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After the Chrysler saleCerberus set to demand massive
concessions
By Shannon Jones
21 May 2007
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Following its announced sale to Cerberus Capital Management,
Chrysler officials are set to press for massive concessions, including
additional job cuts, in upcoming contract talks with the United
Auto Workers (UAW).
Investment analysts have greeted with enthusiasm the statements
by UAW President Ron Gettelfinger and Canadian Auto Workers (CAW)
President Buzz Hargrove praising the sale. It is taken as a sign
that the labor bureaucracy will not offer resistance to the huge
cuts that will be demanded by Chrysler as well as the other Big
Three automakers General Motors and Ford.
Reuters quoted Bear Stearns analyst Peter Nesvold, who declared,
We are favorably impressed with the UAWs seemingly
even-handed initial response, considering how adamantly the union
had sounded against a sale to private equity just a few weeks
ago. In our view the sale opens the door to further restructuring
in Detroit.
In other words, the union-endorsed buyout of Chrysler is only
a prelude to deep attacks on auto workers and will be used to
browbeat and intimidate workers at the other auto companies.
The promises the UAW and CAW officials say Cerberus
made about retaining jobs and benefits are worthless. Chrysler
CEO Tom LaSorda, who is being kept on by Cerberuswhile pocketing
$4.5 million in severance from DaimlerChryslersaid the first
order of business would be to cut more than $300 million in healthcare
benefits from Chrysler retirees and their dependents. The UAW
and CAW have also praised the letter sent by a Chrysler official
saying that outside of the 13,000 previously announced job cuts
there would no reduction in head count due to the
transaction. The so-called pledge, however, includes that caveat
that layoffs wouldnt take place unless abnormal market
conditions and productivity gains required it.
Meanwhile, the news media and political figures in Michigan
and other states where Chrysler has plants is presenting as good
coin the claims by Cerberus management that the firm does not
plan to dismantle Chrysler but is committed to the long-term development
of the company. On May 20, the Detroit Free Press published
a glowing tribute to Cerberuss chief executive Stephen Feinberg.
The financier, who reportedly raked in some $900 million last
year, is presented as a straight-talking blue collar
guy deeply concerned about the workers.
The Free Press writes, Instead of a strip-mining
approach typically used by so-called vulture investors, Cerberus
has evolved into a corporate fix-it shop, making money by solving
management problems that can take up to a decadeeven if
it means Cerberus has to bare its teeth from time to time.
Following last weeks announcement, Michigans Democratic
governor, Jennifer Granholm, joined the effort to hoodwink Chrysler
workers26,000 of whom work in the state. Todays
announcement by DaimlerChrysler AG that it will sell the Chrysler
Group to Cerberus, she declared, is a solid announcement
for the state of Michigan and Michigan workers.
While the UAW, Democratic politicians and the corporate media
are telling auto workers that the Cerberus takeover of Chrysler
will mean no additional job cuts, in private it is well understood
that the opposite is the case. According to a May 14 report in
CNNMoney.com, One high ranking UAW official reportedly told
a meeting of Chrysler Jeep workers in Toledo that Cerberus planned
to close five plants, cut another 30,000 jobs and sell the Jeep
brand if it bought the company.
As the WSWS reported May 16, the
praise the UAW has bestowed on the sale of Chrysleronly
weeks after denouncing private equity firms for stripping
and flipping companieshas nothing to do with concern
for the interests of auto workers. Instead, it is based on the
calculation of a fat payoff, including the possible offloading
of the Big Three automakers retiree healthcare liabilities
to a fund controlled by the UAW bureaucracy.
A report in the May 17 Indianapolis Star declared, Experts
expect Cerberus to ask the United Auto Workers for a 30 percent
cut in wages and benefits, so the number of [job] cuts could go
much higher than 13,000.
Some analysts have suggested that the outline of an agreement
is already pretty well established. They have to have talked
at great depth about what theyre going to do, said
David Cole, chairman of the Center for Automotive Research, referring
to the UAW and the automakers.
While there is unanimous support for an assault on auto workers
living standards within business, political and media circles,
the expansion of private equity firms has become an issue of concern
to layers within the ruling establishment because of the potential
instability they bring. In the German press and elsewhere, private
equity firms have been described as locusts that undermine
the long-term viability of enterprises they own in the chase for
immediate returns.
The operations of the private equity firms of the present decade
differ in little respect from the notorious leveraged buyouts
of the 1980s that culminated in scandal with the trial of junk
bond king Michael Milken and the collapse of investment bank Drexel
Burnham Lambert.
In the wake of the announced sale of Chrysler to Cerberus,
there have been references in the press to the possibility that
the new owners may deliberately drive the company toward bankruptcy
in order to increase pressure for concessions. Since bankruptcy
allows a company to legally cancel its union contact, Cerberus
has an incentive to increase Chryslers debt and siphon off
its cash in order to undermine its finances.
A May 18 report by the Associated Press warns that Cerberus
will bring a big bat into negotiations for a new contract
with the UAW. It cites Harry Katz, dean of the Cornell University
School of Industrial and Labor Relations, who comments, What
Cerberus does is bring to the forefront the real possibility,
if the union doesnt agree to real major changes in the legacy
costs, they would face bankruptcy rather than just an incremental
adjustment in wages or benefits. It brings home kind of the atom
bomb scare.
A piece in the May 18 edition of the New York Times notes,
Cerberus has a lot of leverage in the talks, analysts say,
because it can threaten to dismember Chrysler or take it into
bankruptcy protection, leaving workers with no health insurance
and uncertain pensions.
Auto industry analysts have repeatedly stressed that the combined
$100 billion in retiree healthcare liabilities of the three major
US auto companies makes them uncompetitive and have
to be slashed. The continued rise in gas prices and stagnant or
falling auto sales will provide further incentive for Chrysler
and the other automakers to close plants and further rationalize
production.
These facts are well known to the UAW bureaucracy. The support
for the sale of Chrysler expressed by the union leadership amounts
to an attempt to disarm autoworkers in the face of the attacks
that are coming. It is further confirmation of the role of the
UAW as the instrument of a privileged apparatus, hostile to the
interests of autoworkers.
See Also:
The Cerberus takeover of Chryslerwhat
it means for auto workers
[17 May 2007]
Why the United Auto Workers supports Cerberus
take-over of Chrysler
[16 May 2007]
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