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100th
Anniversary of the Birth of Walter Reuther
by Local 2195 Webmaster John Davis
photos courtesy Reuther Library Wayne State University
100 years; an entire century; a measure of
time. On September 01, 2007 the 100 years anniversary of the birth of
Walter Reuther will occur. Even though he died in a plane crash in May
of 1970, his mark on this union, working Americans and this country is
still felt today.
In his time, Walter Reuther pioneered a number of benefits that every
day working Americans take for granted. Here are just a few of Walter
Reuther’s accomplishments:
- employer provided health care
- pension plans
- cost of living increases
- guaranteed job assurance
- the Peace Core
- the idea of national health care
From humble beginnings in Wheeling West, Virginia, Walter Reuther went
on to become a confidant to a number of presidents, world leaders and
one of the best friends a working person ever had. His unwavering efforts
for truth, justice and the rights of America’s workers earned him
a spot on Time Magazine’s 100
most influential people of the 20th Century.
Born the second of five children, Walter Reuther was the son of Valentine
Reuther, and immigrant and member of the Brewery Worker’s Union.
Walter Reuther recalled, “At my father’s knee we learned the
philosophy of trade unionism. We got the struggles, the hopes and the
aspirations of working people every day.” The young Reuthers developed
a commitment to addressing social problems through union and political
action.
Valentine Reuther would debate the social issues of the day with his sons
after dinner after having sent them to the library to research the topics.
Walter Reuther would say “that while his friends played baseball,
fished or had fun, he spent his days reading up on the issues of the times.”
The Reuther Brothers would move to Detroit seeking jobs in the booming
automobile industry. Following this brief stint the Reuther Brothers would
go to Europe to visit relatives in German and take jobs training Ford
workers in Russia. While visiting German relatives the brothers would
end up having to hide from the Nazis before making their way back to America.
By the end of 1935, the Russian workers were trained and the Reuther brothers
returned to Detroit just in time to participate in the great union-organizing
struggles in the automobile industry. To more effectively “organize
the unorganized,” Walter Reuther worked to combine several small
Detroit local unions into the Westside Local 174. He became president
of the large local, and at the UAW’s 1936 convention, he was elected
to the union’s executive board.
Reuther’s rise would be boosted by the famous “battle of the
overpass” as he and several other UAW organizers were beaten by
thugs hired by Ford as they passed out union literature at the overpass
that carried workers from the parking lot across the street to the Ford
Rouge factory complex in Dearborn, Michigan. It would take four years
but workers at Ford would finally win union membership.
In 1939 Reuther was appointed the head of the General Motors department
by UAW President R. J. Thomas. When General Motors stalled negotiations
for a new union contract, Reuther called
for a June strike, but only by tool-and-die workers. This tactic halted
the all-important retooling for the 1940 model year. Faced with a production
shutdown, General Motors agreed to a new contract.
In 1939 Walter Reuther went to his friend Franklin Roosevelt with a proposal
to develop a contingency plan to covert automotive factories to war time
production. In Europe World War II was raging and Reuther felt that it
was just a matter of time before the United States was drawn into the
war. His “500 Planes a Day” plan was adopted by President
Roosevelt and when the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor on December 07, 1941
the country had a plan for supporting the war time effort. Roosevelt was
so impressed with Reuther he offered him a position in his administration,
but Reuther turned him down because his heart was with the labor movement.
Walter Reuther was recognized as a labor leader of national stature when
he led a strike against General Motors at the end of 1945. Autoworkers
had seen their buying power erode during the war and Reuther demanded
a 30 percent pay increase. He claimed GM could grant the pay hike without
increasing car prices and challenged the corporation to open its books
to prove it. The UAW and GM reached a compromise without opening the corporation’s
books, but Reuther often returned to the theme that automakers had obligations
beyond making money
for their stockholders. They also had a duty to their employees and, ultimately,
the American public.
