San Diego Union-Tribune

AUTO STRIKES ARE EXPECTED TO EXPAND

No deal in sight; UAW not saying which plants would be affected next

- BY LAUREN KAORI GURLEY & JEANNE WHALEN

The United Auto Workers and Detroit’s Big Three automakers spent Thursday in negotiatio­ns as union leaders warned that an ongoing labor strike could spread to new facilities as soon as today.

An expanded work stoppage over wages and benefits for some 150,000 autoworker­s could exacerbate disruption­s to an industry that makes up about 3 percent of the nation’s gross domestic product.

Close to 13,000 UAW members walked off the job last week at three plants — a General Motors plant, a Ford plant and a Stellantis plant. The union is seeking a 40 percent wage increase over four years and more job protection­s as the industry transition­s toward producing electric vehicles, a shift that potentiall­y includes plant closures. Automakers are offering raises of around 20 percent.

“We’re going to keep hitting the company where we need to, when

we need to,” UAW President Shawn Fain said in a video posted late Monday. If there is not “serious progress” by noon today, Fain added, more workers will be called on to join the strike.

Stellantis, which owns Jeep and Chrysler, made a counteroff­er to the UAW on Wednesday, the details of which have not been released and which the union said it is reviewing. It marks the first offer from any of the companies since

the strike began.

Meanwhile, an additional 190 UAW members at a Mercedes axle supplier in Tuscaloosa, Ala., went on strike Wednesday. Their strike is separate from the Big Three work stoppages but centers on similar issues, such as raising pay, improving health care benefits and scrapping employment tiers.

Fain has not said which plants would be affected next — the

lenge the Big Three of ABC, CBS and NBC, with shows like “The Simpsons.” He owns The Wall Street Journal and the New York Post. He slimmed his corporate holdings with the 2019 sale of many entertainm­ent assets to the Walt Disney Co.

Murdoch has also controlled the New York Post, which, like Fox, has promoted his conservati­ve world view.

Despite Murdoch’s advanced age, Thursday’s announceme­nt took some by surprise.

“I do find it shocking because I figured that Rupert would be around until he couldn’t take a breath,” said writer Claire Atkinson, who’s working on a biography of Murdoch.

In a letter Thursday to staff, Murdoch thundered about elites who have “open contempt for those who are not members of their rarified class.” Murdoch’s letter made it clear he doesn’t consider himself one of them, despite his status as a media executive and his family’s wealth, estimated by Forbes in 2020 at about $19 billion.

He also indicated his retirement won’t much beach time.

“I can guarantee you that I will be involved every day in the contest of ideas,” he wrote. “Our companies are communitie­s, and I will be an active member of our community. I will be watching our broadcasts with a critical eye, reading our newspapers and websites and books with much interest.”

Murdoch and his family, particular­ly children James, Lachlan, Elisabeth and Prudence, were said to be the model for the HBO drama “Succession.”

“Rupert is certainly engineerin­g a cleaner exit than Logan Roy’s departure from WaystarRoy­co,” said former CNN president Jon Klein, who consulted on the series. “And he’s leaving behind a lot less of a mess.”

That may be the case — for now, said Murdoch biographer Michael Wolff, who next week is publishing a book, “The End of Fox News.”

“He is 92, and that has taken a toll on him, of course, but the company, too,” Wolff told The Associated Press. “He has remained up until today the singular decisionma­ker, and he can’t communicat­e what he wants and include

people don’t understand what he wants” like they did in the past.

Major changes are unlikely right away under Lachlan Murdoch, who’s largely been running things as CEO for a couple of years.

When Murdoch dies, control of the Fox empire will revert to his four adult children, each of whom has an equal say in the business, Wolff said. “That’s when the real new chapter begins,” he said.

Since Lachlan most closely shares his father’s politicall­y conservati­ve views, Wolff predicted that James Murdoch — known as

the more liberal sibling — would eventually take control of Fox News, or that it would be sold.

“It will certainly not exist as the Fox News Channel that we have known and loved, or hated, for the past 25 years,” Wolff said.

Atkinson said that she has talked with people at the company, and they’re saying Murdoch is “fine and as engaged as ever.”

Thursday’s announceme­nt, she said, “is really just Lachlan taking the mantle and saying, ‘now it’s time.’ It’s his company. His company only.”

One of Murdoch’s chief television competitor­s, Newsmax CEO Chris Ruddy, said that over many decades, no other individual has had as much impact on the media.

“His contributi­ons to the news industry across several continents have been enormous, helping to ensure a balanced and truly free media,” Ruddy said.

Among those who believe Fox has pushed disinforma­tion and is a singular force in worsening the country’s partisan divisions, the reaction to the announceme­nt was, essentiall­y, good riddance.

“They changed how people think of politics in this country, and I think when historians look back on how they changed it, it won’t be a positive look back,” commentato­r Mike Barnicle said on MSNBC.

While Murdoch never ran for political office, politician­s in the United States and Britain anxiously sought his approval.

He had a complicate­d relationsh­ip with Donald Trump. Wolff reported in 2018 that Murdoch had called Trump an “idiot,” adding an expletive for emphasis, but Fox News is built with an audience that largely admires Trump.

For decades, Murdoch was one of the most powerful media figures in Britain, a market he entered after buying the tabloid News of the World in 1969.

He reinvigora­ted Britain’s stodgy newspaper scene with sex, scandal and celebrity and helped shake up television with satellite broadcaste­r Sky.

His clout has waned since the revelation more than a decade ago that employees of the News of the World had eavesdropp­ed on phones and used other underhande­d methods to get scoops on celebritie­s, politician­s and royals. News Corp. owns the Times, Sunday Times and Sun newspapers, but News of the World closed and Murdoch sold his 40 percent stake in Sky when he failed to get complete control of the company.

Fox News went through a series of sexual harassment scandals in the 2010s, which led to top executive Roger Ailes and prime-time personalit­y Bill O’Reilly being pushed out. Murdoch dismissed them as isolated instances that were “largely political because we’re conservati­ve.”

 ?? CARLOS OSORIO AP ?? United Auto Workers march outside the Stellantis North American Headquarte­rs in Auburn Hills, Mich., on Wednesday.
CARLOS OSORIO AP United Auto Workers march outside the Stellantis North American Headquarte­rs in Auburn Hills, Mich., on Wednesday.
 ?? FOX NEWS MEDIA ?? Rupert Murdoch’s son Lachlan is in the line of succession at Fox and the rest of the media empire.
FOX NEWS MEDIA Rupert Murdoch’s son Lachlan is in the line of succession at Fox and the rest of the media empire.

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