Workers at Tesla Gigafactory Berlin celebrate Giga United's majority win in works council election over declining IG Metall support.
Workers at Tesla Gigafactory Berlin celebrate Giga United's majority win in works council election over declining IG Metall support.
Image generated by AI

Giga United wins majority in Tesla Giga Berlin works council election as IG Metall support declines

Image generated by AI

The non-union Giga United group secured 24 of 37 seats with 40.4% of votes in the works council election at Tesla's Gigafactory Grünheide near Berlin, concluding March 4, 2026. IG Metall's list took 13 seats at 31.1%—down from 39.4% in 2024—amid mutual accusations of intimidation, legal disputes, and Elon Musk's anti-union stance.

The election at Tesla's only German Gigafactory in Grünheide, southeast of Berlin, ran March 2-4, 2026, with 87% turnout among 10,703 eligible employees (down from prior election). The council shrank to 37 seats from 39 as the workforce fell to around 10,000 from 12,415. Giga United, led by chairwoman Michaela Schmitz, won a majority for non-union representation. The Polish Initiative placed third at 8.3%, with votes split among 11 lists.

IG Metall, dominant at other German automakers like BMW and Volkswagen, aimed for control but fell short, holding 16 of 39 seats in 2024. Tesla Plant Manager André Thierig called the result a 'clear message' for 'independent co-determination.' IG Metall's Laura Arndt acknowledged: 'Unfortunately it was not enough to secure a majority … we will continue to do our utmost in the new works council to bring about change.' District leader Jan Otto accused Tesla and Musk of pressuring workers, claiming support for unions leads to 'disadvantages' and hollowing out democracy.

Campaign tensions included Tesla accusing an IG Metall rep of secretly recording a meeting (police seized the laptop); the union labeled it a 'calculated lie,' sued Thierig for defamation, and pursued union-busting claims (later settled). Tesla held an anti-union concert in December 2025, distributed 'Giga JA – Gewerkschaft NEIN' buttons, and shared Musk's video warning that external organizations could hinder expansion (e.g., Cybercab, Semi), though the factory would not close.

IG Metall seeks a collective bargaining agreement—the plant's absence of one since opening in 2022 enables direct management-employee relations but draws criticism for overwork, sick pay issues, manager home visits, and layoffs. Tesla cites above-average wages and claims union motives include membership growth. IG Metall chair Christiane Benner decried a 'hard and dirty campaign.' The Brandenburg government urged mediation.

Operating at ~40% of 375,000 Model Y capacity, the plant faced a 14% workforce cut amid 2025 European Tesla sales down 28% and German registrations 48% to 19,390, hit by Chinese EV competition. This is the third election since 2022; the next is 2028.

What people are saying

Discussions on X predominantly celebrate Giga United's majority win in Tesla Giga Berlin's works council election, portraying it as a rejection of IG Metall's union influence and a victory for employee independence, innovation, and flexibility without bureaucracy. High-engagement posts from Tesla enthusiasts and influencers emphasize high voter turnout and future expansions. Some German users express skepticism about election fairness amid intimidation claims, while pro-Tesla sentiments dominate.

Related Articles

Police confiscating laptop from IG Metall union representative in Tesla Gigafactory Berlin works council room amid secret recording allegations.
Image generated by AI

Tesla accuses IG Metall member of recording works council meeting

Reported by AI Image generated by AI

Tesla has filed a criminal complaint against an IG Metall union representative at its Gigafactory Berlin after accusing him of secretly recording a closed works council meeting. Police seized the representative's laptop during the incident on Tuesday. The union denies the allegations, calling them a calculated lie amid tensions ahead of upcoming elections.

In a video interview with Giga Berlin plant manager André Thierig, Tesla CEO Elon Musk detailed expansions including battery production, Cybercab robotaxis, Semi trucks, and Optimus robots—but warned plans depend on the factory avoiding IG Metall influence in upcoming works council elections, amid production drops and slumping European sales. He assured the site would not close.

Reported by AI

Tesla organized a morale-boosting event at its Gigafactory Berlin on December 2, featuring a performance by rapper Kool Savas to counter union influence ahead of a key works council vote. The gathering included anti-union messaging and a wage increase announcement, but drew criticism for its tone and effectiveness. Employees showed little enthusiasm, highlighting ongoing tensions with IG Metall.

Tesla has finally met the job requirements outlined in its $1-a-year lease for the controversial factory in Buffalo, New York, after hiring more than 300 additional employees. The company reports employing 2,399 full-time workers at the South Buffalo site and over 1,060 elsewhere in the state as of the end of 2025. State officials expressed satisfaction, though some lawmakers remain skeptical.

Reported by AI

German rapper Kool Savas has responded to criticism following his surprise performance at Tesla's Grünheide Gigafactory event on December 2, denying he was instrumentalized by the company and reaffirming support for workers and unions amid fan outrage and ticket cancellations.

Tesla's Shanghai Megafactory has achieved a significant milestone by producing over 2,000 Megapack energy storage systems in its first full year of operation. The facility, which began production in early 2025, doubled its output in the final five months of the year. This ramp-up underscores Tesla Energy's expanding role in global energy storage.

Reported by AI

Building on Tesla's recently detailed 2026 roadmap—including CyberCab robotaxi, Optimus Gen 3 humanoid robot, Tesla Semi scale-up, and Megapack 3 energy storage—Wall Street analysts from Canaccord Genuity and William Blair forecast a pivotal year ahead. The end of U.S. EV subsidies has caused a temporary demand slowdown, viewed as a healthy market transition. Tesla's vertical integration in vehicles, robotics, and energy strengthens its competitive edge.

 

 

 

This website uses cookies

We use cookies for analytics to improve our site. Read our privacy policy for more information.
Decline