UAW lashes out at senators in Southern states with foreign car plants after auto aid bill dies
Festering
animosity between the United Auto Workers and Southern senators who
torpedoed the auto industry bailout bill erupted into full-fledged name
calling Friday as union officials accused the lawmakers of trying to
break the union on behalf of foreign automakers.
The vitriol had
been near the surface for weeks as senators from states that house the
transplant automakers' factories criticized the Detroit Three for
management miscues and bloated UAW labor costs that lawmakers said make
them uncompetitive.
But the UAW stopped biting its tongue after
Republicans sank a House-passed bill Thursday night that would have
loaned $14 billion to cash-poor General Motors Corp. and Chrysler LLC
to keep them out of bankruptcy protection. The Bush administration
later stepped in and said it was ready to make money available to the
automakers, likely from the $700 billion Wall Street bailout program.
Still,
autoworkers remain angry with the senators who tried to negotiate wage
and benefit concessions from the union, then scuttled the House-passed
bill that would have granted the loans and set up a "car czar" to
oversee the nearly insolvent companies and get concessions from the
union and creditors. Their top targets were Senate Minority Leader
Mitch McConnell, R-Ky.; Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., who led negotiations
on a compromise; and Sen. Richard Shelby, R-Ala., who has been a vocal
critic of the loans.
Kentucky, Tennessee and Alabama all house
auto assembly plants from foreign automakers, and union officials
contend the senators want to drive UAW wages down so there would be no
reason for workers at the foreign plants to join the union.
"They
thought perhaps they could have a twofer here maybe: Pierce the heart
of organized labor while representing the foreign brands," UAW
President Ron Gettelfinger said at a Friday morning news conference in
Detroit.
Republicans in several Western states -- where unions are often shunned -- joined the Southerners in opposition.
But
lawmakers and their spokesmen said the criticism is off base. Jonathan
Graffeo, Shelby's spokesman on the Senate Banking Committee, said the
senator has consistently opposed taxpayer-funded bailouts.
"He
opposed the Chrysler bailout in 1979 when there were no foreign auto
manufacturers in Alabama, and he opposed the recent $700 billion
bailout of the banking industry," Graffeo said.
"Bailouts
generally don't work, and this is a huge proposed bailout, and I fear
it's just the down payment on more to come next year," Shelby said on
the Senate floor Thursday night. "These companies are either already
failed or failing, and that's a shame. These aren't the General Motors,
Ford and Chrysler I knew."
Corker said the alternative he tried
to develop would have provided federal money in exchange for
restructuring the companies' debt and making the UAW more competitive
in wages with workers at U.S. plants of Japanese competitors.
"Our members wanted to know that the UAW was willing to be competitive," Corker said.
"I
basically pleaded with them to give me some language by some date
certain that they were competitive with these other companies," Corker
said. "That's where it broke down."
Hourly wages for UAW workers
at GM factories already are about equal to those paid by Toyota Motor
Corp. at its older U.S. factories, according to the companies. GM says
the average UAW laborer makes $29.78 per hour, while Toyota --
generally viewed as the main competitor of the Detroit Three -- says it
pays about $30 per hour. But the unionized factories have far higher
benefit costs.
The union, GM and Chrysler have contended that
the companies have restructured and the UAW has granted concessions
that would make them competitive in 2010, but the economy went south
this year and forced them into trouble. A third Detroit automaker, Ford
Motor Co., asked for loans in case of emergency but says it has enough
cash to make it through 2009.
Union officials also accused the
senators of retaliating for the UAW's overwhelming support of
Democratic candidates in federal races. The union gave $1.9 million to
Democrats but only $11,500 to Republicans in the 2008 election cycle.
Many
Democrats support the Employee Free Choice Act, which would take away
employers' rights to demand a secret ballot on whether workers will
join a union. Instead, workers could form unions by getting a majority
of employees to sign a card in support of it.
"There's a lot at
stake. If Republicans think now they can tarnish labor, it's going to
be difficult to pass the Employee Free Choice Act," said Gary Chaison,
professor of labor relations at Clark University in Worcester, Mass.
"The unions are going to say that a strong labor movement is good for
America. One of the things Republicans are trying to show now is that a
strong labor movement isn't good for America."
Other union officials joined Gettelfinger to form a chorus of anger and frustration with the senators.
"What
this is is the Southern conservative senators trying to destroy the
United Auto Workers, trying to destroy unions," said Mike O'Rourke,
president of a UAW local at a GM factory in Spring Hill, Tenn.,
Corker's home state. "It's a sad day in America when the senators turn
their back on Main Street."
In an effort to help the auto
companies get federal aid, the UAW last week offered to delay company
payments into a union-run trust fund that will take over retiree health
care costs starting in 2010. It also agreed to end the controversial
"jobs bank" program in which laid-off workers get most of their pay and
benefits after unemployment pay runs out.
Most Southern U.S.
auto plants run by Toyota, Honda Motor Co., Nissan Motor Co., BMW AG,
Daimler AG and other manufacturers are nonunion. The UAW has tried
numerous times without success to organize workers at the foreign-owned
factories.
Spokesmen for Toyota and Nissan declined comment, but
Honda spokesman Ed Miller said in a statement the company did not lobby
against the bill.
"Honda has been encouraging initiatives that
would maintain the short- and long-term viability of the U.S. auto
industry, including the hundreds of the shared supplier companies in
the United States," he said.
As the Detroit Three have declined
and ceded market share to the foreign nameplates, the UAW's membership
has plummeted 69 percent, from a peak 1.5 million in 1979 to 465,000 at
the end of 2007.
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