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Police arrest auto workers on American Axle picket line in
Detroit
By Tim Tower
15 March 2008
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Auto workers on strike at American Axle and Manufacturing (AAM)
in Detroit and New York are facing a sharp escalation of attacks
in their struggle to prevent the company from carrying through
a brutal two-thirds reduction in their wages and benefits. The
3,650 AAM workers organized in the United Auto Workers union walked
out more than two weeks ago.
On Friday morning, March 14, the company executed what appeared
to be a carefully orchestrated effort at the companys main
production facility in Detroit, involving local police and news
media to provoke a confrontation and force an end to the strike.
Approximately a dozen squad cars and twice as many uniformed
officers accompanied by vans and plain-clothes cops were mobilized
when the company moved large semi-trailers through the St. Aubin
Street gate of the huge American Axle complex. Three picketers
were arrested, charged with disorderly conduct, handcuffed and
taken away in police vans.
Soon after the arrests, reporters from the World Socialist
Web Site visited the picket lines and interviewed strikers.
A witness to the incident reported that one of the truck drivers
got out of his vehicle and approached the pickets in an apparent
deliberate effort to cause a provocation.
The police then escorted the scab back to his truck while other
officers arrested and handcuffed three of the pickets. As the
witness reported, They didnt take him to jail, but
they took three of our guys to jail that were just standing in
the way. Now whats up with that? he asked. To
me, thats illegal. (See video Arrests
on American Axle picket line in Detroit]
Local media outlets responded with breaking-news reports of
violence and arrests on the picket lines and video images of strikers
being hauled away in handcuffs. As an example, in a story headlined
Strikers Handcuffed During Scuffle, the web site for
Channel 4, the local NBC affiliate, wrote, Detroit police
were called to the St. Aubin strike location Friday morning to
control a situation that turned violent.
According to eyewitnesses, the only violence was carried out
by a lone scab truck driver supported by a large number of police.
The provocative character of the incident and the inflated and
inflammatory response to it in the local media are aimed at intimidating
the strikers in preparation for the UAWs move to end the
strike.
As the union has become increasingly integrated into the financial
and management structure of the corporations where its members
work, it has become common practice for the UAW to move to shut
down a strike at the very moment when the workers struggle
begins to exercise its greatest economic impact. Such is the current
danger at American Axle.
General Motors, AAMs principal client receiving 80 percent
of parts produced by company, has a large stake in the current
conflict. When its plants began to shut down because of parts
shortages, the auto giant gave its full support to AAMs
decision to inflict a decisive defeat on its workers. Presumably,
short-term losses were seen as a necessary sacrifice to insure
the extension of the auto industry pattern of brutal cuts in wages
and benefits.
However, the published reports this week of a statement by
GM Chairman Rick Wagoner that the strike will hurt GMs first-quarter
financial results is a sign that pressure is building in corporate
boardrooms to bring the strike to a speedy end. Parts shortages
from the strike have forced GM to close all or part of 28 plants,
affecting more than 37,000 hourly workers.
In line with these demands, the UAW international union has
now taken control of negotiations in the strike in an effort to
impose a contract on striking workers. The Associated Press reported
on Friday that the international dismissed local union representatives
from negotiations on Monday, while declaring that the company
had not shifted its demands for sweeping concessions in wages
and benefits.
The union sent its local bargainers back to their factories
on Monday and reported that the company wasnt budging from
its earlier proposals, wrote Tom Krisher for the AP, who
went on to report that talks resumed Thursday with top negotiators
for American Axle and Manufacturing Holdings Inc. and the United
Auto Workers.
Workers on the picket lines explained the decisive character
of their struggle and their dismay at the conduct of the union.
Its all about looking good on Wall Street, said
Lia. I may never walk in these doors again if the contract
involves cuts.
Scott said, The UAW is supposed to be democratic, but
we cant even vote for our own president. Our pay scale has
been incorporated into an international contract. They know if
we vote the contract down here at this plant, then there are four
other plantssome of which are threatened with closurethat
they can pressure to accept the deal.
I started working here 14 years ago, after leaving the
military, said Steve. We started at $12.55 an hour.
We have had pay increases since then. Now they want to send us
back to $14.50? After inflation, that would mean that we would
be earning less than we made when we started. This is all about
greed, corporate greed. They want to make more money.
The arrest of striking workers on the AAM picket lines is an
indication that the strike has reached a crucial point. With its
takeover of the negotiations, the UAW international is working
to implement a contract in line with the demands of the auto industry,
at the expense of the jobs, wages and benefits of striking workers.
American Axle workers should organize strike committees, independent
of the UAW, to expand the strike to workers at Delphi, Dana, GM,
Ford and Chrysler and demand the restoration of all concessions
and wage a fight against the union-management conspiracy to slash
wages and benefits. Workers should demand the dropping of all
charges against the arrested pickets.
See Also:
Reject UAW plans to sabotage American
Axle strike!
[11 March 2008]
American Axle workers in Detroit discuss
political issues in strike
[14 March 2008]
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