It’s about the way forward for their jobs. Ford employees at two crops in western Germany are set to go on strike on Wednesday, their works council chief mentioned on Monday.
Ford is dealing with a employee strike in Germany
In November, Ford introduced it might reduce round 4,000 jobs in Europe by 2027 as a part of a restructuring, primarily in Germany and the UK. That’s nonetheless about 14% of its European workforce.
The American automaker mentioned the transfer comes after it has incurred “vital losses” lately and a “extremely disruptive market” with new EVs rapidly gaining market share.
Ford blamed slower-than-expected demand for electrical autos and a weak financial scenario. It additionally plans to sluggish manufacturing at its Cologne EV plant, the place the electrical Explorer and Capri are constructed.
Final week, IG Metall members voted in favor of “industrial motion” with 93.5% of votes in favor of a strike. “Ford should act now—in any other case, we are going to undergo with it,” mentioned Kerstin D. Klein, Chief Consultant of IG Metall Cologne-Leverkusen.

Ford is dealing with an inflow of latest competitors, together with Chinese language EV makers like BYD. BYD’s abroad gross sales are surging with a fifth straight month of development in April.
BYD even outsold Tesla in Germany final month, with 1,566 autos registered. Compared, Tesla had simply 855, and Ford noticed 9,534 registrations.

On prime of this, Ford, like many of the trade, is getting ready for extra disruption with Trump’s auto tariffs. After releasing Q1 earnings final week, Ford warned that the tariffs may value as much as $2.5 billion this 12 months.
Throughout Ford’s earnings name, CFO Sherry Home mentioned that current EV launches in Europe, together with the Explorer, Capri, and Puma Gen-E, helped greater than double Mannequin e’s wholesale quantity in Q1.
After early success within the US, Ford additionally launched its “Energy Promise” promotion in Europe, providing EV patrons a free residence charger and a number of other different perks.
Supply: Reuters