Current:Home > InvestAutoworkers union celebrates breakthrough win in Tennessee and takes aim at more plants in the South -Capitatum
Autoworkers union celebrates breakthrough win in Tennessee and takes aim at more plants in the South
View
Date:2025-04-11 16:54:19
DALLAS (AP) — The United Auto Workers’ overwhelming election victory at a Volkswagen plant in Tennessee is giving the union hope that it can make broader inroads in the South, the least unionized part of the country.
The UAW won a stunning 73% of the vote at VW after losing elections in 2014 and 2019. It was the union’s first win in a Southern assembly plant owned by a foreign automaker.
Union President Shawn Fain said the pundits all told him that the UAW couldn’t win in the South.
“But you all said, ‘Watch this,’ ” he told a cheering group of VW organizers at a union hall in Chattanooga, Tennessee, on Friday night, when the UAW victory was clear. “You guys are leading the way. We’re going to carry this fight on to Mercedes and everywhere else.”
However, the UAW is likely to face a tougher test as it tries to represent workers at two Mercedes-Benz plants in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. A five-day election is scheduled to start May 13, where the union’s campaign has already become heated.
The UAW has accused the German carmaker of violating U.S. and German labor laws with aggressive anti-union tactics, which the company denies.
“They are going to have a much harder road in work sites where they are going to face aggressive management resistance and even community resistance than they faced in Chattanooga,” said Harry Katz, a labor-relations professor at Cornell University. “VW management did not aggressively seek to avoid unionization. Mercedes is going to be a good test. It’s the deeper South.”
Late last year, the UAW announced a drive to represent nearly 150,000 workers at non-union factories largely in the South. The union is targeting U.S. plants run by Toyota, Honda, Hyundai, Nissan, Subaru, Mazda, Volkswagen, Mercedes, BMW and Volvo, along with factories operated by electric-vehicle makers Tesla, Rivian and Lucid.
Many of those companies raised pay after the UAW negotiated rich new contracts with Ford, General Motors and Stellantis after strikes at strategically chosen factories last year.
Brooke Benoit, a VW worker who had seen the union voted down in Chattanooga twice before, said workers took notice.
“I think what changed the most is everybody started seeing what we could get when the Big Three went on strike,” she said. “They said, ‘Wait, hold on. If they can get all this, we should too.’ We do the same job, just in a different location.”
The union’s last defeat at VW in Chattanooga came at a low-water mark — in the middle of a federal investigation into bribery and embezzlement under a previous president.
Marick Masters, a business professor at Wayne State University in Detroit who studies the UAW, said the union flipped the script by installing new leadership, touting the rich contracts it won last year from Detroit automakers after strikes at targeted factories, and exploiting a climate that is now more favorable to unions. He said the union was also adept at translating signed pro-union authorization cards into votes — partly by pushing for a quick election.
“Now the public and media eyes are going to be on Chattanooga and how quickly the UAW can translate this into a contract,” he said. If the union can’t quickly get a good contract, it risks losing some of the momentum it gained with Friday’s election win, he said.
Unions in other industries are already moving ahead with organizing campaigns in the South and trying to learn from the UAW’s playbook.
The Association of Flight Attendants, which has tried and failed to win over cabin crews at Atlanta-based Delta Air Lines, hopes to collect enough signatures to force another election at Delta by year end. The union’s president, Sara Nelson, said she was not surprised at the UAW win after strikes that led to record contracts last year.
“I’ve been talking about this for a long time — that strikes and taking on the boss is going to spur organizing, and that’s exactly what we saw here,” Nelson said.
Nelson is trying to secure an industry-leading contract at United Airlines that she can use to court Delta crews. In the meantime, crews at startup Breeze Airways, many of whom live in the South, will vote next month whether to join her union.
The White House issued a statement from President Joe Biden congratulating the UAW. Biden — who joined a UAW picket line in Michigan during the union’s strike against Ford, GM and Stellantis plants last year — praised the success of unions representing autoworkers, Hollywood actors and writers, health care workers and others in gaining better contracts.
“Together, these union wins have helped raise wages and demonstrate once again that the middle-class built America and that unions are still building and expanding the middle class for all workers,” Biden said.
Biden criticized six Southern Republican governors, including Bill Lee of Tennessee, who told autoworkers this week that voting for union representation would jeopardize jobs.
Sharon Block, a law professor at Harvard University who worked in the Biden Labor Department, said the governors’ warning rang hollow after nonunion Tesla revealed that it plans to lay off 10% of its workers after disappointing sales results. She said VW workers saw the governors’ open letter as “an empty threat and a cynical ploy,” and they ignored it.
“Workers for a long time have been told that you can’t organize in the South. And many workers, even not in the South, may work in industries where they’ve been told for a long time you can’t organize,” Block said. “What the UAW showed last night is that we need to go and rethink all those negative statements.”
___
Associated Press video journalist Kristin M. Hall in Chattanooga and writer Gary Robertson in Raleigh, North Carolina, contributed to this report.
veryGood! (769)
Related
- Who are the most valuable sports franchises? Forbes releases new list of top 50 teams
- Rudy Giuliani cleared out his apartment weeks before court deadline to turn over assets, lawyers say
- Adele fangirls over Meryl Streep at Vegas residency, pays homage to 'Death Becomes Her'
- Volvo, Ram, Ford among 252,000 vehicles recalled: Check recent car recalls here
- Nevada attorney general revives 2020 fake electors case
- Adele fangirls over Meryl Streep at Vegas residency, pays homage to 'Death Becomes Her'
- Andy Kim and Curtis Bashaw face off in a New Jersey Senate race opened up by a bribery scandal
- 3 dead, including infant, in helicopter crash on rural street in Louisiana
- New Zealand official reverses visa refusal for US conservative influencer Candace Owens
- Saquon Barkley reverse hurdle: Eagles' RB wows coach, fans with highlight reel play
Ranking
- San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
- See Taylor Swift, Andrea Swift and Donna Kelce Unite to Cheer on Travis Kelce
- Ariana Grande Reveals Why She Chose to Use Her Real Name in Wicked Credits
- Florida prosecutor says 17-year-old suspect in Halloween fatal shootings will be charged as adult
- 'Most Whopper
- Will Smith, Gloria Estefan, more honor icon Quincy Jones: 'A genius has left us'
- This is how precincts in Pennsylvania handle unexpected issues on Election Day
- Chris Martin Falls Through Trap Door Onstage During Australia Concert
Recommendation
Man can't find second winning lottery ticket, sues over $394 million jackpot, lawsuit says
Dawn Staley is more than South Carolina's women's basketball coach. She's a transcendent star.
Freddie Prinze Jr. Reveals How He and Sarah Michelle Gellar Avoid BS Hollywood Life
College athletes are getting paid and fans are starting to see a growing share of the bill
Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
Remains of nearly 30 Civil War veterans found in a funeral home’s storage are laid to rest
Connor McDavid ankle injury update: Where does Edmonton Oilers star stand in his recovery?
3 charged in connection to alleged kidnapping, robbery near St. Louis