KEY POINTS
  • The work stoppage, now more than a month old, is the union's longest strike against GM since 1970.
  • While the union announced a proposed tentative agreement with GM, the strike against the automaker continues.
  • The UAW has been paying striking workers $250 a week in "strike pay," recently increasing that to $275.
A small group of UAW members picket outside General Motors' Detroit-Hamtramck Assembly plant just after midnight Wednesday, Oct. 16, 2019, in Michigan. The union's one-month national strike against the automaker is the longest since 1970 against GM.

DETROIT – As the clock struck midnight, there was no dancing or cheering outside of a General Motors assembly plant in Detroit as there had been a month before — when the United Auto Workers strike against the automaker began.

The dozens of UAW members, supporters and television cameras that were there Sept. 16 were long gone. What remained was a handful of plant workers at each gate lackadaisically holding picket signs or tending to fires in metal garbage cans for warmth.