Another lying Tennessee politician has been exposed in the
aftermath of the Valentine’s Day 712-626 vote rejecting United Auto Workers
representation at the Volkswagen plant in Chattanooga, Tenn.
NewsChannel 5/WTVF
chief investigative reporter Phil Williams in Nashville reported Monday that
state Gov. Bill Haslam apparently lied when he denied his administration’s role in a plot
to make a $300 million offer of taxpayer-funded incentives to the company
contingent on keeping the UAW out of the plant.
Williams cited a confidential document leaked to his station
summarizing the Haslam administration’s “Project Trinity” program. The document,
which state government officials had refused to give to a Nashville newspaper, described
an offer of $300 million to Volkswagen to expand its Chattanooga plant with the
requirement that “the incentives … are subject to works council discussions
between the State of Tennessee and VW being concluded to the satisfaction of
the State of Tennessee.”
Volkswagen had been in negotiations with the UAW to
establish a German-style works council at the plant that would allow union
representation for workers on wages, benefits, safety conditions and other
issues.
Williams said rumors had circulated among Democratic
politicians in Tennessee that incentives were tied to the union vote, but
Haslam repeatedly denied these.
In other words, Haslam is a liar like his Republican friend,
U.S. Sen. Bob Corker of Tennessee. In the days before the election, and after
pledging he would not get involved in the matter because “I do not think it is
appropriate,” Corker came out from under his self-imposed rock and warned that
Volkswagen will only expand its plant if workers reject the UAW. Volkswagen-Chattanooga CEO Frank Fisher denied Corker's claim.
Corker also said Volkswagen would become a “laughingstock”
if it allowed a union to set up at the Chattanooga plant.
Although the workers did reject the UAW, Corker’s promise of
a plant expansion announcement within two weeks of the election never
materialized. In fact, the company’s top labor representative in Germany has
said he and Volkswagen’s powerful works council in Germany may block any
further expansion or investment in the U.S. South until workers there get union
representation.
The revelations about Haslam’s role in the union vote at
Volkswagen undoubtedly will add fuel to efforts by the UAW to get the National
Labor Relations Board to invalidate the election. The union says outside
interference undermined the integrity of the vote. The NewsChannel 5/WTVF report raises questions whether Haslam and
Corker coordinated their attack on the UAW.
A hard-learned lesson about labor organizing in the South
can be found in the 1987 movie Matewan, which tells the story of the violent confrontation between coal miners and company thugs in Matewan, West
Virginia, in 1920.
“The coal company doesn’t want this union,” labor organizer
Joe Kenehan, played by actor Chris Cooper, warns black, white and
Italian immigrant miners arguing with each other rather than unifying against
their common enemy. “The state government doesn’t want it. The federal
government doesn’t want it. All of ‘em are looking for an excuse to come down
and crush us to nothing.”
In the February vote in Chattanooga, the company said it was
actually open to the union although low and mid-level management worked against
it. Still, workers faced a barrage of anti-union propaganda, including more
than a dozen billboards making such claims as the UAW is only a cover for the
“United Obama Workers”.
Hundreds of thousands of dollars poured into Chattanooga
from Washington, D.C., and the pockets of Grover Norquist and his conservative
Americans for Tax Reform. It was the local branch of Norquist’s organization,
called the Center for Worker Freedom, that financed the billboards.
Labor organizer Joe Kenehan had some additional advice for
his striking miners in Matewan that
workers in the South need to remember today. “We got to pick away at this
situation, slow and careful. We got to organize and build support. We got to
work together.”
A united front by workers—black, white, immigrant and
native-born—is the only way to deal with the united front that wants to keep
unions out of the South.
Thanks go out to Lew Smith, a loyal Labor South supporter and key source for labor goings-on around the South, for the tip about the NewsChannel 5/WTVF story.
No comments:
Post a Comment