Boeing Production Crisis Deepens as Workers Begin Strike



Skift Take

What a difference a few days makes. After delight on Sunday that a tentative deal was reached with union officials, Thursday’s overwhelming rejection by members sees Boeing flying into yet another storm.

Boeing’s already fragile airliner production chain is facing renewed jeopardy. Late on Thursday, workers overwhelmingly rejected a tentative deal agreed between union representatives and company management. More than 30,000 unionized staff in Washington and Oregon are now on strike.

Members of the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers (IAM) turned down a package that included a 25% pay rise.

The affected sites produce some of Boeing’s most important planes including the 737 Max and the larger 777 widebody jet. Employees downed tools at midnight Pacific Time on Friday in the first strike of its kind in 16 years.

Pressure on Ortberg

The strike is a huge blow to Boeing and comes just weeks after Kelly Ortberg was appointed its new CEO. In the days leading to the vote, Ortberg toured local production facilities and met with workers on the factory floor. 

As part of a last-minute rallying call to staff, the CEO said: “I ask you not to sacrifice the opportunity to secure our future together, because of the frustrations of the past.”

In a statement, the IAM described the “unwavering solidarity of our membership.” The union said it will “regroup and begin planning the next steps on securing an agreement that our membership can approve.”

The IAM said 94% of its members voted to reject the contract, with 96% voting for strike action. 

Another Headache for Boeing

The high-stakes labor dispute is the latest headache for the U.S. planemaker.

Boeing’s reputation was seriously damaged by two deadly crashes involving the 737 Max in 2018 and 2019. A further serious accident in January 2024 saw a door plug on an Alaska Airlines 737 Max 9 plane blow-out in midair. While there were no casualties, it led to the temporary grounding of the type and renewed scrutiny of Boeing’s production oversight. 

In June, the National Transportation Safety Board sanctioned Boeing after the company shared “non-public investigative information” with the media. The planemaker later acknowledged that some of its comments had “overstepped the NTSB’s role.”

Ortberg and his team will likely have 2008 in their minds. This was the last time Boeing faced a major labor negotiation with the IAM.

Drawn out negotiations resulted in a 57-day strike that crippled output and cost Boeing around $100 million a day. In 2014, the two sides agreed to extend the deal, which has now expired.

Skift has contacted Boeing for comment. 

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