KEY POINTS
  • The United Auto Workers union president, Shawn Fain, drew a hard line ahead of contract negotiations with Ford, GM and Stellantis later this year.
  • UAW leaders publicly laid out their top bargaining issues, including reinstatement of a cost-of-living adjustment, stronger job security and the end of a grow-in, or tiered, pay system.
  • Union officers, led by Fain, are largely newly elected leaders who ran on platforms of standing up to companies and reforming the organization following a yearslong federal corruption scandal.

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United Auto Workers members on strike picket outside General Motors' Detroit-Hamtramck Assembly plant in Detroit with Sen. Bernie Sanders, of Vermont, far left, Sept. 25, 2019.

DETROIT — The United Auto Workers union appears ready to take a hard line when it comes to national negotiations this year with the Detroit automakers, warning of strikes or work stoppages if needed.

UAW leaders publicly laid out their top bargaining issues Wednesday night, including reinstatement of a cost-of-living adjustment that was eliminated during the Great Recession; stronger job security; and the end of a grow-in, or tiered, pay system that has members earning different wages and benefits.

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