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GM’s 330-Page Death Warrant


Guest Column  |  By Paul R. Hollrah  |  June 23, 2009


The ultimate fate of the General Motors Corporation... along with Ford, Chrysler, American Motors, and others... was determined the day that the auto manufacturers accepted the United Auto Workers (UAW) as the principal bargaining agent for their workers.  But the date and time of GM's final demise was established on September 25, 2007, when negotiators for GM and the UAW reached agreement on their final four-year contract agreement.

What should have been established by a single one-sentence agreement between GM and each of its 74,000 workers, i.e. "If you will agree to work for this company, show up for work on time, every day, and provide eight hours of your best effort for eight hours pay, we will agree to pay you the sum of X dollars per hour," was expanded to a monstrous 330-page document in which GM signed away almost every management prerogative to the union, including the kind of cars they would produce, where they would be produced, which workers would perform which tasks,  the plants that would stay open, and those that would close.  Here are a few of the highlights

Is that any way to run a railroad?  No, and it's not a good way to run an automobile manufacturing enterprise either.  So is it any wonder that GM now finds itself in bankruptcy? 

Because of the immense power labor unions have wielded within the Democratic Party, their usefulness and the rightness of the role they play in our economic system have gone largely unquestioned and unchallenged.  Because of their unparalleled political power, and their unflinching willingness to use it, unionized workers have been given unique rights and privileges that they ought not have, and that non-union workers, rightly, do not enjoy.

So where would the Big Three be today if the UAW did not exist?  Writing for the Ludwig von Mises Institute, Pepperdine University Professor Emeritus of Economics, George Reisman, examines that question.  Professor Reisman suggests that:

 As Prof. Reisman suggests, "The UAW, the whole labor union movement, and the left-"liberal" intellectual establishment... are responsible for foisting on the public and on the average working man and woman a fantasy land of imaginary Demons (big business and the rich) and of saintly Good Fairies (politicians, government officials, and union leaders).  In this fantasy land, the Good Fairies supposedly have the power to wring unlimited free benefits from the Demons."

Professor Reisman concludes with some ultimate truths about the demise of the auto industry... truths that should be learned by every schoolchild in America, but aren't.  He laments, "What is happening is cruel justice, imposed by a reality that willfully ignorant people thought they could choose to ignore as long as it suited them: the reality that prosperity comes from the making of goods, not from the making of work; that it comes from the doing of work, not from the shirking of it; that it comes from machines and methods of production that save labor, not from combating those machines and methods; that it comes from the earning and reinvestment of profit, not from the seizure of those profits for the benefit of idlers...

"In sum, without the UAW, General Motors would not be faced with extinction.  Instead, it would almost certainly be a vastly larger, far more prosperous company, producing more and better motor vehicles than ever before, at far lower costs of production and prices than it does today, and providing employment to hundreds of thousands more workers than it does today."

The presence of labor unions in the workplace creates divided loyalties.  It is no more possible to have harmonious relations between employer and employee when the employee is constantly harangued with the notion that the union is his friend and the employer is his enemy... than it is for a worker to import a lover into his or her household, expecting that everyone will live happily ever after in peace and harmony.

In an article titled "Once, We Would Have Called It a Scandal," former Speaker Newt Gingrich tells us that, "Between 2000 and 2008, the UAW gave $23,675,562 to the Democratic Party and its candidates.  In 2008 alone, the UAW gave $4,161,567 to the Democratic Party, including Barack Obama."  In return, Obama and congressional Democrats have arranged for the UAW to own 55% of Chrysler and 17.5% of GM, while the shareholders and the secured bond holders received the back of Obama's hand.  It is the political payoff to end all political payoffs.

In their greed, labor unions have destroyed industry after industry... not the least of which are those that have long anchored our manufacturing sector, the steel industry and the automobile industry.  And now that the unions own a major share of the automobile industry, it remains to be seen how long it will take before they drive themselves out of business.  Or maybe they'll just have their Democrat friends in Congress and in the White House outlaw everything but GM, Ford, and Chrysler products.  It's the way they tend to do things.  So, stay tuned.


Paul R. Hollrah is a freelance writer. He is a member of the Civil Engineering Academy of Distinguished Alumni at the University of Missouri - Columbia and a Senior Fellow at the Lincoln Heritage Institute.

Guest columns do not necessarily reflect the views of Accuracy in Media or its staff.


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