United Auto Workers president Shawn Fain is seeking re-election as the head of the 400,000-member union, but as Reuters colleagues Kalea Hall and Nora Eckert report, his mixed record could make winning a second four-year term a bit of a tough sell.
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In his early days as UAW president, Fain seemed unstoppable.
He led a six-week simultaneous strike against the Detroit Three automakers in 2023, notching up historic 25% wage increases for UAW workers and unionized Volkswagen’s Chattanooga plant, a victory in the U.S. South that had eluded the union for decades.
But despite spending $40 million to organize more plants in the South, the unionization push came to naught after losing a vote at Mercedes-Benz’s Alabama plant.
Rivals are seeking to turn the race into a referendum on Fain's leadership.
A federal watchdog, appointed in 2021 to oversee union management after a corruption scandal, has accused Fain of retaliating against other UAW leaders and of a lack of transparency. Fain responded by saying every board has its challenges. “Everything we've done, we've done by putting this membership first," he said, adding that the UAW has “adopted almost every reform suggested by the monitor”.