IG Metall union workers led by Daniela Cavallo celebrate retaining majority (52 of 67 seats) in VW Wolfsburg works council election, with VW factory backdrop.
IG Metall union workers led by Daniela Cavallo celebrate retaining majority (52 of 67 seats) in VW Wolfsburg works council election, with VW factory backdrop.
Image generated by AI

IG Metall retains majority in VW Wolfsburg works council

Image generated by AI

In the Volkswagen works council election in Wolfsburg, IG Metall defended its top position despite losses. The list led by Daniela Cavallo received 74.8 percent of the votes, securing 52 of 67 seats. In Braunschweig, an AfD-affiliated organization entered the works council for the first time.

The results of the Volkswagen works council election in Wolfsburg were announced on Friday evening. The IG Metall list led by works council chairwoman Daniela Cavallo received 74.8 percent of the votes, as stated by the works council. This marks a decline from 85.5 percent in the 2022 election. As a result, the union secures 52 of the 67 seats for the next four years.

The second strongest force is "Die Andere Liste" of former IG Metall local chief Frank Patta, which rose to 14.1 percent and increased from 4 to 10 seats. Patta had fallen out with Cavallo's predecessor Bernd Osterloh and founded his own list. During the campaign, he leveled sharp criticism at the works council leadership. Overall, six lists and one individual candidate participated, including the Christian Metalworkers' Union (CGM) and independent lists that criticized IG Metall.

In Wolfsburg, 61,300 eligible voters were called to vote, nearly half of the 130,000 VW employees in Germany. Cavallo only ran in Wolfsburg and remains chair of the overall and group works councils.

At other sites in Lower Saxony, Saxony, and Hesse, IG Metall's vote share was sometimes higher. In Braunschweig, a components site, the organization Zentrum, regarded as AfD-affiliated, participated for the first time. The group, which calls itself an "alternative union," received 6.49 percent and 2 of 35 seats. IG Metall achieved 78.5 percent and 28 seats there, while CGM got 15 percent and 5 seats. Zentrum was founded in 2009 as "Zentrum Automobil" at the Mercedes-Benz plant in Stuttgart-Untertürkheim and is mainly active in southern and eastern Germany.

What people are saying

Discussions on X focus on AfD-affiliated Zentrum entering the VW Braunschweig works council for the first time with two seats, while IG Metall under Daniela Cavallo retains a strong majority in Wolfsburg despite some losses. Proponents view the gains by alternative lists as beneficial competition to IG Metall's ideology. Critics see IG Metall's vulnerabilities as fueling right-wing populism among insecure workers. Some express schadenfreude towards the established council.

Related Articles

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

Reported by AI 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.

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.

Reported by AI

VW's works council is demanding a recognition premium for all tariff employees after the company revised its 2025 cash flow upward to six billion euros. Works council chair Daniela Cavallo justifies this with the workforce's joint cost discipline. The premium could be paid out in May 2026.

Cem Özdemir's Greens have narrowly won the Baden-Württemberg state election with 30.2 percent of the vote ahead of the CDU's 29.7 percent. Both parties secure 56 seats each in the state parliament, while the SPD plummets to a historic low of 5.5 percent. The FDP and Left fail to enter the parliament.

Reported by AI

At the CDU federal party congress in Stuttgart, Chancellor Friedrich Merz was confirmed as party leader with 91.2 percent of the votes. The vote was delayed by over three hours due to technical issues with digital voting, leading to paper ballots. Former Chancellor Angela Merkel missed the announcement but congratulated him via SMS.

CDU General Secretary Carsten Linnemann has assured Friedrich Merz of support ahead of the party congress in Stuttgart. Despite poor poll numbers and discontent within the party, delegates expect a strong re-election of the chancellor as party leader. The congress will also address controversial issues like a social media ban.

Reported by AI

The CDU showed great unity at its 38th federal party congress in Stuttgart, confirming Chancellor and party leader Friedrich Merz with 91.2 percent. Despite government challenges, the party avoided confrontations with coalition partner SPD. General Secretary Carsten Linnemann also received a strong result with 90.5 percent.

 

 

 

This website uses cookies

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