Friction is mounting between German automaker Porsche and workers at Volkswagen (VW), where employee representatives fear losing their influence if VW is swallowed up by Porsche.
Porsche head Wendelin Wiedeking fired the first shot earlier this month, unveiling his plans to take control of VW, the German group of which Porsche already owns about 31 percent.
Adding to the tension, he let it be known that if his plans bore fruit, there would be no more "sacred cows" at VW, where employees enjoy advantageous working conditions thanks to collective bargaining agreements.
Porsche finance director Holger Harter this past weekend disclosed in an interview that his company did not intend to include a VW representative on its board of directors if the takeover went ahead.
His comments drew a sharp response from the influential IG Metall trade union as well as from the workers' council at Volkswagen.
Council president Bernd Osterloh then filed a lawsuit aimed at blocking a planned worker participation agreement that would take effect if Porsche raised its stake in VW to more than 50 percent.
Under the proposed arrangement, VW workers would only have three seats on Porsche's supervisory board, equal to the representation by Porsche employees but down from the 10 they currently control at VW.
That structure is unacceptable to Osterloh, who speaks for 324,000 VW workers. Porsche has a workforce of only 12,000.
He called the plan "a slap in the face" for VW personnel and "a danger to job and production site security."
Until now VW unions have had to deal with a single company shareholder, the government of the state of Lower Saxony, which has been keen to preserve jobs. At Porsche employment decisions will be determined by profitability.
Osterloh has nonetheless managed to irritate certain segments of the VW workforce. A source close to the matter said he had been aware of Porsche's worker participation scheme but -- prior to an about-face -- had made no protest.
At Porsche, workers' council head Uwe Huck, a fan of Thai boxing, said in an interview that Osterloh was reacting in a manner that reminded him of certain boxers who "go out of control" when they get hit.
"In this fight, it's no longer a question of employee interests but of power sharing," he said.
The complaint by VW workers will get a first hearing by the Stuttgart labor court on Oct. 24.
And the European Court of Justice on Oct. 23 is to issue a ruling on the "Volkswagen law," which prevents any single shareholder from controlling more than 20 percent of the voting rights in Volkswagen.
If the law is overturned, which seems likely, Porsche will be solidly on course to absorb Europe's largest automaker.
A Chinese aircraft carrier group entered Japan’s economic waters over the weekend, before exiting to conduct drills involving fighter jets, the Japanese Ministry of Defense said yesterday. The Liaoning aircraft carrier, two missile destroyers and one fast combat supply ship sailed about 300km southwest of Japan’s easternmost island of Minamitori on Saturday, a ministry statement said. It was the first time a Chinese aircraft carrier had entered that part of Japan’s exclusive economic zone (EEZ), a ministry spokesman said. “We think the Chinese military is trying to improve its operational capability and ability to conduct operations in distant areas,” the spokesman said. China’s growing
Nine retired generals from Taiwan, Japan and the US have been invited to participate in a tabletop exercise hosted by the Taipei School of Economics and Political Science Foundation tomorrow and Wednesday that simulates a potential Chinese invasion of Taiwan in 2030, the foundation said yesterday. The five retired Taiwanese generals would include retired admiral Lee Hsi-min (李喜明), joined by retired US Navy admiral Michael Mullen and former chief of staff of the Japan Self-Defense Forces general Shigeru Iwasaki, it said. The simulation aims to offer strategic insights into regional security and peace in the Taiwan Strait, it added. Foundation chair Huang Huang-hsiung
PUBLIC WARNING: The two students had been tricked into going to Hong Kong for a ‘high-paying’ job, which sent them to a scam center in Cambodia Police warned the public not to trust job advertisements touting high pay abroad following the return of two college students over the weekend who had been trafficked and forced to work at a cyberscam center in Cambodia. The two victims, surnamed Lee (李), 18, and Lin (林), 19, were interviewed by police after landing in Taiwan on Saturday. Taichung’s Chingshui Police Precinct said in a statement yesterday that the two students are good friends, and Lin had suspended her studies after seeing the ad promising good pay to work in Hong Kong. Lee’s grandfather on Thursday reported to police that Lee had sent
BUILDUP: US General Dan Caine said Chinese military maneuvers are not routine exercises, but instead are ‘rehearsals for a forced unification’ with Taiwan China poses an increasingly aggressive threat to the US and deterring Beijing is the Pentagon’s top regional priority amid its rapid military buildup and invasion drills near Taiwan, US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth said on Tuesday. “Our pacing threat is communist China,” Hegseth told the US House of Representatives Appropriations Subcommittee on Defense during an oversight hearing with US General Dan Caine, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. “Beijing is preparing for war in the Indo-Pacific as part of its broader strategy to dominate that region and then the world,” Hegseth said, adding that if it succeeds, it could derail