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Mobilize auto workers behind the American Axle strike
Statement of the World Socialist Web Site editorial
board
20 March 2008
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The World Socialist Web Site and the Socialist Equality
Party call upon all auto workers to mobilize in defense of the
three-week-old strike by 3,650 workers at American Axle &
Manufacturing plants in Michigan and western New York. By resisting
the companys wage-cutting demands, American Axle workers
are taking a stand for the entire working class.
What is at stake in this struggle? Once again, a company run
by multi-millionaire owners is demanding that the wages and conditions
of the workers be permanently slashed to near-poverty levels.
This is a situation that confronts millions of workers in the
US.
American Axle CEO Richard Dauchwho received at least
$60 million in total compensation over the last five yearshas
threatened to close plants and shift production to lower-wage
factories in the US and Mexico unless workers accept a $14-an-hour
wage cut, sharp reductions in medical coverage, the elimination
of employer-paid pensions and retiree health care benefits, and
hundreds more job reductions.
Last week, three workers at the Detroit plant were arrested
after the company began to implement its threat to ship products
out of the strikebound factories.

This is a struggle not simply against one company. Behind Dauch
stand the biggest corporate and financial interests, which are
determined to make the working class pay for the financial crisis
on Wall Street resulting from the bursting of the real estate
bubble.
The question posed is: Who is to pay for the failure of American
capitalism?
It is not only manufacturing workers whose livelihoods are
being attacked, but far broader sections of the working class.
At the bankrupt investment bank Bear Stearns, more than half of
the companys 14,000 employees lost their jobs and the entire
work force at a stroke saw their life sayings wiped away by the
collapse of the firms stock.
The needs of working people are irreconcilably opposed to a
system that is entirely geared to increasing corporate profits
and further enriching a financial aristocracy. The fact that the
entire working class confronts a ruthless offensive by big business,
backed by a government and two-party system that defend corporate
America, demonstrates that this is fundamentally a political struggle
between opposing social classes.
The industrial mobilization of the working class must be guided
by a new perspective and strategy and the building of a political
movement that opposes the capitalist system, whose failure is
being demonstrated each day in the spread of home foreclosures,
a financial crisis that threatens to plunge the country into a
new Depression, and growing social inequality.
The role of the UAW
The fight against wage-cutting, the loss of jobs and the destruction
of all the gains won by previous generations of workers cannot
be conducted through the existing labor organizations, such as
the United Auto Workers union. They categorically defend the profit
system through their collaboration with the corporations and their
political alliance with the Democratic Party, which they falsely
portray as a friend of the working man in order to
block the building of an independent party of the working class.
Last year the UAW signed contracts with the Big Three automakers
that imposed on its own members 50 percent wage cuts and the destruction
of health benefits and pensions. In return, the union became the
proprietor of a health care trust that constitutes one of the
largest private investment funds in the US, with more than $50
billion in assets. Under the terms of the deal, the UAW has become
the single largest shareholder in General Motors and Ford.
How, by any stretch of the imagination, can one describe such
an outfit as a working class organization? It is a business, controlled
by a bureaucracy that at every point sets out to advance its own
financial interests by collaborating with the auto companies at
the direct expense of the workers who are compelled to pay dues
into its coffers. Its major function is to stomp out dissent within
the ranks and soften up workers to accept managements demands.
With its control of tens of millions of shares of GM and Ford
stock, the UAW has a direct financial incentive to assist the
auto bosses in slashing labor costs, wiping out jobs and driving
up the exploitation of its own members on the shop floor.
American Axle was set up in 1994 after GM spun off its axle
and forging operations in order to slash labor costs for its parts
production. The number one auto maker and its Wall Street investors
are demanding that American Axle deliver a decisive blow to the
striking workers in order to break the resistance of all auto
workers to even greater concessions that will be demanded as the
US auto companies face slumping sales and a further loss of market
share.
The most dangerous threat facing American Axle workers is the
deliberate effort of the UAW to isolate and sabotage their struggle.
The UAWs top leadership has taken the negotiations out of
the hands of local representatives in a sure sign that a sellout
is being prepared.
