Workers at Volkswagen's Chattanooga plant in Tennessee voted overwhelmingly to join the UAW, a potentially industry-altering move that represents a breakthrough in the union's long-running crusade to organize transplant automakers in the southern U.S.
The UAW claimed victory with 2,628 votes in favor and 985 opposed, according to the National Labor Relations Board, which must still certify the results.
The victory comes after two failed attempts this past decade to organize the Chattanooga plant and gives VW its first UAW-represented facility in the U.S. since closing its Westmoreland, Pennsylvania assembly plant in 1988. Union supporters pushed for the vote after the UAW ratified historically rich contracts with the Detroit 3, making the case that VW workers could get better pay, benefits and job security.