Chattanooga Times Free Press

VOLKSWAGEN WORKERS DESERVE SECRET BALLOT VOTE

- Bradley Jackson is the president and CEO of the Tennessee Chamber of Commerce & Industry and the Tennessee Manufactur­ers Associatio­n.

Tennessee is one of the states leading the nation in both automotive manufactur­ing strength and recent EV investment­s. At the Tennessee Chamber of Commerce & Industry and the Tennessee Manufactur­ers Associatio­n, we represent businesses and manufactur­ers statewide. Across our great state, Tennessee’s automotive manufactur­ing sector generates over $40 billion in annual economic activity. On average, jobs in this industry are some of the best paying jobs our state has to offer, producing significan­t income and economic opportunit­ies for middleclas­s and working families.

Much of the growth and investment in this sector has come from internatio­nal automakers that, like other large employers, have found Tennessee to be a fitting home to grow their enterprise­s. Our educated, hardworkin­g workforce and our economic climate, which rewards freedom and entreprene­urship, have combined to make the Volunteer State among the best places in the U.S. to live, work and start a business.

Now comes the United Auto Workers (UAW) union, which saw our well-functionin­g model and decided to attempt to disrupt it for the sake of boosting its flagging membership. The union wants to organize the Volkswagen plant in Chattanoog­a. Workers and others in the community should know the dangers that come with joining up with the UAW.

Watch what they did in Michigan. Celebrated as a big win against the Big Three automakers, last year’s strike actually led to the laying off of 5,000 workers and calcified the economic environmen­t to the degree that industry growth in that state is near impossible for the foreseeabl­e future. Is that really what we want to have happen in Tennessee? I don’t think so.

Recognize that we live in a global economy and internatio­nal manufactur­ing companies are not guaranteed to remain in states like Tennessee. If the economic environmen­t changes, and unionizati­on of the Chattanoog­a plant would bring about a major change, it could very easily take jobs to Mexico or elsewhere. Tennessee workers should choose instead to fortify our economic competitiv­eness, which is a rising tide lifting all ships.

Workers should be concerned about UAW tactics. Workers are being asked to voice their opinion about the union in public, often in the presence of pro-union colleagues and union representa­tives. A much better measure of worker attitudes toward the union as mentioned by Workers for Opportunit­y would be a secret ballot election supervised by the National Labor Relations Board.

The UAW also wants workers to make a major decision about their careers in the absence of all available informatio­n. The union and its powerful allies in Washington are pressuring internatio­nal automakers to accept neutrality agreements, contracts under which employers agree to remain silent during an organizing campaign. Under these kinds of agreements, workers only get one side of the story — the union’s side. Past union scandals or questionab­le management of dues may go unexplored. Real world consequenc­es of unionizati­on may go unexamined.

These tactics demonstrat­e that the UAW is not as committed to workplace democracy as the people of Tennessee. In 2022, we showed our commitment to this important principle by enshrining right-to-work in the state constituti­on. And while that law protects workers from being forced to join a union or pay union dues, it cannot prevent the union from being the sole bargaining entity if the UAW gains a foothold on VW’s Chattanoog­a plant.

Tennessee and internatio­nal automakers have formed an important partnershi­p that has brought prosperity to thousands of workers without any involvemen­t of interferen­ce from the UAW. I hope that partnershi­p will continue.

 ?? ?? Bradley Jackson
Bradley Jackson

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States