Planet Money - How unions are stopped before they start (Update)
Episode Date: April 24, 2024(Note: This episode originally ran in 2023.)Union membership in the U.S. has been declining for decades. But, in 2022, support for unions among Americans was the highest it's been in decades. This dis...sonance is due, in part, to the difficulties of one important phase in the life cycle of a union: setting up a union in the first place. One place where that has been particularly clear is at the Volkswagen plant in Chattanooga, Tennessee.Back in 2008, Volkswagen announced that they would be setting up production in the United States after a 20-year absence. They planned to build a new auto manufacturing plant in Chattanooga. Volkswagen has plants all over the world, all of which have some kind of worker representation, and the company said that it wanted that for Chattanooga too. So, the United Auto Workers, the union that traditionally represents auto workers, thought they would be able to successfully unionize this plant. They were wrong.In this episode, we tell the story of the UAW's 10-year fight to unionize the Chattanooga plant. And, what other unions can learn from how badly that fight went for labor. This episode was hosted by Amanda Aronczyk and Nick Fountain. It was produced by Willa Rubin. It was engineered by Josephine Nyounai, fact-checked by Sierra Juarez, and edited by Keith Romer. Alex Goldmark is our executive producer.Help support Planet Money and get bonus episodes by subscribing to Planet Money+ in Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org/planetmoney.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Last week, unions got a big win.
Workers at a Volkswagen factory in Chattanooga, Tennessee, voted to unionize.
By a lot.
2,628 votes for, 985 against. And this is a result that even less than a year ago
kind of felt like a long shot, which I feel comfortable saying because we did a whole
episode on the plant in Chattanooga. Today we are revisiting that episode. It ran originally in
October 2023. And it's about why it has been so hard to unionize
in places like Tennessee, why it wasn't happening.
And then at the end, we will have an update about what changed last week and how this
win is potentially just the first domino to fall.
It all starts with the story of a party back in May 2011.
Hundreds of people dressed business casual show up,
have some hors d'oeuvres, and witness the grand opening
of a brand new two million square foot
auto manufacturing plant.
This is spectacular.
This is the good stuff.
It's like a fun party.
Some of the guests are cars.
The crowd is invited to an enormous room
with rows and rows of chairs facing a stage.
Please be seated. The opening ceremony is about to begin.
The overhead lights dim and the video screens flash the Volkswagen logo.
Das Auto is finally back in the States.
The future for Volkswagen begins here in Chattanooga.
I gotta say, this is such a weird announcement.
Yeah, it kind of gets weirder as part of the opening ceremonies.
There's an interpretive dance by people in white body suits,
and it kind of appears like they're assembling a Volkswagen.
Afterwards, there is a more just straight ahead press conference.
Right. Tennessee Senator Bob Corker is there and he's emotional.
The greatest moment in my public career was receiving the call from the Volkswagen
group that they were coming to Chattanooga. And I want to thank all of you for making that decision.
The opening of this Volkswagen manufacturing plant in Chattanooga, Tennessee, was the culmination
of years of negotiation.
The company had shut down its only American plant back in the 1980s, and this was their
comeback.
And the competition to win Volkswagen's new plant was fierce.
Around that time, southern states were desperate to lure in big companies. South Carolina gave BMW more than $130 million in incentives, and Alabama gave Mercedes
more than $250 million worth of incentives to build a plant there.
And Tennessee? They wanted in. They wanted a car plant, too. Stephen Sylvia, professor
of international relations at American University, he says the state did everything they could
to woo Volkswagen.
Well, Bob Corker works very closely with the state establishment and they get a
range of subsidies and other benefits they offer Volkswagen. They offer tax
abatements, they offer them land, they offer them educational facilities.
When you add it all up, it comes to more than $570 million in aid,
tax breaks and incentives.
Right. And at the time, a typical auto plant cost about a billion dollars.
Wow. So that is how Das Auto came back to the states and set up in Tennessee.
Now, just to remind you of what this moment was like,
the plant opens as the country is still recovering from the financial crisis.
