Current:Home > ContactUnion workers at General Motors appear to have voted down tentative contract deal -TradeBridge
Union workers at General Motors appear to have voted down tentative contract deal
View
Date:2025-04-16 08:17:07
DETROIT (AP) — A tentative contract agreement between General Motors and the United Auto Workers union appears to be headed for defeat.
The union hasn’t posted final vote totals yet, but workers at five large factories who finished voting in the past few days have turned down the four year and eight month deal by fairly large margins.
The vote tracker on the UAW’s website shows the deal winning by 686 votes. But those totals do not include votes from GM assembly plants in Fort Wayne, Indiana; Wentzville, Missouri; Lansing Delta Township and Lansing Grand River in Michigan, and a powertrain plant in Toledo, Ohio, which all voted against the deal, according to local union officials.
In most cases the vote tallies ranged from 55% to around 60% against the contract.
Workers were awaiting totals from a large assembly plant in Arlington, Texas, but many said they expect the contract to be voted down.
A message was left seeking comment from the union’s spokesman.
It wasn’t clear what would happen next, but local union officials don’t expect an immediate walkout after the final totals are known.
Voting continues at Ford, where the deal is passing with 66.1% voting in favor so far with only a few large factories still counting.
The contract was passing overwhelmingly in early voting at Jeep maker Stellantis. The union’s vote tracker shows that 79.7% voted in favor with many large factories yet to finish.
Local union officials say longtime workers were unhappy that they didn’t get larger pay raises like newer workers, and they wanted a larger pension increase. Newer hires wanted a defined benefit pension plan instead of the 401(K) defined contribution plan that they now receive.
Tony Totty, president of the union local at the Toledo powertrain plant, said the environment is right to seek more from the company. “We need to take advantage of the moment,” he said. “Who knows what the next environment will be for national agreements. The company never has a problem telling us we need to take concessions in bad economic times. Why should we not get the best economic agreement in good economic times?”
Thousands of UAW members joined picket lines in targeted strikes against Detroit automakers over a six-week stretch before tentative deals were reached late last month. Rather than striking at one company, the union targeted individual plants at all three automakers. At its peak last month about 46,000 of the union’s 146,000 workers at the Detroit companies were walking picket lines.
veryGood! (958)
Related
- Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
- Deadline from auto workers grows closer with no sign of a deal as Stellantis announces layoffs
- Biden Finds Funds to Launch an ‘American Climate Corps’ With Existing Authority Congress Has Given to Agencies
- Quaalude queenpin: How a 70-year-old Boca woman's international drug operation toppled over
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- Oklahoma state police trooper fatally shot a truck driver during a traffic stop
- Kraft issues recall of processed American cheese slices due to potential choking hazard
- What Biden's unwavering support for autoworkers in UAW strike says about the 2024 election
- Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
- Testimony begins in officers’ trial over death of Elijah McClain, who was put in neck hold, sedated
Ranking
- Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
- White supremacist pleads guilty to threatening jurors, witnesses in Pittsburgh synagogue shooting trial
- When does the time change for daylight saving time 2023? What to know before clocks fall back
- Outdated headline sparks vicious online hate campaign directed at Las Vegas newspaper
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- 'Super Models' doc reveals disdain for Crawford's mole, Evangelista's ‘deep depression’
- Zelenskyy avoids confrontation with Russian FM at UN Security Council meeting
- White homeowner who shot Black teen Ralph Yarl after he mistakenly went to his home pleads not guilty
Recommendation
New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
Alex Murdaugh plans to do something he hasn’t yet done in court — plead guilty
Railroads work to make sure firefighters can quickly look up what is on a train after a derailment
K-Pop Group Stray Kids' Lee Know, Hyunjin and Seungmin Involved in Car Accident
The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
Maryland apologizes to man wrongly convicted of murder, agrees to $340K payment for years in prison
Syrian President Bashar Assad arrives in China on first visit since the beginning of war in Syria
University suspends swimming and diving program due to hazing