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WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
Detroit: American Axle workers hold protest amidst heavy police
presence
By Shannon Jones
25 April 2008
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Striking American Axle workers held a picket outside the companys
headquarters Thursday afternoon ahead of a scheduled stockholders
meeting.
The UAW local at the striking plants in Detroit called the
protest, which drew about five hundred American Axle workers and
supporters. The demonstration followed the cancellation by the
UAW of a strike support rally set for last Friday in downtown
Detroit.

Workers briefly blocked the entrance to American Axle headquarters
before dozens of heavily armed police cleared the street. The
crowd regrouped on the sidewalk in front of the headquarters before
dispersing after about one hour. There were no reports of arrests.
The police presence, however, was extremely heavy, in an evident
attempt to intimidate the workers.
About 3,600 American Axle workers in Michigan and western New
York have been on strike since late February. They are resisting
demands by the auto parts supplier for wage cuts of up to 50 percent
and a reduction in benefits.
Those participating in the protest evinced the determination
of the working class not to surrender its hard won gains. However,
local level UAW officials who attended the rally offered
no policy to fight the attacks by American Axle other than hurling
insults at CEO Richard Dauch. Workers continue to express frustration
over the fact that they get no information from either the local
or the international union about the content of negotiations.
Reports in the media demonstrate that even prior to the strike
the UAW had agreed to substantial concessions to the auto parts
manufacturer.
The decision by the UAW to call off last weeks scheduled
rally has evidently emboldened American Axle to take an even harder
line. In a press statement Tuesday the company demanded concessions
equivalent to those granted by the UAW to other parts suppliers
and restated its threat to shut down production at the striking
plants. If the International UAW is not willing to consider
a US market labor agreement...AAM will be forced to plan for the
potential closure of some, or all of these uncompetitive facilities,
the statement declared.
WSWS supporters distributed a leaflet at the rally titled,
Appeal to working class, not corporate
shareholders, to back American Axle strike.
The statement called on American Axle workers to make a direct
appeal to workers in the auto industry to carry out a struggle
against the concessions accepted by the UAW.
The WSWS interviewed workers who attended the rally. Scott,
a worker with 14 years seniority, told the WSWS that the turnout
was only a small percentage of what we could have gotten.
We needed this demonstration to boost up morale, but I know that
the shareholders dont care; they are with Dauch.
They brought in the two-tier contract on us in 2004 and
look at what is happening to the Big Three workers. They have
it now. If we accept more concessions the same thing will happen
to other workers. We have to take a stand against this.
Scott spoke about his previous experience in the auto parts
industry. I used to work for ITT Automotive. They went out
of business in 1994. GM came in and said they were unprofitable.
But what was happening was they were shifting production to other
plants; we were paying for all the other plants they were building.
They shut us down and moved all their operations to Ohio.
Scott said that workers saw signs that GM was preparing to
resume operations at plants idled by the strike. What is
making it bad is that GM is getting parts from other plants. I
heard that Dana is retooling to make our axles. The truck plant
in Arlington, Texas, is going back up. They say they are getting
parts from an undisclosed source.
Sometimes I look at it and I think the union is selling
us out, Scott added. They are walking this line and
they are teetering, tottering. I heard they even accepted the
$14 before the strike. The only gripe was the buydown.
Latanya Richardson,
an American Axle worker with 13 years, told the WSWS, What
happens to us will have a major impact on what happens overall.
Next they will go after others.
Like many workers we spoke to, Latanya was angered by the decision
of the UAW to call off the strike support rally set for last week.
It was a smack in the face. We were told we were close to
something - then they cancelled it. I think it was to limit the
exposure to us.
She was also unhappy about the lack of information from the
UAW. We should know what we are getting into. The cost of
living is getting worse. A lot of us are sole providers; we have
a lot to lose. We want to maintain what we have established over
the years. No one is getting rich. It just allows us to be comfortable.
It is definite that they want to eliminate the middle
class. They want to pay poverty wages for the working class.
Alex Clements said there was growing frustration and tension
among American Axle workers. People are getting upset. We
go back in there, and we wont be able to buy the products
we make.
They cancelled the rally for no reason, they said they
were close to an agreementand then they said there was no
agreement. I think it was a ploy or a trick.
Alex felt that strike
pay should be increased, given that the UAW had close to $750
million in its strike fund. What are they saving it for?
An emergency? This is an emergency.
A worker from Chrysler Sterling Heights Assembly came to show
his support for the American Axle workers. He noted the provocative
police presence outside the American Axle corporate headquarters.
I think they are trying to incite something.
He said that many workers had been prepared to attend the strike
support rally in Detroit the previous week. They cancelled
that days rally and they would have had people from all
over the country there.
Latoya, who has worked at AAM for 10 years, said she would
not accept having her standard of living cut in half, which would
happen if the UAW accepted the cuts proposed by American Axle.
I am not willing to settle for just having a job,
she said. We need jobs with decent wages.
See Also:
Despite UAW wage-cut offers, no agreement
yet in American Axle strike
Anger simmers over strike rally cancellation
[21 April 2008]
UAW calls off rally, prepares sellout
of American Axle strike
[17 April 2008]
WSWS writer Jerry White speaks on American
Axle strike
[12 April 2008]
As US auto strike enters seventh week
UAW president backs real sacrifices for American Axle
workers
[8 April 2008]
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