Above photo: Jim West.
Seven thousand Auto Workers at two more assembly plants will walk off the job at noon ET today, UAW President Shawn Fain announced in a Facebook Live appearance this morning. Joining the strike are Fordâs Chicago Assembly Plant and General Motorsâ Lansing Delta Township Assembly in Michigan.
Fain announced that Stellantis would be spared this time. The union had been expected to expand the strike today at all three companies, but, said Region 1 Director LaShawn English, three minutes before Fain was scheduled to go on Facebook Live, the UAW received frantic emails from company representatives.
According to Fain, Stellantis made âsignificant progressâ on the cost-of-living adjustment, the right not to cross a picket line, and the right to strike over product commitments and plant closures. âWe are excited about this momentum at Stellantis and hope it continues,â Fain said.
Fain made clear that negotiations with all three companies are ongoing. âIâm still very hopeful that we can reach a deal that reflects the incredible sacrifices and contributions our members have made over the last decade,â he said to 60,000 viewers on Facebook. âBut I also know that what we win at the bargaining table depends on the power we build on the job. Itâs time to use that power.â
âSee you next weekâmaybe?â
Yesterday afternoon, UAW Local 551 member Marcelina Pedraza said her co-workers at the Chicago Assembly Plant were anxiously awaiting the news of the next targets.
âEverybodyâs on edge,â said Pedraza, who is also a member of the reform caucus Unite All Workers for Democracy (UAWD). âItâs like the NFL draft picks. Are we going to be called next? Are we going to get a tentative agreement?â
She said workers were looking forward to Fainâs Facebook bargaining update, crediting the reform leadership with greater transparency and information-sharing.
âMy last two contracts were, âbargaining is going fine,ââ she said, repeating what previous administrations said. âThen eventually, âhereâs a shitty contract, we want you to vote yes on it.ââ
When Pedraza clocked out Thursday, she and her skilled trades co-workers joked with the supervisor: âSee you next weekâmaybe?â
The addition of two more plants will make 25,000 auto workers now on picket lines as part of the unionâs escalating Stand-Up strike, out of 146,000 UAW members at the Big 3.
âThese guys wanted to go out a long time ago,â said Cody Zaremba, a Local 602 member at the Lansing GM plant, after the news broke that his plant would be joining the strike. âWeâre ready. Everybody, truly, I believe, in the entire membership. Theyâre one with whatâs going on.â
Five thousand workers at 38 parts distribution centers across 21 states have been on strike since last Friday, along with 13,000 at three assembly plants in Michigan, Ohio, and Missouri who walked out on September 15. (See a map of all struck facilities here.)
Canvassing dealers
The UAW is now calling on community supporters to organize small teams to canvass dealerships that sell and repair Big 3 cars and trucks. On Tuesday, the union issued a canvassing tool kit with instructions, flyers, press releases, and talking points.
In negotiations with Ford and GM, auto workers have clinched some important gains. Among them is an agreement by both companies to end at least one of the many tiers in current contracts, putting workers at certain parts plants back on the same wage scale as assembly workers. The top rate for Big 3 assembly workers is currently around $32.
Ford, GM, and Stellantis have all proposed to shorten the time it takes workers to reach top pay from eight years to four. The UAW is still demanding workers receive top pay after 90 days.
Ford was spared in last weekâs escalation, because bargainers there had made further progress on gains for workers.
But today the UAW once again called out workers at Ford and GM, putting some muscle behind its bold demandsâa big wage boost, a shorter work week, elimination of tiers, cost-of-living adjustments tied to inflation, protection from plant closures, conversion of temps to permanent employees, and the restoration of retiree health care and benefit-defined pensions to all workers.
Keep them guessing
Previous UAW administrations had decoupled striking from winningâin 2019, 46,000 GM workers struck for 40 days but ended up with only paltry wage gains to show for it.
âTogether weâre putting the fight back in the UAW and in the entire labor movement,â said Fain. âA union thatâs not prepared to strike to win is like a fighter with one hand tied behind his back. Without the strike weapon, the war on workers is a rigged fight. For decades, itâs been the same story: unchecked corporate power, and disappearing worker power. The result is massive inequality across our society. To restore the balance of power we have to restore the strike.â
This year, for the first time in recent history, the union has played the three auto companies against each other with its strike strategy, departing from its tradition of choosing one target company and patterning an agreement at the other two.
The Stand-Up Strike strategy draws inspiration from an approach known as CHAOS (Create Havoc Around Our System), first deployed in 1993 by Alaska Airlines flight attendants, who announced they would be striking random flights. Although they struck only seven flights in a two-month period, Alaska had to send scabs on every plane, just in case. The unpredictability drew enormous media attention and drove management up the wall. Meanwhile the union was able to conserve its strength and minimize risk.
The companies miscalculated where the UAW was going to strike first, stockpiling engines and shipping them cross-country to the wrong facilities. Auto workers relished the self-inflicted supply chain chaos on UAW Facebook groups and other social media platforms.
Non-strikersâ morale on the factory floor has gotten a boost from rank and filers organizing to refuse voluntary overtime. With support both from Fain and the reform caucus UAWD, workers have been encouraging each other to âEight and Skate,â meaning to turn down extra work and decline to do management any favors.
