BOWLING GREEN, Ky. – Hundreds of western Kentucky auto workers attended a rally to fight for their jobs.
The rally Wednesday at the United Auto Workers hall was sponsored by the Alliance for American Manufacturing, a group that is traveling around the country educating people about the U.S. auto industry’s problems.
The Daily News in Bowling Green reports that local and national auto leaders spoke to workers, urging them to contact elected officials in an effort to keep automotive jobs in the United States.
The General Motors Corp. plant in Bowling Green makes the Corvette and the Cadillac SLR.
For Immediate Release
Contact: Kathy Roeder, (202) 744-1037
or kathy@blueenginemedia.com
Connie Mabin, United Steelworkers
(724) 601-5282 or cmabin@usw.org
Teach-In Showcases National Economics and “Home Economics;” Stories from
11-State Bus Tour on the Future of 7.2 million Auto-Related Jobs in America
Washington, D.C. (May 14, 2009) – From May 11 to May 14, thousands of workers whose paychecks are tied to the U.S. auto industry joined bus tours through 11 states to showcase the ripple effect of economic devastation and lost jobs in industries ranging from steel and paper to shops on Main Street and public education. For highlights from the 11-state bus tour visit www.madeinamericatour.org.
On Tuesday, May 19, from 9:00 AM-1:15 PM in Room HVC 215 of the Capitol Visitors Center, national economists, labor and business leaders, Members of Congress, local elected officials and everyday workers will bring those stories to Washington and present principles for revitalizing the auto industry by supporting American jobs and communities. The first panel begins with MSNBC’s Ed Schultz moderating a discussion featuring Leo Gerard, International President of the United Steelworkers, Wilbur Ross, Chairman & CEO of WL Ross & Company, and Dr. Susan Helper, Case Western Reserve University, Professor of Economics. Labor and business leaders as well as elected officials and workers will participate in additional panels examining the auto supply chain and the government’s response.
U.S. auto manufacturing impacts millions more workers than those on assembly lines. Millions of workers depend on auto manufacturing companies as customers – in 19 U.S. states auto supply manufacturing is either the top or among the top five industrial employers – and millions more depend on auto workers as customers in their stores and restaurants. Local governments depend on income tax and property tax from middle class families to pay for education, health and safety services. To learn more about how the auto manufacturing industry impacts local communities visit www.americanmanufacturing.org and www.usw.org.
Recognizing the consequences that U.S. auto manufacturing has on communities across America, the Alliance for American Manufacturing, United Steelworkers and Mayors and Municipalities Coalition are presenting Congress and the Administration with principles for revitalizing the auto and auto parts manufacturing sectors, and driving economic activity beyond the assembly line floor:
– Stimulate domestic demand for automobiles, such as an incentive program like cash-for-clunkers with a strong domestic content requirement and restoring credit for consumers and businesses.
- Only risk American tax dollars to support domestic jobs, investment, and innovation, and reject off-shoring as a path to profitability for GM and Chrysler.
- Restore cooperative innovation and research and development efforts. A National Automotive Research and Development Program, for example, could provide incentives for companies to create programs that lead to better, safer, and more fuel-efficient vehicles – built domestically.
- Change health care policy to eliminate structural problems for the domestic auto industry. The Big Three’s foreign competitors benefit from either national health care plans or through offering substandard benefits.
- Ensure trade policy promotes U.S. interests. The U.S. imports $41.5 billion in cars and light trucks from Japan and $7.5 billion for Korea, while we export only $534 million and $373 million respectively. We must address non-tariff barriers to trade in these markets, end
currency misalignment and aggressively enforce our trade laws to eliminate unfair trade practices.
Additional panel guests and speakers include: auto supply workers, auto dealers and workers from the bus tour as well as Tom Conway, United Steelworkers international vice-president; Scott Paul, Alliance for American Manufacturing executive director; Mayor Virg Bernero (Lansing, MI); City Manager Peter Auger (Auburn Hills, MI); Mayor Kevin Wixom (Hinkley, MI); Mayor Carty Finkbeiner (Toledo, OH); Mayor Marlene Anielski (Walkton Hills, OH); Major Charles Brunner (Bay City, MI); Mayor Katherine Procop (Twinsburg, OH).
