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UAW presidents radio comments underscore union-management
gang-up against American Axle strikers
By Jerry White
15 May 2008
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Over the weekend, United Auto Workers President Ron Gettelfinger
gave his most extensive comments to date on the American Axle
strike during an interview with Detroit radio station WWJ.
Over 3,600 workers in Michigan and New York have been on strike
for more than two-and-a-half months against the auto suppliers
demand for drastic wage cuts and the elimination of at least 2,000
jobs.
The UAW president told auto reporter Jeff Gilbert that last
weeks announcement that General Motors had offered $200
million to American Axle to help pay for buy-outs and buy-downs
had not led to a quick settlement, as many had anticipated. Instead,
American Axle responded to GMs move with even greater concession
demands, Gettelfinger said, including the closure of the Cheektowaga,
New York machining plant, which employs 116 workers in the Buffalo
area.
This demand, he said, came totally out of left field.
The company gave every indication we were extremely close
on an agreement last Friday afternoon, he continued, but
after he and other top UAW negotiators came back from dinner the
company gave us a notice that they were going to close the Cheektowaga
plant.
Gettelfinger said he was shocked that company negotiators had
answered every concession offer by the UAW with even more egregious
demands.
But why should this come as a surprise?
From the beginning of this struggle, American Axle CEO Richard
Dauch has proceeded with utter ruthlessness. He has repeatedly
threatened to shut his US plants and move production to Mexico
unless workers accept a 50 percent wage cut. The company has threatened
to hire scabs and has kept workers on the streets for nearly twelve
weeks to achieve its demands.
What is behind Gettelfingers incredulity? It is true
that the UAW bureaucracywhich for years has promoted the
nostrums of labor-management unityhas hardly
distinguished itself for its powers of foresight and strategic
thinking. However, another, at least equally probable, explanation
is that he is feigning shock as part of an effort to condition
strikers to accept as inevitable the sellout agreement being prepared.
Gettelfinger all but boasted that the union was ready to accede
to the bulk of the companys demands. He said, We have
literally made hundreds of changes in this contract and throughout
these negotiations ... all to the companys advantage.
He added, In the past two years, mid-contract, we agreed
to Buffalo being phased out. And thats a major savings to
the company. He was referring to the closing of a plant
which once employed over 2,000 UAW workers.
We also negotiated a two-tier wage agreement, Gettelfinger
continued, and we agreed to buyouts to help them. And if
you look at the proxy statement that was filed by American Axle,
the chairman and CEOs pay was based on the improvements
made in that contract.
In other words, well before negotiations began for the current
contract, the UAW had imposed draconian concessions on its members
that guaranteed multi-million-dollar payouts to Dauch and other
top executives.
In the current talks, Gettelfinger acknowledged, the UAW had
already accepted the companys demands to close the Tonawanda,
New York and Detroit forges, eliminating another 760 jobs.
The union had also accepted huge wage cuts. Gettelfinger said
the UAW had agreed to a separate contract at the Three Rivers,
Michigan plant, which would impose even deeper wage cuts than
the estimated $5-$8 an hour cut for workers in Detroit.
[I]n Three Rivers, Gettelfinger said, members
of our bargaining committee, in order to save that facility, have
agreed to a wage rate that is so low that they will have to work
for six months just to earn what the company gave their board
of directors in an increase on their retention pay which is, $10,000.
Here you have the president of the UAWwho nominally represents
half a million auto workersdeclaring in his defense that
he has agreed to wages for American Axle workers that are below
the official poverty level for a family of four$21,200 a
year, according to the US Department of Health and Human Services.
How can a union that carries out measures that impoverish its
own members be defined as a workers organization?
From the beginning, the UAW has negotiated concessions behind
the backs of the members, forced strikers to subsist on poverty-level
strike benefits and deliberately kept the struggle isolated. Far
from opposing wage cuts, the UAW has imposed such cuts on workers
throughout the auto industry in order to boost the profitability
of the corporations.
Every word out of the mouth of the UAW president drips with
cowardice and prostration before the interests of corporate America.
There is not a trace of class consciousness or working class solidarity
in these remarks. On the contrary, they underscore the unbridgeable
chasm that exists between workers and the privileged bureaucracy
that controls the UAW.
Whatever complaints Gettelfinger made about greedy bosses
were combined with nationalist poison. Thus, Gettelfinger told
the interviewer, Were dealing with some very, very
greedy people here. In fact, Im not sure how they could
even call themselves American Axle anymore. To me,
its more like Axle, Mexico and elsewhere.
Hostile to any struggle to unite US and Mexican workers against
the globally-organized auto giants, the UAW wants to convince
its members that they have no choice but to accept far lower wages
in order to retain US manufacturing jobs. This is the overriding
concern of the UAW, which is dedicated not to the jobs, conditions
and living standards of auto workers, but rather to the maintenance
of an income stream for the union bureaucracy from union dues.
For all of its treachery, the UAW has not been able to crush
the resistance of the American Axle strikers. The bureaucracys
biggest worry is its ability to force through a sellout agreement
in the face of rank-and-file opposition. Gettelfinger acknowledged
this in a second interview Sunday on WJR radio, saying, Look,
lets not kid anybody here. No matter what we do as a result
of these negotiations it is going to be difficult to get ratified.
Those in the know in the corporate boardrooms and Detroit news
media see Gettelfingers remarks as an effort to lower expectations,
demoralize the strikers and present a sellout as a fait accompli.
Detroit Free Press columnist Tom Walsh, in a comment
Tuesday entitled UAWs Wrath Sends a Signal,
noted the cynical motives behind Gettelfingers radio appearances.
The union president, he wrote, wants Axle strikers and every
UAW member within earshot of a Detroit radio station to know that
these are brutally tough negotiations; that the company can close
plants at home and build parts in Mexico or somewhere else, because
it has happened before. Hes creating an expectation for
the rank-and-fileif it wasnt there alreadythat
the next contract will be a bitter pill for American Axle workers
to swallow.
And then hopefully in the next few days, Gettelfinger
can surprise them with positive news. Like an end to the strike
sooner than expected. Maybe a deal to keep the Cheektowaga plant
open. Or a $5,000 signing bonus, plus big checks to ease the transition
to retirement or a lower-wage job.
Getting the contract ratified at American Axle is much harder
than the unions efforts on behalf of GM, Ford and Chrysler
last year, Walsh noted, because the UAW is now asking current
workers to vote in favor of slashing their own pay.
For Gettelfinger, he continued, to succeed in the tricky
business of getting a concessionary contract at American Axle
ratified, he must be the one to set the expectations if he hopes
to be able to exceed them when he takes a tentative deal to the
members. Speaking for the corporate and political establishment
in Detroit, Walsh concluded, The hope here, for the future
of all parties involved, is that he pulls it off.
See Also:
American Axle threatens additional plant
closure
UAW president says union will accept massive concessions
[13 May 2008]
GM offers $200 million in bid to end
American Axle strike
[10 May 2008]
Wage-cutting in the US auto parts industry:
The background to the American Axle strike
[8 May 2008]
UAW preparing agreement to slash American
Axle workers wages, close plants
[3 May 2008]
US auto strike enters tenth
week
A political balance sheet of the battle at American Axle
[30 April 2008]
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