Canadian autoworkers strike against General Motors, joining UAW

Canadian autoworkers strike against General Motors, joining UAW


Lana Payne speaks to delegates after being elected as president of UNIFOR, Canada’s largest private sector union, at the Metro Toronto Convention Centre on Aug. 10, 2022.

Richard Lautens | Toronto Star | Getty Images

DETROIT — Labor strikes are now an international issue for General Motors after the Detroit automaker failed to reach a tentative agreement by Monday for roughly 4,300 workers represented by Canadian union Unifor.

The Canadian autoworkers will join roughly 9,200 United Auto Workers members who are on strike in the U.S. at two assembly plants and 18 parts and distribution centers for GM. The U.S. strike started Sept. 15 and has since expanded.

The new strikes in the Canadian province of Ontario affect an assembly plant that produces light- and heavy-duty Chevrolet Silverado trucks; production of some V-6 and V-8 engines used in a variety of vehicles such as the Chevrolet Equinox; and a stamping facility that produces parts for various cars and trucks.

The Canadian strike against GM comes days after Unifor President Lana Payne said Friday the union was encountering “resistance” from the automaker regarding a number of “important elements” of the tentative deal.

Payne singled out worker classifications as a major issue under the deal, which is patterned off a ratified agreement between the union and Ford Motor.

Striking United Auto Workers (UAW) members from the General Motors Lansing Delta Plant picket in Delta Township, Michigan September 29, 2023.

Rebecca Cook | Reuters

“We have been crystal clear with the company that there is no agreement until this is resolved,” Payne said Friday in an online video addressed to Unifor members. “With days to go before our deadline, we have major issues left unresolved.”

Other issues involve universal health allowance for retirees and future product investment commitments, she said.

Unifor, which represents 18,000 Canadian workers at the Detroit automakers, took a more traditional approach to its negotiations than its U.S. counterpart. The Canadian union is negotiating with each automaker separately and using a deal first reached last month with Ford as a “pattern” for GM and Chrysler parent Stellantis.

Ford’s three-year deal included hourly wage increases of up to 25%, reactivation of a cost-of-living allowance to battle inflation and a shorter progression for workers to reach top pay, among other new or altered benefits.

The agreement, which covers more than 5,600 workers at Ford facilities in Canada, was ratified by 54% of workers who voted. 

That traditional patterned bargaining approach runs counter to the UAW’s new strategy of bargaining with all three automakers at once.

UAW President Shawn Fain: Our goal has always been to win a record contract

The UAW has been gradually increasing the strikes since the work stoppages began, after the sides failed to reach tentative agreements by Sept 14. The targeted, or “stand-up,” strikes are taking place instead of national walkouts in which all plants simultaneously strike.

Only 25,200 workers, or roughly 17% of UAW members covered by the expired contracts with the Detroit automakers, are currently on strike. UAW President Shawn Fain previously said the union would increase the work stoppages based on progress in the negotiations.

Thousands of other UAW members have been laid off as a result of the strikes, including roughly 2,175 workers at other GM facilities. Most notably, the Detroit automaker was forced to idle production of a Kansa assembly plant that produces Chevrolet Malibu sedans and Cadillac XT4 crossovers.



Source

Lucid widely misses earnings expectations, forecasts continued EV growth in 2026
Business

Lucid widely misses earnings expectations, forecasts continued EV growth in 2026

A Lucid Gravity coming off the line at the company’s factory in Casa Grande, Arizona Lucid Group reported mixed fourth-quarter results Tuesday as the all-electric vehicle maker continues to face challenging market conditions and internal problems. The company widely missed Wall Street’s quarterly earnings expectations, while beating average revenue estimates by roughly 12%. It also […]

Read More
Jamie Dimon says AI is already reshaping JPMorgan Chase’s workforce as bank plans ‘huge redeployment’
Business

Jamie Dimon says AI is already reshaping JPMorgan Chase’s workforce as bank plans ‘huge redeployment’

Jamie Dimon, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of JPMorgan Chase & Co., attends the ribbon-cutting ceremony opening the firm’s new headquarters at 270 Park Avenue, in New York City, U.S., October 21, 2025. Eduardo Munoz | Reuters JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon said the bank is taking steps to address the impact of artificial intelligence […]

Read More
Property Play: Data center expansion reaches an ‘inflection point’
Business

Property Play: Data center expansion reaches an ‘inflection point’

Key Points Texas is about to unseat Virginia as the world’s largest data market, according to a new report from JLL. Data center vacancies at the end of 2025 remained at a historic low of 1% for the second year in a row. The demand is now being driven by hyperscalers and AI, and headwinds […]

Read More