UAW drops complaint in lost election at Tennessee VW plant
The United Auto Workers union has thrown in the towel regarding their complaint over the lost election at the Chattanooga Volkswagen plant, where they claimed "outside infuence" unfairly skewed the election results.
The United Auto Workers union on Monday said it was withdrawing its objection claiming undue outside political interference in the result of a February election it lost among workers at the Volkswagen AG plant in Tennessee.
UAW President Bob King, in a statement issued by the union on Monday, said the process of objecting to the National Labor Relations Board could have dragged on for months if not years.
King and the UAW announced the withdrawal on the morning of the scheduled start of an NLRB hearing in Chattanooga on the union's objection.
The UAW has had no success in trying to get workers at automotive plants owned by foreign companies in the U.S. South to agree to join the union in an area where membership has fallen over the last several decades. Volkswagen officials agreed not to work against the UAW and allowed the union direct access to workers at the plant during work hours, a rarity by companies in a UAW organizing drive, which he union hoped would increase its chances of victory.
But in a Feb 12-14 election, workers voted 712-to-626 against allowing the UAW to represent them.
"The unprecedented political interference by Gov. (Bill) Haslam, Sen. (Bob) Corker and others was a distraction for Volkswagen employees and a detour from achieving Tennessee's economic priorities," King said. "The UAW is ready to put February's tainted election in the rearview mirror and instead focus on advocating for new jobs and economic investment in Chattanooga."
During the election campaign, Republican Gov. Haslam and other Tennessee politicians threatened to cut off financial incentives to Volkswagen if the UAW were installed as labor representative of the workers. Corker, a U.S. senator and former mayor of Chattanooga, claimed during the vote that VW would not place additional work at the plant if the UAW won the election.
King said he would next try to take his case against what he called outside interference by politicians to Congress.
The union never had a case and they knew it. In effect, the union wanted to take away the free speech rights of American citizens and prevent them from speaking their minds on a local issue. Even Obama's NLRB would have been reluctant to rule in their favor, so dropping the complaint seemed to be the logical thing to do.
Also see Matthrew Vadum's "Labor Fascism in Chattanooga"