4,000 more autoworkers joining US strike: Union

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Striking United Auto Workers members from the General Motors Lansing Delta Plant picket in Delta Township, Michigan, on Sept 29.

Striking United Auto Workers members from General Motors' plant in Delta Township, Michigan, on Sept 29.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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Washington – Employees at United States automaker Mack Trucks voted down a labour agreement on Sunday and will join some

25,000 other United Auto Workers (UAW) members on strike,

the union announced.

“UAW members at Mack Trucks have voted to reject a tentative agreement and will strike at 7am on Monday,” the union posted on social media platform X, formerly known as Twitter.

The post said this will impact 4,000 employees at Mack, a maker of industrial vehicles, which is headquartered in North Carolina, but has manufacturing plants in Pennsylvania and Maryland.

“I’m inspired to see UAW members at Mack holding out for a better deal, and ready to stand up and walk off the job to win it,” said UAW president Shawn Fain.

The Mack workers will be joining striking UAW members at the so-called “Big Three” – General Motors, Ford and Stellantis – who launched a targeted action on Sept 15 after failing to reach a new deal.

The targeted strike called for stoppages at a handful of plants, while leaving most of the union’s 146,000 US hourly autoworkers on the job.

After two weeks of expanding the strike to other plants, Mr Fain on Friday said that the UAW will hold off for now, citing last-minute progress in talks.

With the dual earlier expansions of the strike on the prior two Fridays, the total number of workers on strike at the Big Three stands at about 25,000.

The industrial action is the first-ever joint strike at the three major automakers, in a push for higher salaries and other improvements, especially related to the transition to manufacturing electric vehicles.

In a letter to Mack posted on X, the UAW cited wage increases, cost-of-living adjustments and several benefits as outstanding issues in their contract negotiations. AFP

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