For locals, this is like this one shiny star in a long dark night. When the Volkswagen plant starts
hiring, 85,000 people apply for just 2,000 jobs. 2,000 new jobs making cars. And of course, this is interesting not just to locals,
but also to unions, specifically the United Auto Workers.
You know, the union that traditionally represents people
who work in car manufacturing
and currently has members on strike.
They want these to be union jobs.
Right, because the way the UAW sees it,
Chattanooga is one place where they maybe can regain some ground.
The UAW used to represent a majority of auto workers in the U.S.
Back in 1979, they had more than one and a half million members.
By the time this plant opened, that number had fallen to below 400,000.
And Stephen says that decline is in part because of right to work laws that make it hard to form and fund a union, but it's also
because a bunch of foreign-owned car companies came into the U.S. and set up non-union factories.
The UAW has had a frustrating time for almost 20 years trying to organize foreign-owned car
plants and failing. But the arrival of Volkswagen in the South?
For the UAW, this seems different, potentially good.
The UAW leadership saw Volkswagen as their best opportunity.
Their best opportunity for good reason.
Because Volkswagen has plants all over the world,
and they all have some kind of worker representation.
Plus the company had actually come out and said that they wanted that in
Chattanooga at their new plant.
So management was open to a union.
The UAW definitely wanted a union.
And now it's just a matter of convincing the workers.
Yeah.
You'll want a union too.
What could go wrong?
Hello, Malka to Planet Money.
I'm Amanda Aronschek.
And I'm Nick Fountain.
Union membership in the US has been declining for decades.
In part, because of how difficult this one phase
in the life cycle of any union has become.
Be setting up of that union.
And if you want a case study
in just how many ways things can go wrong,
well, look no further
than Chattanooga.
Today on the show, we look at three attempts over 10 years to establish a union at this
one car plant in Tennessee.
And let these attempts tell us about why union campaigns live or die. This message comes from NPR sponsor Grammarly.
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One of the 2000 workers hired by Volkswagen at their new plant in Chattanooga is Steve Cochran. I was there the first day the first car was produced. So I've been there since the
groundbreaking pretty much. Steve's job is to maintain the equipment. When something breaks,
he's one of the people they call to fix it. He used to work at Goodyear Tire Factory.
His entire career has been working in factories.
Right.
And he says, when you work at one of these places, you got to stay sharp.
Even though there's a lot of automation in there, there's still a lot of hands on the
car screwing in bolts and stuff.
And I still got all 10 toes and 10 fingers.
And there's a lot of people out there that don't my age, you know, because they get them
hung up in something or do something dumb.
And I like to go home with all my digits and all the same way I come in, you know.
So I get that.
I get that.
I feel like that's a reasonable thing to expect from work.
Oh, yeah.
Now, Steve had been in a union before when he'd worked for Goodyear.
So when he heard that Volkswagen was supportive of unions, he was like, yeah,
great.
That's what I want to. Like if you get a job at General Motors, Ford, or any of the places like that, it's life
changing.
That changes your life for years.
It changes everything that you ever do.
That should be the same thing when you get a job at Volkswagen.
Volkswagen had set starting wages at the plant at $14.50 an hour, which was pretty decent
for Chattanooga. But Steve is pretty sure that
if they had a union, they'd probably get higher wages, better benefits, more time off.
Not long after the plant opens, the United Auto Workers hold their first meeting in Chattanooga.
Steve shows up, and he's into it. Pretty quickly, he decides that not only does he want a union,
he wants to be a union organizer. So he starts campaigning for the UAW. He's making flyers, he's talking to people,
doing social media, he's trying to convince his co-workers, we need a union.
We need the UAW.
Now to establish a local chapter that is able to sit down and negotiate with Volkswagen,
they have to prove that a majority of workers actually want a union. Here is how that happens.
Union officials go around with authorization cards.
This is Professor Stephen Sylvia again.
So they're not membership cards, but they're authorization cards. What they say on them is, is I authorized the UAW to be my representative in collective bargaining.
