National Post (National Edition)

After Feds seized his golf clubs, UAW’s embattled boss lays low

Jones accused of misusing union funds

- KEITH NAUGHTON, GABRIELLE COPPOLA AND DAVID WELCH

SOUTHFIELD, MICH. • In a closed-door meeting at a Detroit casino two years ago, retiring United Auto Workers president Dennis Williams revealed his successor would be Gary Jones, an accountant then running the union’s western region. The resounding reaction among the union brass in the room was: Gary who?

The UAW’s former chief bean counter didn’t strike anyone as a firebrand in the image of the union’s legendary leader Walter Reuther. But the union was the target of a widening federal corruption probe, and the button-down CPA was seen as the antidote to the UAW’s growing image problem.

Now Jones, 62, appears to be in the crosshairs of the investigat­ion, just as the UAW is sending 46,000 General Motors Co. workers to the picket lines in the first nationwide strike against the automaker in 12 years. The mild-mannered finance man was nowhere to be seen when the union announced the strike on Sunday in Detroit. The already low-profile Jones has been incognito since he was implicated — but not indicted — in a federal charging document last week that accompanie­d the arrest of UAW regional director Vance Pearson on conspiracy, money laundering, wire fraud and other charges.

Jones, who vowed as president to win back the trust of the rank-and-file with a clean-slate agenda, instead stands accused of using union members’ dues to finance a “lavish lifestyle” that included long stays in luxury lodgings, golf outings and steak dinners with champagne and cigars, according to the government. In a raid of his suburban Detroit home, federal investigat­ors seized golf clubs and US$30,000 in cash.

“If you ask anybody in my plant, ‘What do you think of UAW President Gary Jones?’ they’d start laughing and they’d say, ‘He’s a thief, he’s a criminal, he’s a crook,’” said Brian Pannebecke­r, a forklift driver at Ford Motor Co.’s axle plant in Sterling Heights, Michigan. “They don’t know him here in Detroit, other than to know that he’s held a lot of lavish conference­s out in Palm Springs.”

The UAW didn’t respond to a request for an interview with Jones. Brian Rothenberg, a spokesman for the union, said last week the allegation­s against Pearson are “very concerning” but added the UAW believes the government “has misconstru­ed any number of facts.”

Jones became the union’s 12th president in June 2018. After the surprise selection by Williams, he was formally elected during a raucous ceremony at the union’s constituti­onal convention.

As he stepped up to the podium for his acceptance speech, the theme from “Rocky” blared from loudspeake­rs while delegates gave him a standing ovation, replete with horns and noise makers.

“I am here to fight for you,” the bespectacl­ed Jones roared, thrusting a fist aloft. “Knowing our core values, knowing who we are and knowing what the UAW is about could not be more important than it is today.”

Following the fiery speech, Jones took questions from reporters for what may be the only instance in his presidency. He wasted little time suggesting the media was to blame for the black eye the UAW was getting from the corruption scandal, which he insisted involved only a few “bad apples.”

“Specific individual­s — not institutio­ns like the UAW — are responsibl­e for the betrayals of trust identified by the government,” Jones said, adding that the union had done its own investigat­ion of the misdeeds.

Asked if the union would release the results of its internal probe, Jones replied: “I’ve got to talk to our attorneys.” The union has yet to reveal its findings.

In subsequent public appearance­s — at the union’s bargaining convention, ceremonial opening handshakes, Detroit’s Labour Day parade — Jones declined to engage with the media. When a Bloomberg News reporter attempted to question him at the convention in March, she was blocked by his security.

There is little in Jones’s background that would have prepared him for such scrutiny.

He hired into Ford’s now-shuttered glass factory in Broken Arrow, Oklahoma, 44 years ago. While working and raising two daughters along with his wife, Cindy, Jones earned a bachelor’s degree at the University of Tulsa and became a CPA.

In 1990, then-UAW President Owen Bieber tapped Jones to join the union’s internatio­nal staff in the accounting department. A year later, he became chief accountant and would climb the ranks until he was elected in 2012 to lead Region 5, which oversees locals spanning states including Missouri, Texas and California.

Since arriving in Detroit a year ago, Jones has worked to transform his taciturn nature into the mould of the fist-pounding labour boss.

“We invested in you, now it’s your turn to invest in us,” Jones told GM Chief Executive Officer Mary Barra as he sat across the table from her during one of the opening handshake events in July. “We are the voice of the American worker, the defenders of the middle class.”

But as the UAW’s scandal spreads, Jones is losing his voice of authority.

“They were already in a situation where trust was damaged with the membership,” Kristin Dziczek, vice president of the industry and labour economics group at the Center for Automotive Research, said after Jones was implicated. “This just makes it worse.”

HE’S HELD A LOT OF LAVISH CONFERENCE­S OUT IN PALM SPRINGS.

 ?? JEFF KOWALSKY / BLOOMBERG FILES ?? United Auto Workers president Gary Jones, seen at an industry event in Michigan earlier this year, was implicated in a federal charging document last week.
JEFF KOWALSKY / BLOOMBERG FILES United Auto Workers president Gary Jones, seen at an industry event in Michigan earlier this year, was implicated in a federal charging document last week.

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