(To the right is a picture of the 1963 March on Washington with the late United Auto Workers leader Walter Reuther third from the right. Photo by Rowland Scherman of the U.S. Information Agency)
Chip Wells, 43, an 11-year veteran at the 5,200-employee Nissan
plant in Canton, Miss., says the recent bad news coming out of the Volkswagen
plant in Chattanooga, Tenn., did nothing to deter him and fellow pro-union Nissan workers
from their campaign to join the United Auto Workers.
“People think that derailed us,” says Wells, who works in
Nissan’s paint department, “but we think it made us stronger. That plant (in
Chattanooga) was only opened for two years. They’re still in the honeymoon phase.”
The UAW “made some mistakes and they realize it,” he says.
“The demographics were different. Here labor rights are civil rights, actually
human rights.”
Wells expects a union election at Nissan’s Canton plant by
this summer. UAW President Bob
King has tied his legacy to organizing in the South, and he plans to step down in
June.
Wells says he traveled to Chattanooga to witness the
Valentine’s Day 712-626 vote rejecting UAW representation at the Volkswagen
plant. “When we got there, they’d lost by 43 or however many there were. Some
were crying. To me, they took it too hard. We don’t need to be feeling like
this.”
Despite its closeness, the vote at the 1,560-worker Volkswagen
plant in Chattanooga was called “a devastating loss that derails the United
Auto Workers union’s effort to organize Southern factories,” by the Associated
Press. The New York Times called it a
“stinging defeat” for the UAW. Others talked of a “fatal blow” to UAW hopes to
organize the foreign auto plants in the South.
What’s missing from this picture is the nine-year-old
campaign in Canton that has grown from small gatherings of activists,
organizers, and a handful of courageous workers in 2005 to rallies of hundreds
at local churches and college auditoriums. Caravans of workers, students and
activists have traveling to trade shows across the country and as far away as
South Africa and Brazil, where national labor leaders have pledged their
support.
Even beyond Nissan in Canton, the UAW has an active campaign
at the Mercedes-Benz plant in Vance, Ala., where, as with the Volkswagen plant
in Chattanooga, the potential exists to establish a German-style works council
with the UAW representing workers on key issues such as wages, benefits and
working conditions.
In Chattanooga, the UAW should have insisted on more time to
establish a firm foundation of community support that would withstand the
inevitable anti-union political-business-media juggernaut. U.S. Sen. Bob
Corker, R-Tenn., Tennessee Republican Gov. Bill Haslam and outside groups like Grover
Norquist’s Americans for Tax Reform led a virulent campaign warning of lost
jobs, plant closings and a Detroit-like future if the UAW won.
The UAW underestimated the forces aligned against it. The
union figured that Volkswagen’s own willingness to allow a fair election and creation
of a German-style works council at the plant was sufficient to ensure victory.
The UAW was wrong.
Mississippi is different.
The workers who voted in Chattanooga were predominantly
white in a Republican stronghold in a Republican-dominated state. Mississippi
is also Republican-ruled, but the Nissan plant has an 80-percent black
workforce and is located near the capital city of Jackson, one of the state’s
few Democratic strongholds. Then there’s the legacy of civil rights in
Mississippi.
“The politicians are going to get involved, and it is going
to be ugly,” Well says. “Down here in the South this is a mindset. This is the
50th anniversary of Freedom Summer. They didn’t like people coming
in from the outside to tell them how to do their business. They look at the UAW
the same way.”
Indeed, the summer of 2014 will mark the 50th
anniversary of the murders of civil rights activists Andrew Goodman, Mickey
Schwerner and James Chaney in Neshoba County, Miss. Goodman and Schwerner came
to Mississippi as part of a wave of young idealists hoping to help establish
freedom and democracy during what became known as “Freedom Summer”. Chaney was
a native Mississippian and the only black among the three.
“Labor Right Are Civil Rights” was the banner carried by a
delegation of preachers, activists and workers from Canton to the recent North
American International Auto Show in Detroit. That slogan has inspired a network
of students at historically black colleges and universities who are constantly
working their computers and IPhones to build support for a union election at
the Nissan plant.
“Our movement is moving,” says Hayat Mohammad, a 19-year-old
English major at predominantly black Tougaloo College near Jackson and a leader
of the Mississippi Student Justice Alliance. “We have such amazing
talent—photographers, journalists—such active young people. Nissan is feeling
the pressure.”
What the workers in Canton and Chattanooga face is what
workers face all across the South. Yet union campaigns were successful at places
such as Smithfield Foods in North Carolina in recent years and, decades before,
with the textile giant J.P. Stevens in North Carolina. The Farm Labor Organizing Committee and
Coalition of Immokalee Workers have also won better wages and conditions for
migrant workers in North Carolina and Florida. These campaigns were all hard-fought and took
years.
“You’ve got to train your local leaders, get your core group
together and train them,” veteran Southern labor organizer Danny Forsyth once
told me in an interview. “Whenever I left town, the local leadership could do
what was necessary to do.”
Forsyth knows what he’s talking about. Over a four-year
period in the 1980s, he helped secure 20 victories out of 22 campaigns in the
South. That includes the successful battle to establish a union at the giant
Pillowtex textile mill in Kannapolis, N.C., in 1999.
The best organizing is from the ground up, Forsyth said, and
it utilizes the same methods espoused by famed community organizer Saul
Alinsky. Workers learn where they fit in vis-à-vis the existing power structure
in a plant and see they have power, too. Community is key to organizing,
Forsyth said.
A workers’ organizing committee has a firm foothold at the
Nissan-Canton plant, Chip Wells says. “We are fighting for each other. We love
each other. We’ve gotten to know each other, really become friends from not
even knowing each other a couple years ago. If something happens to one, we all
get behind each other.”
Anti-union pressures inside the Canton plant continue, Wells
says. Plant leaders no longer subject workers to the anti-union videos that
were once a staple, but they still “tell us how many plants (the UAW) closed
down, insinuate things.”
Unlike Volkswagen, Nissan has given no indication that it
will allow a fair, intimidation-free election at the Canton plant. Nissan CEO
Carlos Ghosn has been a vocal opponent of unions at his company’s Southern
plants.
Mississippi Gov. Phil Bryant, a Republican, has already
publicly invited outside groups to come in and help fight unions at the auto plants in
his state. He and other Republican leaders can be expected to do what Haslam
and Corker did in Tennessee.
“It is our blood, sweat and tears that is in these
vehicles,” Nissan worker Wells says. “We are prepared for the politicians.”
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