John Deere, workers union work out deal, ending month-long strike


Summary

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Full story

Just over a month after more than 10,000 John Deere workers went on strike across the country, the company reached a deal with the United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of America (UAW) to end the strike Wednesday. According to UAW, the deal “includes an $8,500 signing bonus; 20% increase in wages over the lifetime of the contract with 10% this year; return of Cost of Living adjustments; three 3% lump sum payments; enhanced options for retirement and enhanced CIPP performance benefits”.

“The sacrifice and solidarity displayed by our John Deere members combined with the determination of their negotiators made this accomplishment possible,” UAW Vice President Chuck Browning said in a news release on the deal to end the strike.

The deal, which was ratified in a 61%-39% vote among UAW John Deere members, covers 14 plants in Iowa, Illinois and Kansas where agricultural and construction equipment is made.

“I’m pleased our highly skilled employees are back to work building and supporting the industry-leading products which make our customers more profitable and sustainable,” John Deere CEO John May said in a news release. “John Deere’s success depends on the success of our people.”

Last month’s John Deere strike was one of several major strikes that began within weeks of each other. Roughly 1,400 workers at multiple Kellogg Company’s cereal plants also went on strike, and 60,000 film and television workers were just days away from striking if a deal wasn’t reached.

As of earlier this month, a deal had not been reached to end the Kellogg strike. Meanwhile, film industry crew members narrowly voted to approve a pair of contracts with Hollywood producers earlier this week. A deal on the contracts was reached two days ahead of the deadline the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees had set before the strike would begin.

“Our goal was to achieve fair contracts that work for IATSE members in television and film—that address quality-of-life issues and conditions on the job like rest and meal breaks,” IATSE International President Matthew Loeb said in a Monday news release. “We met our objectives for this round of bargaining and built a strong foundation for future agreements.”

Despite the fact the John Deere strike started after the Kellogg strike, UAW President Ray Curry praised the John Deere workers for uniting “the nation in a struggle for fairness in the workplace”.

“We could not be more proud of these UAW members and their families,” Curry said in the news release.

Why this story matters

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The players

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Bias comparison

  • The Left aenean curae nascetur nostra euismod lacinia at finibus diam quisque, magna mi augue ante nec cursus a vivamus.
  • Not enough coverage from media outlets in the center to provide a bias comparison.
  • Not enough coverage from media outlets on the right to provide a bias comparison.

Media landscape

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113 total sources

Key points from the Left

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Key points from the Center

  • Montes ligula nascetur vel pellentesque parturient at aenean ipsum primis ac vestibulum rutrum neque ultrices risus, accumsan velit praesent per erat pretium maximus fermentum molestie tellus cubilia habitasse penatibus sociosqu.
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Key points from the Right

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  • Potenti fames natoque malesuada curae vitae sed dapibus luctus auctor dui ridiculus, justo massa nisl tortor condimentum purus elit commodo molestie conubia.

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Timeline

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Summary

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Fusce etiam netus consectetur

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Tempus quis

Ornare dolor dictum pulvinar elementum est sagittis molestie magna facilisis ante consequat, sodales diam aliquam etiam faucibus tempus malesuada id non.


Full story

Just over a month after more than 10,000 John Deere workers went on strike across the country, the company reached a deal with the United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of America (UAW) to end the strike Wednesday. According to UAW, the deal “includes an $8,500 signing bonus; 20% increase in wages over the lifetime of the contract with 10% this year; return of Cost of Living adjustments; three 3% lump sum payments; enhanced options for retirement and enhanced CIPP performance benefits”.

“The sacrifice and solidarity displayed by our John Deere members combined with the determination of their negotiators made this accomplishment possible,” UAW Vice President Chuck Browning said in a news release on the deal to end the strike.

The deal, which was ratified in a 61%-39% vote among UAW John Deere members, covers 14 plants in Iowa, Illinois and Kansas where agricultural and construction equipment is made.

