More
than 1,700 workers at the big Volkswagen plant in Chattanooga,
Tennessee, are voting this week on whether they want to stand up to
the right-wing politicians and the union-busting companies that have
been called in to thwart the second union drive in as many years,
with workers concerned about working conditions as much as pay and
benefits.
Voting
started yesterday at the plant and it will continue today and
tomorrow. Local politicians and business groups have circled the
wagons and tried their best to convince the VW workers that unions
are not good for them and that the UAW is only organizing them for
the dues they can pay. The workers know better, because they are
working at what are arguably the lowest wages in the VW world. And
as well, they are working in conditions that are causing injuries on
a grand scale and they see the company minimizing those injuries,
such as carpal tunnel syndrome.
Wages
aren't that great, either, starting between $15 and $16 an hour, a
wage level that fast food workers are demanding around the U.S. as a
minimum wage that barely provides the necessities of life. While a
job is a job, some of the workers have noticed that there is much
turnover in the workforce at VW, because they are not treated as
human beings, but part of the assembly line. But that's typical for
any large company that has adopted a philosophy of “lean”
operation, which means that they will keep whittling down the number
of workers to the point at which they can just make production every
day. That means lots of injuries, not much time for toilet breaks,
if any, and a speed-up of the assembly line.
In
the last National Labor Relations Board election two years ago, one
would have thought that Chattanooga was under seige by a foreign
power, rather than a union that would allow the workers to stand up
to the bosses to demand respect and justice, along with good pay,
good benefits, and good and safe working conditions. Without a union
and union contract, those things are just a dream. But the powers
that be in Chattanooga and Tennessee brought out their big guns
during that election, with U.S. Senator Bob Corker leading the
charge, such that he could have been on the payroll of the
union-busters that were brought in.
This
time, they have run the same game plan: captive audience meetings to
“inform” the workers of the evil nature of unions,
propaganda against unions in general, and training of management and
supervisors who talk to line workers every day about the benefits of
working non-union. And this in a company that has unionized work in
all of their global enterprises, as well as a powerful union movement
in its home country, Germany, where unionized auto workers represent
a powerful part of the social fabric, not just in the auto plants.
VW,
however, doesn't have to lift a finger to oppose unionization in
Chattanooga, since the rabidly anti-union business community and
right-wing politicians will do their dirty work for them. A
union-busting company that is plying its trade there says that the
money to pay them has come from VW workers and interested persons in
the city and state. It's hard to believe that workers being paid
between $15 and $23 an hour, even in Tennessee, have the spare cash
to to fund fat union-busters to destroy their own interests and
welfare and that of their families and communities. They may be
oppressed, but they are not dumb. Someone has to change things and
they are learning that only they can make the needed changes by
working union.
Politicians
in that part of the world, however, continue to strive to keep the
southern states union-free and tout the “benefits” and
they love to point out that the UAW's efforts to unionize other
plants in other southern states have not been successful. And,
they're proud of it. Keeping the workers down in their place is what
their goal is and they have succeeded. Eventually, though, workers
see through the propaganda and threats and strive to make the
workplace safe and healthy. Right now, auto companies don't need to
worry much about health and safety, because there is no right to a
safe and healthy workplace without a union. Laws on the books just
don't do it, since they are lightly enforced or not enforced at all,
while workers suffer and die.
The
other big club that is continuously held over the heads of workers in
all of the U.S., but especially in the southern states is that the
plant will close if you unionize or “we won't get the big
expasion of plant and jobs if you unionize.” That was one of
the threats that was used in the election two years ago. The company
did its part, even though the anti-union effort was led by business
interests and their politicians. It hired lawyers to delay and
thwart the election that is under way.
“VW
should be ashamed of this legal obstruction that led to this,”
said a statement from UAW. “It’s sad how Volkswagens’
strategy of using high-priced legal games can stand in the way of the
right to vote for Chattanooga workers. Chattanooga workers deserve
to know from VW, how much money have you spent on these lawyers to
try to stop us from having a voice?” The answer, of course, is
lots of money has been spent, much of it coming from east Tennessee
manufacturing entities through Southern Momentum, which claims to be
a worker organization that opposes the UAW. In reality, this is an
old lie that is told by anti-worker organizations, when their money
comes from the rich and Corporate America, which desperately wants
the American workforce to be pliant and obedient.
Southern
Momentum, like other shills of big business usually claim to be the
“underdog” in a struggle like VW in Chattanooga, but all
of the money and power are on their side and they are most willing to
use money, threats, propaganda, and donuts to bring the workers to
their side. The workers' side has no money and no power, unless they
form a union. Elections like the one that continues today and
tomorrow at VW will never be free of coercion by the money powers,
but they do have the right to vote on their future. It is up to
them.
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