I think you’re confused. VW has unions in Germany because Germany actually cares about its citizens. They wouldn’t have unions if you gave them the option.
VW tried twice to unionize their US factory in Chattanooga. Both times the workers voted against unionisation.
VW does a lot for unions and workers councils compared to other companies.
The VW management, the German union and the German Workers council wanted the plant to unionize.
VW is a lot more pro union than Amazon. Die to German law there are a lot of union members on the board.
The 2014 vote was opposed by local politicians, mainly republicans.
VW is odd since it is a German company and about as unionized as you can get.
VW factories in the US are not unionized.
I know. That’s why it’s odd. VW should have no problem with a union.
I think you’re confused. VW has unions in Germany because Germany actually cares about its citizens. They wouldn’t have unions if you gave them the option.
VW tried twice to unionize their US factory in Chattanooga. Both times the workers voted against unionisation. VW does a lot for unions and workers councils compared to other companies.
No, UAW tried to unionize twice and VW did everything they could to stop it.
https://www.labornotes.org/2019/06/why-uaw-lost-again-chattanooga
Your comment is like saying Amazon wanted unions but the workers didn’t.
VW wanted the union at the first vote.
https://truthout.org/articles/volkswagen-workers-vote-on-union-works-council-scheme/
https://www.wsj.com/articles/union-vote-at-volkswagen-tennessee-plant-heading-to-close-1392379887
The VW management, the German union and the German Workers council wanted the plant to unionize. VW is a lot more pro union than Amazon. Die to German law there are a lot of union members on the board. The 2014 vote was opposed by local politicians, mainly republicans.