General Motors latest offer includes 25% compounded wage increase, COLA reinstatement

The offer comes following GM's earlier inclusion of its future battery plants in the UAW's national master agreement that staved off an escalation of strike targets.

What are the cars made by the UAW and when will the strike affect supply?

The UAW makes roughly 40% of all cars sold in the United States and these are the cars that may be most affected by the union strike.

Auto supplier businesses endangered by extended UAW strike, says expert

"They are not necessarily ‘mom-and-pop,’ but they’re small businesses. They may have 10 to 20 employees, 30 employees or less. And they don’t generate a whole lot of revenue on an annual basis."

Here's how many autoworkers have been laid off by Detroit's Big Three due to UAW strike

As the UAW strike continues, there are 34,000 members striking against Detroit's Big Three. Meanwhile, Ford, Stellantis, and General Motors have laid off thousands of workers as there's no end in sight to the strike.

GM delays EV pickup truck production at Michigan plant

A spokesperson for General Motors said the year-long delay has nothing to do with the four-week partial strike at the plant.

UAW strike update: Ford, union spar over what needs to happen next

Bill Ford and UAW President Shawn Fain exchanged jabs Monday about the implications of the ongoing strike and what needs to happen next.

UAW strike update: 550+ Ford employees laid off due to Kentucky Truck, Chicago Assembly stoppages

More than 550 Ford employees were told not to report to work Monday as a result of the UAW strike, the automaker said, citing stoppages at Kentucky Truck Plant and Chicago Assembly Plant.

Rpt: Ford F-150 Lightning EV Michigan plant to cut 1 of 3 shifts

In a separate statement from Ford, the no. 2 automaker did release a list of strike-related layoffs beginning October 16th at six different locations.

UAW's surprise strike at Ford's Kentucky Truck plant to impact over 100,000 people, rankle supply chain

Ford executives said they were surprised by the move by the UAW and said the aftershocks from the move would be far-reaching, hitting more than 100,000 people and crippling the supply chain.