UAW’s Fain blames ‘greed’ for ‘unfair’ trade policies that hurt workers

Detroit — The president of the United Auto Workers told a group of foreign ambassadors Thursday that “labor is not the enemy” as he blamed “unfair” trade policies driven by “greed” for shrinking the union and causing lower standards of living.

The comments from Shawn Fain came during a panel before the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation at the Westin Book Cadillac Detroit and just weeks after Fain called employers like Detroit’s three automakers “the enemy” during the UAW’s own bargaining convention. At Thursday’s event, Fain, AFL-CIO Secretary-Treasurer Fred Redmond and U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai emphasized the need for “worker-centered” agreements in which all parties benefit.

United Auto Workers President Shawn Fain (right) condemns "unfair" trade policies for workers' woes during a penal discussion with AFL-CIO Secretary-Treasurer Fred Redmond and U.S. Trade Rep. Katherine Tai (left).

“Anti-worker trade policy has been the single biggest source of damage to the working-class people in our country over the last 40 years,” Fain said, highlighting the closing of General Motors Co.’s Lordstown Assembly Plant in Ohio to address overcapacity, the indefinite idling of Stellantis NV’s Belvidere Assembly Plant in Illinois in response to the microchip shortage and electric-vehicle costs, and security products developer Master Lock Co. LLC’s decision on Wednesday to shut down a Milwaukee manufacturing plant next year for the work to be dispersed at other North American and global facilities.

“None of these decisions have to do with (technology) advancements and those types of things,” Fain continued. “It boils down to one thing: Corporate greed and trade policies that do not take into consideration communities and workers.”

It becomes a “race to the bottom,” Fain added. The loss of 1 million UAW members, leaving the union with just over 383,000 active members, was “due to trade agreements, where these companies chose to put product where they could exploit other countries’ environments, they could exploit their labor standards and exploit their labor laws.”

He called for reciprocity deals that make tariffs on imports into each of two countries, particularly the United States with China, equal. Redmond cited a need for enforcement measures to ensure protections for organizing, for collective bargaining, for health and safety, against discrimination, and against child and forced labor. He pointed to measures included in the U.S.-Mexico-Canada trade agreement to require investigations into unfair labor practices as an example.

“We have seen workers neglected, and these good jobs were outsourced,” said Redmond, whose federation of unions represents 12 million workers and who also is president of the Trade Union Confederation of the Americas. “They were offshored, and it really decimated the industrial manufacturing base and the steel industry and all of the industries in this country.”