What A Day - Autoworkers, Roll Out!
Episode Date: September 18, 2023The United Auto Workers Union is on strike at all three of Detroit’s major automakers — General Motors, Ford, and Stellantis. This is the first time in history it’s done that. Nearly 13,000 work...ers walked off the job at three auto plants across the country on Friday to fight for better wages and benefits as negotiations for a new labor contract continue.And in headlines: Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton was acquitted of all the impeachment charges against him, tens of thousands of protesters marched in Manhattan to call on world leaders to end the usage of fossil fuels, and Drew Barrymore reversed the decision to bring back her talk show amid the Hollywood writers’ strike.Show Notes:What A Day – YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@whatadaypodcastCrooked Coffee is officially here. Our first blend, What A Morning, is available in medium and dark roasts. Wake up with your own bag at crooked.com/coffeeFollow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/crookedmedia/For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's Monday, September 18th. I'm Juanita Tolliver.
And I'm Trevelle Anderson, and this is What A Day,
the pod that suggests if you're looking for a new career,
crisis PR is where it's at.
Because there's so many famous people lately who've made decisions that got them in hot water.
Drew Barrymore, Ashton Kutcher, the guy who founded Rolling Stone.
What y'all doing out there?
Pure mess.
Listen, and everybody needs an Olivia
Pope in their life, okay? Oh, yes. On today's show, we'll explain why all those people should
have kept their mouths shut. Plus, come on, B. That's thousands of climate protesters yesterday in New York chanting for Biden to end fossil fuels.
More on that coming up.
You know, I love anything with a dance track in the background.
But first, the United Auto Workers Union is officially on strike.
No justice, no jeeps.
No justice, no jeeps.
That was the sound of UAW workers chanting on the picket lines this weekend
after Detroit's big three automakers, General Motors, Ford, and Stellantis,
failed to meet their demands for a new labor contract by last Thursday's strike deadline.
Nearly 13,000 workers from across the country walked off the job on Friday at three auto plants,
a General Motors factory in Wentzville, Missouri,
a Ford plant in Wayne, Michigan,
and a Jeep plant in Toledo, Ohio.
Take a listen to Tori Carter,
a Ford worker who spoke to the news outlets
More Perfect Union on the picket lines Friday night.
Right now, I'm fired up.
I'm ready to go to war.
I'm ready to fight for what's mine.
We deserve it.
I mean, we don't get to see our families,
and it's been really rough for us this year, so right now, I'm ready to fight for what's mine. We deserve it. I mean, we don't get to see our families. And it's been really rough for us this year.
So right now, I'm ready.
We make these cars.
We can't even afford them ourselves.
The greed and stuff has to stop now.
Period.
And this is the first time that the UAW has struck all three of Detroit's major automakers
at the same time.
So this is history in the making.
Yeah, that chant, no justice, no jeeps is really clever and very appropriate.
Look at y'all getting real creative out there. So the UAW actually represents over 145,000 workers
nationwide. So why exactly is it just these 13,000 workers on strike? Yeah, so the UAW is using
what's called a stand-up strike method. Like
all unions, the UAW has a strike fund to support its members who are out of work. They've got over
$825 million in the tank to keep people afloat, but there's only so much to go around. Analysts
say that the fund could be completely exhausted if the strike goes longer than 12 weeks, so the
idea is to start small with these three
plants to make sure the fund doesn't get depleted too quickly, but big enough to be disruptive to
the company's operations. Other UAW workers will continue working under their expired contracts.
If negotiations continue to stall, though, the strike could spread to more plants.
Gotcha. So where do negotiations currently stand? I know both sides are back at the bargaining
table, but do we have a sense of how things are exactly going? So the biggest point of contention
between them continues to be compensation. As we've said on the show, workers want a 36%
increase in wages over the next four years, but none of the big three have offered them
anywhere close to that. Stellantis proposed a wage increase of 21% to its workers,
while Ford and General Motors made similar offers on Sunday.
But the UAW rejected them all and made clear that the strike will continue.
And how exactly have the automakers responded to the strike thus far?
The CEOs of the big three have been making their rounds on TV saying the same old BS about
why the workers are asking for too much. And just hours after the strike began, Ford and General
Motors temporarily laid off thousands of non-striking workers, claiming that the strike
was forcing their hands. Although as of our recording time at 9.30 p.m. Eastern, Stellantis
is the only automaker that hasn't announced any plans to let people go.
But on Friday, Ford told 600 of its workers in Michigan not to come back to work,
and General Motors said it plans to lay off 2,000 workers in Kansas because of the strike.
The union has obviously pushed back on this idea, calling it a squeeze move.
