UAW calls for a midnight strike at GM pickup truck axle supplier

DETROIT, (Reuters) – United Auto Workers President Shawn Fain on Sunday called ​for a strike at a Michigan factory that ‌makes axles for General Motors pickup trucks, some of its most profitable vehicles.

The Detroit union said late on Sunday that workers ​at the plant in Three Rivers, Michigan, owned ​by Dauch Corp would walk off the job ⁠at midnight (0400 GMT).

Dauch, formerly named American Axle, is ​a major supplier of driveline parts, and there are about ​1,000 unionized workers at the plant, according to the UAW.

Dauch could not be immediately reached for comment late on Sunday.

GM ​said it was closely monitoring the situation and “assessing any ​potential impact.”

The UAW is pushing for wage increases after employees made ‌sacrifices ⁠to keep the plant open in 2008, according to the union. Wages at the plant top out at $22 an hour after a five-year progression period, down from ​as much as $29 ​an hour ⁠in 2008, the union said. In early May, workers voted 98% in favor of ​authorizing a strike if needed.

“For 18 years, ​these ⁠members have built you an empire of profit while getting treated like dirt. They’ve taken wage cuts, benefit cuts, ⁠they ​poured their souls into this plant,” ​Fain said on a livestream announcing the midnight strike.

Reporting by Kalea ​Hall; Editing by Mike Colias, Jacqueline Wong and Jamie Freed