Volkswagen workers hold 2-hour strikes to push back against proposed pay
cuts and plant closures
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[December 02, 2024]
FRANKFURT, Germany (AP) — Volkswagen workers launched rolling two-hour
strikes Monday at nine plants across Germany to underscore their
resistance to pay cuts and factory closures the company says are
necessary to cope with a slack European auto market.
The work stoppages included the company's base plant at Wolfsburg, where
workers rallied against a cost-cutting drive by the automaker’s
management in which they face the threat of the company’s first plant
closures in its home country.
Volkswagen argues that it must lower costs in Germany to levels achieved
by competitors and by Volkswagen plants in eastern Europe and South
America. Chief employee representative Daniela Cavallo has said
employees should not shoulder the burden of management failures to
develop attractive products and come up with a cheaper, entry-level
electric vehicle.
“We demand that all make their contribution – management and the
shareholder side as well,” Cavallo said at the rally in Wolfsburg as
employees drummed, whistled and clapped.
She said the next round of talks in a week’s time “is likely to set the
course – rapprochement or escalation. We are ready for both.”
The so-called warning strikes, a common tactic in German wage
negotiations, are taking place as part of talks for a new labor
agreement after a mandatory peace period that bars strikes expired on
Sunday. The IG Metall industrial union said any job actions beyond those
occurring on Monday would be announced later.
The company is demanding a 10% pay cut for 120,000 German workers and
has said it can't avoid shedding factory capacity that is no longer
needed. Employee representatives say the company has proposed closing
three of its German plants.
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Volkswagen workers march holding a sign with writing reading in
German "Ready to Strike!" on the first day of a nationwide warning
Volkswagen workers' strike, in Zwickau, Germany, Monday, Dec. 2,
2024. (Hendrik Schmidt/dpa via AP)
Thorsten Gröger, the regional leader of the IG Metall industrial union
in Lower Saxony, where Volkswagen is headquartered, said that the
company won’t be able to “overlook” the walkouts. “If necessary, this
will be one of the toughest conflicts Volkswagen has ever seen.”
The company hasn't publicly detailed its plans but is facing a drop in
demand in Europe, higher costs and increasing competition from Chinese
automakers. Volkswagen built factories to supply a European car market
of 16 million in annual vehicle sales, but now faces demand for around
14 million, Volkswagen brand head Thomas Schaefer was quoted as saying
in the Welt am Sonntag newspaper. Since Volkswagen has a quarter of the
market, that represents a loss of 500,000 cars a year.
For years, strong profits in China helped cover higher costs but the
changing environment now means that “it's high time to address this,”
Schaefer said.
The walkouts began at a plant in Zwickau in eastern Germany and were to
continue at plants in Braunschweig, Chemnitz, Dresden, Emden, Hanover,
Kassel, and Salzgitter.
The next negotiations are slated for Dec. 9.
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