News & Commentary October 8, 2023 UAW wins battery plant concession from GM
https://onlabor.org/october-8-2023/
By Swap Agrawal
Swap Agrawal is a student at Harvard Law School.
In this weekends news and commentary, UAW wins battery plant concession from GM, and labor advocates react to the appointment of Laphonza Butler to Californias vacant U.S. Senate seat.
On Friday, United Auto Workers (UAW) President Shawn Fain announced that General Motors (GM) agreed to include workers at joint-venture battery plants under the unions national labor agreement. GM had previously argued that the union cant legally negotiate over EV battery plants, but the threat of an escalating strike caused the company to change its tune. The UAW was poised to call on 5,000 workers at GMs assembly plant in Arlington, Texas to join the Stand Up Strike. GMs Arlington plant is considered to be one of the most profitable manufacturing facility in the world. These workers would have joined 25,000 already on strike at five assembly plants and 38 parts distribution centers nationwide. We were about to shut down GMs largest money maker, in Arlington Texas, said Fain on Facebook Live. Today, under threat of a major financial hit, they leapfrogged the pack in terms of a just transition. And heres the punchline: Our strike is working. But were not there yet.
UAW President Fain shared this update on Facebook Live while symbolically awarding roses to automakers General Motors, Stellantis, and Ford based on progress at the negotiating table, a reference to the reality show The Bachelor. Fain said that based on the companies progress, it will not expand its strikes against the Big Three. These public updates on bargaining are a key feature of UAWs shift in strategy. Traditionally, UAW negotiators disclosed nothing while union members sat tight and waited for a final result. Serious bargaining happens at the table, not in public, complained GM CEO Mary Barra in a September 29 statement. The UAW is pitting the companies against one another, but its a strategy that ultimately only helps the nonunion competition. However, non-union workers are drawing inspiration from UAWs updates. The response from auto workers at nonunion companies has been overwhelming, Fain told NBC News. Hundreds of workers across the country, from the West to the Midwest and especially the South, are reaching out to join our movement and to join the UAW.
FULL story at link above.