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White House


A BIG AUTO WORKERS’ STRIKE COULD HIT NEXT WEEK — WITH BIDEN’S POLICIES IN THE
BALANCE

A strike next week against the three big U.S. automakers could ding the economy
and hamper the president’s message on jobs and climate change.



President Joe Biden’s stated belief that a strike won’t come to pass appears to
be a minority opinion, with many political insiders and industry officials
expecting it will take place. | Patrick Semansky/AP Photo

By Holly Otterbein, Zack Colman and Olivia Olander

09/09/2023 03:40 PM EDT

 * 
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 * * Link Copied
 * * 
   * 
   * 

President Joe Biden is publicly predicting that auto workers won’t strike when
their contracts with the Big 3 U.S. carmakers expire next week.

But privately, White House officials are “aware” that a strike is likely, said a
person familiar with their thinking — and have spent much of the summer engaging
with both sides in a labor dispute that threatens to dent the economy and the
president’s reelection hopes. The person was granted anonymity to speak frankly
about a sensitive topic.



Unlike the last United Auto Workers strike — for six weeks against General
Motors in 2019 — this labor showdown has outsize political implications for a
vocally pro-union president who has staked his 2024 campaign on his handling of
the economy. And this time, UAW President Shawn Fain is floating the possibility
that the union could strike against GM, Ford and Stellantis all at once,
magnifying the economic fallout.



One of Biden’s signature policies is hovering over the talks: His effort to
counter climate change and create U.S. manufacturing jobs through hundreds of
billions of dollars in clean-energy spending is frustrating the UAW, which is
demanding that workers share in the benefits from the government-subsidized
shift to electric vehicles.

Fain has refused to endorse Biden’s reelection, complaining that the
administration has handed out subsidies for projects such as electric-vehicle
battery plants without demanding higher pay and labor standards.

energy & environment

Auto union withholds support for Biden, citing electric vehicles

By Timothy Cama | May 03, 2023 06:14 PM

An autoworkers’ strike, which could begin as soon as Thursday night, could also
coincide with a federal government shutdown if Congress cannot reach a stopgap
spending deal by Sept. 30. And it would add to the post-pandemic strike boom
that has marked much of the Biden era, with contract disputes already shutting
down much of Hollywood and smaller walkouts at private companies taking place
across the country.

“Of course it’s a concern and something that has been closely watched,”
Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg told POLITICO. “From an administration
perspective, we’re in contact with the parties, urging them to get to a
solution.”

He also echoed Biden’s recent praise for the automakers’ union and its role in
U.S. history. “The best way to put it is, the UAW is a huge part of what built
the middle class,” Buttigieg said. “We believe in collective bargaining, and I
think ultimately this can get to a good place.”

Asked earlier this week about Biden’s comments about the likelihood of a strike,
White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said he is an “optimist” and
encourages “both sides to continue to talk.”

Gene Sperling, the point person for the White House on talks between UAW and the
Big 3, has spoken on a regular basis with union officials and the businesses for
the past two months. He also is in touch with members of Congress as well as
Michigan leaders such as Gov. Gretchen Whitmer.

White House officials have approached their role as something that goes beyond
merely monitoring the negotiations, but also stops well short of intervening,
according to people familiar with their thinking. At times, Biden’s aides have
sought to find common ground between the car companies and UAW, the sources
said.




“The president did not want intervention … but he did want engagement,” said a
senior White House official, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss the
matter freely.

The goal is to keep all four parties talking. Biden himself has made clear to
his aides that he wants a “win-win” solution.

But at the same time, people close to Biden understand that he is a pro-union
president who wants a deal that enables workers to support a family — and that
everything should be done to prevent plant closures and put jobs back into
communities during the transition to electric vehicles.

Indeed, one of Sperling’s main efforts has been to cultivate a relationship with
the new leadership at the UAW, where Fain won election in March on a platform of
taking a more aggressive stance in contract negotiations.

“I know that the White House and the president care deeply about workers getting
a fair shake and they also believe deeply in the power of the union, including
to strike,” said Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.), chair of the Congressional
Progressive Caucus.