On March 4 the Detroit Free Press reported that the
UAW offered substantial wage cuts to American Axle on the eve
of the strike.
According to a March 17 article in the Automotive News,
the UAW International is seeking job guarantees from
American Axle to end the walkout, basically on managements
terms. General Motors has contracted hundreds of millions
of dollars of new business annually with American Axle. The union
wants those axles and other parts built in UAW-represented US
plants, not in Mexico, said a source close to the situation,
the publication reported.

It continues, The job guarantees are needed to salve
the pain of concessions the UAW must make at American Axle to
bring wages and benefits more in line with the axle makers
competitors, said Dave Cole, chairman of the Center for Automotive
Research think tank in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Plant investment
is the quid pro quo, he said.
As always the UAW is negotiating, not to defend its members,
but to defend its own interests. The Automotive News article
makes clear that the UAW International is trying to arrive at
agreement with Dauch to secure the maximum number of dues-paying
workers in return for agreeing to the wholesale destruction of
wages, benefits and working conditions.
Whatever job guarantees the UAW claims it has obtained
will not be worth the paper they are written on. The UAW said
it received such promises from GM, Ford and Chrysler last year.
But once the contracts were ratified the companies eliminated
entire shifts at their assembly plants and wiped out thousands
of jobs.
American Axle workers are defying the pattern of wage- and
benefit-cutting contracts the United Auto Workers union has accepted
throughout the auto industry. Having faced widespread opposition
to its betrayal of Big Three auto workers, the UAW is determined
to make sure the American Axle strike does not become a rallying
point to oppose its pro-business policies.
The way forward
If this struggle is not to be isolated and sabotaged, the conduct
of the strike and negotiations must be taken out of the hands
of the UAW. Rank-and-file committees should be set up, independently
of the UAW, to unite auto workers and working people in the communities
threatened with layoffs and plant closings. These committees should
call demonstrations, organize mass picketing to stop production
at the American Axle plants, and fight to expand the strike to
GM, Ford, Chrysler, Delphi and the other auto and auto parts companies
in order to overturn the concession contracts signed by the UAW.
The fight of auto workers must be linked up with the struggle
of the working class as a wholeagainst the threat to jobs,
the wave of home foreclosures, cuts in social programs, and the
squandering of billions on the war in Iraq. This must be the start
for the building a new political movement of the working class
based on the fight for an international and socialist alternative
to capitalism.
The decimation of cities like Detroit, Cleveland and Flint,
Michigan has been part of a deliberate policy of deindustrialization,
which has led to the destruction of six million manufacturing
jobs since 1979. This was done by the most powerful financial
interests, which sought to free up capital from underperforming
industries in order to reap vast fortunes in the stock market
and through other forms of financial swindling.
At the same time, companies like American Axle shifted production
to Mexico, China and other low-wage countries in order to maximize
returns for investors and enrich the top corporate executives.
The response of the UAW has been to peddle nationalist poison
in order to drive a wedge between US workers and their brothers
and sisters internationally, while collaborating ever more closely
in the slashing of wages, benefits and jobs.
The attack on auto workers is international. In recent days,
BMW has announced the elimination of 8,000 jobs in Germany, and
GM Europe said it would cut 5,000 jobs in Belgium, France, Spain
and Germany. A genuine fight in defense of jobs is possible only
by uniting auto workers on an international scale based on a socialist
program.
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.
The vast assets of the auto industrybuilt up by the labor
of generations of workerscan no longer be the personal property
of Americas wealthy elite, who dispense with them as they
see fit. If the industry is to be run for the good of society,
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 auto workers and
their families, but the production of safe, high-quality and affordable
transportation for consumers.
The fight for this socialist and internationalist policy requires
a break with the Democratic Partythe twin party with the
Republicans 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 auto workers to consider
our program and make the decision to join and build the SEP as
the new revolutionary leadership of the working class.
We
encourage autoworkers and others to contact the WSWS.
See Also:
American Axle workers in Detroit discuss
political issues in strike
[14 March 2008]
Reject UAW plans to sabotage American
Axle strike!
[11 March 2008]
UAW offered wage cuts on eve of American
Axle strike
[5 March 2008]
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