Found at: http://www.pww.org/article/articleprint/10848/ |
Autoworkers not ready to make nice |
DETROIT — As the United Auto Workers’ two-day special convention on bargaining came to a close, music filled the hall. It seemed to send a message to GM, Ford and Chrysler that that the union isn’t ready to roll over. The song was the Dixie Chicks’ hit “Not Ready to Make Nice.”
Far from being demoralized, autoworkers and other UAW members here voiced anger at the Bush administration and corporations who attack labor while watching their own pockets get fat. Detroit auto companies keep repeating that autoworkers must “sacrifice” more, but the sacrifices have been completely one-sided, union members say. Grants and stock options GM gave its top six executives alone are worth more than $10 million.
A GM worker from Texas told the World the rich just keep getting richer and voiced anger over the “horrific” war in Iraq, saying the young men and women who have died and those coming back with missing arms and legs are “our” children, not “theirs.”
“People in Iraq and in our country are suffering but the rich continue to get richer,” he said.
UC-Berkeley professor Harley Shaiken reinforced that view when he told the convention the top 0.1 percent (that’s right, one-tenth of 1 percent) posted income increases in recent years equivalent to those of the bottom 50 percent.
In his opening speech, UAW President Ron Gettelfinger sent a message to Delphi Corp. that corporate “bottom feeders” who file for bankruptcy to break unions should know the UAW and other unions will “always be there to fight one more day, no matter how long it takes.”
He underscored the union’s demand for health care, saying, “It’s time to have a single-payer, universal, comprehensive, national health care program that covers every man, woman and child in America.” He also called for passage of the Employee Free Choice Act, declaring the union will prepare to do battle in the Senate because “Bush has his veto pen ready.”
Although little was said on the possible sale of Chrysler, Gettelfinger blasted equity and hedge funds circling overhead. “Many of them are out to increase their wealth by stripping and flipping companies,” he charged.