General Council of the Trades Union Congress
The General Council of the Trades Union Congress is an elected body which is responsible for carrying out the policies agreed at the annual British Trade Union Congresses (TUC).
Organisation
editThe council has 56 members, all of whom must be proposed by one of the unions affiliated to the TUC. Unions with more members receive an automatic allocation of seats, in proportion to their membership. Smaller unions propose candidates for eleven elected seats. In addition, there are separately elected seats: four for women, three for black workers, at least one of whom must be a woman, and one each for young workers, workers with disabilities, and LGBT workers. The General Secretary also has a seat on the council.[1]
Some members of the council are further elected to serve on the smaller Executive Committee of the TUC. The President of the Trades Union Congress is also chosen by the General Council.[1]
Although the TUC has long had links with the Labour Party, members of the General Council are not permitted to sit on Labour's National Executive Committee.[2]
History
edit1921 to 1983
editUntil 1921, the leading body of the TUC was the Parliamentary Committee. This had seventeen members, but by the collapse of the Triple Alliance, it was considered ineffective and to have insufficient powers in industrial matters.
The new General Council had 32 members, elected from industrial groups, each consisting of one or more unions operating in a particular industry. Two of the places were reserved for women. It received additional powers to intervene in the case of major industrial disputes, and to resolve inter-union conflicts. In 1924, the Joint Consultative Committee was set up, which brought trades councils ultimately under the control of the General Council.[3] However, these powers were not always exercised; many members of the council in the early years were elected on grounds of seniority, rather than recent accomplishments. Some were associated with left- and right-wing factions, although most were not strongly identified with a particular wing of the movement.[4]
Changes to the groups and numbers of seats were made over time, as the number of workers represented in different industries fluctuated,[5] but the system survived intact until the early 1980s.
Group 1: Mining and Quarrying
editMost of the members elected from Group 1 represented the large Miners' Federation of Great Britain, or its successor, the National Union of Mineworkers, but there were several smaller unions which often managed to win one seat.[6]
Year | Representative | Union | Representative | Union | Representative | Union |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1921 | Robert Thomas Jones | NWQU | Robert Smillie | MFGB | Hugh Murnin | MFGB |
1922 | Herbert Smith | MFGB | ||||
1925 | Thomas Richards | MFGB | ||||
1927 | A. J. Cook | MFGB | ||||
1931 | Herbert Smith | MFGB | Ebby Edwards | MFGB | ||
1932 | John McGurk | MFGB | ||||
1933 | Peter Lee | MFGB | William Forshaw | LCNWCEBBF | ||
1934 | Joseph Jones | MFGB | ||||
1935 | Will Lawther | MFGB | ||||
1938 | R. W. Williams | NWQU | ||||
1946 | Jim Bowman | NUM | Robert J. Jones | NWQU | ||
1950 | Bartholomew Walsh | NACODS | ||||
1950 | Ernest Jones | NUM | ||||
1954 | Edwin Hall | NUM | ||||
1957 | Bartholomew Walsh | NACODS | ||||
1960 | Joseph Crawford | NACODS | Will Paynter | NUM | Len Martin | NUM |
1961 | Fred Collindridge | NUM | ||||
1963 | Sidney Ford | NUM | ||||
1971 | Lawrence Daly | NUM | Representation reduced to two seats[7] | |||
1973 | Joe Gormley | NUM | ||||
1980 | Arthur Scargill | NUM | ||||
1981 | Ray Chadburn | NUM | ||||
1982 | Mick McGahey | NUM |
Group 2: Railways
editThroughout this period, Group 2 comprised three railway unions: the Associated Society of Locomotive Engineers and Firemen (ASLEF), National Union of Railwaymen (NUR) and Transport Salaried Staffs' Association (TSSA). Each usually saw its general secretary elected to one of the three seats, although the abolition of one seat in 1969 left a battle between ASLEF and the TSSA for the second seat.[6]
Year | Representative | Union | Representative | Union | Representative | Union |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1921 | Alexander Walkden | TSSA | J. H. Thomas | NUR | John Bromley | ASLEF |
1924 | John Marchbank | NUR | ||||
1925 | J. H. Thomas | NUR | ||||
1929 | Charlie Cramp | NUR | ||||
1933 | John Marchbank | NUR | ||||
1936 | William Stott | TSSA | Richard Squance | ASLEF | ||
1940 | Charles Gallie | TSSA | William P. Allen | ASLEF | ||
1944 | John Benstead | NUR | ||||
1947 | Fred Bostock | TSSA | Jim Figgins | NUR | Jim Baty | ASLEF |
1948 | George Thorneycroft | TSSA | ||||
1953 | Bill Webber | TSSA | Jim Campbell | NUR | ||
1955 | Albert Hallworth | ASLEF | ||||
1957 | Sidney Greene | NUR | ||||
1960 | William Evans | ASLEF | ||||
1963 | John Bothwell | TSSA | Albert Griffiths | ASLEF | ||
1968 | Percy Coldrick | TSSA | ||||
1969 | Seat abolished[8] | |||||
1972 | Ray Buckton | ASLEF | ||||
1975 | Sidney Weighell | NUR |