UAW President Sean Fain put out a statement firing back at CEOs on Saturday saying, quote,
with their record profits, they don't have to lay off a single employee. In fact,
they could double every auto workers pay, not raise car prices and still rake in billions of
dollars. Yeah, it's always odd to me when they act like they're hurting for money. So they have
to lay people off when the reality is that they're still pulling in millions, billions of dollars every year, unimpacted.
100%.
So now what about Biden's response to all of this?
I know he said that he supports the strike, but some striking UAW workers are skeptical, to say the least, of his allyship.
Can you tell us more about the tension there? Well, on Friday, the president held a press conference to respond to the UAW's decision
to strike. Auto companies have seen record profits. Those record profits have not been
shared fairly, in my view, with those workers. I mean, no lies detected. The White House is
also sending some of his aides to Detroit this week to help broker a deal between the UAW and the big three. But the UAW recently declined to endorse Biden for
reelection. Here's what Fain told CBS on Sunday when asked why. Our endorsements are going to be
earned. We've been very clear about that. No matter what politician it is, we expect action,
not words. Part of the reason why there's tension between Biden and the UAW is the president's
plan to shift most cars to electric vehicles by 2032. Earlier this year, the Biden administration
proposed rules that would require that two thirds of new cars sold in the US have to be electric
vehicles to limit air pollution. Which all definitely sounds great, but how exactly does
that affect the demands and livelihoods of the auto workers?
UAW workers are concerned that the shift could threaten their jobs. For one, electric cars
require fewer people to assemble, and most electric vehicle jobs aren't unionized, so workers won't
benefit from better pay and labor standards. President Biden has promised to make sure that
battery plants and other electric vehicle workers will still have well-paying jobs and benefits.
But like Fain basically said in this clip, the UAW will believe it when they see it.
So the president is in a tough position right now between showing his commitment to clean energy and honoring his promise to be the, quote, most pro-union president you've ever seen.
And the UAW is watching to see how he balances the two.
And finally, the union
has had several talks with the automakers since the strike began. Tell us where those stand.
Each day, they've met with a different company. On Saturday, UAW met up with Ford and apparently
had a productive conversation. Yesterday, it was GM. And today, the union meets up with Stellantis.
We'll keep following the story as it develops, but that's the latest for now.
We'll be back after some ads.
Now let's wrap up with some headlines.
Headlines.
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton has kept his job.
On Saturday, the embattled Republican was acquitted of all the impeachment charges against him and was reinstated shortly afterwards.
Paxton was accused of using his office to help a donor, interfering with a federal investigation, and retaliating against whistleblowers on his staff. He was tried for 10 days in the Republican-controlled state senate,
and all but two GOP senators voted to acquit. Paxton's lawyers shouldn't pack up their brief
cases just yet, though. He's still in the middle of a years-long case against him for securities
fraud in Texas, and he's been under FBI investigation
since 2020. We're also side-eyeing another acquittal, this time in Michigan. On Friday,
jurors in the state acquitted three men accused of being part of a plot to kidnap Governor Gretchen
Whitmer in 2020. Prosecutors tried to make the case that Eric Molitor and brothers William and
Michael Null all tried to aid the scheme by going on a
scouting mission to Whitmer's vacation home. But according to the Associated Press, the defense
attorney said the jury didn't believe there was enough evidence to convict. This was the final
trial for the 14 men charged in the kidnapping plot who were angry at Governor Whitmer for
issuing lockdowns to protect the public during a historic pandemic. I mean, she was literally just
trying to save people's lives, but okay. Nine of those men, including the masterminds, were already
convicted and stayed in federal courts and are currently serving prison time. In Manhattan yesterday,
tens of thousands of protesters marched the streets to call on world leaders to end the usage of fossil fuels.
The protest was largely aimed at President Biden, who arrived in New York last night for his speech in front of the United Nations General Assembly on Tuesday.
Climate protests cropped up internationally this weekend also, with marches in Germany, Senegal, South Korea, India, and more. Burning fossil fuels, which include coal,
oil, and natural gas, remains to be the biggest cause of global warming. And while Biden has
advanced the nation's most ambitious climate policies, his administration has also continued
to approve permits for new oil and gas drilling. The good news? California is doing something right.
The state's Attorney General Rob Bonta filed a lawsuit on Friday against five of the world's largest oil and gas companies for lying about climate change.
The lawsuit alleges that these companies have known since the 1950s that burning fossil fuels would warm the planet.
But instead of warning the public about its dangers, they downplayed the effects.
Of course they did.
Likely to earn more money for themselves.
All in the name of capitalism.