âWeâre hawking every little change theyâre making, like job assignments or parts moves,â said Luigi Gjokaj, Local 51 vice president at the Stellantis Mack plant. âAnything out of the ordinary, weâre pushing back. Weâre paying attention to discipline; are they giving a written warning or time off when they would have done a verbal warning before? Our stewards are on high alert. Our committee people are being very diligent.
âManagement has been real quiet this week. Theyâre a little gun-shy now.â
Majority public support
A majority of Americans support the UAW strikers, and the Big 3 have taken a P.R. hit since the strike began, according to a new survey conducted by the business intelligence firm Caliber.
âEighty-seven percent of respondents told us they were aware of the strike,â Caliber CEO Shahar Silbershatz told The Intercept. âItâs clear the strike is not just causing commercial repercussions, but reputational repercussions as well.â
These reputational repercussions will only worsen. Five strikers were hit by a vehicle leaving a GM parts center in Swartz Creek, Michigan, on the afternoon of September 26. Strikers in Massachusetts and California have also reported incidents of violence against them on picket lines.
GM deployed scabs at its parts depots this weekâthe only company that has done so, as far as we know. Stellantis has lined up scabs to swoop in and keep parts flowing, but itâs not clear whether theyâve actually started working at struck locations.
When Labor Notes reached out for comment the day before scabs were reporting to work, GM said that it was dispatching salaried employees to perform their normal duties. The company didnât say it had put a job listing on recruitment websites paying $14 an hour for scabs to do the work of striking auto workers.
One GM non-union employee told Labor Notes that the company is circulating a questionnaire among salaried employees to prepare to deploy them as scabs at parts distribution centers. Questions reportedly include, âCan you work out-of-town for two weeks/three weeks/duration of the work stoppage?,â âAre you trained and certified in Mobile Equipment?,â and âAre you comfortable working at heights up to 30 feet?â At least some salaried workers are counseling each other on how to turn down the request.
Government help or hinder
On Tuesday, President Joe Biden walked the picket line with auto workersâthe first time a sitting U.S. president has walked a picket line. While to Labor Notes readers that might sound like a low barâlast December, Biden and Congress intervened to block a national railroad strikeâBidenâs latest decision surely must have rankled the corporate elite.
Former President Donald Trump was also in Michigan this week, speaking at a non-union auto parts plant. âComing to Michigan to speak at a non-union employer and pretending it has anything to do with our fight at the Big 3 is just more verbal diarrhea from the former president,â said UAW Vice President Mike Booth.
Those with government power can make or break unions. During the UAWâs Flint sit-down strike in 1936-37, Michigan Governor Frank Murphy declined to use the National Guard to crush the 44-day sit-inâwhich went on to force GM to recognize the UAW. By contrast, Ronald Reaganâs decision to fire air traffic contractors in 1981 had a chilling effectâdubbed the âPATCO Syndromeââon workers organizing strikes throughout the 1980s and 1990s.
Labor historian Nelson Lichtenstein credits the expanding strike with pressuring Biden in the run-up to the 2024 election, challenging the common canard that social disruptions would hurt the re-election prospects of Democrats. âLyndon B. Johnson told Martin Luther King, Jr. in the months before the 1964 election, âDonât have any more demonstrations. Thatâs going to be bad in getting me re-elected,âââ Lichtenstein said. âBut LBJ was wrong.
âToday, you need a demonstration of worker power and solidarity,â Lichtenstein said. âIf Biden knows whatâs good for him, heâll continue to support the auto workers as he did when he visited their picket line. This strike has become a social movement with the capacity to mobilize enormous numbers of working-class people on behalf of the trade unions and those politicians who demonstrate their solidarity with the UAW and other unions.â
Workers are seeing employers make money hand over fist while they work harder for wages that are worth less and less. That not only drives the shift in expectations that we are seeing but also creates the chance for pitched battlesâlike the one at the Big 3âto become national referendums on capitalism.
âWe can unmake itâ
Fain didnât pull any punches in his speech after Biden, drawing a historical parallel between the auto workers who built B-24 Liberator bombers during World War II and those on strike today.
Eighty years later, âitâs a different kind of war weâre fighting,â Fain said. âToday, the enemy isnât some foreign country miles away. Itâs right here in our own area. Itâs corporate greed.
âAnd the weapon we produce to fight that enemy is the liberatorsâthe true liberators. Itâs the working-class people.
âAnd the difference between them and us is, just as our theme song âSolidarity Foreverâ says: âWithout our brain and muscle, not a single wheel would turn.â
âThatâs whatâs different about working-class people. Whether weâre building cars or trucks or running parts distribution centers; whether weâre writing movies or performing TV shows; whether weâre making coffee at Starbucks; whether itâs nursing people back to health; whether itâs educating students, from preschool to collegeâwe do the heavy lifting. We do the real work. Not the CEOs, not the executives.
âAnd though we donât know it, thatâs what power is. We have the power. The world is of our making. The economy is of our making. This industry is of our making.
âAnd as weâve shown, when we withhold our labor, we can unmake it.â
Source: Popularresistance.org











