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Reject UAW plans to sabotage American Axle strike!
Statement of the World Socialist Web Site editorial
board
11 March 2008
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The two-week long strike by American Axle & Manufacturing
(AAM) workers against the auto supplier is in danger of being
betrayed by the United Auto Workers union. The UAW is working
behind the scenes to implement a contract that follows the pattern
of wage and benefit concessions it has already negotiated throughout
the auto industry.
Monday marked the fifth straight day of bargaining between
the UAW and American Axle to reach a deal that would end the strike
by 3,650 workers in Michigan and western New York.
Unlike the two-day or six hour Hollywood strikes
called by the UAW against General Motors and Chrysler, the American
Axle walkout has substantially disrupted the operations of the
Big Three automakers, which have spearheaded the attack on workers
jobs and living standards. However, even though tens of thousands
of GM, Chrysler and auto parts workers have been laid off or forced
to work shorter hours due to the strike, there is widespread support
for the American Axle workers.
Autoworkers are looking to their brothers and sisters at American
Axle to draw a line in the sand against the corporate attack on
jobs and living standards. It has long been the practice of the
UAW to shut down strikes just at the point when they are having
the greatest impact. Preparations must be made now to campaign
for a rejection of any contract that contains wage and benefit
concessions.
It is necessary to oppose the efforts of International and
local UAW officials to push through a sell-out with threats of
plant closings and layoffs and offers of bogus buyouts
aimed at bribing current workers to sacrifice the interests of
future generations.
American Axle workers should organize strike committees, independent
of the UAW, to expand the strike to workers at Delphi, Dana, GM,
Ford and Chrysler, and to make an appeal to Canadian auto workers
who will face concessions demands from the Big Three automakers
this summer. Workers must demand the restoration of all concessions
and wage a fight against the union-management conspiracy to transform
the auto plants into low-wage sweatshops.

The last thing the UAW wants is a unified struggle against
the auto bosses and their Wall Street backers. Operating as little
more than a company union, the UAW has sought to isolate the strike
and is working eagerly to end it.
The UAW bureaucracy has already acceded to the bulk of the
companys demands. The Detroit Free Press reported
last week that even before the strike started the union had agreed
to substantial wage cuts. According to documents leaked to the
newspaper, the unions wage proposal has several layers,
ranging from $14.56 for entry-level, support positions to $21
for core axle-making jobs. In addition, the union proposed
a reduction in skilled workers wages from $32.13 an hour
to $27.
Wall Street has already factored in the capitulation of the
UAW to the companys wage and benefit demands. According
to an article in Reuters, JP Morgan analyst Himanshu Patel
said in a note for clients on Monday that while buyout costs
for the new contract could be rich, a new deal could allow
American Axle to cut hourly labor costs by $20 per hour on average.
He said that would translate to an additional $2 in annual earnings
per share.
The Delphi contract and the recent agreements signed by the
UAW with GM, Ford and Chrysler have discarded the gains won through
the struggles of generations of autoworkers. With the assistance
of the UAW, the Big Three automakers intend to replace tens of
thousands of higher paid senior workers with employees making
$14 an hour, with substandard medical benefits and no employer-paid
pensions or retiree health care benefits.
The transformation of autoworkers from the highest paid industrial
workers in the world into a poverty-stricken workforce is the
culmination of three decades of labor-management partnership
by the UAW. The UAW has a particularly long history of collaboration
with Richard Dauch, the multi-millionaire owner of American Axle.
As an executive vice president of Chrysler during the bailout
of the near-bankrupt company in 1980, Dauch traveled with UAW
Vice President and Chrysler Department head Marc Stepp to over
150 factories and facilities, where the two threatened workers
with the loss of their jobs if they did not increase productivity
and accept work rule changes and other company dictates.
In a show of gratitude, Dauch invited Stepp to write the foreword
for his 1993 biography Passion for Manufacturing, which
details his years at Chrysler. Fondly recalling his trips with
Dick, Stepp writes, Never before had our workers
seen management and labor saying the same thing in the same room
at the same time. Some long-time union members could not believe
it. I asked them to lend us your hand to produce quality
products. If you will not do that, then give us your goodwill.
If you cant do that, then get the hell out of the way so
we can take care of business.
During the Chrysler bailout, the UAW set a new standard for
betraying its members when it collaborated with the company in
the shutdown of dozens of plants, the elimination of 50,000 of
its members jobs and the imposition of $500 million in wage
cuts and other concessions. In recognition of the unions
services, Chrysler Chairman Lee Iacocca appointed UAW President
Douglas Fraser to the companys board of directors.
