Mercedes-Benz earlier this year brought college football coaching legend Nick Saban to talk to workers at its auto manufacturing campus in Alabama after the UAW announced a bid to unionize the plants there.
Why it matters: Mercedes workers in Tuscaloosa County are voting this week on whether to join the UAW in what would be the union’s second victory in as many months after years of organizing failures in the South.
The big picture: Saban — who recently retired from coaching and joined ESPN as a commentator — is revered in Alabama for leading the Crimson Tide to seven national championships.
Saban owns multiple Mercedes dealerships and has reportedly said he does not endorse the UAW’s campaign.
Behind the scenes: “They don’t stop the line for hardly anything, but they shut the line down and they had a meeting with Nick Saban in there to talk to us about teamwork and the tactics and methods he used as a football coach,” Kay Finklea, a quality inspector at the site and a member of the UAW’s voluntary organizing committee in Tuscaloosa, tells Axios.
Axios


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