Democracy Dies in Darkness

Red and blue voters are backing UAW strikers in one swing county

In Bucks County, where UAW workers are picketing a GM auto-parts warehouse, residents say workers have a point

Updated September 27, 2023 at 4:17 p.m. EDT|Published September 27, 2023 at 6:00 a.m. EDT
General Motors employees, from left, Omar Glover, Robin Medeiros, Rob Baran and Bill Beier strike outside of the GM parts warehouse in Langhorne, Pa. on Tuesday. (Rachel Wisniewski for The Washington Post)
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BUCKS COUNTY, Pa. — When Russ Oxley read on Facebook that a group of striking autoworkers needed firewood to keep them warm, he loaded up his GMC pickup and drove to the picket line outside a General Motors warehouse.

The rain-soaked workers gratefully accepted the donation and threw a few logs on a fire they’d been nursing since last week, when they walked out of their auto-parts storehouse in a strike for better wages and benefits.