Right. The first step to getting a union at the plant is getting signed cards from a majority of the workers,
which the UAW says they got.
But here's where things go a little sideways.
Remember how Volkswagen ended up in Tennessee?
That $570 million worth of incentives?
Yeah.
Many of those politicians behind those incentives
do not want the UAW at this plant.
They do not want the UAW in Chattanooga.
They do not want the UAW on a boat.
They do not want it with a goat.
They do not want the UAW anywhere near anything.
Right.
The way they figured, a union at the plant could lead to contagion.
Next thing you know, all the companies in Chattanooga would end up unionized.
That would be expensive for business.
So Volkswagen, trying to be pro-labor, but also trying to keep things, you know, kind of chill with the Republicans running the state.
They are stuck in this mushy middle.
And they do this kind
of weird thing. They reject the cards, don't recognize the union, but at the same time they
still insist they do want a union. So the UAW decides to try the next option for setting up a
union with an election, which to Volkswagen seems more acceptable. An election is called,
there's a week and a half of official campaigning where the UAW
makes their case and people opposed to the union make theirs.
And then there's going to be a secret vote.
Both sides campaign everywhere.
There are billboards, TV ads, radio ads, testimonials.
A lot of people who don't work at the plant also get into the mix.
Like Maury Nicely.
He's a lawyer who works for an anti-union
group called Southern Momentum. This is the top of the UAW in Detroit. This is part of a presentation
that Morrie gave to workers to convince them not to vote for the UAW. And in this moment in the
presentation, he's pointing to a pyramid which is on the screen. Understand, you're at the bottom of this pyramid.
Revenue goes up to the top and control goes down.
I spoke with Morrie and according to him,
he was brought into this campaign
by some Volkswagen workers
who did not want a union at the plant.
If you want to think of Southern Momentum,
think of it as it's basically a loud speaker
for these employees who are concerned about the UAW,
who beyond Southern Momentum didn't have a voice.
Southern Momentum was partly funded by donations from members,
but Moria also acknowledges that money came from people who didn't work at the plant,
local businesses, and people who really didn't want the UAW to come to Chattanooga.
Another person who really didn't want the UAW to come to Chattanooga. Another person who really didn't want the UAW to come to Chattanooga,
Senator Bob Corker,
one of the politicians who offered Volkswagen that $570 million plus in incentives,
and said that the plant opening was the greatest moment in his public career.
Well, right before the big vote,
he shows up in a new segment pointing out how
dangerous and radical the union leaders are.
The officers a month ago talking about fighting and combat and all of those kind of things.
If that's the environment you want, UAW certainly is the people for you to choose or the people
to choose.
Then on the first day of voting, he delivers a shocker.
He says he has it on good authority that if workers reject the union, Volkswagen would commit to expanding
its operation and build its new SUV right there in Chattanooga.
After three days of voting, it's finally time to tally up the votes and see who's won.
For the union, 626 votes. Against it, 712. It's decided there will be no union at the plant in Chattanooga.
And to Maury from Southern Momentum, Bob Corker and a bunch of local politicians weighing
in like this on the union election, that totally made sense.
These were Tennessee politicians. These were Chattanooga politicians. These were citizens
saying this is not the best thing for our state and that's exactly what those
people should be doing. But for maintenance worker Steve Cochran, the senator had gone too far.
I'd say he was probably one of the biggest deciding factors. That and the media ran with it.
You know they pushed it everywhere on the news, radio, everything in the world. To Steve, the
senator had intimidated the workers and he thinks some of them might have changed their votes.
Well some people did out of a fear thing. I ain't gonna say they believed him, but they said,
you know, what if, you know, what if.
What if Bob Corker is right? What if Volkswagen sets up a new plant elsewhere?
What if they cut our jobs? What if, what if, what if?
So that was Union campaign number one. Doomed, Steve would say, by a politician
putting his finger on the scales.
And maybe that is the takeaway from this first campaign. Sometimes big, powerful Doomed, Steve would say, by a politician putting his finger on the scales.