Jayapal, pointing to the way that Biden officials have handled past contract
negotiations, added, “Those are the ways in which, without dictating terms and
being actively involved in saying what the resolution should be, I think just
the presence and the monitoring and the encouragement and the pushing of the
White House can often be very useful.”

The White House has also analyzed the economic implications of a potential
strike and sought to understand all possible outcomes of the negotiations.

“The White House thinks through economic implications of all sorts of possible
events on a daily basis, it would be irresponsible not to,” said a second White
House official, who was also granted anonymity to discuss the administration’s
thinking.

Meanwhile, former President Donald Trump — the leading GOP candidate to take on
Biden — is seizing on the opportunity to court autoworkers frustrated with the
move to electric vehicles, and hoping to repeat his surprise 2016 victory in
Michigan. Biden’s policies “will murder the U.S. auto industry and kill
countless union autoworker jobs forever,” the ex-president’s campaign contended
in a statement this week, months after he advised the UAW that “you’d better
endorse Trump.”

Fain has ruled out an endorsement of Trump and slammed him as recently as this
month. White House officials have also pointed out that Biden has won early
endorsements from the AFL-CIO and other major unions. Even so, Trump has
succeeded before in winning support from disaffected union members even without
getting their leadership’s blessing.

2020 elections

Rank-and-file union members snub Biden for Trump

By Holly Otterbein and Megan Cassella | September 22, 2020 04:30 AM

Biden’s stated belief that a strike won’t come to pass — “I don’t think it’s
going to happen,” he said on Sept. 4 — appears to be a minority opinion, with
many political insiders and industry officials expecting it will take place.

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce, National Association of Manufacturers and Motor
Equipment and Manufacturers Association, as well as GM, Ford and Stellantis,
have either briefed the White House on their point of view or are planning to in
the days ahead. Already, business officials have shared an analysis with the
White House that suggested that 50 percent of suppliers would go bankrupt within
two to three weeks of a strike — affecting approximately 345,000 workers.


MOST READ


 1. ‘WE PUT IN AIR CONDITIONIN’, STAYED YEAR-ROUND, AND RUINED AMERICA’


 2. ‘I JUST HAD ANOTHER ONE’: HOW MCCONNELL SCRAMBLED TO PROTECT HIS JOB AFTER
    TWO FREEZE-UPS


 3. TRUMP PRIVATELY DISCUSSED BIDEN IMPEACHMENT WITH HOUSE GOPERS


 4. A REPUBLICAN LEADER FROM THE 2013 SHUTDOWN HAS A WARNING FOR KEVIN MCCARTHY


 5. MCCARTHY PRESSURE HITS A BOILING POINT



The UAW declined to comment for this story. In a Facebook Live appearance
Friday, though, Fain said that if there is no deal by Thursday night, “There
will be a strike — at all three if need be.”

Ford spokesperson Jessica Enoch said that “our focus is on reaching a deal that
rewards our employees, allows for the continuation of Ford’s unique position as
the most American automaker and enables Ford to invest and grow.”

GM shared a previously published statement that said “we have progressed to more
detailed discussions but “we still have work to do.”

Stellantis said its focus is on reaching an agreement that “balances the
concerns of our 43,000 employees with our vision for the future — one that
better positions the business to meet the challenges of the U.S. marketplace and
secures the future for all of our employees, their families and our company.”

Among other concessions, the union is demanding 40 percent pay raises over four
years, a 32-hour work week, and the reinstatement of traditional pensions for
new hires. The automakers contend that meeting those wage demands would
surrender the budding electric vehicle market to foreign rivals.

On Thursday, GM submitted an offer that included a 10 percent increase in wages
plus additional lump sum payments. Fain dismissed it as “an insulting proposal
that doesn’t come close to an equitable agreement for America’s autoworkers.”

Ford made what it called a “generous offer” to the union on Aug. 31, including a
9 percent wage increase over the life of the contract and 6 percent in lump sum
awards.

Stellantis put an offer on the table Friday that included a 14.5 percent pay
boost, along with “inflation protection” payments over the next four years.

Fain has rejected those offers as well.

