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Vote no on UAW sellout at GM!
Elect rank-and-file committees for contract fight!
Statement of the Socialist Equality Party and World Socialist
Web Site
1 October 2007
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The following statement is being distributed at ratification
meetings being held at United Auto Workers locals at GM plants
around the US. It is also posted in pdf
format. We urge WSWS readers and auto workers to download and
distribute it as widely as possible.
Auto workers should emphatically reject the total surrender
by the UAW and resume the struggle against General Motors. The
tentative contract means the destruction of virtually all of the
gains won by generations of auto workers. If ratified, it will
have catastrophic consequences for active, retired and future
Big Three workers.
UAW President Ron Gettelfinger has traded the wages, pensions,
health benefits and jobs of UAW members for the right to control
a multibillion-dollar VEBA trust fund and make himself and his
cronies millionaires.
The fact that not one local president voted against the agreement
comes as no surprise to anyone who has followed the UAW. Nevertheless,
it demonstrates that from the standpoint of the workers
interests, the UAW is dead and cannot be revived.
Rejection of the contract is only the first step. Auto workers
should take the struggle out of the hands of the UAW by electing
rank-and-file committees to re-launch the strike and formulate
demands that defend workers jobs, living standards and working
conditions. An appeal should be made to Ford, Chrysler and Delphi
workers to join this fight, and 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 the corporate elite.
Workers should reject completely the claim that the resources
do not exist to provide secure, good-paying jobs, decent pensions
and full health-care coverage. The problem is that the profit
system and the two-party monopoly that defends it subordinate
the needs of the vast majority of people to the modern-day robber
barons. To change this, workers need their own party fighting
for a socialist program based on equality and genuine democracy.
The contract summary distributed by the UAW is a whitewash
consisting of half-truths and lies. Its talk about job security
is a fraud. Its assurances that the health benefits and pensions
of retirees are secure are phony to the core.
Wall Streets verdict on the deal confirms that it is
a sellout of historical proportions. The companys stock
went up 7 percent for the week. The Wall Street Journal wrote
on Thursday that the contract signals the end of an era when auto
workers pay and benefits set the standard for the
American middle class.
The GM contract sets a precedent for all of corporate America.
Already Ford officials are complaining that the GM contract does
not go far enough in reducing labor costs.
Contract provisions
* Health benefits
The deal puts an end to company-paid medical benefits for retired
workers, something that was won in the 1950s and 1960s. Under
the VEBA, benefits will be subject to the vagaries of the stock
market and the pressure of big investors to make ever deeper cuts.
The UAW will be transformed into a corporate entity, in control
of one of largest investment funds in America. Tens of millions
of dollars will go to consultants, investment firms, lawyers and
the top union officials.
The union has agreed to higher co-pays and other takeaways,
including new restrictions on eligibility for dependents and efforts
to lower GM outlays for disability benefits.
A chunk of the assets controlled by the UAW will be tied to
the price of GM stock, giving the union bureaucracy a direct incentive
to slash the wages and benefits of UAW members in order to push
up the value of assets in the VEBA.
* Two-tier wage system
Auto workers will be forced to pay dues to a union that enforces
a return to the low-wage, sweat shop conditions of the 1930s.
The agreement gloats that wage cuts will be based on the Delphi
model, reducing the pay of new workers to $14 an hour and undermining
solidarity by repudiating equal pay for equal work.
As many as 24,000 senior workers will be pushed out and replaced
by new-hires making half the traditional pay rate. Entry-level
production and skilled trades positions will be redefined as non-core,
meaning the workers can be paid lower wages and benefits.
* Wage freeze
Base pay for current workers will be frozen. As a result, take-home
pay will be ravaged by inflation. The Cost of Living Adjustment,
won by UAW workers in 1949, is being abandoned. The first 10 cents
of quarterly COLA increases will be diverted to bolster the VEBA
and defray company health costs for current workers.
* Pensions
Current workers and retirees pensions will be undermined
by the diversion of pension funds into the VEBA. New hires will
receive no pension. Instead, they will get a 401 (K). This is
the first step in the elimination of pensions for all auto workers.
* Jobs
The so-called job guarantees are bogus. GM explicitly exempted
three plants from any commitment to new product lines. This means
these plants are targeted for sale or closure. As for the rest,
GMs pledges are contingent on new local agreements to impose
more brutal speedup, forced overtime and other flexible
work rules.
The UAW, as the proprietor of the VEBA, will have less incentive
to oppose jobs cuts than before, since its income will be less
dependent on the size of its dues base.
This betrayal must be rejected. Above all, the political lessons
must be drawn. The transformation of the UAW into a profit-making
business is the culmination of a long process in which the union
has become increasingly antagonistic to the interests of the rank-and-file
and ever more the instrument of a privileged bureaucracy that
is unaccountable to the members.
This betrayal is rooted in the failure of the entire outlook
and policy not only of the UAW, but of the official labor movement
as a whole.
The leaders of the unions that emerged from the class battles
of the 1930s rejected the building of a labor party by the working
class and instead aligned the unions with the Democratic Party.
This signified the subordination of workers interests to
the profit system and the abandonment of any struggle for universal,
government-run social programs, such as health care. The UAW purged
the union of the socialist and left-wing elements and accepted
the economic dictatorship exercised by American capital over the
working class.
The UAW responded to the crisis of the US auto industry by
renouncing any form of class struggle and embracing the corporatist
policy of labor-management partnership. On this basis, it collaborated
in the destruction of 600,000 Big Three UAW jobs since 1978.
The global integration of production was the final nail in
the coffin of the unions, not only in the US but internationally.
Because of their nationalist programs, unions have been transformed
from organizations that pressured the companies for concessions
to the workers into organizations that pressure workers for concessions
to management.
The claim by the UAW bureaucracy that the Democratic Party
will carry through a serious reform of the health care system
is a farce. The Democrats, like the Republicans, are funded by
big business, including the health care monopolies.
The Democratic Congress gives Bush hundreds of billions for
the war for oil in Iraq, which will soon consume $1 trillion in
addition to the lives of thousands of American troops and hundreds
of thousands of Iraqis. The full brunt of this tragic waste of
blood and treasure is born by the working class.
A political movement, independent of both corporate-controlled
parties, must be built by the working class based on a fundamentally
different social principle: Economic life must be organized not
to serve corporate profit and private wealth, but rather the needs
of working people and society as a whole.
The vast industries upon which modern society depends can no
longer be the private domain of corporate executives and Wall
Street speculators. The auto industry must be transformed into
a public enterprise, democratically controlled by working people.
This is the policy advanced by the Socialist Equality Party
and the World Socialist Web Site. We urge auto workers
and other workers to contact
the WSWS to discuss this program and the building of a new leadership
of the working class.
See Also:
Strong rank-and-file opposition to UAW
sellout evident at local meetings
[1 October 2007]
UAW local presidents ratify
historic betrayal of US auto workers
[29 September 2007]
Details of General Motors
contract underscore UAW betrayal
[28 September 2007]
Total surrender by US auto
union
[27 September 2007]
General Motors workers oppose
threats to retiree health care, jobs
[26 September 2007]
US auto workers shut down
General Motors
[25 September 2007]
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