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Sunday, May 10, 2009

Obamas payback to the UAW

As a former resident of Detroit, with a long line of family ties to the UAW (United Auto Workers), I find that my opinion of unions and my families past are at odds with one another. I know of the great strife people went through in the late 19th and 20th centuries when it came to labor. People were treated unfairly and it comes as no surprise that people organized against their employers, and if I was there, I might have been a vocal supporter.

At one time, the UAW organized bicycle factories in Cleveland and Chicago, which undoubtedly secured higher wages, however the companies closed up shop and moved out of state. Their businesses simply could not compete with the competition when faced with the reality of updating equipment versus overhead costs. The lesson holds true for companies dealing with pressure from organizations such as the UAW today. With shrinking market share from foreign competitors, some union members don’t take into account the costs of doing business and staying competitive. What seems fair (wages), can in the end find one with out a job at all. Our society is changing more rapidly than the people it contains. Our manufacturing base is shrinking and being replaced with high tech jobs that require a skilled workforce, which is why the “guaranteed good job” straight out of high school will not exist in the years to come. Products are being manufactured in other countries for cheaper prices, and this fact puts our union system at odds with prosperity. There once was a time in America that the union actually helped, but now they have grown into a bloated bureaucracy that endangers our economy. How can an American company with a union compete with an overseas competitor, without raising prices on products? How can America stay competitive if the Card Check bill is passed by our congress and president?

Supporters of unions promote protectionism that only stifles growth in our overseas markets, and is met with a swift penalty by foreign governments that seek to correct our mistakes. A company must depend on quality, brand loyalty, and patriotism in order to keep customers coming back and paying the higher prices on goods. Or if you live in Detroit, you can resort to yelling at drivers of foreign cars out your window at stop lights. Hey, whatever works.

As the UAW eyes new membership (Card Check Bill), their membership has declined from the 1.5 million in 1979 to 465K as of 2007. As a business, the union must make sound financial decisions based on the trends of their revenue, which comes in the form of union dues. In the past 25 years, the UAW has donated approximately 25 million dollars to democrat campaigns. According to Opensecrets.com the UAW in the 2008 election cycle has donated approximately 1.9 million dollars to lawmakers that carry a “D”, while their republican counterparts have only managed to collect approximately $11,500. It may not seem unusual for union political slant, but the money is being paid back through ownership of GM and Chrysler, which will be managed by VEBA (Voluntary Employees Beneficiary Association). The managers of VEBA may end up being knowledgeable, but it places the enlisted in charge of the officers. VEBA has received a 39% stake in GM, but our federal government was the clear winner with a controlling share. Since when does any government hand back control once it’s there’s?

The secured loan bond holders of GM have released a statement that said: “We believe the offer to be a blatant disregard of fairness for the bondholders who have funded this company and amounts to using taxpayers’ money to show political favoritism of one creditor over another.” An offer of 10% was offered to the bond holders, while the UAW received a share four times what they were owed. With no plan to give the correct share of the company over to the bond holders, their claims of political favoritism are solid.

Perhaps the bond holders of GM would be more willing to save the company, with an incremental plan in place that transfers shares back to the bond holders over time. GM stands to make a profit after the restructuring, and so does VEBA. If all goes well, VEBA will turn the profits into benefits for the workers. If the company turns around and becomes successful, VEBA keeps their 39% share of the company, but why shouldn’t they incrementally hand over shares to the bond holders once their debts are paid through sales profits? If VEBA sells the shares on the market to pay the benefits to workers, then obviously, the plan crumbles for the bond holders. Why would they invest in GM twice?

Instead of a fair restructuring plan for all involved, the new administration is using the bully pulpit of the White House to threaten bond holders into a deal. While in discussions on the future of Chrysler, Mr. Lauria of the law firm White & Case said that they offered to take 50% of what they (bond holders) were owed while they had no contractual obligation to do so. Mr. Lauria, in an interview with a local Detroit radio show host, said that "One of my clients was directly threatened by the White House and in essence compelled to withdraw its opposition to the deal under threat that the full force of the White House press corps would destroy its reputation if it continued to fight.”

The allegations of Mr. Lauria have been denied, as if the man had ideological political reasons for coming out against the White House. In the last election cycle, Mr. Lauria supported the democrats in a senatorial bid in Florida which leads me to believe that like many lawyers, he shares the views of the current administration.

See below for Thomas Lauria campaign contributions.
http://www.campaignmoney.com/political/contributions/thomas-lauria.asp?cycle=08



12 comments:

  1. Great blog, I found you over at the comment secion of the Pajama Underground....it's nice to see someone in your position of former liberalosity seeing the error of those ways....

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  2. Completely uninformative. The skilled work / knowledge economy b.s. must stop. Every job in every company - including ones that require business management degrees - is learned on the job. What is more, there is no more demand for these educated / skilled knowledge workers. We have a brain bubble. We've been trying to cram recent grads into the GMs, Dows, Oracles, Apples, etc., but there isn't much for them to do – other than blog about how workers who actually break a sweat and work for $14/hr. or less without benefits are ruining the country. Please. Unions like the UAW say slave labor anywhere in the world is not to be tolerated any more than torture should be. Make our trade agreements reflect our humanitarian and environmental ideals, so corporations can't simply cherry pick and exploit the desperation of others while they call up a an frat buddy to see if he's got a cushy job for Bill Jr.

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  3. Spoken just like a true Salon.com blogger. Thank you, you have given me exactly what I hoped for in my first angry liberal troll.

    No need for educated skilled workers? I’m not even going to bother with that one.

    Nowhere in the blog did I condone slave labor. I was actually referring to the non union Toyota plants. You shouldn’t take their rejection personally.

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  4. See what those folks look like from the side of good Former? Cowardly nuts, many who are hired guns sitting in DNC funded modern day electronic sweat shops with airconditioning simply hired to troll and trash conservative blogs and forums to discourage bloggers. I just delete em all for that reason, no cred. All canned talking points

    Welcome to side of good, thanks for the add and I've returned the favor my friend, and you'll quickly see the dif between that side and this side I'm sure, 100 times more civil

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  5. I considered the deletion option, however I feel that I need to entertain myself.

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  6. Public's D's dusty and rather juvenile "workers of the world unite" speech belongs at the bottom of history's garbage bin. Unreasonable union demands and burdensome government regulations have made it impossible to build a car people want in an America while actually turning a profit. Let any car company that can't cut it die.

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  7. Juvenile yes, but he sure was fun.

    I agree with you with the exception of the "die" part. I'm in favor of reorganizing in such a way that actually favors the company. Under favorable conditions cars cost less, they have the money to retool plants, and they can advertise like they need to without gov't interference. Some in my family are receiving benefits from the car companies. Cutting them off is not an option, and would be disastrous to them and many other older retirees. Future payouts along the same line should not be an option either. The day for actual retirment plans by the company is gone, and has been replaced by 401k and IRA's that are managed by the worker. Thats just the way it is going to have to be in a global economy. Period.

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  8. Love how GM finally declares bankruptcy today and stocks go through the roof. Hahah!

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  9. Could that have something to do with GM not weighing the market down? Maybe a little. The day to day ups and downs of the market is no way to put a gage on economic recovery. A long term outlook is best. Can anyone say "inflation"?

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  10. The unions have no shame. Check out the following
    link:

    http://www.examiner.com/x-9382-Marin-Republican-Examiner~y2009m6d16-California-Budget-Battle---State-GOP-takes-on-the-SEIU-and-public-employee-unions

    ReplyDelete