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More Chrysler locals reject UAW contract betrayal
By Jerry White
22 October 2007
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Auto workers at six large union locals have voted to reject
the tentative agreement reached between the United Auto Workers
union and Chrysler LLC. If opposition continues in the same proportion,
the contract will be defeated. This would be the first national
UAW contract defeated by the rank and file since 1982, when Chrysler
workers fought to recoup losses from the 1979-80 Chrysler bailout.
The no vote on Sunday at the Jefferson North plant
in Detroit was a particular blow to the UAW bureaucracy. Top union
officials, such as UAW President Ron Gettelfinger and Vice President
General Holiefield, had personally campaigned for a yes
vote at the plant. According to workers attending the union meeting,
Holiefield announced the factorys second shift would soon
be laid off. He threatened workers by saying that it was unlikely
they would get their jobs back if they did not approve a contract
that improved Chryslers competitiveness.
The contract opens the door for Chryslers ownersprivate
equity firm Cerberus Capital Managementto accelerate plans
to shut down and sell off plants and impose sweeping wage and
benefit concessions. In exchange the UAW bureaucracy will get
control of one of the largest private investment funds in the
USa multi-billion retiree health care trust fund, known
as a Voluntary Employees Beneficiary Association or VEBA.
There was widespread opposition to the contract among Jefferson
workers, with some carrying hand-made signs saying, Vote
No. Fifty-seven percent of 1,100 production workers and
79.5 percent of 195 skilled trades workers opposed the deal, according
to the union.
Supporters of the Socialist Equality Party interviewed workers
and distributed statements opposing the contract at the Jefferson
North plant. (See Detroit auto
workers speak out against UAW-Chrysler contract)
The Detroit plant, which employs 2,200 workers who make the
Jeep Grand Cherokee and Jeep Commander, was the fourth large assembly
plant to reject the contract since voting began Thursday.
On Saturday, 79 percent of production workers from UAW Local
110 at the St. Louis (South) assembly plant rejected the contract.
Members of UAW Local 136 at the sister plant, St. Louis (North)
Assembly, voted down the deal by an 81 percent margin. Fifty-four
percent of Local 1183 workers who voted rejected the contract
at the companys Newark, Delaware plant, which is closing
in 2009.
The UAW had hoped the contract would pass at Jefferson North
and St. Louis North, two of only a handful of plants that Chrysler
indicated would have new products following the expiration of
the next contract in 2011.
The contract was also defeated at UAW Local 122, which represents
workers at a stamping plant in Twinsburg, Ohio, where 53 percent
of those who participated voted no, according to the
locals Web site. At UAW Local 961, representing an axle
plant in Detroit, 54 percent of workers who voted turned down
the contract.
So far, at least six localsrepresenting more than 11,000
workershave rejected the deal reached between the union
and automaker, and at least eight othersrepresenting nearly
6,500 workershave approved it, according to the Detroit
News. Smaller locals in Trenton, Michigan; Perrysburg, Ohio;
Milwaukee and Kenosha, Wisconsin; and Morrow, Georgia, supported
the deal.
A majority of Chryslers 45,000 UAW members must vote
yes for approval. A Chrysler executive told the Detroit
Free Press the company believes were in trouble
if the contract failed at Jefferson North Assembly Plant in Detroit
and two other assembly plants, which are voting this week, in
Belvidere, Illinois and Sterling Heights, Michigan.
In the face of mass opposition several local union leaders
have opposed the deal, in contrast to the agreement with General
Motors, which was unanimously supported by local presidents. The
UAW bureaucracy has moved quickly to suppress the opposition from
within its ranks.
On October 17 UAW Vice President Holiefield sent a letter to
local officials whose appointments are dependent on the approval
of the international union, making it clear that opposition to
the deal could mean the loss of their well-paid positions and
a return to the assembly line. The International Union is
asking that all appointed union representatives stand in solidarity
in support of this Tentative Agreement, the letter read
in part, adding that they should educate [themselves] on
the contents contained in the highlights and seek out workers
to show your support. It concluded, Please acknowledge
your receipt and endorsement of this Tentative Agreement by your
signature and Local Union number below.
The New York Times reported that union leaders
have several options before the voting ends. Officials have already
begun lobbying local leaders to push for approval of the deal.
Since some contract details still need to be worked out, the union
and the company could come up with assurances or provisions at
particular plants that could help swing the vote in favor.
This includes offering a $3,000 signing bonus to temporary workers
at the Belvidere, Illinois, assembly plant, where opposition is
widespread because they are not being hired as full-time employees,
like temporary workers at GM.
Even more ominously, the New York Times reported, If
the contract seems headed to defeat, the union could suspend the
voting and go on to Ford in hopes of reaching an agreement there.
Such undemocratic methods would not be alien to the UAW, which
is controlled by a bureaucracy completely unaccountable to the
workers it claims to represent.
There are also signs those union officials currently opposing
the deal would be more than willing to back a renegotiated offer
if it included certain cosmetic changes. A leading opponent of
the contract is Bill Parker, chief of the UAW Chrysler committee
that negotiated the accord and president of Local 1700 at the
Sterling Heights Assembly plant. Long associated with the New
Directions faction of the UAW, Parker has criticized UAW President
Ron Gettelfinger for not securing commitments for work at Chrysler
plants as far into the future as he did in the UAW-General Motors
agreement.
If fact, those so-called commitments are worthless. Any new
products are contingent on market conditions, and
there are countless loopholes for GM to continue shutting plants
and laying off thousands of workers. This was underscored by the
announcements made after the GM contract was approved that the
company was eliminating second shifts at the Detroit/Hamtramck
and Pontiac truck assembly plantstwo factories where new
product commitments were madelaying off more than 1,600
workers indefinitely.
Parker and other dissidents in the UAW do not offer any genuine
alternative to the Solidarity House bureaucracy. The issue is
not reforming the UAWwhich, with the VEBA scheme, will now
become a profit-making businessbut breaking with this outlived
organization.
Rejection of the contract is only the first step. The contract
fight must be taken out of the hands of the UAW and rank-and-file
committee organized to launch a struggle to defend workers
jobs, living standards and working conditions. A national auto
strike should be launched and a campaign begun to bring out GM,
Ford, Delphi, Visteon and other workers, together with an appeal
to auto workers in Canada, Latin America, Asia and Europe who
are facing attacks by the same global auto giants.
The defense of workers conditions and rights must be
developed on an entirely new basis. This means, above all, the
building of a new political movement of the working class, independent
of the two parties of big business, to fight for a program that
starts from the needs of working people, not the profits and stock
portfolios of CEOs and Wall Street speculators.
See Also:
Large UAW local votes 80 percent to reject:
Chrysler sellout faces strong rank-and-file opposition
[20 October 2007]
Vote no on UAW sellout at
Chrysler! Elect rank-and-file committees for contract fight!
[19 October 2007]
UAW deal opens door for Chrysler carve-up
[18 October 2007]
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