General Motors deal clears way for end to US car strike
Business
Joe Biden welcomed the deal hailing the deal as ‘great’
(Web Desk) - General Motors has struck a deal with the United Auto Workers (UAW) union to end a six-week strike in the US.
The tentative agreement follows similar deals at Ford and Chrysler-maker Stellantis, the other two carmakers affected by walkouts.
Nearly 50,000 workers and dozens of sites were involved in the action, the first in union's history to target all three firms at once.
US President Joe Biden welcomed the deal hailing the deal as "great."
The president added: "These record agreements reward auto workers who gave up much to keep the industry working and going during the financial crisis more than a decade ago."
Mr Biden had visited a picket line at the start of the strike to express support for the workers' cause, becoming what is believed to be the first sitting president in modern times to do so.
General Motors (GM), Ford and Stellantis have all now agreed to pay raises of roughly 25% over the four-year term of the new contracts, as well as other changes, including making it easier for so-called "temporary" staff to transition to full-time and receive full benefits.
For the lowest-paid workers, the changes could mean pay jumps of more than 150% by the end of the deals, according to the union.
Car workers will return to their jobs while the new contract is finalised, the union said in a statement.
"We wholeheartedly believe our strike squeezed every last dime out of General Motors," UAW President Shawn Fain said in a video address. "They underestimated us. They underestimated you."