A - I n f o s

a multi-lingual news service by, for, and about anarchists **
News in all languages
Last 40 posts (Homepage) Last two weeks' posts Our archives of old posts

The last 100 posts, according to language
Greek_ 中文 Chinese_ Castellano_ Catalan_ Deutsch_ Nederlands_ English_ Français_ Italiano_ Polski_ Português_ Russkyi_ Suomi_ Svenska_ Türkçe_ _The.Supplement

The First Few Lines of The Last 10 posts in:
Castellano_ Deutsch_ Nederlands_ English_ Français_ Italiano_ Polski_ Português_ Russkyi_ Suomi_ Svenska_ Türkçe_
First few lines of all posts of last 24 hours | of past 30 days | of 2002 | of 2003 | of 2004 | of 2005 | of 2006 | of 2007 | of 2008 | of 2009 | of 2010 | of 2011 | of 2012 | of 2013 | of 2014 | of 2015 | of 2016 | of 2017 | of 2018 | of 2019 | of 2020 | of 2021 | of 2022 | of 2023 | of 2024

Syndication Of A-Infos - including RDF - How to Syndicate A-Infos
Subscribe to the a-infos newsgroups

(en) Italy, FAI - Umanita Nova: Metalworkers: income, not work (ca, de, it, pt, tr)[machine translation]

Date Wed, 6 Nov 2024 07:42:04 +0200


Contracts come and contracts go, but the bosses continue to plot against the working class. ---- The trade federations of CGIL, CISL and UIL have called a strike of workers in the automotive sector for October 18, with a national demonstration in Rome. This day of struggle has also received the applause of employers' and pro-government newspapers. Faced with the massive increase in pace and overtime, accompanied by redundancy payments, incentivized exoduses and layoffs, the concertative unions have found nothing better than to call on the working class employed in the automotive sector to fight for the interests of the bosses. In the statement issued by the union bureaucracies, in addition to the whining about the car crisis, we read the explicit request to the government to make public resources available to multinationals in the sector "in exchange for employment guarantees".
But how does Stellantis behave in other states? We publish below an excerpt from an article published on the US website "Labor notes", dedicated to the behavior of the multinational automotive company in the USA

FACTORIES LIKE CASH COWS
The Stellantis company, in the United States, announced in December 2022 that it was closing the assembly plant at the gigantic complex in Belvidere, Illinois; a year later all the jobs had disappeared, promptly following up on what was announced. The same company, last year, following an agreement established that in 2024 it would launch a distribution hub for components at the same plant; to date, nothing of what was promised has yet been seen. Similarly, Stellantis assured in the contract that in 2028 it would also build a new battery plant worth 3.2 billion dollars in the same complex, and that by 2027 it would invest 1.5 billion dollars to resume production, at the same site, of a medium-sized truck, the Dodge Dakota. Therefore, the company would have created 5,000 new jobs in the United States. But Stellantis now says that due to "market conditions," all of those plans are "postponed." Promises that were perfectly kept when it came to eliminating jobs are completely unfulfilled when it comes to creating jobs.
"We have no choice but to strike to force this company to honor its agreements," said Stephen Hinojosa, a member of UAW Local 12 and a production team leader at the Toledo Assembly Complex.
Toledo is one of Stellantis' largest manufacturing plants in the country, where 5,000 workers demonstrated extraordinary unity on the first day of a stand-up strike a year ago. It was also one of the plants where workers voted against the national agreement that ended that strike, specifically criticizing the bonus structure, the conversion of temporary workers, and the provisions on vacation and overtime.
The plant's problems have been simmering for some time. Hinojosa likens Stellantis to private equity: It treats its U.S. auto plants like cash cows to the bone.
"They've gotten there," he said. "They've stripped everything down to the last cent, and they suck every profit they can. And when they get to a point where there's nothing left to extract as profit from the product, they sell the plant for scrap."
That's the modus operandi of CEO Carlos Tavares. "Every time he's taken over a company, he's cut production and relegated jobs to places where labor is cheaper; that's how he's been able to make those companies profitable," Hinojosa said.
In a glowing 2023 profile in the French newspaper Le Monde, Tavares was described as a "samurai, obsessed with work, demanding, cold, fast and with enormous efficiency," characteristics that credit him with reviving French automaker Peugeot from bankruptcy and rewarding shareholders with lucrative dividends.
"To achieve these feats, Tavares shook up the company with staff cuts, inter-plant competition, drastic cost control and pressure on teams," Le Monde wrote.
Tavares's method is described as fiercely competitive in a Darwinian world. "Only the
best will survive," he said. "When I talk to a worker about the goals I have set for his plant, I tell him: It's demanding, but if you fail to achieve these goals, you will be in a vulnerable position. Only performance protects," Tavares told Le Monde.
It's always "market conditions" when it comes to laying off a worker or closing a plant. It's never "market conditions" when it comes to raising CEO pay by 56%. Carlos Tavares is telling American autoworkers, 'Market conditions are for you, not for me.'

