Labor News & Commentary May 12, 2024 the Apple organizing campaign faces a setback & more
https://onlabor.org/may-12-2024/
By Otto Barenberg
Otto Barenberg is a student at Harvard Law School.
In todays news and commentary, Mercedes workers gear up for a major election; Argentinas unions stage a general strike; and the Apple organizing campaign faces a setback.
Tomorrow, workers at a Mercedes-Benz plant in Tuscaloosa County, Alabama will begin voting on whether to join the United Auto Workers (UAW). The election, which covers nearly 6,000 Mercedes employees and will run through Friday, marks a crucial test of the UAWs path-breaking campaign to unionize Southern auto plants. The union hopes to capitalize off the momentum from its historic victory at a Volkswagen factory in Tennessee last month.
Mercedes has waged an aggressive anti-union campaign, despite its claims of neutrality. Elyse, Everest, John, and Holden previously reported on the German automakers captive audience meetings; employee allegations of intimidation and retaliation; and a Republican-backed anti-union media blitz. On Friday, the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) indicated it was investigating six unfair labor practice charges at the Tuscaloosa plant. The complaints allege Mercedes disciplined workers for discussing unionization, fired union supporters, blocked workers from distributing union materials, engaged in surveillance, coerced employees into attending captive audience meetings, and told workers that unionization is futile. Undeterred, hundreds of pro-union workers rallied yesterday ahead of tomorrows vote.
Even farther south, on Thursday, Argentinas largest unions staged a 24-hour general strike in protest of the countrys libertarian president Javier Milei. Schools, hospitals, and transportation services were closed as millions of workers challenged Mileis drastic cuts to public spending, mass layoffs of public employees, and far-reaching deregulatory agenda. We are facing a government that promotes the elimination of labor and social rights, the unions said. Last weeks general strike is the second of Mileis short tenure. Over 1.5 million workers walked off the job in January, as Holt reported at the time, pressuring the Argentine leader to backtrack on some of his most extreme austerity measures. Milei, a self-described anarcho-capitalist, ran on an aggressive anti-inflation platform, but has so far struggled to stabilize the countrys currency and economy. As the countrys annual inflation rate nears 300%, over 40% of Argentines are now living below the poverty line.
FULL story at link above.