It’s time for another Labor
South roundup, and this go-round we find
the United Auto Workers gearing up for another election at the Volkswagen plant
in Chattanooga, Tennessee. This comes at the same time former VW boss Martin
Winterkorn faces charges for fraud, much like former Nissan boss Carlos Ghosn
is facing other charges of his own. Meanwhile Mississippi legislators lead the nation
as waterboys for ALEC, while the top GOP gubernatorial candidate in that state
warns against the threat of Hollywood elitists. This and a peek at old
socialist Milwaukee!
(To the right, the UAW's Walter Reuther--third from right, forefront--at the Battle of the Overpass in 1937--just before Ford goons began swinging their fists at him and other organizers)
UPDATE - May 5, 2019: No date has been scheduled as of yet for the next vote for union representation at the Volkswagen plant in Chattanooga. However, Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee has already weighed in in a speech to plant workers last week that was a thinly veiled attack on the union. Par for the course in Tennessee politics. Volkswagen shut down its assembly lines so workers could hear it.)
Five years after losing a tight election at the Volkswagen plant in Chattanooga, Tennesee, the United Auto Workers is prepping for another vote very soon and the opposition is already gathering forces.
UPDATE - May 5, 2019: No date has been scheduled as of yet for the next vote for union representation at the Volkswagen plant in Chattanooga. However, Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee has already weighed in in a speech to plant workers last week that was a thinly veiled attack on the union. Par for the course in Tennessee politics. Volkswagen shut down its assembly lines so workers could hear it.)
Five years after losing a tight election at the Volkswagen plant in Chattanooga, Tennesee, the United Auto Workers is prepping for another vote very soon and the opposition is already gathering forces.
UAW officials say they hope this election will not be marred
by the outside interference that contributed to their narrow 712-626 loss on
Valentine’s Day in 2014. After pledging to stay away from that fray, then-U.S.
Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., and Tennessee Governor Bill Haslam came in with fists
flying against the union. Haslam even threatened a promised $300 million state
subsidy to help Volkswagen expand the plant if it went union.
The last election featured "a lot of outside interference," UAW Local 42 President Steve Cochran told Mike Pare of the Chattanooga Times Free Press. "We hope that doesn't happen like the last time."
The last election featured "a lot of outside interference," UAW Local 42 President Steve Cochran told Mike Pare of the Chattanooga Times Free Press. "We hope that doesn't happen like the last time."
Will anti-union forces stay out of this battle? Of course
not. The UAW needs a reality check if it even hopes for such a thing. In fact, the
National Right to Work Foundation is already up in arms and trying to call
attention to recent troubles at the union involving officials misusing
union funds. Corker and Haslam will come off the farm to wave a bloody flag,
bet on it, and so will old right-wing troglodytes like Grover Norquist.
Volkswagen, with 43 of its 45 plants around the world already unionized, will
be fighting the union as well. It challenged a pro-union vote by skilled trades
workers at the Chattanooga plant back in 2015, and its public pledges to remain neutral
this time around ring hollow. No small irony that former VW boss Martin Winterkorn
now faces serious fraud charges over the company’s diesel emissions scandal. If
that goes south for him, he’ll find himself in the same kind of pickle that
former Nissan CEO Carlos Ghosn is in. Ghosn has been in and out of jail in
Japan in recent months due to charges that he misused the company’s cash.
What the UAW and pro-union workers at the plant need to do
is be battle-ready and smart. Win the game at getting their message to the
public, be more creative in their public relations, their catchy phrases, as
well as in their appeals to the workers. Be the cause of social justice that
the UAW was back in the 1930s, the UAW of Walter Reuther, not the diminished,
vision-lacking UAW of more recent years.
The Waterboys of the
Mississippi Legislature
More bills written by outside sources get filed in the
Mississippi Legislature than in any other state, according to a recent report
by USA Today.
Whether the issue is abortion, gun laws, or reduced
regulation, legislators in this state carry more water for corporations and
other outside groups than their counterparts elsewhere. The Republican-led
legislature is a brooding hotbed of conservatism, fertile ground indeed for the
arch-conservative Koch brothers and groups like the American Legislative
Exchange Council.
Rest assured, with the Koch brothers and ALEC giving marching
orders, Mississippi will remain the nation’s poorest state and one with ever-shrinking
services to its legions of poor. Politicians like Republican gubernatorial
candidate and current state Lieutenant Governor Tate Reeves can be expected to
do their part. On the campaign trail recently, Reeves touted his low-tax,
low-services, pro-school voucher, anti-public education agenda by decrying the
growing influence of “the elitist not only in Hollywood on the West Coast but
also on the East Coast” who want to destroy Mississippi and its values. Ross
Barnett would be proud.
Good news in Milwaukee,
let’s hope
(Jerry Lee Lewis in the 1950s)
One bright spot on the horizon has been the selection of
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, as the site of the 2020 Democratic Party National
Convention. No city in the country has a stronger leftist tradition than
Milwaukee, which elected three socialist mayors between 1910 and 1960. Under
their leadership the city became famous for its commitment to social equality
and also fiscal soundness.
However, given the ongoing battles within the Democratic
Party for its soul, the effort by neoliberal Clintonites to crush the
progressive spirit embodied by Bernie Sanders, let’s hope we don’t end up
singing that old Jerry Lee Lewis ditty “What Made Milwaukee Famous Made a Fool Out of Me”!
No comments:
Post a Comment