
United Auto Workers union President Shawn Fain dismissed Ford CEO Jim Farley's claim that Ford would go bankrupt if it met all of the union's contract, saying, "It's a joke."
"The cost of labor for a vehicle is 5% of the vehicle," he told CNN while on a picket line outside Ford's Michigan Truck plant in Warren Michigan. "They could double our wages and not raise the prices of vehicles, and they would still make billions of dollars. It's a lie like everything else that comes out of their mouths."
Ford CEO Jim Farley told CNN earlier in the day that the company couldn't afford all of the union's demands, including a 40% pay raise and a 32-hour, four-day work week. Company officials had told reporters earlier in the day that the $30 billion in operating profits the company made from 2019 through 2022 would have swung to a $14.4 billion loss had it be operating under terms of the UAW's contract demands.
"Forty percent will put us out of business," Farley said. "We would lose $15 billion. We would have to cut people, close plants. What's the good of that? It's not a sustainable business."
Ford had offered the UAW a 20% pay raise over the life of the contract, including an immediate 10% hike. But it wasn't enough to prevent a strike.
Fain said earlier Thursday evening that "we are committed to winning an agreement with the 'Big Three' that reflects the incredible sacrifice and contributions UAW members have made to these companies."