And maybe that is the takeaway from this first campaign.
Sometimes big, powerful people interfere with union drives and change the outcome.
The past bunch of years, leaders at Amazon and Boeing have gotten in trouble for this,
threatening dire consequences if their workers unionize.
For workers, sometimes those threats can overshadow the potential upsides of joining a union,
like how much more vacation they might get or more pay.
Which brings us to Chapter 2, the Micro Unit.
After the failure of the 2014 campaign in Chattanooga, the UAW decides that they should
try again and quickly.
We gotta do something different.
So Steve and some of his fellow workers
come up with a new plan.
They decide instead of trying to organize the whole plan,
what if they start a micro unit?
You know, a small group that would get to bargain
directly with management.
In this case, it would be just for the skilled workers.
So not like workers on the line,
but electricians and machinists, those kind of jobs.
When there's 150 of you, you know, you're like, you know, about all of them, you know,
so you kind of talk to each other stuff and know how things are going to shake out.
Steve thinks a bunch of these skilled workers are going to vote for a micro unit.
Many of them have been in unions before and they supported the UAW in the first campaign.
And the plan is if they win, then they can scale up and unionize the whole plan.
The process plays out kind of like it did the last time.
Steve and the other organizers try to get people to sign authorization cards.
Volkswagen again rejects those cards.
Again, there's some campaigning, then an election.
And this time, the UAW wins.
We won by 68%.
You actually did better than that that Steve. 71% of workers
voted for the micro unit. This is a big deal. All of these foreign-owned car
companies BMW, Mercedes, Nissan, they've been setting up plants in the south and
none of them had unions. Now at this point Volkswagen's management's like wait
a second we're not really into this whole micro unit thing.
Because we do want some kind of worker representation,
but it needs to represent all the workers,
not a fraction of them.
We can't negotiate with just some of you.
That's verboten.
Oh.
Now, this is when Stephen the Professor
says that Volkswagen's attitude towards the union hardens.
And so what happens is they go to fight it, so they hire Ler Mendelssohn, which is a very
well-known union-busting law firm, and then they learn about the union avoidance playbook.
This is where it's injected into the Volkswagen bloodstream. Once it's there, it just takes and they just run with it.
We should mention that we reached out to Volkswagen for this story and they declined to comment.
So now instead of the fight happening with ads and billboards and flyers, it's gonna happen with lawyers.
Lots of lawyers.
Volkswagen and the UAW ask the National Labor Relations Board to weigh in on the dispute.
They're the federal agency that oversees union elections.
For a peek into how that agency works, we called up Wilma Liebman.
She's a former chair of the Labor Board and also a former Planet Money guest.
By the way, I came here about a couple months ago to do an interview for a different Planet
Money episode.
Yes. Wilma knows a lot about labor unions. That's why we call her. She's also worked for the
UAW as a consultant and as one of their ethics officers.
Wilma says that the UAW went to the board to try to get Volkswagen to recognize the
micro unit. And Volkswagen, they refused.
And here's where it gets interesting in an albeit kind of wonky way.
A lot of times when this kind of thing happens, Wilma says, companies will actually weaponize
the whole labor board process and use it to gum things up.
I think some employers slow walk it.
So they make it look like they're engaging in good faith bargaining.
But if they really are determined to avoid unionization and having
to bargain with the union, there are different ways that the whole process can be slowed
down. Wilma says that's what happened here. Generally,
the Labor Board has permitted these micro units, but Volkswagen argued that grouping
those skilled workers together, that did not qualify. Maintenance workers like Steve work with everyone in the plant.
They weren't really what's known as a community of interest.
They weren't a self-contained group.
The UAW, of course, argues that this micro unit
that they're trying to set up is a community of interest.
Volkswagen's like, nope.
So back and forth, hearing this, appealing that,
Volkswagen drags this whole thing out as long as they can which Wilma says is perfectly legal. There's no real penalty
for employers using all these kinds of delaying strategies. There's no fines,
there's no damages to speak of, it doesn't have much in the way of teeth.
