Douglas Andrew Fraser | |
---|---|
Born | December 18, 1916 Glasgow, Scotland, United Kingdom |
Died | February 23, 2008 Southfield, Michigan, United States |
(aged 91)
Occupation | Auto worker; Labor leader, UAW |
Spouse | Eva Falk Fraser (died 1970) Winifred Fraser |
Children | Jeanne Fraser, Judith Yonich, Barbara MacKenzie, Sandra Bryner |
Douglas Andrew Fraser (December 18, 1916 – February 23, 2008) was an American union leader. He was president of the United Auto Workers from 1977 to 1983, and an adjunct professor of labor relations at Wayne State University for many years. He is best remembered for helping to save Chrysler from bankruptcy in 1979 by heavily lobbying Congress for a financial bailout.
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Fraser was born in Glasgow, Scotland in 1916. Fraser's father, Samuel, was an electrician and an active and vocal trade unionist.[1] The family was so poor that his father, who worked at a brewery, would sometimes fuel the family stove with stolen whiskey.[2] Samuel Fraser moved to Detroit, Michigan, when he was a young boy. In 1922, his mother—with Douglas and his sister and brother—sailed to New York City[3][4] aboard the SS Cameronia and were inspected at Ellis Island on April 23, 1923. They travelled to their new home in Detroit via train.
He was deeply influenced by the Great Depression. His father was out of work for extensive periods, and Fraser admitted the poverty and social disorder he witnessed changed his life.[3]
He dropped out of high school when he was 18, worked in a machine shop, and took several jobs in the auto industry. Fraser eventually found work as a metal finisher in one of Chrysler's DeSoto factories, where he became active in the union in 1936. He was twice fired for his union beliefs and activities, and participated sitdown strikes at Chrysler. Fraser was elected president of UAW Local 227 in 1943, and served in the U.S. Army during World War II.[2][3][4]
After the war, Fraser quickly rose through the ranks in the UAW. He was appointed an international representative in 1947.[2] During a difficult 104-day strike at Chrysler in 1950, he deeply impressed UAW staff with his negotiating skill.[4][5] He joined the personal staff of UAW President Walter Reuther in 1951, where he was a personal administrative assistant to the president. In 1959, he was elected co-director of UAW Region 1A, and a member-at-large of the international UAW board of directors in 1962. Reuther soon thereafter appointed him director of the UAW's Chrysler, Skilled Trades, and Technical, Office and Professional Departments. He was elected a vice-president of the international union in 1970.[2][3]
As a key member of Reuther's staff, Fraser was involved in a number of successful collective bargaining agreements. early retirement program in 1964, and wage parity for U.S. and Canadian members in 1967. Reuther died in a plane crash during the 1970 contract talks, leading many to speculate that Fraser might be tapped to lead the union. But after a deeply divided vote of the UAW executive council voted 13-to-12 against him, Fraser withdrew his name and Leonard Woodcock became union president.[2][3][6][7] Fraser led a nine-day strike against Chrysler which began on September 14, 1973, the first against the automaker in decades. The collective bargaining agreement hammered out five days later (and ratified on September 23) contained restrictions on mandatory overtime, a comprehensive health and safety program, significant improvement to the early retirement plan, and a new dental care benefit. A new streamlined arbitration process was also negotiated, which reduced the time for resolving grievances.[8]
Fraser was president of the United Auto Workers from 1977 to 1983. He was elected president after Woodcock reached the mandatory retirement age of 65.[9]
He is best known for his role in negotiating a greater voice for the union in corporate governance with Chrysler during the company's 1979 bankruptcy crisis and subsequent government-sponsored bailout. Fraser mobilized UAW members and heavily lobbied Congress in a move that proved critical[4] to convincing the government to provide $1.2 billion in federally guaranteed loans that enabled Chrysler to avoid bankruptcy. He used Reuther's "equality of sacrifice" formula to convince UAW members that major concessions were needed to save the company. Fraser then negotiated wage cuts of $3 an hour and waived restrictions on layoffs which allowed Chrysler to shed nearly 50,000 jobs (or about half its workforce).[1] In an unprecedented move, Chrysler Corporation named Fraser to its Board of Directors, on which he served from 1980 to 1984.[4][10] He was the first labor leader to sit on the board of directors of an important American company.[11]
Fraser negotiated another round of concessionary contracts in 1982. The early 1980s recession hit the Ford Motor Company particularly hard. To help save the company, Fraser negotiated significant wage and benefit cuts. The same wage concessions were given to General Motors, as Fraser sought to keep wages uniform across the industry in order to avoid giving one company a cost advantage over another.[3]
Some deeply criticized Fraser's 1979 negotiations, however. They argue that the Chrysler agreement set off a wave of concessionary bargaining among automobile manufacturers which then spread into steel, mining, trucking, meatpacking, airlines and rubber. These critics claim that a 30-year truce between labor and management broke down after 1979, leading auto manufacturers to abandon pattern bargaining and seek an end to job protections and cost-of-living increases.[6]
Fraser was active in politics his entire life. A Democrat, he was an unabashed liberal.[2][3]
Fraser was also socially progressive. He was a vocal supporter of the civil rights movement. He strongly supported busing to achieve desegregation in the public schools, even though most UAW members did not. Despite resistance from both staff and members, he began initiatives within the UAW and the auto industry to recruit more minorities and women. He also pushed for national health insurance.[2][3]
Fraser retired as UAW president in 1983. He was an adjunct professor at Wayne State University for many years, teaching labor relations and labor history.[1] A major research and study center, the Douglas A. Fraser Center for Workplace Issues, was named for him.[12]
Fraser received The International Center in New York's Award of Excellence for his significant contributions to life in America.
Douglas Fraser died on Saturday, February 23, 2008, from complications due to emphysema at Providence Hospital in Southfield, Michigan.[1]
Preceded by Leonard Woodcock |
UAW President 1977–1983 |
Succeeded by Owen Bieber |