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As contract faces rejection
UAW conspires with Chrysler to impose agreement
By Jerry White
23 October 2007
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The United Auto Workers union is engaged in a war against its
membership, colluding with management at Chrysler LLC to impose
a new labor agreement, which a majority of Chrysler workers oppose.
The deal would pave the way for Chryslers Wall Street
ownersprivate equity firm Cerberus Capital Managementto
shut down and sell off dozens of factories, slash the wages of
future workers by half and abolish employer-paid pensions and
retiree health care benefits. In return the UAW bureaucracy would
gain control of a multi-billion trust fund, estimated to be worth
over $70 billion once deals are sealed with all three of Detroits
automakers.
This betrayal has provoked an upsurge of opposition from rank-and-file
workers. A majority of Chrysler workers who have voted thus far,
including those at four large assembly plants in St. Louis, Detroit
and Newark, Delaware, have rejected the deal. If the opposition
continues at this rate in votes scheduled this week at assembly
plants in Sterling Heights and Warren, Michigan, as well as Belvidere,
Illinois, the contract will be defeated. This would mark the first
rejection of a national auto agreement since 1982.
While threats have been leaked to the press that Cerberus might
respond to a rejection of the contract by locking out its 49,000
workers and hiring replacements, at this point it is much more
likely that the private equity firm will rely on the UAW bureaucracy
to push through its demands.
Citing people close to the situation, an article
in the Detroit News reported, [I]f the pact isnt
ratified in the end but the vote is close, Chrysler appears likely
to ask the UAW to take a revote, rather than to directly return
to the bargaining table. Those at Chrysler apparently see a defeat
as the unions problem that must be resolved
by the union.
It is increasingly becoming clear that the UAW bureaucracy
has no intention to let the will of its members decide the matter.
The UAW has responded with a campaign of blackmail, lies and intimidation
to push through a yes vote.
Based on information from union insiders, the New York Times
reported on October 20, 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.
Richard Block, acting director at the Michigan State University
School of Labor and Industrial Relations, also suggested to the
Detroit News that the union leadership, facing widespread
opposition and lacking a quick fix that would satisfy the members,
could choose to move on to negotiations with Ford Motor Co. They
could go on to Ford and get that done because it may help with
Chrysler workersgive them more guidance as to what the pattern
is, Block said.
In other words, the UAW could simply ignore the decision of
its members and isolate the Chrysler workers from GM and Ford
workers in order to ram through the concession contract.
Another option for the union, in the event that the membership
turns the contract down, is to make the workers vote until they
get it right. Citing Canadian Auto Workers President
Buzz Hargrove, who they called a seasoned bargainer,
the Detroit Free Press said, the UAW could wait a
bit and have another vote.
Given the history of the UAW bureaucracy, workers should also
be on guard against efforts to manipulate the results of the ratification
vote, particularly since several locals have refused to make public
how many of their members voted or by what percentage the contract
was approved or rejected.
The conspiracy to ram through Chryslers demands began
even before the tentative agreement was reached. Initially, the
nine-member UAW National Negotiating Committee unanimously opposed
the outlines of the agreement drawn up by UAW President Ronald
Gettelfinger and the International union. According to Shawn Fain,
a member of the bargaining committee at UAW Local 1166 in Kokomo,
Indiana, the International union repeated the vote three more
times, until only one opponent of the deal remained, Bill Parker,
the Chairman of the Negotiating Committee.
Then on October 15, during a meeting of the Chrysler Councilmade
up of presidents and committeepersons from each of Chryslers
local unionsthe International rejected a motion for a roll
call and pushed through a voice vote. Shain noted that this was
a total sham, due to the fact that there was no way to get an
accurate count of those voting in favor or opposed and the fact
that there are numerous people in the council meeting who have
no voice yet they yell out their vote anyway.
Gettelfinger announced the deal had won overwhelming
supportalthough witnesses said a third or more of
the delegates opposed itadding, We give people an
opportunity to express themselves. Were a very democratic
union.
After a series of large locals voted down the contract, UAW
Vice President General Holiefield sent out a letter to appointed
union officials demanding they return it with a signature pledging
their support for the agreement. The letter was a thinly veiled
threat that these appointed officials would lose their high salaries
and be sent back to assembly line if they failed to back the agreement.
With opposition growing, Gettelfinger and Holiefield traveled
to the Jefferson North Assembly plant in Detroit last week, where
they announced that second shift workers being laid off would
not return to their jobs if the contract was not passed. Nevertheless,
60 percent of the workers turned down the deal.
On Monday, Holiefield held a meeting with 60 representatives
from Local 1700which represents workers at the Sterling
Heights Assembly plant who are voting Wednesdayin an effort
to circumvent the president of the local, Parker.
Holiefield announced a previously undisclosed understanding
between the UAW and Chrysler that supposedly guaranteed production
at the plant and other US factories well beyond the 2011 expiration
of a proposed contract if the deal was approved, according to
unnamed union officials who spoke to Reuters.
It sounds to me like theyre making one more push
for the deal, to get it ratified, Erich Merkle, analyst
at IRN Inc., told the newspaper. I guess it comes down to
whether the member base of the UAW trusts the leadership in terms
of these handshake-type deals.
At the Belvidere Assembly plant, the Wall Street Journal
reported, union leaders will have some new carrots to offer
the rank and file. Chrysler has told UAW leaders it will give
preference to the temporary workers when it hires for permanent
jobs, said a person familiar with the matter.
It is urgent that workers take matters into their own hands
by organizing rank-and-file committees to oppose these efforts
to stifle opposition. These committees should monitor the vote
and fight for the launching of a national strike against Chrysler.
The struggle should be spread to workers at GM, Ford, Delphi and
other industries, and an appeal made to auto workers in Canada,
Mexico, Europe and Asia who are facing attacks on their jobs and
living standards. Such a struggle is only possible if it is waged
independently of the UAW.
No confidence should be placed in Parker and other professional
dissidents in the UAW who are currently opposing the deal. They
would be more than willing to back a renegotiated offer if it
included certain cosmetic changes, such as the so-called job commitments
contained in the UAW-General Motors contract.
That such guarantees are worthless was proven immediately after
the GM contract was ratified, when the company announced the indefinite
layoff of 1,600 workers at plants in Detroit and Pontiac, Michigan,
which had received such commitments. On Monday, GM announced that
it would layoff an additional 1,000 workers at an assembly plant
in Lansing, Michigan.
Moreover, the dissidents promote illusions that the UAW can
be forced to defend the interest of autoworkers. Parker told Detroit
Free Press Parker said, I am hoping that Ron [Gettelfinger]
is there to represent us and that if the membership says clearly
that we cant accept this, that he will do the right thing
and go back into negotiations to improve it.
The prerequisite for any serious struggle against the auto
companies is to break decisively from the UAW. It is not a workers
organization but an organization controlled by a bureaucracy whose
interests are hostile to those of the workers it supposedly represents.
With control of the multi-billion retiree trust fund the UAW is
now becoming a big business, which will profit at the same time
that it cuts the benefits of autoworkers.
Rejection of the contract is only the first step. The defense
of workers conditions and rights must be developed on a
completely new basis, entirely independently of every faction
of these outlived and corrupt organizations. 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:
More Chrysler locals reject UAW contract
betrayal
[22 October 2007]
Detroit autoworkers speak out against
UAW-Chrysler contract
[22 October 2007]
Vote no on UAW sellout at
Chrysler! Elect rank-and-file committees for contract fight!
[19 October 2007]
The Cerberus-Chrysler deal:
The case for public ownership of the auto industry
[30 May 2007]
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