Connect with us

Jobs

John Deere to lay off a further 345 workers, adding to its bloodletting of over 1,500 jobs

Published

on

John Deere to lay off a further 345 workers, adding to its bloodletting of over 1,500 jobs

Take up the fight against layoffs! Fill out the form below to begin building a rank-and-file committee at your workplace.

Workers on strike outside a John Deere plant in Iowa in 2021. [AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall]

Last Thursday, agriculture machinery maker Deere & Company announced 345 job cuts from its Waterloo Operations in Iowa, which employs some 5,000 workers. The layoffs will take place on September 20. It will also lay off seven workers from its Coffeyville, Kansas, plant on August 9.

According to Iowa’s Workforce Adjustment and Retraining Notification (WARN) site, Deere has announced 1,429 job cuts since the beginning of 2024. The consequences of these layoffs will ripple across workers’ families and communities, multiplying their disastrous effects on thousands of people.

The layoffs can and must be stopped through the independent intervention of Deere workers by forming rank-and-file committees across state lines and internationally to unite workers against the cuts.

Mobilizing in opposition to both management and the sellout bureaucrats in the United Auto Workers, Deere workers should coordinate with the International Workers Alliance of Rank-and-File Committees (IWA-RFC) to fight back and demand that all job cuts be rescinded and all laid-off workers be rehired.

Just two weeks ago, Deere announced indefinite layoffs of 800 workers in Iowa and Illinois in the coming months. In Illinois, 503 workers at its Harvester Works factory in East Moline, Illinois, will be laid off starting September 20. In Iowa, across the Mississippi River, 211 workers at the Davenport Works and another 99 at the Dubuque Works plant will be laid off, each starting on August 30.

Including the layoffs announced last week, the total number of job cuts at Waterloo alone is 894.

Deere’s executives are shifting the cost of declining sales onto the backs of workers. In a statement to the Des Moines Register, the company said, “As the largest global manufacturer of agricultural equipment, John Deere, like many others in the industry, faces significant economic challenges, including rising global operational and manufacturing costs, and reduced customer demand. These changes are being made due to reduced demand for the products produced at these facilities. As stated in our second quarter earnings call, industry sales are expected to decline 20 percent from 2023 to 2024.”

Continue Reading