‘No Justice, No Jeeps’: UAW strikes in auto power play
Amid thriving car sales, US auto workers rally for better wages, highlighting the widening pay gap in the industry
20 September 2023 - 11:13
byBen Klayman
Support our award-winning journalism. The Premium package (digital only) is R30 for the first month and thereafter you pay R129 p/m now ad-free for all subscribers.
United Auto Workers (UAW) members picket outside a Deere plant in the US. Picture: BLOOMBERG
Toledo — A Toledo grocery store parking lot was full of Jeeps and Fords on Tuesday morning in a show of strength by auto workers on strike from Stellantis’s nearby Jeep plant.
Dozens set out in an Ohio-to-Michigan convoy to rally support for their walkout, many Jeeps adorned with signs reading “No Justice, No Jeeps.”
“We don’t get no profit sharing. We don’t get full benefits. I get paid $16.66 [an hour],” said Esperanza Ledesma, 32, of Toledo, a temporary employee who has worked at the Jeep plant for a year. “I make more waitressing. You know what I’m saying? I’m struggling.”
The nearly week-old United Auto Workers (UAW) strike against Ford, General Motors (GM) and Stellantis is viewed as a signal of the strength of the US labour movement that has garnered national support from Americans.
Driving for fair wages
The UAW members from two striking plants gathered in Toledo, were gathering for the one-hour, 72km drive to Wayne, Michigan, where Ford workers also walked off the job last week.
UAW workers have numerous demands, including higher pay, with many most concerned about the tiered wage structure that they say has created a yawning gap between newer and older employees. Many work two jobs to make ends meet.
Ledesma was hitching a ride in a 2021 Jeep Wrangler for the journey. Her colleague, Roxanne Stadtfeld, 58, of Monroe, Michigan, said she earns $19.28 an hour and supplements her income by delivering food for DoorDash.
Nobody has a magic wand. No-one can just say, ‘Companies act responsibly or fairly with workers.’ That’s why you have this struggle
Randi Weingarten, president, American Federation of Teachers
Stadtfeld had her 2019 Dodge Journey for the route, which snakes along the west bank of Lake Erie up into Michigan. Many were travelling in models that these UAW members produce and are among the most profitable vehicles for Ford, GM and Stellantis.
They are also the most popular. In Michigan, Ohio and Missouri, the three states where workers are now striking, models made by the Big Three dominate the leader board of new auto registrations. Ford F-Series pickup trucks are on top in all three states, according to S&P Global Mobility data.
The US is still the second-largest car market in the world, trailing only China. US automakers have over the years shifted increasingly to manufacturing heavy pickup trucks and SUVs that have higher margins than smaller vehicles.
UAW leaders say they deserve a greater percentage of company profits, while executives fear squeezed margins as a result of higher labour costs and lower-profit electric vehicles (EVs). Some 12,700 of the UAW’s 150,000 total members who work at the Big Three are on strike, but more could walk off the job in coming weeks if progress is not made.
Union membership has fallen steadily over several decades in the US. However, unions representing workers in the airline, rail, port and retail industries have increasingly been flexing their muscles in recent years as inflation has risen and low unemployment has given labour more power.
Picketers at the Toledo plant were joined by other union leaders on Tuesday, including Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers (AFT), and AFL-CIO head Liz Shuler.
“Nobody has a magic wand. No-one can just say, ‘Companies act responsibly or fairly with workers.’ That’s why you have this struggle,” Weingarten said.
Among those on the line were Brandon Cappelletty, 25, a temporary employee with Jeep for 4½ years, who works in the paint shop on Gladiator pickups.
“I’m 25 and the pay isn’t there, so I can’t even move out of my parents’ house,” he said.
Cappelletty estimated his net pay in 2022 at about $37,000, working six or seven days on 10-hour shifts on some weeks. He was holding a sign that said “End Tiers.”
Support our award-winning journalism. The Premium package (digital only) is R30 for the first month and thereafter you pay R129 p/m now ad-free for all subscribers.
