Current:Home > InvestUAW strikes are working, and the Kentucky Ford plant walkout could turn the tide -Excel Wealth Summit
UAW strikes are working, and the Kentucky Ford plant walkout could turn the tide
View
Date:2025-04-13 06:23:23
The United Auto Workers’ strikes came to Louisville, Kentucky, this week when the 8,700 workers at the Ford Kentucky Truck Plant held a surprise walkout. They join the 25,300 employees now on strike at other Big Three facilities across the country.
And the movement they’re leading is gaining momentum – the strikes are popular with the public and infectious with workers. They’re drawing on the energy of recent labor efforts at Starbucks, UPS, Hollywood and elsewhere. And in the UAW’s case, they’ve struck a chord by calling out eroding compensation and unjust transitions that have harmed production workers across the economy in recent decades.
Now the members of Louisville’s UAW Local 862 could help shape the outcome of these negotiations. The Local says its members are responsible for 54% of Ford’s North American profits, including through the production of SUVs and Super Duty pickups.
EV production at Ford a major negotiation sticking point
Ford is now a special target of UAW after some progress in negotiations with General Motors, which recently conceded to putting new electric vehicle and battery manufacturing facilities under the master UAW contract.
The need for good union jobs in the transition to EV production at Ford and Stellantis is still one of the major sticking points in the negotiations.
Not coincidentally, on the same day the Louisville truck plant workers hit the bricks, Ford BlueOval SK battery facilities under construction in Kentucky and Tennessee announced a starting salary increase for their not-yet-union job openings. Solidarity is contagious, and these corporations are worried.
That’s why the Big Three are starting to make other concessions as well.
A deal may be closer than we think:UAW strike talks show progress with Ford, Stellantis
That includes over 20% wage increases, agreements to bring back cost-of-living adjustments that had disappeared in recent years and a shorter path for workers to reach top wage rates. But along with the need for a full just transition to EV jobs, the companies’ wage proposals fall short after years of failing to keep up with inflation and in the context of soaring CEO pay. And the UAW is rightly calling for an end to employment tiers that have denied pensions to workers hired after 2007.
Record profits must mean record contracts for UAW
I got to hear directly from UAW President Shawn Fain last week at a policy conference in Detroit. Fain grew up in Indiana as the grandson of unionized auto workers who moved there from Kentucky and Tennessee.
His refrain is common sense: These corporations have never been more profitable, and “record profits must mean record contracts.”
Trump doesn't have union's back:In UAW strike, Trump pretends to support workers. He's used to stabbing them in the back.
Auto workers made huge sacrifices when the Big Three nearly failed after the Great Recession, and it’s past time that the workers share in the industry’s tremendous gains.
But Fain is also unflinching in his vision that the UAW’s fight is about the future of the broader American economy. We’ll either continue on the path that enriches billionaires and squeezes the working class, or we’ll build something better. To the plutocrats claiming that the UAW aims to wreck the economy, Fain clarifies that they only aim to wreck “their economy.”
Now these Louisville workers are joining the growing picket line, and marching for a place in history.
Jason Bailey is executive director of the Kentucky Center for Economic Policy. This column first published at the Louisville Courier Journal.
veryGood! (8)
Related
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- Watch: Meadow the Great Dane gives birth to 15 puppies in North Carolina, becomes media star
- Garcelle Beauvais teams with Kellogg Foundation for a $90M plan to expand ‘Pockets of Hope’ in Haiti
- Attorneys for an Indiana man charged in 2 killings leave case amid questions of evidence security
- Nearly half of US teens are online ‘constantly,’ Pew report finds
- Jon Bon Jovi named MusiCares Person of the Year. How he'll be honored during Grammys Week
- Raiders QB Jimmy Garoppolo ruled out against Bears due to back injury, per reports
- The government secures a $9 million settlement with Ameris Bank over alleged redlining in Florida
- New Zealand official reverses visa refusal for US conservative influencer Candace Owens
- Jordan will continue to bleed votes with every ballot, says Rep. Ken Buck — The Takeout
Ranking
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Natalee Holloway's Harrowing Final Moments Detailed in Joran van der Sloot's Murder Confession
- More than 300 arrested in US House protest calling for Israel-Hamas ceasefire
- Pioneering L.A. program seeks to find and help homeless people with mental illness
- Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
- New York judge fired for pointing gun at a Black man in court
- As winter nears, some parents are still searching for the new pediatric COVID shot
- Mortgage rates climb to 8% for first time since 2000
Recommendation
Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
Security incident involving US Navy destroyer in Red Sea, US official says
No gun, no car, no living witnesses against man charged in Tupac Shakur killing, defense lawyer says
Ruins and memories of a paradise lost in an Israeli village where attackers killed, kidnapped dozens
New Zealand official reverses visa refusal for US conservative influencer Candace Owens
Hurricane Norma weakens slightly on a path toward Los Cabos in Mexico
Britney Spears recounts soul-crushing conservatorship in new memoir, People magazine's editor-in-chief says
Martin Scorsese on new movie ‘Killers of the Flower Moon’: ‘Maybe we’re all capable of this’