Lessons From The AAM Strike

American Axle workers began to return to work earlier this week, after the end of a three-month walkout in Michigan and New York. The struggle—one of the longest walkouts in the auto industry in decades—ended in a bitter defeat for the workers.

More than half of the returning 3,650 workers, including 1,100 in Detroit, will lose their jobs. The remaining will see their wages cut from $28 an hour to $18.50 and in some locations as low as $10.

In a conference call to Wall Street investors Wednesday corporate CEO Richard Dauch said the new deal would reduce all-in labor costs by 50 percent—saving the company $300 million. “I am pleased to report,” he boasted, “we have achieved all of these goals.”

That the hated contract was ratified by a 78 percent margin was testimony to the lack of confidence in the United Auto Workers union to obtain anything better if workers remained on strike. Even before the walkout began, the UAW signaled its willingness to impose substantial wage cuts. Then the union left workers isolated on the picket lines for 87 days and paid meager strike benefits of $200 a week. In the end, the UAW brought back the concessions agreement and told workers, “Take it or leave it.”

Acting on the belief that there was no alternative, workers voted for the deal with most opting to take the buyout now or in the near future. Many, no doubt, will join the migration of ex-auto workers out of Michigan, where 143,000 auto jobs—or 45 percent of the total—have been wiped out since 1999.

The UAW betrayal at American Axle—like at Delphi and the Big Three concessions before it—will be used to set a new benchmark for the permanent lowering of wages. Hit by high gas prices, the credit crunch and slumping sales, General Motors and Ford have already announced sharp reductions in the production of light trucks and SUVs.

This is only a prelude to a new round of mass layoffs, bankruptcies and concession demands in the auto industry, the airlines and the rest of the US economy. The corporate executives and investors will not be satisfied until the auto industry is a low-wage sector in which workers have no benefits or job security.

The needs of the working class—for decent paying jobs, health care, education, housing and a world free from war—must take precedence over the selfish and destruction drive for individual profit. The guiding principle must be the fight for social equality, the elimination of poverty, and the raising of the living standards of the world’s people through the conscious and rational use of mankind’s productive resources.

The existing Unions are impotent!  They do not serve the workers as they were suppose to.  I say it is time for a change.  The workers need strong representation and leadership.  Not only do they need it, but they must step up and demand it!

2 thoughts on “Lessons From The AAM Strike

  1. Industries start, grow, mature…and morph into something else or they die!! Job security is not in extorting above-market wages and benefits but continually re-making yourself to make yourself more relevant to current conditions. Look at agriculture, mining, steel making, rail roads…they used to be vast sectors of the economy but today they are blips. And my friend, it is not Mexicans and Indians and others taking those jobs, more jobs are lost due to technology and innovation (driven by the US actually) – what required thousands of laborers in the fields today can be done by one farm combine.

  2. Hello again–I will agree somewhat–but the US has been doing terrible in the field of manufacturing, the biggies prefer to try and keep the investors happy not worrying about the consequences. It is more about profit earnings than growing an economy.

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