DETROIT — The United Auto Workers and General Motors have agreed to a deal that will put an end to collective bargaining talks between the union and Detroit automakers following more than six weeks of targeted U.S. labor strikes, sources told CNBC.
GM is the final Detroit automaker to reach a deal with the union following historically contentious talks.
Tens of thousands of workers across the country went on strikes after the sides failed to reach agreements by a Sept. 14 deadline.
Ford Motor was the first to reach a tentative agreement with the union, on Wednesday, followed by a deal with Chrysler-parent Stellantis on Saturday.
The headline economics of the deals, such as 25% wage increases, were patterned off of Ford's initial deal.
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