Ending the Boeing strike won't be easy. Here's why.
By Peter Eavis / © 2024 The New York Times Company
When thousands of Boeing employees rejected a new labor contract, precipitating a strike that began Friday, they were at odds not just with management but also with the leaders of their union, who backed the proposed deal.
Now, any attempt to reach an agreement must take account of the demands of the rank and file of the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers. What they want significantly larger pay raises and far more lucrative retirement benefits than their leaders and Boeing agreed to may be too much for management. But labor experts said the strength of the strike vote 96% in favor should help the union get a better deal.
Those overwhelming numbers are kind of embarrassing, certainly from a public relations standpoint for the union, said Jake Rosenfeld, a sociologist who studies labor at Washington University in St. Louis. But they also simultaneously present the union with leverage when it does resume negotiations.
And Boeing is in a difficult spot after a slowdown in commercial jet production required by regulators after a panel blew out of a passenger jet fuselage in January led to big financial losses. A long strike at Boeings main production base in the Seattle area would add significantly to the losses and possibly tip its credit rating into junk territory, a chilling development for a company with nearly $60 billion in debt.
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