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UAW moves to prevent defeat of Chrysler contract
By Jerry White
25 October 2007
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United Auto Workers union locals at four major factories in
the Detroit area on Wednesday ratified the tentative agreement
signed between the UAW and US number three automaker Chrysler
LLC.
The votes at assembly and stamping plants in Warren and Sterling
Heights came amidst an aggressive campaign by the UAWbacked
by the Detroit news mediato push the contract through at
locals that had not yet voted.
Although the contract was ratified by large margins, particularly
at the Warren Truck Assembly Plant and the stamping plants in
Warren and Sterling Heights, nearly1,800 out of the approximately
7,100 workers who voted turned down the deal. A third of the members
of Local 1700 at the Sterling Heights Assembly Plant voted no.
The deal gives a green light to Chryslers Wall Street
ownersthe private equity firm Cerberus Capital Managementto
accelerate plans to shut down and sell off dozens of factories.
Previously announced cuts of 15,000 hourly and salaried positions
are only the beginning. Top management is already discussing eliminating
at least five vehicle models.
In addition, the contract will slash future workers wages
by half, freeze the wages of current workers and abolish employer-paid
retiree health care coverage. In exchange for sacrificing the
jobs, wages and benefits of auto workers, the UAW will take control
of a multi-billion-dollar retiree health care trust fund, called
a voluntary employees beneficiary association, or VEBA,
and go into business as the proprietor of one of the largest private
investment funds in the US.
On the eve of Wednesdays voting, which took place at
plants that employ 20 percent of Chryslers US workforce,
top union officials were dispatched to the shop floors of the
factories to campaign for the contract. Thousands of emails and
leaflets were distributed denouncing opponents of the agreement
for spreading misinformation and promoting the lie
that the contract will preserve jobs.
The Detroit news media joined in the effort, with auto analysts
telling workers that the rejection of the deal would only lead
to an even worse contract. Others said Cerberus would respond
by locking out the workers, while still others floated the idea
that the UAW would simply organize another vote without renegotiating
the deal.
After the ballot, Melvin Thompson, president of Local 140 at
Warren Truck, called the votefrom which more than 40 percent
of his members abstainedan overwhelming success.
The Detroit area votes occurred the day after workers at the
largest Chrysler local in the country, which represents 4,500
workers at three transmission plants in Kokomo, Indiana, delivered
a resounding defeat to the contract. Seventy-two percent of the
3,159 workers who voted from UAW Local 685 cast no
votes, according to a local union steward. At nearby Kokomo Casting,
78 percent of 751 voters turned down the contract, a UAW official
said. That local represents 800 workers.
As of Wednesday evening, at least nine locals, including those
representing workers at four large assembly plants in Michigan,
Missouri and Delaware, had rejected the deal. All together, these
locals represent more than 16,500 workers. At least 21 locals,
including many smaller units, representing an estimated 22,200
workers, have accepted it, according to press reports.
For the contract to pass, a simple majority of the 45,000 eligible
UAW members who cast ballots must approve it.
The last major vote will take place on Friday and Saturday
at the assembly plant in Belvidere, Illinois., which employs 3,400
UAW members. The local leadership has opposed the contract and
there is deep sentiment against it, particularly among the hundreds
of temporary employees who are not being hired as full-time workers
under the terms of the agreement. In the UAW-GM contract, some
4,000 temporary employees were promised full-time positions, although
they will be paid 70 percent or less of the traditional rate and
receive substandard health care coverage.
The UAW has released only percentages of yes and
no votes at the various locals that have voted, not
the actual number of votes for and against. Several locals have
not even released percentages.
Given the high-handed tactics of the UAW bureaucracy and its
contempt for the democratic rights of its members, none of the
figures presented by the UAW can be taken at face value.
If the contract is rejected, it will mark the first national
auto contract to be voted down since 1982, when Chrysler workers
fighting to recover the wages and benefits they lost during the
1979-80 Chrysler bailout voted down the contract negotiated by
the union. After the rejection, then-UAW President Douglas Fraser,
a member the corporations board of directors at the time,
forced workers to vote again on a modified contract
that handed over to Chrysler a total of $1.1 billion in concessionsnearly
$10,000 per worker.
Local 1700 President Bill Parker has publicly opposed the new
contract, citing Chryslers refusal to make commitments on
future production at his plant and most others beyond the 2011
expiration of the tentative agreement. Parker has urged UAW President
Ron Gettelfinger to renegotiate the contract to include so-called
job protections contained in the UAW-General Motors agreement,
saying that if the UAW leadership resolved that issue alone,
it would go a long way to satisfying not only the general membership,
but also local leadership.
In fact, the job commitments made by GM are entirely contingent
on market conditions. They are no more real than those
made in previous contracts going back a quarter of a century,
a period which saw the destruction of 600,000 UAW jobs at the
Big Three US auto companies. In the two weeks since the UAW-GM
contract was approved, GM has announced the elimination of the
second shift at factories in Detroit, Pontiac and Lansing, resulting
in the indefinite layoff of 2,600 workers.
On the eve of the vote by Local 1700, UAW Vice President in
charge of the Chrysler Department, General Holiefield, told leaders
at the local that the Sterling Heights assembly plant would be
guaranteed production until 2016 under a previously undisclosed
secret understanding between the union and the company.
Workers spoke to the World Socialist Web Site during
the vote at the Sterling Heights Assembly Plant Wednesday. A worker
with eight years said, Im most concerned about this
core and non-core businessthats what I asked about.
Are they going to lay off all the core workers who make higher
wages and do the same thing Delphi did, making everyone work for
a low wage? I cant go for all the Mopar parts workers working
for non-core wages either.
Another worker said, Its not about the money, its
about making sure you have a job. Ive worked here for eight
years, but I need to know that my job is guaranteed for the next
twenty years.
Another worker said, Cerberus is not exactly the most
trustworthy company. Its clear they want to get rid of lots
of jobs and thats what I dont like.
Jenise, a worker with eight years, said, Why are they
keeping secret whether they are going to invest in their US plants?
Is Cerberus going to shut the plants here and go global by building
factories in Mexico, Canada and China? How can you plan anything
if you dont know whether you are going to have a job four
years from now?
When this reporter pointed out that auto workers around the
world were confronting an assault on their jobs and living standards
by the global auto giants, Jenise responded, Workers should
unite globally too. We are so close to Mexico and Canada.
Here at Sterling Heights, she continued, they
try to get us to compete with other Chrysler plants. When they
talked about a new location for a midsize car, we were told that
we were up against the Belvidere, Illinois plant, which is one
of the newest plants. They also hired hundreds of temporary workers
to cut costs there. Four years ago we were competing against a
plant in Missouri to see who would give up more wages and working
conditions. Thats how they play that game.
As for the VEBA, that already failed at Caterpillar and
other companies. It was supposed to last so many years, and then
after just a few, it went under.
See Also:
UAW defends 50 percent wage cut for Chrysler
workers
[24 October 2007]
As contract faces rejection
UAW conspires with Chrysler to impose agreement
[23 October 2007]
More Chrysler locals reject UAW contract
betrayal
[22 October 2007]
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