‘No Justice, No Jeeps’: UAW strikes in auto power play
Amid thriving car sales, US auto workers rally for better wages, highlighting the widening pay gap in the industry
Toledo — A Toledo grocery store parking lot was full of Jeeps and Fords on Tuesday morning in a show of strength by auto workers on strike from Stellantis’s nearby Jeep plant.
Dozens set out in an Ohio-to-Michigan convoy to rally support for their walkout, many Jeeps adorned with signs reading “No Justice, No Jeeps.”
“We don’t get no profit sharing. We don’t get full benefits. I get paid $16.66 [an hour],” said Esperanza Ledesma, 32, of Toledo, a temporary employee who has worked at the Jeep plant for a year. “I make more waitressing. You know what I’m saying? I’m struggling.”
The nearly week-old United Auto Workers (UAW) strike against Ford, General Motors (GM) and Stellantis is viewed as a signal of the strength of the US labour movement that has garnered national support from Americans.
Driving for fair wages
The UAW members from two striking plants gathered in Toledo, were gathering for the one-hour, 72km drive to Wayne, Michigan, where Ford workers also walked off the job last week.
UAW workers have numerous demands, including higher pay, with many most concerned about the tiered wage structure that they say has created a yawning gap between newer and older employees. Many work two jobs to make ends meet.
Ledesma was hitching a ride in a 2021 Jeep Wrangler for the journey. Her colleague, Roxanne Stadtfeld, 58, of Monroe, Michigan, said she earns $19.28 an hour and supplements her income by delivering food for DoorDash.
Stadtfeld had her 2019 Dodge Journey for the route, which snakes along the west bank of Lake Erie up into Michigan. Many were travelling in models that these UAW members produce and are among the most profitable vehicles for Ford, GM and Stellantis.
They are also the most popular. In Michigan, Ohio and Missouri, the three states where workers are now striking, models made by the Big Three dominate the leader board of new auto registrations. Ford F-Series pickup trucks are on top in all three states, according to S&P Global Mobility data.
The US is still the second-largest car market in the world, trailing only China. US automakers have over the years shifted increasingly to manufacturing heavy pickup trucks and SUVs that have higher margins than smaller vehicles.
UAW leaders say they deserve a greater percentage of company profits, while executives fear squeezed margins as a result of higher labour costs and lower-profit electric vehicles (EVs). Some 12,700 of the UAW’s 150,000 total members who work at the Big Three are on strike, but more could walk off the job in coming weeks if progress is not made.
Union membership has fallen steadily over several decades in the US. However, unions representing workers in the airline, rail, port and retail industries have increasingly been flexing their muscles in recent years as inflation has risen and low unemployment has given labour more power.
Picketers at the Toledo plant were joined by other union leaders on Tuesday, including Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers (AFT), and AFL-CIO head Liz Shuler.
“Nobody has a magic wand. No-one can just say, ‘Companies act responsibly or fairly with workers.’ That’s why you have this struggle,” Weingarten said.
Among those on the line were Brandon Cappelletty, 25, a temporary employee with Jeep for 4½ years, who works in the paint shop on Gladiator pickups.
“I’m 25 and the pay isn’t there, so I can’t even move out of my parents’ house,” he said.
Cappelletty estimated his net pay in 2022 at about $37,000, working six or seven days on 10-hour shifts on some weeks. He was holding a sign that said “End Tiers.”
Reuters
Ford dodges Canada strike as US tensions simmer
US car makers union leader Shawn Fain rewrites the rules
US automakers, union try to reach deal before strike widens
Union begins strike at three carmakers in Detroit
Would you like to comment on this article?
Sign up (it's quick and free) or sign in now.
Please read our Comment Policy before commenting.
Most Read
Related Articles
UN warns just 15% of sustainable development targets are on track
EU risks relying totally on China for batteries
Published by Arena Holdings and distributed with the Financial Mail on the last Thursday of every month except December and January.