NYT: Chattanooga is a Lobbyist Battleground

J.Emerson
by J.Emerson

On Tuesday, the New York Times published a look at the ongoing feud between pro- and anti-union forces at Volkswagen’s plant in Chattanooga, Tennessee. It paints a picture of a political battle fought mainly by outside forces, utilizing the deep pockets of some of the nation’s most powerful lobbying groups.

Steven Greenhouse’s story “Outsiders, Not Auto Plant, Battle U.A.W. in Tennessee” is mainly focused on the lobbying efforts of anti-union groups, including the freshly minted Center for Worker Freedom. The CWF is a subsidiary of Americans for Tax Reform, the well-known anti-tax group led by conservative titan Grover Norquist. Conservative commentator Matt Patterson heads the CWF, and has made it clear that he wants the UAW out of Chattanooga, telling the NYT

“Unions are a big driver of government. Unions are very political, the U.A.W. is one of the most political. If they help elect politicians who pass huge government programs, that requires taxes.”

Mr. Patterson has serious resources to call upon in his crusade. In a piece for conservative blog The Daily Caller, Mr. Patterson lambasted the UAW as a “ left-wing ATM machine.” He also criticized the recent rejection by the NLRB of a worker complaint alleging misleading solicitation by the UAW at Chattanooga, labeling it as politically motivated. Mr. Patterson’s CWF is just one of a number of conservative lobbying groups making their presence known in the region. Previous efforts by the UAW to organize the transplant auto factories have widely been dismissed as moribund. However, the level of spending and lobbying action of anti-union groups suggests otherwise, at least in this case.

Greenhouse’s full piece is well worth a read, if only because it shows how high the stakes at Chattanooga have become (or at least are perceived to be). It also demonstrates, perhaps unintentionally, how “pro-union“ and “anti-union“ have been constructed as all-or-nothing categories in post-bailout America. That new politics of exclusion has turned what would originally have been a fairly small-scale regional controversy into a national issue.

The fear of (or hope for) a domino effect of widespread unionization of the Southern auto industry is palpable amongst groups with a national reach. Even so, the level of concern may be overblown. Every plant is unique, and with manufacturing subdivided between an ever-larger number of OEMs and locations, the chance of unionization automatically spreading is slim. VW’s well-publicized sales difficulties in North America coupled with major layoffs last year have undoubtedly contributed to an exceptional climate at the plant, one unlike the other transplant factories. The future still holds many uncertainties for the friends and foes of organized labor.

J.Emerson
J.Emerson

More by J.Emerson

Comments
Join the conversation
4 of 12 comments
  • Lichtronamo Lichtronamo on Jan 30, 2014

    The domino effect that would be felt on the local level if VW workers unionize is the midsize, three row crossover being sent to Mexico, not Chattanooga, for assembly.

    • Pch101 Pch101 on Jan 30, 2014

      The push for unionization is coming from VW management in Germany. The crossover has already been assigned to Chattanooga. Some of VW's most difficult union relationships are with its workforce in Mexico.

  • Xeranar Xeranar on Feb 01, 2014

    In short: Conservatives know that in the first world only the US is anti-union on any palpable level. Germany is the most-unionized but the rest of the first world is at various levels of unionization and isn't fought nearly as hard in a public way. Privately, for sure, no corporation wants to concede any part of their profit to workers or 'less for me and more for you' is bad in their world. As a labor scholar though I hate to break the bad news: Heavy and Light Industry labor unions will never rebound to the levels of the prior times. Service unions though will come to dominate the US by the end of this century barring some dramatic change in demographics. So, while I enjoy reading TTAC most of your views on unionism are minority views held by a demographic of Americans that are inclined to vote for a rural minority party that is faltering.

    • Andy D Andy D on Feb 01, 2014

      yah , the revelation, that most of the guys I hang with on the forums are neo-cons ,gun toting neo-cons, kinda flummoxes me. But you know what is most confusing about neo-cons is not their beliefs, but the economic disparity between them and their champions.

  • Varezhka Maybe the volume was not big enough to really matter anyways, but losing a “passenger car” for a mostly “light truck” line-up should help Subaru with their CAFE numbers too.
  • Varezhka For this category my car of choice would be the CX-50. But between the two cars listed I’d select the RAV4 over CR-V. I’ve always preferred NA over small turbos and for hybrids THS’ longer history shows in its refinement.
  • AZFelix I would suggest a variation on the 'fcuk, marry, kill' game using 'track, buy, lease' with three similar automotive selections.
  • Formula m For the gas versions I like the Honda CRV. Haven’t driven the hybrids yet.
  • SCE to AUX All that lift makes for an easy rollover of your $70k truck.
Next