW has said it is committed to organizing workforces at other
carmakers, making negotiations in 2028 between the union and the
"Big Five or Big Six."
Momentum toward deals accelerated over the past two weeks after UAW
workers walked out at three of the most profitable factories in the
world. The UAW eventually struck against nine plants.
"We have shown the companies, the American public and the whole
world that the working class is not done fighting" Fain said. "In
fact, we're just getting started."
(Reporting by David Shepardson in Washington and Joseph White in
Detroit; Additional reporting by Shivansh Tiwary, Kannaki Deka and
Richard Francis in Bengaluru; Writing by Deepa Babington and
Sayantani Ghosh; Editing by David Gaffen, Alistair Bell, Peter
Henderson, Matthew Lewis and David Gregorio)
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