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DETROIT – Volkswagen workers at a plant in Tennessee have filed a petition with the National Labor Relations Board for a vote to join the United Auto Workers, the union announced Monday.
The filing comes after a “supermajority of Volkswagen workers have signed union cards in just 100 days,” the union said – marking a major milestone in the labor group’s organizing drives of non-unionized auto plants in the U.S.
The UAW has previously failed to organize foreign-based automakers in the U.S. Most recently, plants with Volkswagen and Nissan fell short of the support needed to unionize. In 2019, VW workers at the Chattanooga, Tennessee, plant rejected union representation in an 833-776 vote.
The Chattanooga plant is Volkswagen’s only U.S. assembly plant and employs over 4,000 autoworkers who would be eligible to vote for union representation.
A spokesperson for VW did not immediately respond for comment.
VW is one of 13 non-union automakers in the U.S. that the UAW set its sights on late last year after securing record contracts with the Detroit automakers.
The drive covers nearly 150,000 autoworkers across BMW, Honda, Hyundai, Lucid, Mazda, Mercedes-Benz, Nissan, Rivian, Subaru, Tesla, Toyota, Volkswagen and Volvo.
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