President Joe Biden is joining members of the United Auto Workers on the picket line in Michigan on Tuesday. That’s a big deal, and it says at least as much about the rising influence of organized labor as it does about the president.
The union has been carrying out work stoppages against automakers Ford, General Motors and Chrysler parent Stellantis since Sept. 15. It’s demanding, among other things, a big jump in wages, protections to ensure that wages remain tied to the rising cost of living, a shorter workweek and the right to strike as the industry’s transition to manufacturing electric vehicles is likely to result in job losses.
It shouldn’t go without notice, however, that the trip was announced after Biden came under pressure on multiple fronts.
Part of what’s motivating the union’s aggressive tactics is that while profits at these automakers have increased 90% over the last decade or so and their CEOs’ pay is soaring, workers haven’t seen a corresponding increase in pay. The average hourly wage for autoworkers on the production line has declined 30% since 2003 when adjusted for inflation, according to Bloomberg News. Now the union is pursuing a strategy of rotating and expanding work stoppages at factories to pressure the companies to meet its demands.
Biden’s decision to show solidarity with the workers is a powerful symbolic gesture. Politico says Biden’s decision to join striking UAW members on the picket line is “likely the most visible step any president has taken on behalf of striking workers.” It could give the workers more leverage in negotiations, and it’s an act that’s only appropriate for a president who claims to be the most “pro-union president in American history.”
It shouldn’t go without notice, however, that the trip was announced after Biden came under pressure on multiple fronts.
Last week, former President Donald Trump announced that he was heading to Detroit to speak with current and former union members on Wednesday. His event is scheduled to coincide with the second Republican presidential primary debate — a pointed attempt to make him look like he’s a man of the people, despite his anti-labor record and friendliness to corporate interests.