Despite all of that around the end of 2016 it's finally starting to look like
Volkswagen is running out of things to appeal, and the UAW might get their micro unit.
But then, big plot twist. A new president is elected, Donald Trump. You may remember
him. And the political orientation of the Labor Board completely changes.
Yeah. So this agency is famous for what's typically called flip-flopping every time the White
House changes.
A more formal expression is policy oscillation.
I too have been accused of policy oscillation by my family.
It happens to the best of us.
So here is what happens.
A new chair is appointed by the president, and now the board is like,
you know what, we need to look at how we define community of interest again. Tighten up those
rules for forming a micro unit. All of a sudden, the UAW is back at square one.
Wilma says the Labor Board can be annoyingly inconsistent over time, that the rules are
always changing. I think the reasons for that are pretty obvious.
It's, you know, the labor and capital have deep divides, and labor law and the role of
unions in the U.S. have always been subject to very deeply held and divided views.
The UAW and Volkswagen continue to fight over the micro unit thing in the background for
years.
Kind of gets stuck in a stalemate.
So the takeaway from the second failed union drive in Chattanooga?
Timing really matters.
Under some administrations, the NLRB seems to take the side of management, like what
happened to the UAW in Chattanooga.
And under others, the NLRB is just way more union-friendly, like how
they had a bunch of rulings in favor of the new union at Starbucks, and for some grad
students who have organized around the country. Just kind of depends on who's in charge.
Meanwhile, Steve and his buddies, they still want a union. Coming up after the break, they take their fight to the NPR Network at donate.npr.org.
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By 2018, the plant has been open for seven years.
Steve and the other union supporters have been trying to get a union set up pretty much the whole time. But this conflict has sort of been a slow burn.
Yeah, they never really had a big dramatic type moment that you see in a union movie. But then
a week and a half before Christmas 2018, that moment happens. And it basically launches the
union's third campaign. It happens when the company changes this one policy.
So we have a shutdown every Christmas and every summer, you know, for putting new equipment
in or whatever it is.
It's called winter shutdown and they pay us for that week.
The shutdown was so that they could change up the assembly lines so they could start
making their new SUV.
This time it was going to take even longer than the week they usually needed, three extra days.
Normally how this would work is that workers would have the option to just not get paid for those days.
But this time management makes an announcement and says,
Hey everybody, for those three extra days, you're going to have to use your paid time off.
We were just like, you know, really? People were like, I don't want, I ain't doing that. They didn't like it.
At that moment, there are a bunch of people
working on the floor of the plant,
and they're all looking at each other
over these half assembled cars,
muttering to each other about management,
taking away three of their already limited paid days off.
For a lot of the workers,
that's three out of just 10 days that they get each year.
If y'all make us use all of it up,
then when are we gonna have to take time off
to be our families, be sick, take our kids to the doctor?
You know, so it's kind of like, you know, that doesn't work for me.
And meanwhile, the workers know that the people who made this new policy are sitting just upstairs, up in their glass-walled offices.
There was one guy said, man, what can we do? You know, because I'm really walking barefoot in our break time. I said, I'll go barefoot with you.
By break time, the number of angry people has grown.
About 50 of us marched upstairs and said, no, we're not going to do this.
At first, management kind of digs in, but the workers, they dig in too.
Yeah, because when break time ends, they don't go back to the floor.
Production just stops.
They could start the line back up because there's so many people missing from the line.
Steve says he could see on the managers' faces that their little protest, it was working.
So the workers and the managers are in this standoff.
The cars on the plant floor are not being assembled.
Finally, the managers say, okay, they'll think about it.
By the end of the day, they're like, fine, you don't have to use your paid days off.
When that happened, that actually changed the way they handled that stuff for a little while.
But it didn't stick. Steve says that not too long after, they actually changed the
policy back. And Steve, he used this moment. He told his colleagues, if they had a union,
this flip flopping by management around policies, it would not be happening.
Try to explain to people if if we had had a contract
and that stuff was written in a contract,
then we wouldn't have to do that no more.
