I don't think so. Pretty much every Republican in Tennessee was on board and on message, and the message was closely tageting the workers at Volkswagen's Chattanooga assembly plant. And as rubato points out, they only had to sway a very few workers: if only 44 (out of 1338--that's 3%) of them had voted the other way, the UAW would have won.Lord Jim wrote:That seems like a pretty simplistic explanation for what happened, and that the influence here is being grossly exaggerated...
We live in a country where less than half the adult citizens can even name one of their US Senators let alone know or care what they're saying; I think who ever wrote that is projecting their own interest in politics on to others in an inappropriate way. (And of course being led to their conclusion by their biases; they don't want to believe that a majority of the workers could honestly have concluded that this wasn't in their best interests on the merits; they prefer to find some external reason to blame.)
The Republicans in general and Sen. Corker in particular were making the sort of threats which, if made by the company, would have been clearly illegal under U.S. labor laws. In other words, they very loudly--with as much publicity as possible--made the threats they wished VW would make...at whatever cost to the state's economy. Was it credible that the Tennessee state government could have followed up and forced VW to cut back on (and/or move to other states) any expansion of their U.S. production? I don't know. You tell me. But it's certainly credible to me that at least a few dozen VW employees might have thought the threat was credible.