UAW's influence tested in pivotal Alabama Mercedes-Benz factory union
vote
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[May 17, 2024] By
Nora Eckert
VANCE, Alabama (Reuters) - The outcome of a vote on Friday by workers at
a Mercedes-Benz factory in Alabama will be a key referendum on whether
the United Auto Workers can maintain momentum in the historically
anti-union South.
The UAW hopes to continue a run that includes an overwhelming organizing
victory at a Volkswagen plant in Chattanooga, Tennessee, as well as a
lucrative new contract at six Daimler Truck facilities across the South.
Daimler Truck was spun off from what is now Mercedes.
A win at Mercedes would make it the second foreign-owned automaker in
the U.S. South to join the UAW, a historic feat in a region that has
previously been inhospitable to unions.
VW workers twice voted against the UAW before last month's win, and
Nissan workers at a plant in Mississippi rejected the UAW by a wide
margin in 2017. In 2021, workers at an Amazon.com warehouse in Alabama
voted against forming a union by a more than 2-to-1 margin.
"If the union wins, they improve their momentum dramatically for future
organizing," Harley Shaiken, labor professor at the University of
California, Berkeley, said of the Mercedes vote.
Results of the election being overseen by the U.S. National Labor
Relations Board are expected to be finalized around 1 p.m. EDT (1700
GMT) on Friday. More than 5,000 eligible workers from an SUV assembly
plant as well as Mercedes’ nearby electric-vehicle battery plant began
casting ballots on Monday.
The company made its feelings clear in the run-up. Signs urging workers
to vote "no" were hung around the plant, and the company hired
anti-union firms to speak with workers about the potential risks of
joining the UAW, according to workers, as well as photos and audio
reviewed by Reuters.
Mercedes has rejected claims it prevented union organizing efforts in
Alabama. A spokeswoman said the company respects employee unionizing
efforts and is ensuring every worker has a chance to vote by secret
ballot while having the information needed to make an informed choice.
Political opposition has been staunch in this campaign, too. Six U.S.
governors, including Alabama's Kay Ivey, signed a letter asking workers
to reject the UAW. They said unionization would stunt the auto
industry's growth across the South.
Workers on both sides expect this election to be close. Mercedes
employee Kay Finklea, who is pro-UAW, said the company's messaging,
including a recent anti-union push with a local pastor, has swayed some
to vote "no."
"I was hoping for a bigger win, but I'll take a close win," she said on
Wednesday. "I think we’ve still got it."
Clinching a win at Mercedes is a critical step in UAW President Shawn
Fain's $40 million mission to organize more than a dozen automakers
across the nation, including Toyota and Tesla. It would also allow the
union to add to its dwindling ranks.
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Signs urge the workers to vote line the road leading up to the
Mercedes plant in Vance, Alabama, U.S., May 16, 2024. REUTERS/Nora
Eckert
HARD TO IGNORE
The vote is hard to ignore for Alabamans who live between Birmingham
and Tuscaloosa; pro-UAW signs poke out of forests on the sides of
Interstate 20 with portraits of longtime Mercedes workers alongside
the UAW emblem.
Ahead of the vote, the German automaker also shuffled its
leadership, installing Federico Kochlowski as the new head of
Mercedes Benz U.S. In a speech to workers last week, Kochlowski
addressed concerns about worker safety, long hours and flagging
morale at the plant.
"I don’t want to sugar-coat issues," he said in audio reviewed by
Reuters. "You don’t know me, but you can trust me."
Some Mercedes workers are encouraged.
"He's very team member-oriented, so maybe things might change
positively," said Jay White, who has been employed at the plant for
18 years and is anti-UAW.
The Mercedes and Volkswagen U.S. factories were the first two to
reach a supermajority of workers signing cards supporting the union,
a threshold at which the group calls for an election. The UAW has
not yet said any other plants have reached that level.
However, workers at two other plants in the South - a Hyundai plant
in Alabama and a Toyota parts factory in Missouri - have launched
organizing campaigns, with 30% of employees signing cards supporting
the UAW.
Workers who have attempted to organize at the Mercedes factory for
years said this time felt different, largely because the union had
proven its mettle by winning record contracts in Detroit. After a
contentious six-week walkout last autumn against General Motors,
Ford and Jeep-maker Stellantis, the union won wage increases of 25%
and cost-of-living adjustments for workers.
The environment has also never been better for the UAW. Public
support for unions has soared in recent years and U.S. President Joe
Biden made a historic appearance to walk picket lines outside
Detroit last autumn.
Biden's opponent in the November election - former president Donald
Trump - has accused the UAW of allowing the manufacturing of EVs to
steal American jobs.
The union's mission is to continue striking while the iron is hot.
"We're moving as fast as we can,” Fain said last month.
(Reporting by Nora Eckert in Vance, Alabama; Editing by Ben Klayman
and Matthew Lewis)
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