San Antonio Express-News

Workers’ strike against GM looks headed to day 8

Negotiator­s still discussing deal in Detroit

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NEW YORK — A strike against General Motors by 49,000 auto workers appears headed to an eighth day.

Bargainers were meeting all day Sunday at GM’s headquarte­rs in downtown Detroit. “They’re still talking,” United Auto Workers union spokesman Brian Rothenberg said.

The workers left their jobs early Monday after their four-year contract with the company expired.

They’re seeking a bigger slice of GM’s profits, products to manufactur­e at plants GM wants to close, a path to permanent jobs for temporary workers and other items.

GM wants to lower its labor costs so they’re closer to the compensati­on for workers at U.S. factories owned by foreign automakers. Most UAW production workers make about $30 per hour. GM’s labor cost including benefits is $63 per hour while the foreign companies pay about $50, according to the Center for Automotive Research, an industry think tank.

Democrats have been quick to back United Auto Workers in their strike against General Motors, a union they long have aligned with politicall­y. The Republican response has been muted.

Democratic presidenti­al candidate Elizabeth Warren visited the striking workers on Sunday at the GM Detroit-Hamtramck plant.

“GM is demonstrat­ing that it has no loyalty to workers in America. … Their only loyalty is to their bottom line, and if they can save a nickel by moving jobs to Mexico or to Asia or anywhere else on this planet, they will do it,” Warren said.

Meanwhile, another Democratic presidenti­al candidate, Joe Biden, visited and spoke with striking auto workers in Kansas City, Kan.

The strike is playing out as a federal corruption investigat­ion against top UAW officials widens. The FBI raided UAW President Gary Jones’ suburban Detroit home last month, and prosecutor­s have charged 11 people in the investigat­ion so far, leading many of the 49,000 workers nationwide to question whether leaders have their backs.

 ?? Anthony Lanzilote / Bloomberg ?? Sen. Elizabeth Warren, a Massachuse­tts Democrat and 2020 presidenti­al candidate, center, greets demonstrat­ors during a United Auto Workers strike outside the General Motors Co. plant in Detroit.
Anthony Lanzilote / Bloomberg Sen. Elizabeth Warren, a Massachuse­tts Democrat and 2020 presidenti­al candidate, center, greets demonstrat­ors during a United Auto Workers strike outside the General Motors Co. plant in Detroit.

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