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A wave of strikes that disrupted the three largest US automakers for six weeks looked to have been finally resolved Monday, as the auto workers union reached a tentative agreement with holdout General Motors.
President Joe Biden saluted the "historic agreement" between US automakers and the United Auto Workers (UAW) union, saying: "These record agreements reward autoworkers who gave up much to keep the industry working."
The GM deal comes after the UAW also unveiled pacts with Stellantis and Ford, likely ending the strike on the "Big Three" automakers.
The UAW launched the strike on September 15, marking the first simultaneous work stoppage of the three carmakers.
Workers were pushing for higher wages and other improvements, in particular relating to the transition to making electric vehicles.
Asked on Monday if a preliminary agreement had been reached between both sides, a source familiar with the talks replied "yes," without providing further details.
Negotiations with GM took place on Sunday night and into the early morning, according to CNBC.
The deal's terms are generally similar to earlier agreements with Ford and Stellantis, including a 25 percent hourly pay raise and cost-of-living adjustments, Bloomberg reported, citing sources.
GM and the union declined to comment when contacted by AFP.
At its height, the strike mobilized more than 45,000 of the UAW's 146,000 members working for the Big Three automakers.
"For months we've said that record profits mean record contracts," UAW President Shawn Fain said in an earlier statement, after the preliminary deal with Ford was reached.
"And UAW family, our Stand Up Strike has delivered," he added.
- Ratification -
In the case of Stellantis, some 5,000 jobs will be added by the Jeep maker over the course of the latest contract, according to Fain previously.
This was a turnaround from job cuts the automaker was pursuing before the negotiations.
The tentative contract includes a 25 percent raise in base wages by 2028. Cost of living adjustments will cumulatively raise the top wage by 33 percent, to over $42 an hour, the union said.
While the wage increases in the tentative agreements are lower than the 40 percent sought by Fain when UAW launched the strike, they are considerably higher than the nine percent rise Ford initially proposed in August.
This month, Ford estimated the strike has cost it some $1.3 billion.
In September, Biden joined striking workers on the picket line in Michigan, becoming the first sitting president to do so.
The in-principle pacts still need to be ratified by workers in a vote, in a process that could take two weeks, a source close to negotiations said earlier.
With the Ford and Stellantis deals, members were cleared to return to work at grounded factories.
L.Rodriguez--TFWP