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American Axle Workers Take a Hard Hit as UAW Officials Give up Strike
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United Auto Workers officials ended the 12-week American Axle strike with a concessions-heavy tentative agreement May 16. If approved, the contract will close two of the five struck plants by November and impose deep givebacks only marginally better than the offer that sent workers to the picket lines (see section below).
The strike -- the longest major auto industry walkout since the GM strike of 1970 -- was considered by many UAW activists to be a watershed moment in the fight to maintain union standards in the auto parts industry. Members' reactions to the settlement varied. Some strikers were openly angered by the main Detroit informational meeting May 18. Speeches from UAW President Ron Gettelfinger and International Vice-President Jimmy Settles drew scattered boos and heckling from the audience.
Wendy Thompson, a retired president of UAW Local 235, challenged the UAW officials' strategy for the strike from the floor in a speech that drew applause. "Vote no" chants were heard both inside and outside the meeting hall.
Reactions from other local meetings were more mixed. Resignation, frustration, and a "take-the-money-and-run" attitude toward proposed buyouts and buydowns (payouts that transition workers to the new lower wage scale) were cited in eyewitness and press reports from workers at the two plants on the chopping block, Detroit Forge and Tonawanda Forge. Workers voted Monday at four struck plants in western New York and Michigan, which total 1,650 workers. The contract is expected to pass in these locales by varying margins.
More than 2,000 members of UAW Local 235 at the flagship Detroit Axle plant, who passed a resolution early in the strike demanding five days to consider any settlement, will vote Thursday. Local 235 members held a one-day strike in 2004 after rejecting a previous concessionary agreement. Vote totals are expected to be released May 23.
Shopfloor Newsletter Condemns Axle Settlement "Lowlights"
Shifting Gears, an American Axle rank-and-file newsletter, pointed out the following "contract lowlights" in a special leaflet urging strikers to reject the proposed contract:
See more stories tagged with: rights, labor, united auto workers
Chris Kutalik is the editor of Labor Notes..