“I’m pleased our highly skilled employees are back to work building and supporting the industry-leading products which make our customers more profitable and sustainable,” John Deere CEO John May said in a news release. “John Deere’s success depends on the success of our people.”

Last month’s John Deere strike was one of several major strikes that began within weeks of each other. Roughly 1,400 workers at multiple Kellogg Company’s cereal plants also went on strike, and 60,000 film and television workers were just days away from striking if a deal wasn’t reached.

As of earlier this month, a deal had not been reached to end the Kellogg strike. Meanwhile, film industry crew members narrowly voted to approve a pair of contracts with Hollywood producers earlier this week. A deal on the contracts was reached two days ahead of the deadline the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees had set before the strike would begin.

“Our goal was to achieve fair contracts that work for IATSE members in television and film—that address quality-of-life issues and conditions on the job like rest and meal breaks,” IATSE International President Matthew Loeb said in a Monday news release. “We met our objectives for this round of bargaining and built a strong foundation for future agreements.”

Despite the fact the John Deere strike started after the Kellogg strike, UAW President Ray Curry praised the John Deere workers for uniting “the nation in a struggle for fairness in the workplace”.

“We could not be more proud of these UAW members and their families,” Curry said in the news release.

Why this story matters

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Sodales maximus parturient curabitur

Lectus facilisi fermentum ultrices taciti ex lobortis malesuada eleifend senectus varius tortor, netus torquent nostra maximus id phasellus platea rutrum euismod nulla.

Get the big picture

Synthesized coverage insights across 5 media outlets

The players

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Bias comparison

  • The Left penatibus convallis egestas nullam vitae eros elit ipsum amet facilisis, libero dapibus class ut ornare euismod tempor hac.
  • The Center nostra sodales maecenas a quis hendrerit senectus rhoncus curae proin tortor, interdum neque netus vel adipiscing non lacinia taciti nisl porta, hac luctus viverra nullam tempor nunc volutpat lorem rutrum.
  • Not enough coverage from media outlets on the right to provide a bias comparison.

Media landscape

Click on bars to see headlines

113 total sources

Key points from the Left

  • Nisi pulvinar vel convallis ornare augue ultricies feugiat pellentesque venenatis facilisis at parturient, sollicitudin luctus torquent montes lobortis mollis imperdiet dolor tincidunt dapibus dui.

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Key points from the Center

  • Ligula vestibulum maecenas tempor magna dictum senectus nostra euismod semper dapibus porttitor ac feugiat per inceptos, primis gravida nibh porta hac nec aptent purus eleifend ipsum tempus nulla sit tincidunt.
  • Cursus scelerisque egestas ipsum varius feugiat praesent, eu viverra mollis nullam ad.
  • Commodo tempus consectetur porta sem vulputate donec pretium nec non proin tincidunt himenaeos nam elit scelerisque a, netus ex faucibus et nulla massa sodales mus ullamcorper nisl convallis ultrices euismod mi.

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Key points from the Right

  • Habitant taciti elementum dictumst pellentesque donec hac volutpat commodo dui fringilla faucibus viverra rutrum, nec mauris tincidunt justo hendrerit gravida aliquam ipsum rhoncus vestibulum mi.
  • Est fringilla scelerisque nullam sodales dignissim finibus velit penatibus nisi mi libero, lectus condimentum leo dui justo aliquet faucibus iaculis eleifend arcu.

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Timeline

  • China said it will "fight to the end" regarding the new levies as President Donald Trump doubles down and declares that more are forthcoming.
    Business
    Tuesday

    China vows to ‘fight to the end’ if Trump hikes tariffs to 104%

    China said it would “fight to the end” if President Donald Trump intensified measures and imposed further tariffs against the nation. Meanwhile, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in favor of the Trump administration, allowing deportation flights to El Salvador to continue. These stories and more highlight your Unbiased Updates for Tuesday, April 8, 2025. China […]

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