German
politicians vow to stop VW’s mass layoff plan
The giant
automaker’s planned cuts are among the clearest signs yet of Germany’s
industrial decline.
June 29,
2026 8:36 pm CET
By James
Angelos and Nette Nöstlinger
https://www.politico.eu/article/volkswagen-german-politicians-vow-to-stop-vws-mass-layoff-plan/
BERLIN —
German political leaders are responding to Volkswagen's bombshell plan to slash
100,000 jobs — potentially one of the largest corporate layoffs in history —
with predictable pledges to prevent the cuts, even as Germany's economic
reality grows darker.
That sets
up a clash between VW's increasingly aggressive corporate management and the
politicians and unions that sit on the automaker's supervisory board — and who
have the power to block the plans. It's a fight that ties the survival of
Chancellor Friedrich Merz's ever-more-unpopular coalition government to
Germany's increasingly bleak and potentially inescapable economic reality.
VW's push
to cut nearly one in six workers and shut down four German plants is the most
poignant sign yet of the growing desperation of Germany's manufacturing sector
and its once-vaunted car industry, which have been hit particularly hard by
competition from China and U.S President Donald Trump's tariff wars.
The plan
also shows that the problems inside Germany's largest and most iconic automaker
are even deeper than previously acknowledged — and that Chief Executive Oliver
Blume is growing more forceful in his push to restructure the company and cut
costs.
Leaders
of the parties in Merz's coalition vow to resist the plan, and because Lower
Saxony — home to VW's headquarters in the city of Wolfsburg — is the company's
second-largest voting shareholder, they have considerable power to try to stop
it.
“The
primary goal is to preserve the production sites of German manufacturers and to
safeguard jobs,” Stefan Kornelius, Merz's spokesperson, said Monday.
The news
of VW's plan to cut 100,000 jobs, first reported Friday by Germany’s Manager
Magazin and expected to be presented to VW's supervisory board in July, could
hardly have come at a worse time for Merz's weak coalition government —
consisting of the chancellor's conservatives bloc and the center-left Social
Democrats.
The
far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party — which has been hitting Merz's
coalition hard over the shedding of industrial jobs — holds a considerable lead
over the chancellor's conservatives in national polls — and is even further
ahead in two state elections set for September in AfD strongholds in the former
East Germany.
“Germany’s
industrial base is crumbling at a dramatic pace right before our eyes,” said
Alice Weidel, one of the leaders of the AfD, in a statement on Monday. “Even
long-established companies are fleeing the economic mismanagement of this
federal government.”
How far
will VW go?
Because
of VW's unique corporate structure — and its partial ownership by the state of
Lower Saxony — politicians and workers' representatives have an outsize role in
how the company is run. The state, with its large number of factory laborers,
is also one of the few remaining strongholds for the SPD, a party that has
traditionally had close ties to labor unions.
Olaf
Lies, the SPD premier of Lower Saxony, sits on the supervisory board, along
with the deputy state premier, Julia Willie Hamburg, a politician of the
center-left Greens. Both have vowed to resist VW's cost-cutting plans, and
argue that its management instead needs a better plan to recapture lost market
share.
“Our task
must be to ensure that we don’t seek solutions through simplistic measures like
‘We’ll lay off employees or close locations,’” Lies told public broadcaster ZDF
on Sunday. “We have to be competitive; we have to be technological leaders. And
we also have to be able to secure and capture markets again. And personally,
that’s what I expect from the executive board of a company like this.”
VW’s
supervisory board would need to approve the reported layoffs and factory
closures with a vote scheduled for July 9, according to the Manager Magazin
report.
But
representatives of the workers’ side and state politicians currently hold a
majority of 11 out of 19 votes on the supervisory board. It therefore appears
unlikely that the proposed plans will be approved without significant
amendments or the inclusion of additional safeguards for workers.
The
question will be how far VW's management is willing to go in confronting
politicians and trade unionists over its cost-cutting drive.
One of
the most potentially explosive elements of VW's reported plan is the possible
spin-off of at least parts of the company into a separate entity. Experts say
management may be seeking to create a corporate structure that would give it
greater freedom to decide the future of factories and jobs, without the
constraints of state ownership or trade union representation. Under the current
law regulating VW's governance model, management would need a two-thirds
supervisory board majority to close one of its western German factories.
“It would
be very radical,” Helena Wisbert, professor of automotive economics at Ostfalia
University of Applied Sciences, said of a possible spinoff attempt. Wisbert
said such a step would be extremely difficult to pull off — in great part
because the current supervisory board would have to approve a spinoff. Still,
she added, if such a step were truly under consideration, “it would really show
just how intense the pressure to cut costs is right now.”
In an
emailed statement to POLITICO sent on Friday, VW said it would "not
comment on internal, confidential documents," but added that “the entire
Group — including its brands and subsidiaries — must undergo a profound
transformation. To this end, the Group Executive Board has been working
intensively over the past few months on a strategic plan for the company’s
restructuring.”
VW's woes
became clear in 2024, when management announced a plan to close three factories
in Germany for the first time in the automaker's then 87-year history. But
after marathon negotiations at the end of that year — which labor unions hailed
as a “Christmas miracle” — factory closures were averted. Both parties agreed
that 35,000 jobs would be cut by 2030.
But as
the company's outlook soured, VW announced this March it would increase job
cuts to 50,000 by 2030 — an announcement met with relatively muted reaction.
Now, plans to cut double that amount are facing far stiffer resistance.
"As
a state, we have a clear expectation that VW management will put forward a
viable plan for the future," Grant Hendrik Tonne, the SPD economy minster
of the state of Lower Saxony, told POLITICO. "Plant closures are not a
plan for the future and are therefore unacceptable."
Romanus
Otte contributed reporting.


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