After Reuther was elected president of the UAW in 1946, he began to guide
the union down a new path and pledged to work for “a labor movement
whose philosophy demands that it fight for the welfare of the public at
large.” Under his leadership, UAW members won unprecedented benefits,
including enhanced job security, cost-of-living adjustments, vacations
and health-care insurance. Supplemental unemployment benefits (SUB), introduced
in 1955, helped to ease the economic pain caused by the cyclical nature
of auto work. With SUB, workers on layoff continued to receive a paycheck,
which equaled 95 percent of their regular take-home pay. Reuther hailed
SUB as “the first time in the history of collective bargaining [that]
great corporations agreed to begin to accept responsibility” for
their workers during layoff.
Walter Reuther was admired and loved by working class people everywhere,
but not so by the rich and powerful. In 1938 a group attempted to kidnap
and murder Reuther but he escaped. After returning home after a late meeting
in 1948, Reuther sat at his dining room table eating his warmed over dinner
when an assassin fired a shotgun through a window in his home. With his
wife May and children sitting along side him, the blast almost blew his
right arm off. He would eventually regain limited use of his arm, but
it would pain him the remainder of his life. The police placed little
effort in finding the criminals, because of the influence of the rich
and powerful in Detroit. Reuther’s drive to change the nature of
work in the auto industry resulted in strong and steady opposition. Future
Michigan Governor George Romney, then with the Automobile Manufacturers’
Association, called Reuther “the most dangerous man in Detroit”
for the labor leader’s skill in “bringing about…revolution
without seeming to disturb the existing…society.”
Walter Reuther was a visionary whose efforts would benefit the entire
segment of working class Americans. In 1959 he met a young minister named
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and formed
a friendship that would last the remainder of their lives. He marched
with Dr. King in Selma, Alabama and gave him an office at Solidarity House,
the UAW Headquarters in Detroit, to organize the Freedom March in Detroit
and the March on Washington in 1963. At the historic March on Washington,
where Dr. King delivered his famous “I Have a Dream Speech”,
Walter Reuther would be the only white man to deliver speech from the
podium.
The 1960s found Walter Reuther spending much of time working on social
issues and had just begun the push for National Health Care when his life
was cut short. For years he had envisioned an education center for UAW
members to discuss and learn about the issues that working class people
face. His dream became the Walter and May Reuther Family Education Center
at Black Lake, Michigan. On May 09, 1970 Walter and May flew to Black
Lake for a final walk through before the center opened. They were killed
in a plane crash at Traverse City, Michigan as the plane landed. Test
would indicate the plane had been tampered with but no one was ever arrested
in connection with the crash.
Labor’s great voice and advocate had been silenced just as his friends
Dr. King and John and Bobby Kennedy. Yet, his legacy remains for us today.
On this 100 anniversary of the death of Walter Reuther many of his dreams
remain unfulfilled. Health Care for everyone was an idea that he was just
beginning to push at his untimely death. Today, this idea remains undone.
Reuther felt that health care should be a right and not a privilege. He
was against oppression of the people of underdeveloped countries at the
benefit of the major corporations. He felt that government existed to
serve and protect all citizens – not just the wealthy and powerful.
On this centennial anniversary of this great man, there is no better honor
that we could bestow than to continue his work. Walter Reuther believed
in social unionism and we should follow his example. “Social Unionism”
refers to the idea that organized labor exists to serve the needs of the
working class as oppose to concerning itself with its members alone. This
means that we are concerned about issues that impact all working class
families. If we do this, then issues such as minimum wage and national
health care are important to us. Our members make more than minimum wage
and most have health care, but our efforts should lean toward making certain
that all working class families have these rights and it is our voice
that speaks for these families. When working class families see us working
for them in their communities, in their local and state politics and on
the national scene, then we won’t be knocking on our working class
friends and families door asking them to join us. When they see us exhibiting
social unionism, then they will come knocking on our door asking how they
can join.
On this important birthday for Walter Reuther, let us dedicate ourselves
toward carrying the torch for the working class that he so proudly displayed.
The terms on which he lived his life can best be summed in a quote by
the man himself which goes “There is no greater calling than to
serve your fellow men. There is no greater contribution than to help the
weak. There is no greater satisfaction than to do it well.” Walter
Reuther is surely enjoying his eternal rest in the satisfaction of knowing
he did it well.
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