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UAW’s Chattanooga Kabuki, Trying To Look Relevant

Recently,  UAW Secretary-Treasurer Gary Casteel orchestrated a Kabuki Dance (political posturing) for the press and set off a several days of commotions about the United Auto Workers union and their presence in the South.   But, it really was no more than a union boss trying to be relevant when the fate of his union had already been decided in Chattanooga after the UAW union was rejected by Volkswagen employees’ secret ballot votes.   (You may remember, it took Chattanooga Volkswagen (VW) employees and their attorneys from the National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation several months of wrangling with UAW union lawyers, VW lawyers and the NLRB to allow these employees the opportunity for the vote in secret.)

Casteel’s public relations gambits appear to be no more than efforts to prevent, or at least distract people from, inevitable stories like the one in the Wall Street Journal article that confirms the UAW union’s current troubles in Chattanooga:

The February vote to reject an organizing bid by the United Auto Workers paid off big for workers in Tennessee on Monday. Volkswagen announced it will invest $900 million to build a new sport-utility vehicle in Chattanooga, creating 2,000 [additional] jobs that would probably have gone to Mexico if the UAW had won.

Many of the recent stories about UAW’s Chattanooga plant have been regurgitations of UAW union boss press releases and talking points.  Some points to ponder:

Don’t allow UAW’s attempt to appear relevant in Chattanooga. Nor, should you be lulled into complacency.  With VW management placing an outspoken German union boss Bernd Osterloh on its North American board, UAW officials now have an inside man at VW North America.

The dangerous threat to Right to Work Freedoms currently enjoyed by employees in 24 states remains from all union bosses who have ability to force tens of thousands of employees to pay forced dues.  It is only the fact that UAW bosses can still force tens of thousands Americans to pay them dues against their will that continues to keep UAW bosses relevant in America. Until a National Right to Work Act is passed freeing millions of Americans from the yoke of union boss servitude, then Right to Work Freedom in any state remains under a constant threat.

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