‘Early in my research, a friend with excellent knowledge of the United Auto Workers internal operations told me, ‘Don’t give up. They are hiding something’…’
It’s 1990, and US labour is being outsourced to Mexico. Rumours of a violent confrontation at the Mexican Ford Assembly plant on January 8 reach the United Auto Workers (UAW) union in the US: nine employees had been shot by a group of drunken thugs and gangsters, in an act of political repression which changed the course of Mexican and US workers’ rights forever.
Rob Mc Kenzie was working at the Ford Twin Cities Assembly plant in Minnesota when he heard of the attack. He didn’t believe the official story, and began a years-long investigation to uncover the truth. His findings took him further than he expected – all the way to the doors of the CIA.
Virtually unknown outside of Mexico, the full story of ‘El Golpe’, or ‘The Coup’, is a dark tale of political intrigue that still resonates today.
Mục lục
List of Photographs
Series Preface
Acknowledgments
List of Abbreviations
Prologue
PART I U.S. LABOR’S COLD WAR IN LATIN AMERICA
1. The Birth of AIFLD and the Coup in British Guiana
2. Labor’s Foreign Policy Contested and the Military Takeover in Brazil
3. AIFLD and the Battle of Chile
4. El Salvador, Nicaragua, and AIFLD’s Agenda for Central America
PART II EL GOLPE
5. Mexico in the 1980s
6. U.S. Auto Companies Move South
7. The Coup
8. The Strike
PART III TRACKING THE ASSASSINS
9. Detroit
10. St. Paul
11. Washington, DC
Conclusion: Putting Together the Pieces of the Puzzle
Appendix: On the Home “Front”
Photographs
Notes
Index
Giới thiệu về tác giả
Patrick Dunne is a graduate in History from the University of Cambridge, with a dissertation on ‘The AFL-CIO and the Coup against Allende’.