Biden to visit Michigan to support auto strike, a day before Trump
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[September 23, 2023]
By Jeff Mason, Heather Timmons and Ben Klayman
WASHINGTON/TOLEDO, Ohio (Reuters) -U.S. President Joe Biden will travel
to Michigan on Tuesday to show support for the United Auto Workers'
strike against Detroit automakers, putting him in the center of the
dispute that has pitted his labor allies against major manufacturers.
Biden, a Democrat, sees himself as a pro-union president and his visit
to the state, a day before former President Donald Trump is scheduled to
be there, will underscore his support for union workers' right to take
action and engage in collective bargaining.
"Tuesday, I’ll go to Michigan to join the picket line and stand in
solidarity with the men and women of UAW as they fight for a fair share
of the value they helped create," Biden said on Friday in a post on X,
the social media platform formerly known as Twitter. "It’s time for a
win-win agreement that keeps American auto manufacturing thriving with
well-paid UAW jobs."
Biden is running for re-election in 2024 and will likely face Trump, who
is the frontrunner for the Republican presidential nomination.
A spokesperson for Trump's campaign said Biden's trip to Michigan was "a
cheap photo op."
"The only reason Biden is going to Michigan on Tuesday is because
President Trump announced he is going on Wednesday," the Trump campaign
said in a statement late on Friday.
The UAW on Friday invited Biden to visit workers on its picket lines,
and said that it would expand its Detroit strike to parts distribution
centers across the United States at General Motors and Chrysler parent
Stellantis. The company said it has made real progress in talks with
Ford Motor.
"It’s very rare for a president to visit strikers," said Jeremi Suri, a
historian and presidential scholar at the University of Texas at Austin.
He added that even pro-labor Democratic President Jimmy Carter never
visited a picket line. "This would be a major, major shift for Biden to
identify the presidency with striking workers, rather than siding with
industry or staying above the fray."
UAW WITHHOLDS ENDORSEMENT
Numerous unions have already endorsed Biden's re-election, but the UAW
has for now withheld its endorsement. Biden said the automakers should
"go further to ensure record corporate profits mean record contracts for
the UAW," echoing sentiments by union leaders.
Both the Detroit Three and the UAW have a lot at stake from federal
policy decisions. The automakers are counting on Washington for billions
in subsidies for electric-vehicle production. They are negotiating with
the Biden administration over future emissions rules that require a
shift to EVs that the industry believes would be too fast and too
expensive.
The union, meanwhile, is concerned that the transition to EVs will mean
a loss of jobs as those vehicles require fewer parts in production.
Trump plans to travel to Detroit to speak at a rally advertised for auto
workers as he tries to win back some blue-collar voters who defected to
Biden in his victory in 2020. Trump has called for rank-and-file union
workers to ignore their leaders.
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U.S. President Joe Biden steps out of an electric Chevrolet
Silverado EV pickup truck being shown to him by General Motors Chief
Executive Mary Barra during a visit to the Detroit Auto Show to
highlight electric vehicle manufacturing in America, in Detroit,
Michigan, U.S., September 14, 2022. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File
Photo
FIGHTING BILLIONAIRE CLASS
Trump has not said if he will visit the picket lines. United Auto
Workers President Shawn Fain blasted Trump earlier in the week,
saying the union was "fighting the billionaire class and an economy
that enriches people like Donald Trump at the expense of workers."
The last U.S. president to show such support for striking workers
was probably Theodore Roosevelt, Suri said. In 1902, Roosevelt
invited striking coal workers to the White House with government
officials and management, concerned that the country faced a coal
shortage.
Ahead of the precedent-shattering meeting, Roosevelt, like Biden,
found himself with little leverage to negotiate.
"There is literally nothing ... the national government has any
power to do," Roosevelt complained to U.S. Senator Henry Cabot
Lodge, according to a recounting of the strike on the Department of
Labor website. "I am at wit's end how to proceed."
Workers on the picket lines had mixed feelings over whether Biden
should visit. Some said politicians should stay out of the fray,
while others said they would welcome the support if the strike
continued.
“Me personally, I wouldn’t mind if Biden stepped up and showed some
support," said Laura Zielinski, 55, of Toledo, Ohio, on Tuesday,
noting Biden's visit to the Stellantis Toledo assembly plant in 2010
while he served as vice president.
"Support like that would put a spotlight on the talks - kind of give
a nudge to the companies.”
Thomas Morris, 60, who was on a picket line in the Philadelphia
suburbs, said he appreciated Biden's support of unions and calls for
corporations to pass along record profits to workers and consumers.
He would love to see Biden join. "It would bring a lot of publicity
and help the fight," Morris said.
(Reporting by Heather Timmons and Jeff Mason in Washington, Ben
Klayman in Toledo, Ohio, and David Gaffen in New York; additional
reporting by Kanishka Singh in Washington and Jarrett Renshaw;
Editing by Matthew Lewis, Nick Zieminski and Alistair Bell and
Timothy Gardner)
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