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How Biden can stop Trump’s union stunt in its tracks

Either you’re on the side of the company or the side of the workers. Neutrality is not an option.

Which Side Are You On?”, the song written by Kentucky union activist Florence Reece about conflicts between coal miners and coal companies, has a verse that goes, “They say in Harlan County/There are no neutrals there/You’ll either be a union man/Or a thug for J.H. Blair.” (Blair was the county sheriff who helped the companies fight union-organizing in the early 1930s.) The song’s message is that one has to choose: Either you’re on the side of the company or the side of the workers. Neutrality is not an option.

With the United Auto Workers now striking against the Big Three automakers, it’s not nearly clear enough to the public just which side the two major political parties are on. President Biden, the self-proclaimed “most pro-union president in history,” has spoken in support of the workers but seems bizarrely reluctant to be seen as too supportive of the UAW and its demands. Meanwhile, former President Donald Trump — whose egotistical answer to the strike is that union leaders “should endorse Trump” — will travel to Detroit next week to give a speech to workers, where he’ll pretend to be on their side. Confusion is just what Republicans want, and just what Biden ought to change. 

When this is over, far too many people may think Republicans are the ones standing up for workers.

The president’s political instincts are usually pretty sound, but in this case something has gone seriously awry. Biden ought to be standing on the picket line with striking autoworkers, so even voters who only glance at the news know exactly which side he’s on. But he isn’t. And when this is over, far too many people may think Republicans — whose hatred of unions knows no bounds — are the ones standing up for workers.

To be clear, the UAW is wise to Trump's efforts. “Every fiber of our union is being poured into fighting the billionaire class and an economy that enriches people like Donald Trump at the expense of workers,” said UAW president Shawn Fain in a statement. Yet in 2016, Trump lost union households by only 8 points — better than any Republican presidential candidate since Ronald Reagan. That likely helped him in the Midwest, especially in Michigan, where every vote he could grab from Hillary Clinton made a difference.

Four years later, Biden beat Trump by a comfortable margin among those same voters. But Trump’s opportunity, and Biden’s risk, goes beyond just union households. The entire electorate will make judgments — accurate or otherwise — about whose interests the candidates are serving.

President Joe Biden speaks about his economic plan at the LIUNA Training Center in DeForest, Wis., on Feb. 8, 2023.
President Joe Biden speaks about his economic plan at the LIUNA Training Center in DeForest, Wis., on Feb. 8.Mandel Ngan / AFP via Getty Images file

This is a pivotal moment in the ongoing struggle over labor rights, with the autoworkers’ strike part of a wave of labor actions, including the Hollywood writers and actors strike and efforts to organize companies such as Starbucks and Amazon. According to a recent Gallup poll, unions are more popular now than at any time since the 1960s, despite the fact that only 1 in 10 Americans is a union member. The same poll found that 75% of Americans support the UAW, not the car companies, in the autoworkers strike. 

Because the UAW represents the kind of blue-collar manufacturing workers Republicans are eager to claim as their own, they have been far more vocal about this strike than others. But what can they say when their party and its corporate allies have waged a spectacularly successful war on organized labor that dates back decades? 

Some Republicans have made their anti-union animus clear. When asked about the UAW strike, Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., invoked Reagan’s firing of striking air traffic controllers in 1981, the seminal moment in the GOP war on collective bargaining. Fellow South Carolinian Nikki Haley proudly calls herself a “union-buster.” As governor back in 2014, she said, “We discourage any companies that have unions from wanting to come to South Carolina because we don’t want to taint the water.”

But others have attempted a kind of sidestep, arguing that the real problem facing autoworkers is the Biden administration’s promotion of green energy and electric vehicles. Sen. J.D. Vance, R-Ohio, for instance, tweeted that he was “Rooting for the auto workers across our country demanding higher wages and an end to political leadership’s green war on their industry.” Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis claims rolling back incentives for EVs “will mean more autoworker jobs.” This is not only absurd (no one is being prevented from buying gas-powered cars if they want to), but ignores the issues of fair treatment that are driving the UAW strike.

Similarly, Trump claims that there should be no attempt to ease the transition to EVs, because “the electric cars, automatically, are going to be made in China.” In fact, the Big Three are desperately trying to catch up to their competitors on EVs, and the Biden administration’s efforts are geared toward American manufacturing of EVs and batteries. Among other things, the government is providing subsidies for domestic manufacturing and incentives to purchase EVs made in the U.S.

Republicans haven’t said the workers’ demands should be met. All they’ve done is blame the conflict on the president.

The UAW is indeed concerned with EVs, but not because they want to prevent that transition from happening. It’s inevitable, as they well know. They want to ensure it doesn’t become a way for the auto companies to further undermine unions. Not only do electric cars require fewer parts — meaning fewer workers per vehicle — but automakers are building the bulk of electric vehicles in the South, where the labor laws are weakest.

President Joe Biden greets union workers at Los Angeles Metro's Purple Extension Transit Project on Oct. 13, 2022.
President Joe Biden greets union workers in Los Angeles in 2022.Kyle Grillot / Bloomberg via Getty Images file

The workers want to ensure that, in the transition to EV, their labor will provide them with what every person has a right to expect: fair wages, decent benefits and some measure of job security. What is it that the Republicans who claim to represent working people want? The same thing they’ve always wanted: to crush the unions and destroy collective bargaining, so workers can be more easily exploited by corporations. 

Republicans haven’t said the workers’ demands should be met. All they’ve done is blame the conflict on the president. In their perfect world, the economic model of the South — no union presence, low wages, low benefits, minimal workers’ rights — would spread to the whole country.

Unfortunately, President Biden is letting them get away with it. That’s not because Biden is unsympathetic to the union’s cause. He has echoed union arguments, saying that “auto companies have seen record profits, including the last few years, because of the extraordinary skill and sacrifices of the UAW workers. But those record profits have not been shared fairly, in my view, with those workers.” But while other Democrats are flocking to join UAW members at rallies and on the picket lines, Biden has stayed away, and frustration is growing among both union advocates and progressives over what looks like a White House effort to remain mostly neutral in negotiations. 

But as Florence Reece sang, you can’t be neutral. What is Biden worried about — that if he supports the UAW too strongly, corporate leaders will criticize him? That’s exactly what he should want. He should literally stand with the union, right on their picket lines, and say loudly and repeatedly that his opponents are the enemy of workers everywhere.

There’s little reason to doubt where Biden’s heart is. His long advocacy for labor is sincere. And he can rightly point to the many ways his administration has advanced the cause of labor. But there are moments when you have to show people, in the most visible way possible, which side you’re on. This is one of those moments, and it would be a tragedy if Biden missed the opportunity.

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