UAW Solidarity House | 8000 East Jefferson Avenue
Detroit, Michigan 48214 | p. (313) 926-5000
© Copyright 2012 UAW. All Rights Reserved.
UAW members and retirees from several Ohio local unions made the most of a sunny September day and painted Barack Obama posters with their families at Swan Creek Preserve Park in Toledo. UAW Local 14 member Candy Morgan, standing, of General Motors' Power Train Plant in Toledo, helps grandson Kameron, 4. Pamela Phillips, also of Local 14 and from the same plant, has a laugh with 3-year-old daughter Shakyrah. Photos: by Rebecca Cook
Barack Obama opposes efforts to undermine the Fair Labor Standards Act, which ensures overtime pay.
John McCain voted against an amendment to guarantee our right to overtime pay. In April 2004 the Bush administration issued final overtime eligibility regulations that threaten the overtime pay rights of 6 million workers. (S. 1637, Vote 79, 5/4/04) Legislators who support working families tried to overturn Bush's unfair rules; McCain backed Bush and voted against them – and against us.
Barack Obama proposes a public health plan nationwide for the uninsured, self-employed and small businesses, giving them access to benefits similar to those available to members of Congress.
John McCain will make health care premiums part of taxable income, essentially creating a new tax for working families. For the typical UAW member that will cost an extra $2,800 a year.
Barack Obama opposes privatizing Social Security. He worked to lower prescription drug prices for seniors and proposes eliminating income taxes for seniors earning less than $50,000.
John McCain campaigned for Bush's 2006 Social Security Privatization Plan, and told the Wall Street Journal he still backs a system of private retirement accounts.
Barack Obama co-sponsored the Employee Free Choice Act and refuses to cross picket lines.
John McCain voted against the Employee Free Choice Act and voted to allow employers to hire permanent replacements during a strike. During the TV writers strike earlier this year, McCain crossed the picket line to appear on "The Tonight Show With Jay Leno."
This portion of this Web site is paid for by the UAW V-CAP (Voluntary Community Action Program), 8000 E. Jefferson, Detroit, MI 48214, with voluntary contributions from union members and their families, and is not authorized by any candidate or candidate's committee.