Reuther, elected as president of the UAW in 1946, pushed things way beyond just the shop floor.
He negotiated contracts that established national standards, including cost-of-living adjustments, employer health insurance, pensions, and paid vacations.
He then linked the automobile worker gains to broader social progress, supporting the civil rights movement, environmental protection, and full employment policies.
A close ally of Martin Luther King Jr., Reuther marched in Selma and spoke at the March on Washington in 1963.
For him, the struggle for civil rights and labor rights was the same.