DETROIT (AP) The United Auto Workers union confirmed Friday that it's in talks with Volkswagen about representing workers a factory in Chattanooga, Tennessee.
The union said its representatives met with VW officials last week in Wolfsburg, Germany, to discuss a German-style "works council" at the plant as well as full UAW representation. A works council would give workers a say in plant operations.
Currently, only one U.S. plant owned by foreign automakers has UAW representation, a Mitsubishi factory in Normal, Illinois, with about 1,000 workers. The union has been trying for years to organize other plants, which mainly are in southern states.
The prospect of UAW representation in Chattanooga concerns Southern Republicans, who fear a UAW foothold in the region will allow it to recruit workers at other auto plants.
Volkswagen managers told workers about the talks in a letter on Thursday. Any union representation would require a vote of the plant's roughly 2,000 full-time blue-collar workers who make the VW Passat midsize sedan.