Leo W. Gerard, USW international president said, “Traveling around the country last week, we heard from laid-off people in Fort Wayne, Indiana, who desperately want to go back to work making auto parts. They are angry that their tax dollars might be used to export jobs. In Granite City, Illinois, a fourth-generation restaurant owner agonized over the thought that he may not be able to hand down his diner to his baby girl because local plant closings have hurt his business. All over the country workers on and off the assembly line are counting on our leaders to recognize that there’s much more at stake than profits. Saving the auto industry is about 7.2 million people, their families and their communities. Our teach-in aims to bring this message to Washington – that this is America’s fight, and a strong domestic auto industry matters to all of us.”
By Greg Burry | People’s Weekly World Newspaper
HAMTRAMCK, Mich. — Steelworkers union President Leo Gerard joined Lansing, Mich., Mayor Virg Bernero, members of Congress, actor Danny Glover and the Rev. Jesse Jackson here as the “Keep It Made In America Tour” rolled into Michigan this week.
The multi-city bus tour by workers, union leaders, city and state officials, car dealers and other local businesses, aims to mobilize working people in the fight to keep manufacturing jobs and rebuild a future for America’s heartland communities.
This is a “fight for middle class jobs and to rekindle the American dream,” Gerard told a May 11 rally in this epicenter of the auto crisis. “If we are silenced we will be crushed. If we don’t stand up and fight we will be crushed.”
The tour of 36 cities in 11 states is fighting back against Wall Street and corporations who want to outsource manufacturing and jobs, and crush the working class. Debbie Stabenow, one of Michigan’s two Democratic senators from Michigan, reflected that spirit, declaring, “We will not go under. It is time to stand up, and we will fight with you.”
Looking at the working class crowd gathered here, Bernero delivered a stinging indictment of Wall Street.
His city, Lansing, was formerly home to Cadillac and Oldsmobile manufacturing plants employing thousands in well-paid union jobs with health coverage and other basics of a decent life. The per capita income in the city is now under $18,000 and one in six residents lives below the official poverty line.
Wall Street does not see us as workers who worked all their lives to build America, the Lansing mayor said. Instead, Wall Street sees workers as costs that decrease profits and must be eliminated by outsourcing, slashing wages and benefits, and exporting our standard of living and the American dream. Outsourcing is the way capitalism works, Bernero said. Noting that it is considered all right for Wall Street to turn to the government for a bailout for a financial crisis they created, he said ironically, “Socialism is for Wall Street and capitalism is for us.”
The mayor concluded, “This battle is going to be won with the blood, sweet and tears of union workers.” Some say the unions have had their time, but “The union’s time is today,” he said. “We have to stand together. The labor movement will lead us out of this.”
Gerard noted that every country with a domestic auto industry has stepped up to help their auto industry, with conditions. France gave $9 billion with the condition that the industry cannot close any plants and must expand domestic production. But such demands have not been placed on American auto companies or banks that have taken bailout loans, Gerard said.
Manufacturing is central to the country’s future, speakers said. A viable economy cannot be solely based on the service sector. The opportunities to rebuild manufacturing in the U.S. are great, many said. We can make wind turbine parts, Stabenow said, “keep it American and build it right here in Michigan.” Michigan Congressman Sander Levin called for electric vehicles and batteries to be built in Michigan.
To keep manufacturing in America, we must “change this rotten system” that Wall Street has created, said another Michigan Democrat, Rep. John Conyers. We need an “economic system that puts everyone to work,” Conyers said. He proposed a new full-employment act similar to the 1978 Humphrey Hawkins Full Employment and Balanced Growth Act to retrain workers and create jobs to get the economy moving. “What we need now is a full employment stimulus,” the veteran lawmaker said.
This was not a rally to bash workers in other countries. “They did not take jobs from us,” the Rev. Jesse Jackson said. “Corporations took jobs to them and chose cheap labor over organized labor.”
Underscoring that this was a rally to demand jobs, keep manufacturing in America, and strengthen worker rights and economic rights, Jackson said we must “save the worker,” and “stimulate the economy from the bottom up.”
He called for a “level playing field, free and fair trade, and a moratorium on foreclosures and plant closings,” and for “reinvesting in American manufacturing.”
Actor and activist Danny Glover urged collective action, saying we must be the “architect of our own rescue.” Paraphrasing India’s Gandhi, Glover declared, “We are going to be the world we want to create.” It is a world without violence and war, and a sustainable economy that provides full employment, and universal health care, he said.
The Shreveport Times has a great photo essay on the “Keep it Made in America” tour when it came to town.