About this episode
Employees of a Volkswagen plant in Chattanooga, Tennessee just voted to form the FIRST autoworkers union in the Southern US. It’s no small feat in a part of the country that has been notoriously anti-union. How has the South managed to scare away organized labor since the Civil War? Are labor unions finally finding a foothold there now? And why have unions been in decline across the whole US in recent years? Max and Erin dive into the politics, racism and foreign influence behind it all to uncover why it’s taken so long for collective bargaining to catch on down south. SOURCES UAW wins big at Volkswagen in Tennessee – its first victory at a foreign-owned factory in the American South UAW strikes at General Motors plant in Texas as union goes after automakers' cash cows | AP News Welcome to Operation Dixie, the most ambitious unionization attempt in the U.S. | by Meagan Day | Timeline | Medium Racial divides have been holding American workers back for more than a century - The Washington Post Manufacturing jobs are defying expectations - The Economist Union Membership, 1939 and 1953 Textile Union Fight to Organize Stevens Plants Shifts to Greenville, S.C. - The New York Times The UAW wants to recruit Southern auto workers. Here’s why that failed in the past In a seminal development for Wisconsin's economy, manufacturing has begun returning home Nissan attacked for one of 'nastiest anti-union campaigns' in modern US history How the South Became Anti-Union - Flagpole Union organizing effort and success in the U.S., 1948–2004 - ScienceDirect Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.