BOOST PROFITS, FIRE WORKERS
Stellantis is a voracious beast. Like the Roman god Saturn, who ate his own children to prevent them from challenging his power, Stellantis has devoured lesser corporate deities in a quest for monopoly. Formed in 2021 through a merger of Fiat Chrysler and French conglomerate PSA, it has become the parent company of 14 auto brands, including Jeep, Ram Trucks and Chrysler, and one of the world's most profitable automakers, with net income of $20 billion last year.
Stellantis has laid off thousands of U.S. auto workers, with 2,450 more to go next month. The company has reduced its global workforce by 47,500 (out of 242,000) from December 2019 to 2023, all the while racking up profits by gorging on human sacrifice.
The cost-cutting is part of Stellantis' plan to double revenue by 2030, but things aren't exactly going as planned. U.S. sales of its brands fell 21% in the second quarter, compared to the same period last year, and net income fell by $6 billion, down 48% in the first six months.
Sales are down, profits are down, and CEO pay is way, way up, but the problem isn't the market: at General Motors and Ford, car sales are up. So the problem isn't drivers, the problem is Carlos Tavares.
Tavares is one of the world's highest-paid auto executives, with a total compensation of $39.5 million. Stellantis has pledged $3 billion in stock buybacks this year and has already paid out $5 billion in dividends.
In July, Tavares blamed auto workers for the sales slump, targeting the Sterling Heights, Michigan, plant for producing poor-quality RAM 1500 pickups, reducing the number of vehicles that have passed quality certification and delaying deliveries to dealers.
A network of U.S. dealers, meanwhile, accused Tavares of "rapid degradation" of the automaker's brands and "short-term decisions."
This isn't so much a story of a bust following a boom as it is of mismanagement that shifts the blame to workers and shareholders while the boss cuts production and reduces the workforce.
"Capital jealously guards its 'right to manage' from any influence by labor, yet somehow it's always labor's fault when management gets it wrong," said Brian Callaci, chief economist at the Open Markets Institute, a nonprofit that studies the stranglehold that corporate monopolies have on democracy.

Stellantis is recalling millions of vehicles, including the Toledo-built Jeep Wrangler and Gladiator. The company's job cuts have led to fewer quality inspectors and less oversight of supply chains.

ON THE MASSIVE WAGON
The situation in Europe is no better. In August 2024, Stellantis-produced cars were registered in the European Union, EFTA states and the United Kingdom, 103,612, a reduction of 28.7% compared to August 2023. The reduction in registrations of Stellantis-produced cars in the first two quarters of 2024 was 3.3 compared to 2023, for a total of 1,491,967. In the same period, the market share decreased, going from 17 in 2023 to 16.2 this year.
Beyond the strong words against Stellantis and CEO Tavares, the mobilization of the concertative unions aims to push the government to support the automotive industry and create favorable conditions for it to continue producing in Italy, that is, to guarantee substantial profits at the expense of the community. It is no coincidence that all this is happening while negotiations for the renewal of the national metalworkers' contract are at a standstill: the threat of layoffs and redundancy payments has always been considered by employers to be an excellent tool for weakening any worker resistance.

An example of the union strategy is given by the Termoli factory, which in the Stellantis plans should produce batteries for electric cars and employ two thousand people. The government had committed to contributing 400 million from the PNRR, which however were allocated to other investments, because the management of the new factory decided to postpone the investment, both due to the slowdown in demand for electric cars in Italy and the need for a technological update on the batteries to be produced. Now the unions are asking, among other things, for the commitment of 400 million in public money to be maintained.
Let's do some math. The total investment is two billion, of which 400 million would come from the PNRR; if the two billion were given directly to the people employed, they would translate into an annual income of 50 thousand euros per person for 50 years, without pollution, without increasing extractivism, reducing illnesses.
We must free ourselves from the work ethic, which is only exploitation of the working class and plundering of the environment, we must free ourselves from the idea of defending jobs: with this logic the concertative unions have signed thousands of agreements to the downside on wages, rights, public services. If we want to win we must unite everyone, those who have a job and those who don't, those with permanent contracts and those who don't, for a general battle for income. The story of the strike of the 18th demonstrates once again that the concertative unions are only the errand boys of the multinationals, let's organize ourselves in the grassroots, conflictual and direct action unions.

Tiziano Antonelli

https://umanitanova.org/metalmeccanici-reddito-non-lavoro/
_________________________________________
A - I N F O S N E W S S E R V I C E
By, For, and About Anarchists
Send news reports to A-infos-en mailing list
A-infos-en@ainfos.ca
Subscribe/Unsubscribe https://ainfos.ca/mailman/listinfo/a-infos-en
Archive: http://ainfos.ca/en
A-Infos Information Center