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Abstract:Image copyrightReuters Almost 50,000 General Motors workers have been called out on strike after the
Image copyrightReuters
Almost 50,000 General Motors workers have been called out on strike after the car giant failed to reach a pay and conditions deal with the United Auto Workers union (UAW).
“We do not take this lightly. This is our last resort,” UAW vice-president Terry Dittes told reporters in Detroit.
The sides had set a Saturday night deadline to reach agreement.
The strike - from midnight (04:00 GMT) on Monday - is the first by GM, America's biggest carmaker, since 2007.
In that strike, a two-day stoppage cost $300m (£240m).
The union's previous four-year contract with GM expired this weekend, and the two sides had been holding negotiations on wide-ranging issues, including wages, healthcare, profit sharing, and job security. Also, the union has been fighting to stop GM from closing car assembly plants in Ohio and Michigan.
Earlier on Sunday 850 maintenance workers at five GM facilities walked off the job on strike.
Mr Dittes said: “We are standing up for fair wages, we are standing up for affordable, quality health care. We are standing up for our share of the profits.”
GM argues that its wages and benefits are among the best in the industry. The company has yet to comment publicly on the planned strike, but said on Saturday that it was “prepared to negotiate around the clock”.
However, it remains unclear if the two sides had plans for further negotiations.
The strike comes at a time when the US car industry is starting to see a slowdown in sales, and rising costs associated with investment in electric vehicles and curbing emissions.
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