All that stuff is just not left up to somebody's,
this is how I feel about today.
In the months after this mini protest,
Steve and the other union supporters
are actively trying to drum up support for another election.
But you know what was also happening around this time?
The FBI has raided the home of United Auto Workers Union president Gary Jones.
This is part of a probe regarding alleged corruption within the US auto
industry. Yeah the whole time they're campaigning this corruption scandal at
the UAW is all over the news. Again in addition to the pro-union side there's a
campaign against the union and they are making a very big deal of this scandal.
So you know a lot of the discussion in the campaign flowed down to is this really who
you want representing you?
Southern Momentum's Maury Nicely again.
He says he doubled down on this message, made the whole campaign very personal.
Is this who you want?
Look guys, is this who you want to marry?
Is this who you want to step up and say I do too?
When the campaign for the third election wrapped up,
the vote tally came in.
For the union, 776.
Against it, 833.
The union loses again.
Now, some of this obviously had to do
with the UAW's legal problems.
The corruption scandal was like a gift. Oh yeah, oh yeah, absolutely. I mean,
it certainly take no revelry in that, but that obviously colored and influenced that election.
Morrie says he knew workers who were open to the idea of joining a union.
They just didn't want to join the UAW. So, the takeaway from union drive number three, it's kind of a self-evident one, maybe don't
have a giant scandal in the middle of your union election.
Right.
But Morey said there was more going on here than just the scandal.
The real reason, he says, that this third union drive failed, really, why they all failed,
was because of where they were taking place.
We are a very right leaning state, and particularly in terms of politics.
And union equals democrat, right?
And an anti-union equals republican.
And so, you know, when you come into Tennessee, you're probably already dealing with that.
On this point, union organizer Steve Cochran actually agrees.
He says people decide whether they're pro or anti-union based partly on their political
identities.
But he says that didn't happen by accident.
It was the result of a deliberate campaign by anti-union forces.
They've politicized it.
That's the biggest one that I've seen where they're saying,
well, if you vote in favor of unions, you're a Democrat. And I'm like, no, that's not true.
That has nothing to do with anything inside my workplace. It just doesn't. I mean, sorry,
but Democrat or Republican, either one, you know, it doesn't matter. But they've done a real good job of doing that,
you know, playing them kind of politics of people. So Steve has been at this for more than 10 years.
He's tried three times to get his plan organized,
but he says he's still not done.
Do you think there's, is there a plan
to try to unionize the whole plant again?
Oh, always.
Oh, oh yeah, absolutely.
Yeah, always, always.
It's kind of a thing.
You either give up or die, you know?
You keep pushing or you die.
You just want it up, you know, don't give up.
Steve has been watching the big UAW strikes happening right now across the country.
If those go well for the union, maybe next time more workers at his plant in Chattanooga will vote yes.
That is where we left it back in October 2023.
Now, as we know, things did in the end go well for the union.
So what changed?
What changed to flip so many votes at the Chattanooga plant?
To answer that, we called up professor Steven Sylvia again.
If you wanna start at what made things different,
it was the election of Sean Fain.
Sean Fain became president of the United Auto Workers
in March of 2023.
And late last year, he led the UAW on strike nationally
and won huge victories against the big three automakers.
That's General Motors, Ford, and Stellantis,
which used to be Chrysler.
Many people looking at it were in some ways
skeptical at first.
But the thing that was amazing is the way that the UAW was very clever in selecting tactics.
Traditionally, the UAW would target just one of the big three-car companies at a time.
But Sean Fain threw out that old playbook, and the UAW decided to hold strikes at all
big three companies at the same time. But not at every single plant. They picked strategic plants. So
when they shut one of these down, it meant that another plant downstream
wouldn't be getting what they needed to do their jobs. So the whole thing was very
disruptive to production and it also let a lot more workers stay on the job
collecting paychecks. By having a strike that would have a relatively small very disruptive to production, and it also let a lot more workers stay on the job collecting
paychecks.
By having a strike that would have a relatively small number of employees involved, you could
shut down a significant amount of production. And they were very successful.
