- Union says 190 struck an Alabama plant making front axles
- Ford reached deal with Canadian workers late Tuesday
UAW President
“It didn’t look good for us,” Modenhauer said while walking the picket line Wednesday outside Stellantis’ North American headquarters in suburban Detroit. “The holdup is product. They didn’t want to line up products for our plants for the future.”
The new Stellantis offer is being reviewed, said the union, without providing details of the proposal. A spokeswoman for Stellantis, the maker of Jeep SUVs and Ram pickups, said the company “officially passed a fifth offer yesterday, which focused on subcommittee open issues.”
Read More:
Mercedes Walkout
The labor actions spread beyond Detroit for the first time as 190 UAW workers struck a
The job action followed a UAW social media post Tuesday evening with a Spartacus movie clip showing “UAW locals waiting to go out on strike” as the title character’s fellow rebels in turn each stand and claim, “I am Spartacus.”
Stellantis said Wednesday it will temporarily
The UAW will have a Facebook Live event on Friday at 10 a.m. in Detroit, where it will likely discuss whether additional plants belonging to the city’s legacy carmakers will face strikes, a person familiar with the discussions said.
The new job actions and Friday deadline raise the stakes for talks between three of the biggest automakers in the US and the union representing 146,000 of their workers. Friday will mark one week since the UAW called its first-ever walkout across all three of the legacy Detroit manufacturers.
In Canada, Ford reached a
“When faced with the prospect of an all-out strike by 5,600 Unifor members at every single one of Ford’s facilities in Canada, the company made a significant offer,” the union said in a statement.
Read More:
Strike Impact
There were conflicting reports as to how the strike was affecting supplies. S&P Global Mobility estimated that the strike is costing the companies output of about 3,200 vehicles a day.
But on Tuesday, Stellantis’ North American Chief Operating Officer
A UBS note Tuesday cited Marc Robinson, principal consultant of MSR Strategy, as saying it could take eight weeks for there to be a strike resolution.
--With assistance from
To contact the reporters on this story:
To contact the editors responsible for this story:
Anne Cronin, Kelly Gilblom
© 2023 Bloomberg L.P. All rights reserved. Used with permission.
Learn more about Bloomberg Law or Log In to keep reading:
See Breaking News in Context
Bloomberg Law provides trusted coverage of current events enhanced with legal analysis.
Already a subscriber?
Log in to keep reading or access research tools and resources.