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As US auto strike enters seventh week
UAW president backs real sacrifices for American
Axle workers
By Jerry White
8 April 2008
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The strike by more than 3,600 workers at American Axle has
revealed the unbridgeable chasm that separates rank-and-file auto
workers from the leadership of the United Auto Workers union.
An op-ed piece by UAW International President Ron Gettelfinger
published April 4 in the Detroit News makes clear the position
of the union hierarchy in the strike now entering its seventh
week. After recounting the concessions the UAW has repeatedly
granted the company, Gettelfinger writes: This year, we
have again put forward responsible proposals to address American
Axles legitimate concerns. These proposals, if accepted,
will mean real sacrifices by our members and real savings for
the company.
Here the UAW president acknowledges that there is a basic agreement
between the union and American Axle over the company demand for
steep cuts in labor costs.
While castigating the company for poor negotiating practices
which have made reaching a deal more difficultincluding
announcing huge bonuses for its top executives in the middle of
a strikeGettelfinger asserts that our members understand
that the competitive realities of the auto industry have changed.
Thats why, he continues, weve
already given American Axle a break in 2004 and 2006. Gettlelfinger
points out that the 2004 agreement slashed the companys
labor costs by as much as $200 million per year.

Far from voluntarily accepting these rollbacks, American Axle
workers bitterly opposed the previous concessionary deals. The
union and management were able to push them through only by blackmailing
the workers with the threat of plant closings and mass layoffswhich
then occurred anyway.
The UAW collaborated with management to coerce
workers into taking the buyout, according to a National Labor
Relations Board complaint against UAW Local 424 filed by workers
at the now-shuttered Buffalo, New York plant.
The concessions the UAW has imposed on auto workers have enabled
CEO Richard Dauch to pocket more than $250 million since he led
a group of private investors to buy up the factories from General
Motors in 1994.
If American Axle now faces a cost disadvantage with major competitors
such as Dana Corporation, it is because the UAW has a set up a
bidding war between auto workers by handing over one concession
after another in order to boost the profits of Detroits
Big Three automakersGeneral Motors, Ford and Chrysler.
Gettelfingers editorial came amidst a flurry of activity
by the UAW International aimed at strangling the strike. Last
week the UAW announced that the company had begun handing over
data requested by the union on its labor costs. This was followed
by a meeting between the UAW International and local union representatives
on the weekend and a face-to-face meeting on Monday between Gettelfinger
and Dauch.
In an effort to pressure GM to help broker a deal with American
Axle and maintain some credibility with an increasingly suspicious
and hostile membership, the UAW has given a ten-day strike notification
at five GM plants in Michigan, Ohio and Texas, and called a rally
for April 18 in Detroit. The UAW president declared, however,
Wed like nothing better than to cancel our rally because
the strike was resolved by having a ratified contract.
That the union is offering major wage and benefit cuts is clear
from the letter, as well as documents previously leaked to the
Detroit Free Press that showed the union had offered substantial
givebacks on the eve of the strike.
Well aware of the militant opposition of rank-and-file workers,
however, the UAW has a concern, not for upholding wages and benefits,
but for how best to frustrate and undermine the resistance of
the workers as it strikes a concessionary deal.
At the same time, Gettelfinger & Co. are intent on defending
the interests of the union bureaucracy in any deal with American
Axle. The UAW is willing to accede to more job losses, but it
is no doubt seeking assurances from American Axle that it will
maintain a minimum number of jobs at UAW-represented plants, thereby
guaranteeing a future flow of dues income.
The UAW is doubtless also seeking financial guarantees to maintain
the position of the union apparatus. In exchange for sacrificing
the hard-won gains of generations of auto workers in the Big Three
negotiations last year, the UAW was granted control of a retiree
health care trust funda Voluntary Employees Beneficiary
Association, or VEBAworth more than $50 billion, with much
of it paid in Ford and GM stock. A VEBA was also set up at Dana
Corporation, and a similar deal may be in the works at American
Axle.
There is a growing recognition that workers cannot defend their
interests through the UAW and that a new road of struggle must
be found. As one American Axle striker in Detroit told the World
Socialist Web Site: The UAW used to fight big
business. Now they are a big business.
According to a recent filing with the Department of Labor,
the UAW last year saw an increase in the interest income from
its investments, even as UAW membership levels fell to the lowest
point since 1941.
New industrial organizations of the working class must be built
in opposition to the corporatist unions. American Axle workers
should spearhead this fight by electing rank-and-file committees,
led by the most trusted militants, to take the conduct of the
struggle and negotiations out of the hands of the UAW. These committees
should directly appeal to all auto workers to spread the strike
in order to overturn the wage-cutting contracts agreed to by the
UAW throughout the auto industry.
A new political strategy is needed to unite the working class
against the impact of the financial crisis and oppose home foreclosures,
layoffs and the assault on living standards.
This requires breaking with the Democrats and Republicanswhich
are both beholden to big businessand building a new political
movement of the working class to fight for a socialist alternative
to the capitalist system. This includes placing the major auto
companies under public ownership and the democratic control of
the working population.
This is the perspective being fought for by the Socialist Equality
Party.
See Also:
SEP/ISSE meeting: Which way forward?
The American Axle strike and the political issues facing the working
class
[7 April 2008]
Reject UAW plans to sell out American
Axle strike
[4 April 2008]
American Axle strikers in Buffalo determined
to resist wage cuts
[3 April 2008]
American Axle moves to hire
strikebreakers
[31 March 2008]
American Axle CEO Richard
Dauch and the right of private property
[29 March 2008]
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