American Axle was founded in 1994 when a private investor group,
led by Dauch, purchased the five key axle and forge factories
from GM. The UAW supported Dauchs ownership, agreed to lower
wages for new hires and helped the company move out its higher
paid, senior workers.
This opened up the era in which much of the auto industry was
been hived off to financial pirates. For Dauch and the new private
equity owners of Chrysler, the vast industrial assets built up
by generations of workers are little more than personal ATM machines,
from which they can extract tens of millions of dollars in salaries,
bonuses and stock options.
In 1997 private equity firm Blackstone Group bought a controlling
share in American Axle and then resold it in a series of stock
sales, which netted $600 million for its wealthy investors. These
included David Stockman, the former budget director in the Reagan
administration. Stockman is currently under indictment for fraud
and other charges stemming from the bankruptcy and liquidation
of another auto parts maker, Collins & Aikman.
In 2006, Dauch received $9,329,628 in salary, bonuses and stocks,
according to a proxy statement filed with the Securities and Exchange
Commission. His weekly earnings were $179,404or more than
195 times what an American Axle worker earned in a 40-hour weekeven
though the company reported a $222 million loss for the year.
Dauch is not an exception. In 2006 top auto executives made
an average of $7.1 million, including Ford chief Alan Mulally
who pocketed $39.1 million and Johnson Controls head John Barth
who walked away with $30.8 million. At the same time workers and
retirees were forced to give up medical benefits and tens of thousands
of workers were laid off.
Over the last 30 years a one-way war has been conducted against
the working class in which trillions of dollars have been transferred
from workers into the hands of Americas wealthy elite. During
this time the UAW, along with its allies in the Democratic Party,
have sought to blame the assault on jobs and living standards
not on the corporate bosses and the capitalist profit system,
but on workers in other countries and so-called unfair foreign
competition.
The claim that the auto industry does not have enough resources
to pay decent wages and benefits is a lie. American Axles
financial books must be made public. The huge payouts for Dauch
and other top executives must be frozen and the tens of millions
they have squeezed out of the company returned.
However, workers at American Axle confront more than just the
greed of Dauch and other individuals. They confront a social system,
capitalism, which subordinates all decisions effecting millions
of people to the profit demands of a tiny elite. Dauch & Co.
are rewarded handsomely for delivering profits to investors in
the form of cuts in wages and benefits.
Under the capitalist free enterprise system, the
corporate executives and Wall Street investors have a monopoly
over the decision-making process, but they are not the ones who
pay for their disastrous choices. Time and again their single-minded
drive to enrich themselves undermines the long-term health of
these companies.
The first step needed to protect the interests of working people
is to institute democratic control over all business decisions
affecting work, safety, salaries, hiring and hours. These decisions
cannot be made by the wealthy fewwhose interests are antithetical
to the needs of working peoplebut by committees of factory
floor workers, technicians, accountants and other experts committed
to the interests of the working class.
The auto industry, upon which millions of workers and their
families depend, can no longer be the personal assets of Americas
wealthy elite, who dispense with them as they see fit. The last
three decades of industrial decaythe ruination of Detroit,
Cleveland and other Rust-Belt cities and the devastating
consequences of the sub-prime mortgage crisis and the collapse
of the housing markethave demonstrated that these people
are unfit for the job.
If the auto industry is to be run for the good of society,
not personal profit, it must be transformed into a publicly owned
utility and placed under the democratic control of working people.
This will not only guarantee a good standard of living for autoworkers
and their families, but the production of safe, high-quality and
affordable transportation for consumers. The revolutionary advances
of technology and globally integrated production put to use to
meet the vast requirements and problems of modern society.
It is essential that American autoworkers reject the flag-waving
chauvinism of the UAW bureaucracy and the Democratic Partywhich
only serves to divide and weaken the international working classand
unite with their class brothers and sisters in Europe, Latin America
and Asia in a common fight to defend the jobs and basic rights
of all working people.
The fight for this socialist and internationalist policy requires
a break with the Democratic Partythe second party of big
business, inequality and warand the building of a mass socialist
party of the working class. This is the aim of the Socialist Equality
Party. We urge American Axle workers to consider our decades-long
struggle against the betrayals of the UAW bureaucracy, to study
our history and program and make the decision to join and build
the SEP as the new revolutionary leadership of the working class.
See Also:
Impact of American Axle strike spreads
[10 March 2008]
UAW offered wage cuts on eve of American
Axle strike
[5 March 2008]
American Axle strike enters second week
[4 March 2008]
American Axle strikers defy
UAW wage-cutting pattern
[29 February 2008]
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