And as the workers in the Chattanooga plant watched all of this. Another thing, Stephen says, that made Sean Fain and the UAW seem more attractive was
transparency.
Workers got to watch the UAW negotiate in real time, often with live streaming updates
on the negotiations.
Like, there's this one video where Sean Fain gives his response to a Stellantis offer.
Everything they're looking for in this document is about concessions.
So I'll tell you what I'm going to do with their proposal.
I'm going to file it in its proper place because that's where it belongs, the trash, because
that's what it is.
Sean is different because he is so transparent and honest with everyone.
That's the thing that we like best about him.
This is Steve Cochran again, does maintenance for the Volkswagen factory in Tennessee.
He's a union organizer. When I called him up, he was in his car driving home from work.
Steve says that Sean's transparency tactics were able to change some people's perceptions
of unions in the South.
Having all that done in the public eye was very, very, very eye opening, very educational
for a lot of people everywhere.
When we last left Steve, the union had just lost their third election.
He and the other union organizers were getting ready to regroup.
Since then, there's been one other big change, this time from the Volkswagen side.
The company decided to stay neutral this time.
They didn't put out a big anti-unit campaign, they didn't put out fear tactics to us.
They said, hey, it's going to be your decision.
Y'all's decision is what it is, and we'll stay as neutral as possible. And they did. Steve says this is because the brass at
Volkswagen headquarters in Germany told the management at the Chattanooga factory that
you will not run an anti-union campaign. Because of that, the stalling tactics that the company
had used last time did not come into play. So Steve Cochran said it was much easier to make his case this time,
even in conservative Tennessee,
which is a right to work state where
unions are very politicized.
They're considered aligned with
the Democratic Party and
are generally pretty unpopular.
You have to understand that there's a lot of
Republican voting people in Chattanooga.
A lot of them. We're never
going to tell anybody how they should or
shouldn't vote, that'll never happen. But everybody put that aside. They put all that aside and
said, we got to do it ourselves.
And then after all of those campaigns for in the past dozen or so years, last week,
workers at Steve Cochran's factory voted overwhelmingly to form a union.
We had a watch party at the union office and all the other stuff. There was some good fireworks going off,
and some people drinking a little bit of alcohol,
stuff, nothing got out of hand.
Steve, how did it feel to walk into work
on the first day after the vote?
It is a lot better feeling than walking in after a loss.
I know that.
I was very proud and had the outcome,
and very smiling and stuff, but I didn't gloat.
Steve said there were a couple of people who might have cheered a little, maybe a few handshakes,
some high fives, but mostly people just got back to work side by side with their colleagues,
regardless of how they voted.
We've been at this thing for 12 long years and it's just a, it's a great feeling now,
you know, but honestly, people can disagree about something.
We're still going to do our job though and build the best quality car we can.
That shows you the true grit.
And Steve's hoping that maybe this is the start of a new era of unionizing in the South.
You know, we're one of the first dominoes.
You know, so if our domino knocks their domino and the next domino, this may be a
huge, huge push throughout all the automotive industry in the South.
The next domino Steve hopes will fall
are the Mercedes factory in Vance, Alabama,
a Toyota engine plant in Missouri,
a Hyundai plant in Alabama,
and a plant that Volkswagen is currently building
in South Carolina.
Our original episode was produced by Willa Rubin,
engineered by Josephine Neonai, fact-checked
by Cierra Juarez, and edited by Keith Romer.
Ida Poroside helped with research, Alex Goldmark is our executive producer.
Today's update was produced by James Snead, engineered by Valentina Rodriguez Sanchez,
and fact-checked by Sam Yellowhorse-Kessler.
If you want to read more about union organizing at car manufacturing plants,
Stephen Silvia's got a new book out.
It's titled, The UAW's Southern Gamble.
Special thanks this week to Blake Farmer,
Michael Gilliland, and Bob Kilken.
I'm Amanda Oranjic.
And I'm Nick Fountain.
This is NPR.
Thank you for listening.
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