UAW president slams Biden administration for loan to Ford-SK battery plants

United Auto Workers President Shawn Fain on Friday blasted the historic, $9.2 billion Department of Energy loan to Ford Motor Co. and South Korean battery maker SK On Co. as an example of the federal government “actively funding the race to the bottom with billions in public money.”

“These companies are extremely profitable and will continue to make money hand over fist whether they’re selling combustion engines or EVs. Yet the workers get a smaller and smaller piece of the pie,” Fain said in a statement. “Why is Joe Biden’s administration facilitating this corporate greed with taxpayer money?”

The strongly-worded statement was the latest example of the UAW’s new, more militant leadership being willing to publicly criticize Democratic leadership that historically has had friendly ties with the Detroit union — an unanticipated rebuke of the president’s re-election campaign.

In May, Fain said in a letter first reported by The Detroit News that the union would withhold endorsing Biden in the 2024 election until the administration supported a “just transition” to EVs with “top wages” for workers.

More:UAW demands Biden support ‘top wages’ for EV workers before endorsing

Fain’s newest statement came in response to news Thursday that the Department of Energy planned to make the largest single loan in its history to the Ford-SK On joint venture to help finance three electric-vehicle battery plant projects the companies are building in Kentucky and Tennessee. The loan would cover the majority of the $11.4 billion the companies are investing in the projects that also include an EV assembly plant.

“The UAW is working toward the same goal as the President, which is to ensure the future of the auto industry is made here in America, with good-paying, union jobs,” Robyn Patterson, a spokesperson for the White House, said in a statement. “America’s auto workers are essential to achieving that goal. The President respects the UAW for working hard for the interests of the working people they represent, and the President will keep working hard toward that goal as well, including blocking attempts by Republicans in Congress to send these historic private sector investments and jobs overseas.”

The loan marks the most significant direct government support for an auto company since the bailouts of General Motors Corp. and Chrysler Corp. during the Great Recession. It is just the latest example of the Biden administration’s push to ramp up domestic production of EVs, batteries and other critical components and materials in a bid to compete with China.