Electric shock: Tesla and IG Metall at war over council coup.
Credit: Shutterstock, FooTToo
Tesla has gone into overdrive, accusing Germany’s most powerful union, IG Metall, of attempting to block operations at its Berlin gigafactory. The row erupted after IG Metall filed a court motion to oust the factory’s works council head – a move Tesla branded as a “desperate” power grab.
The works council leader, notably not a union member, now finds himself in the firing line as IG Metall cites alleged breaches of German labour laws. But Tesla is having none of it, slamming the union for “sowing unrest” in what it claims are perfectly happy ranks at its state-of-the-art electric vehicle plant.
Union fury revs up over conditions
This isn’t the first time sparks have flown between the two sides. IG Metall has been rallying against what it describes as sub-par working conditions at the factory, the only car plant in Germany not covered by a collective wage agreement.
But Tesla hit back, insisting its workers enjoy equal or better perks compared to those covered by union-negotiated deals.
“Our independence and the resulting good working conditions and secure jobs at our plant are a constant source of annoyance for the union,” Tesla fired off in a blistering statement.
A union battle with global charge
The row in Berlin is just one front in Tesla’s global war with organised labour. Across the pond in Sweden, Tesla is fighting tooth and nail to avoid signing collective agreements – and has found itself dragged into court more than once.
And stateside, Elon Musk’s EV juggernaut faces a legal pile-up with accusations of anti-union tactics and dodgy employment practices. Still, the company denies any wrongdoing, repeatedly pointing to its worker-friendly policies.
No majority, no problem?
Earlier this year, IG Metall tried – and failed – to gain a majority on Tesla’s works council in the Gruenheide plant, grabbing just 40% of the seats. Since then, the union has been revving up accusations of “aggressive tactics” and stoking tensions with claims of unfair dismissals.
One union rep even got the boot from the council in October, fuelling the fire and widening the rift.
The bottom line
It’s clear: Tesla and IG Metall are stuck in a high-voltage standoff. For now, the battle lines are drawn at Berlin’s gigafactory, with both sides claiming to put workers’ interests first.
Stay tuned – this power struggle is far from over.
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