Business groups are openly urging the White House to play an active role in
averting a strike.

Biden’s “role right now is to make sure that all parties stay at the table and
keep talking,” said John Drake, vice president of transportation, infrastructure
and supply chain technology at the Chamber of Commerce. “The UAW can say that
the president doesn’t have any business being involved in negotiations. But
there are huge national implications of these negotiations going south, and the
president absolutely has a role to play in these negotiations.”

White House

‘This is a problem’: Biden faces looming strikes that could rock economy

By Holly Otterbein and Zack Colman | July 23, 2023 07:00 AM

White House officials have not previously ruled out the possibility of Biden
getting involved, but have suggested that he probably wouldn’t unless both sides
wanted him to.

Biden and Congress actively intervened last year to block what would have been
an economically crippling rail strike, angering many union activists by imposing
a deal that fell far short of their demands. But he has much less legal
authority to thwart an autoworkers’ strike, even if he were inclined to.

Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.), a progressive and a member of the Biden campaign’s
national advisory board, said he has talked with Sperling and praised his
approach.




“He gets why we need to stand 100 percent with workers and has been doing all he
can to hold the Big 3 accountable,” he said.

At the same time, Khanna is encouraging the Biden administration and other
Democrats to stand “unequivocally” with Fain: “The White House and House
Democrats must make it clear that the Big 3, which have received billions in
American taxpayers subsidies and seen their CEO pay go up 40 percent or more,
need to provide a contract covering all EV and battery plants that pay workers a
living wage.”

Sperling and other senior White House officials were part of an effort by the
Biden administration to quell the UAW’s angst over its handling of federal
incentives for building electric vehicles.

The Energy Department in late August rolled out a $15.5 billion package of
grants and loans to retool existing factories that the agency said would place a
priority on companies that are likely to allow collective bargaining or have a
history of high pay and jobs standards. In a sign of improving relations, Fain
praised the announcement, a contrast to his statements flogging the same
department in June for awarding $9.2 billion in loans to Ford for facilities in
right-to-work states Tennessee and Kentucky.

Labor

Biden signs law bringing rail strike saga to an end

By Nick Niedzwiadek | December 02, 2022 12:20 PM

But in the view of White House aides, it’s the automakers and union officials
who need to hammer out a deal.

John Podesta, the senior White House adviser leading efforts to implement the
hundreds of billions in climate and clean energy incentives in last year’s
Inflation Reduction Act, told reporters Thursday that when it comes to the
negotiations, the White House is “monitoring this closely.” At the same time, he
said, “ultimately it’s up to them to bargain.”

The appearance of automakers taking federal subsidies to states with lower pay
and little or no union presence has endangered UAW support for Biden’s clean
energy agenda, said Jason Walsh, executive director of the Blue-Green Alliance,
a coalition of environmental and labor groups.

That conflicts with a key part of the president’s “Bidenomics” campaign theme —
his contention that subsidizing the shift away from fossil fuels will aid both
the Earth’s climate and future of American manufacturing jobs.

“For my coalition, union workers are not going to continue to support the
policies necessary to make this clean energy shift if they are not benefiting
from it directly and economically,” said Walsh, who also served in the Obama
administration. “For them, the end of the month matters a whole lot more than
the end of the world.”

Adam Wren contributed to this report.


 * Filed under:
 * Employment & Immigration,
 * Labor,
 * Strikes,
 * Joe Biden,
 * Joe Biden 2024,
 * Donald Trump,
 * Donald Trump 2024,
 * 2024 Elections


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   The performance and effectiveness of ads that you see or interact with can be
   measured.
   
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 * APPLY MARKET RESEARCH TO GENERATE AUDIENCE INSIGHTS
   
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   Market research can be used to learn more about the audiences who visit
   sites/apps and view ads.
   
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 * DEVELOP AND IMPROVE PRODUCTS
   
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   Your data can be used to improve existing systems and software, and to
   develop new products
   
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 * CREATE A PERSONALISED ADS PROFILE
   
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   A profile can be built about you and your interests to show you personalised
   ads that are relevant to you.
   
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