I feel like we need a new jingle for that.
Hurricane Lee is forecast to weaken over the next few days before moving out into the Atlantic Ocean. The storm hit the Northeast on Saturday and knocked out power for tens of thousands of people.
Strong winds brought down trees onto power lines and roads, and at least one person died from its impact.
But Massachusetts Governor Maura Healey lifted the state of emergency that she declared before the storm made landfall,
noting the lack of significant damage.
But further down south, Atlanta was hit with a different storm that brought unexpected flash floods on Thursday afternoon. About three hours worth of rain dumped on the city in just a matter of minutes.
The water was so powerful that it picked up cars and even flooded dorms on Clark Atlanta University's campus.
Videos on social media show the water rising in the hallways of the residence halls as students waded through.
But since Thursday, the university has received an outpouring of donations,
including from other HBCUs, for students who had to be relocated from the floods.
Jan Winner, the co-founder of Rolling Stone magazine,
has been removed from the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Foundation's board
after a widely criticized interview he did with the New York Times published on Friday.
Winner was speaking about his upcoming book, The Masters, and when he was asked about his
decision to not include interviews with women or black artists, his answer was that they
were not, quote, articulate enough to be included.
Ugh.
Insofar as the women, I mean, there were just none of them were as articulate enough on
this intellectual level.
Wow.
Excuse me? He said it confidently, too. With his whole chest. Wow. Excuse me?
He said it confidently, too.
With his whole chest.
Wow.
With his whole chest.
The nearly 400-page book features interviews with seven white male rock and roll icons.
And in other news of white man flops, Ashton Kutcher has resigned as chairman of the board of the anti-child sex abuse organization that he co-founded with his then-wife Demi Moore in 2009.
This comes after outrage that he and his now-wife Mila Kunis
wrote leniency letters for their former That 70s Show co-star Danny Masterson.
He was sentenced earlier this month to 30 years in prison for raping two women.
Kunis served as an observer on the board and is also stepping down.
And finally, you know, just to put the cherry on top of all of this, Drew Barrymore yesterday
reversed the decision to bring back her talk show in the middle of the Hollywood writer's strike.
She was under heavy fire for recording new episodes last week without her three unionized
writers. Before she announced the latest move on Instagram, last Friday she initially tried to
defend making new episodes in a now-deleted, tear-filled video she recorded at home.
I deeply apologize to writers. I deeply apologize to unions.
Ma'am. Ma'am.
By the way, WOD Squad, if you've seen the video, we want to know.
Did she wallpaper her ceiling?
Like, is that something people are doing these days?
The first of those newly recorded episodes was supposed to air today.
But Barrymore said she'll now wait until the strike is resolved before her talk show starts a new season.
Her backtrack prompted another show, CBS's The Talk, to put a pause on its season premiere today as well.
However, there are several other talk shows such as The View and Real Time with Bill Maher that'll still go on without their unionized writers.
It's so interesting because just a couple months ago, Drew Barrymore was, you know, lauded for stepping away from that award show because of the writer's strike oh and then now she wanted
to make it seem like she was doing something good by continuing with her show and here she is now
with her tail tucked between her legs again what were you thinking drew what were you thinking girl
our friend drew wasn't thinking though that's the problem. No thought was given. And I hope more thought is given in the future.
But those are the headlines.
One more thing before we go.
Six decades ago, doctors achieved the impossible when they successfully replaced a human kidney with a machine.
But since then, the story has turned into one of the nation's worst healthcare catastrophes. On last week's America Dissected, host Abdul El-Sayed sits down with Tom Muller
about his book, How to Make a Killing,
where they talk about the corporate corruption of dialysis.
Listen to this convo and more only on America Dissected.
New episodes drop every Tuesday.
That is all for today.
If you like the show, make sure you subscribe,
leave a review,
go into Crisis PR, and tell your friends to listen.
And if you're into reading and not just wondering
if that was wallpaper on Drew's ceiling like me,
What A Day is also a nightly newsletter.
Check it out and subscribe at Cricut.com slash subscribe.
I'm Juanita Tolliver.
I'm Trey Bell Anderson.
And protests are so hot right now.
Oh, it's giving Paris Hilton.
That's hot.
Hold on.
I got to do a more vocal fry.
Hold on.
That's hot.
Shout out to the throwback.
Shout out to Paris Hilton.
She is thriving today.
That's all that matters.
What a day is the production of crooked media it's recorded and mixed by bill lance our show's producers itsy kink dania raven yamamoto and natalie bettendorf are our associate producers
and our senior producer is lita martinez our theme music is by col Gillyard and Kashaka.