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United Automobile Workers

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United Automobile Workers (UAW)

 in full International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace, and Agricultural Implement Workers of America

U.S.-based industrial union representing automotive and other vehicular workers in the U.S., Canada, and Puerto Rico. The UAW was founded in Detroit, Mich., in 1935, when the Committee for Industrial Organization (see AFL-CIO) began to organize automotive workers. The union successfully countered automakers' initial resistance with sit-down strikes and a 1937 Supreme Court decision upholding the right to organize as declared in the Wagner Act. General Motors Corp. was the first to recognize the UAW, and most other automakers followed suit, though Ford Motor Co. continued to resist until 1941. Under Walter Reuther, the union won contracts providing for cost-of-living adjustments, health plans, and paid vacations. Reuther's friction with George Meany led the UAW to withdraw from the AFL-CIO in 1968. A short-lived alliance with the Teamsters was dissolved in 1972, and the UAW rejoined the AFL-CIO in 1981. Toward the end of the 20th century, the union's bargaining strength was eroded by an increasingly global labour market, effectively reducing the wages and benefits manufacturers were willing to pay American workers.



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Congressman John Dingell (D-Michigan), and representing local government, corporate business, United Automobile Workers, cultural and educational groups, preservation groups and environmental organizations, met to discuss legislative approaches for a proposed Automobile National Heritage Area.
Leaders of the United Automobile Workers, who had been treating the confrontation in Flint as an emotional showdown over what they described as strikebreaking tactics by the automaker, began settling down Friday to discuss with GM how many jobs would be preserved at the two factories.
It also might have led them to devote a little more space to the role of the United Automobile Workers union in helping to get these companies into trouble - and to get them out of it.
 
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