Volkswagen is Germany’s largest private employer and has a history of poor worker relations.
Volkswagen CEO Olivier Blume faced a huge booing crowd in Germany today, arguing that company isn’t operating in “a fantasy world” and that plants will be closing and jobs will be lost.
In a demonstration of unrest, nearly 100,000 Volkswagen employees engages in strikes across Germany, contesting the automaker ...
As promised, so they acted. On Monday, 2nd December, Volkswagen's German factories halted operations for several hours. This ...
The head of Volkswagen’s works council Daniela Cavallo has made it clear that the IG Metall union and the works council do ...
The IG Metall union, the biggest labor force in Germany, says 98,650 VW employees came out to protest, and as you’d expect ...
Volkswagen has threatened to close plants in Germany for the first time in its 87-year history to reduce costs and boost ...
Employees staged warning strikes in protest against the German carmaker’s plans for potential factory closures and sweeping ...
Workers at Volkswagen plants in Germany have begun rolling two-hour 'warning' strikes at nine factories in a stand against ...
Almost 100,000 workers joined walkouts at Volkswagen's German plants on Monday in protest at management plans to cut wages ...
Volkswagen workers launched rolling two-hour strikes Monday at nine plants across Germany to underscore their resistance to ...
Workers at Volkswagen factories across Germany walked off the job on Monday after a dispute between the automaker and the IG ...