Analysis
Joe Biden’s visit to the UAW picket line is
historic – and may pay off politically
Steven
Greenhouse
The president standing ‘in solidarity’ with striking
autoworkers is a powerful gesture that could resonate with key blue-collar
voters
Tue 26 Sep
2023 11.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/sep/26/why-biden-uaw-strike-visit
In the more
than 150 years since workers first formed labor unions in the United States, no
American president has ever stood “in solidarity” with workers on a picket
line. Joe Biden has vowed to do exactly that with striking autoworkers in
Michigan on Tuesday.
“This is
genuinely new – I don’t think it’s ever happened before, a president on a
picket line,” said Nelson Lichtenstein, a longtime labor historian at the
University of California, Santa Barbara. “Candidates do it frequently and
prominent senators, but not a president.”
Biden’s
visit to the picket line, labor experts say, will give him a political boost in
Michigan and other industrial swing states and might also help nudge the United
Auto Workers (UAW) and automakers to a quicker settlement. But some experts say
his visit could backfire if the walkout drags on for months or seriously hurts
the nation’s economy.
Biden’s
predecessors were often far more hostile toward strikers. In 1894, Grover
Cleveland dispatched federal troops to help shut down a railroad strike; during
the Korean war in 1952, Harry Truman seized the nation’s steel mills in
response to a steelworkers’ strike; and in 1981, Ronald Reagan fired 11,345
striking air traffic controllers.
Biden has said he will be the most pro-union president
ever, and visiting a picket line is indeed unprecedented for a president
Meg Jacobs of Princeton University
“Biden has
said he will be the most pro-union president ever, and visiting a picket line
is indeed unprecedented for a president,” said Meg Jacobs, a labor historian at
Princeton University.
The UAW
strike is the first to hit all three big US car manufacturers simultaneously.
The union has emphasized the huge profits Ford, General Motors and Stellantis
have made since the 2008/2009 recession and claimed little has been passed on
to workers.
CEO pay at
the big three has increased by 40% since 2013 as profits have soared. GM’s Mary
Barra, the highest-paid CEO of the three, pocketed $28.97m last year.
Meanwhile, auto manufacturing workers have seen their average real hourly
earnings fall 19.3% since 2008.
The union’s
messaging has so far won popular support, with 58% of Americans backing the
strike according to a Reuters/Ipsos poll.
On Friday,
the UAW’s president, Shawn Fain, called for everyone “from our friends and
families all the way up to the president of the United States” to “join us on
the picket line”. Hours later, Biden tweeted, “Tuesday, I’ll go to Michigan to
join the picket line,” saying he planned to “stand in solidarity with the men
and women” of the UAW.
Jacobs said
the picket line visit could have important political benefits for Biden. “It’s
a smart move. There’s no way for him to win the presidency without industrial
states like Michigan,” Jacobs said. “Biden has to do well in the important
industrial swing states that Hillary Clinton lost to Donald Trump in 2016
[Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania – all of which Biden won back in 2020].
Going to the picket line signals a commitment to working families, to the
working class. It signals to workers in those states that he is authentic about
this.”
On Friday,
the Trump campaign attacked Biden’s plan to join the UAW strikers, calling it
“nothing more than a cheap photo-op” and saying it was inspired by Trump’s plan
to speak in Detroit to union members on Wednesday. A week ago, Trump campaign
sources said the former president would give a speech to 500 workers, including
many UAW members, on 27 September at the same time the second Republican
presidential debate is held. Labor experts said it was highly unusual for a
former president to arrive in a city that’s the center of a major strike with
the intention of somehow intervening and making political gains. Trump is
expected to attack Biden over his plan to bring about a quick transition to
electric vehicles, a move that Trump says will endanger autoworkers’ jobs.
All this
shows that Biden and Trump are vying for an important political group,
blue-collar workers, and that helps explain Biden’s visit. “Biden realizes that
constituency is important,” Jacobs said.
Marick
Masters, an auto industry expert at Wayne State University in Detroit, said
Biden’s plan to join a picket line was an astute way to counter Trump’s Detroit
speech. “In his visit, Trump is trying to energize his base and embarrass
Biden,” Masters said. “But Biden coming to a picket line here will make it
harder for Trump to embarrass Biden.”
Masters
said there was an easy way for Biden to trump his predecessor, who hasn’t
indicated that he would join a picket line: “All Biden has to say is ‘I came
and stood by you. Someone else who occupied this office didn’t.’”
Masters
agreed that Biden’s visit could give him a needed political boost. “A lot of
autoworkers are blase when it comes to Biden. He doesn’t get a great deal of
enthusiasm. But his visit could generate support,” Masters said. “[Union
members] will go the extra mile and be more willing to campaign for him and
vote for him. It could very well make the difference” in the industrial swing
states “if there is a close election and it’s a redo of 2020.”
Biden’s
visit could still backfire, said Masters, if the strike drags on for months or
is seen as pushing the nation into recession. But if it doesn’t: “I think this
show of commitment will inspire a lot of union members and they won’t forget
this,” he said.
Some labor
experts see Biden’s visit as mainly symbolic as far as the contract talks are
concerned. They say that notwithstanding his pro-union rhetoric, he doesn’t
have much leverage.
Art
Wheaton, director of labor studies at Cornell University, said he wasn’t sure
whether Biden’s visit would help speed a settlement, but he didn’t doubt that
it would help him politically. “I don’t know if it persuades GM [or the other
automakers] to move faster,” Wheaton said.
As for the
political angle, Wheaton said: “He’s going to be on the union side, saying,
‘I’m for the working person, I’m publicly siding with the UAW.’ It takes away
one talking point from Trump that Biden’s not doing anything. Biden’s standing
up with the workers.”
While
Biden’s move may be unprecedented, Princeton’s Jacobs said she still saw
Franklin Roosevelt as the most pro-union president in history. “I think FDR
deserves the title as the most friendly toward labor,” Jacobs said. “Without
the Wagner Act [the landmark 1935 law that the New Deal Congress enacted to
create a federally guaranteed right to unionize and bargain collectively], we
wouldn’t have the UAW and the labor protections we have today. I think Biden is
very much a New Deal Democrat. He sees labor in the same way. It’s not new that
he talks about corporations’ record profits and translating record profits into
record gains for workers.”
If ever
there was a moment for a Democratic president to join a picket line, this is
probably it, said UC Santa Barbara’s Lichtenstein. “Today the Democratic party
is probably more united on labor issues than any time since the New Deal, and
even then, the whole southern Democratic contingent was hostile toward labor,”
he said. “Even with Kennedy and Johnson, there was a whole anti-labor
contingent in the Democratic party. But right now is a rare moment when labor
is very popular, and it usually isn’t.”
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