Early Monday morning, 49,000
General Motors workers, members of the United Auto Workers union
(UAW), walked off the job to protest low wages and a cruel two-tier
wage system that has left thousands of “temporary” workers living
at or close to the minimum wage. The walkout, which is estimated to
cost GM as much as $100 million a day, is the biggest auto-workers’
strike in decades.
In response to the strike, GM
Chief-Executive Mary Batta, who is slated to earn an astounding $22
million this year, immediately and without warning stopped funding
for the employer-provided healthcare for all striking GM workers on
Tuesday morning. This decision was made despite the fact that the
company had promised just a day before that they would cover the cost
of employee health insurance until the end of the month. The
unexpected move has left UAW members and their families without
access to vital, sometimes life-sustaining health services.
Just hours after the announcement,
stories began pouring in of UAW members being denied essential care.
In Parma
Ohio, for instance, the child of one GM employee had to cancel a
vital cancer treatment because of the loss of benefits.
In Tennessee, UAW
member, Dennis Urbania, says he was forced to postpone life-saving
heart-transplant surgery because he can no longer provide proof of
insurance. Meanwhile thousands of GM workers and their family members
face potentially massive medical costs if they are hurt or injured
while uncovered. Though UAW members on strike are eligible for
emergency insurance under the federal COBRA program, transitioning to
the new insurance is not easy, and almost impossible to do while also
walking a picket line day in and day out. And every day the strike
drags on these risks increase.
And this is precisely why GM
decided to cut off their employees health insurance. While it’s
true that corporations like GM care only about the bottom line; in
this case, it’s not really about the money—it’s about
retaliation and intimidation. GM believes that it can use this tactic
to weaken the workers’ strike fund and to scare their workers
sufficiently that they will be less willing to stay on strike for an
extended period of time and more likely to return to work sooner and
with fewer gains. And GM is not alone in using health insurance as a
weapon to keep workers in line. Not only do other employers regularly
stop funding health insurance to forestall or undermine strike
efforts, but they also often use the threat of increased health care
costs or reductions in health benefits as a bargaining chip in
contract negotiations. This tactic has made it that much more
difficult for unions to win wage gains for employees, since they are
forced to spend enormous efforts pushing back against employer
demands to pass the increasing cost of health care onto their
workers.
Despite the obvious negative
effects of employer-provided insurance, many centrist Democrats and
even some
union leaders have used unions as an excuse to oppose any
robust form of national health care, claiming that it would hurt
unions. Joe Biden for instance, has argued that union members should
not be “forced” to give up their hard-won benefits. “You’ve
worked like hell, you gave up wages for it,” Biden said,
claiming that most union members were happy with their healthcare and
wanted to keep it. This sentiment has been echoed by
business union leaders such as AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka, who
has been cool to the idea of plans like Medicare for All precisely
because he says it will take away employer-provided health benefits.
Meanwhile, SEIU leaders have backed Kamala Harris’s healthcare
plan, which would leave private insurers in place and maintain
employer-provided health care for at least a decade if not
indefinitely. For union bureaucrats like Trumka, who tend to spend
more time with politicians than rank-and-file workers, benefits such
as high-quality health insurance are just another way to maintain the
relative advantage of union membership and thus secure their
continued existence.
Such reasoning, however, is
incredibly myopic, and issues from a position of weakness. If unions
wish to rebuild their power, they cannot ignore the needs and demands
of the broader working class who are their natural allies, nor can
they continue to allow employers the power to bargain over such a
basic human necessity as health care. A system of free, universal
public health care would be good for all working people and would
allow unions to focus more directly on taking control of their
working conditions as well as taking back from capital a greater
share of the value their members create.
>> The article above was written by James Dennis Hoff, and is reprinted from Left Voice.
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