Group 3: Transport (other than railways)
editBy far the largest union in Group 3 was the Transport and General Workers' Union (TGWU), although representatives of the National Union of Seamen and a couple of minor unions often secured one seat.[6]
Year | Representative | Union | Representative | Union | Representative | Union | Representative | Union | Representative | Union |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1921 | Harry Gosling | ASWLB | Ben Tillett | TGWU | Created 1930 | Created 1968[9] | Created 1977[10] | |||
1924 | Joe Cotter | AMWU | ||||||||
1925 | Ernest Bevin | TGWU | ||||||||
1930 | John Beard | TGWU | ||||||||
1931 | William Robert Spence | NUS | ||||||||
1935 | Walter Farthing | TGWU | ||||||||
1940 | Arthur Deakin | TGWU | ||||||||
1942 | Charles Jarman | NUS | ||||||||
1944 | Bert Papworth | TGWU | ||||||||
1947 | Tom Yates | NUS | ||||||||
1949 | Albert McAndrews | TGWU | ||||||||
1955 | Jock Tiffin | TGWU | A. L. Hill | TGWU | ||||||
1956 | Frank Cousins | TGWU | ||||||||
1958 | Len Forden | TGWU | ||||||||
1961 | Jim Scott | NUS | ||||||||
1962 | Bill Hogarth | NUS | ||||||||
1965 | Harry Nicholas | TGWU | ||||||||
1966 | Frank Cousins | TGWU | ||||||||
1967 | Bill Jones | TGWU | ||||||||
1968 | Jack Jones | TGWU | ||||||||
1969 | Harry Urwin | TGWU | ||||||||
1970 | Fred Howell | TGWU | ||||||||
1972 | John Slater | MNAOA | ||||||||
1974 | Jim Slater | NUS | Stan Pemberton | TGWU | ||||||
1977 | Moss Evans | TGWU | ||||||||
1978 | Walter Greendale | TGWU | ||||||||
1980 | Larry Smith | TGWU | ||||||||
1982 | Derek Gray | TGWU |
Group 4: Shipbuilding
editThe Amalgamated Society of Boilermakers dominated Group 4, with various smaller unions gradually merging into it or the general unions.[6]
Year | Representative | Union |
---|---|---|
1921 | John Hill | ASB |
1936 | Mark Hodgson | ASB |
1948 | Ted Hill | ASB |
1965 | Danny McGarvey | ASB |
1977 | John Chalmers | ASB |
1980 | Jim Murray | ASB |
Group 5: Engineering, Founding and Vehicle Building
editGroup 5 contained a large number of unions - 26 in 1934 - and while the Amalgamated Engineering Union (AEU) reliably won at least one seat, unions like the Electrical Trades Union (ETU) and United Patternmakers' Association (UPA) often won seats.[6]
Year | Representative | Union | Representative | Union | Representative | Union | Representative | Union |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1921 | Alonzo Swales | AEU | Jimmy Rowan | ETU | Allan Findlay | UPA | Created 1968[9] | |
1935 | Harry Berry | AEU | George Walker Thomson | AESD | ||||
1938 | James Kaylor | AEU | ||||||
1941 | Ernest Bussey | ETU | ||||||
1943 | Jack Tanner | AEU | ||||||
1947 | Wilfred Blackwell Beard | UPA | ||||||
1948 | Robert Openshaw | AEU | ||||||
1954 | William Carron | AEU | ||||||
1957 | William Tallon | AEU | ||||||
1967 | John McFarlane Boyd | AEU | Alf Roberts | NUVB | ||||
1968 | Percy Hanley | AEF | Hugh Scanlon | AEF | ||||
1970 | Len Edmondson | AUEW | ||||||
1972 | Les Buck | NUSMWCH&D | ||||||
1975 | Reg Birch | AUEW | ||||||
1977 | George Guy | NUSMWCH&D | ||||||
1978 | John McFarlane Boyd | AUEW | Terence Duffy | AUEW | ||||
1979 | Gavin Laird | AUEW | ||||||
1982 | Ed Scrivens | AUEW | Gerry Russell | AUEW |
Group 6: Technical, Engineering and Scientific
editYear | Representative | Union | Representative | Union |
---|---|---|---|---|
1968 | Created 1968[9] | Created 1974[11] | ||
1968 | George Doughty | TASS | ||
1974 | Ken Gill | TASS | Clive Jenkins | ASTMS |
Group 7: Electrical
editYear | Representative | Union |
---|---|---|
1965 | Created[12] | |
1965 | Les Cannon | EETPU |
1971 | Frank Chapple | EETPU |
Group 8: Iron and Steel and Minor Metal Trades
editThe Iron and Steel and Minor Metal Trades Group was originally Group 6, but was renumbered in 1968. The Iron and Steel Trades Confederation (ISTC) was the largest union in the group, and consistently held one of its seats. Until 1966, there was a second seat, held by the tiny National Union of Gold, Silver and Allied Trades (NUGSAT), and later by the National Union of Blastfurnacemen (NUB). There were many other small unions in the group - in 1934, it had 23 members.[6]
Year | Representative | Union | Representative | Union |
---|---|---|---|---|
1921 | Arthur Pugh | ISTC | William Kean | NUGSAT |
1935 | John Brown | ISTC | ||
1945 | Lincoln Evans | ISTC | Ambrose Callighan | NUB |
1947 | Jack Owen | NUB | ||
1953 | Harry Douglass | ISTC | Joseph O'Hagan | NUB |
1966 | Reduced to 1 seat | |||
1967 | Dai Davies | ISTC | ||
1975 | Bill Sirs | ISTC |
Group 9: Building, Woodworking and Furnishing
editThe Building, Woodworking and Furnishing Group was originally Group 7, but was renumbered in 1965. While there were initially a large number of unions in the group, the Amalgamated Union of Building Trade Workers (AUBTW) and Amalgamated Society of Woodworkers (ASW) generally won the seats, and later became part of the Union of Construction, Allied Trades and Technicians (UCATT), which dominated the group from the 1970s. The National Amalgamated Furnishing Trades Association (NAFTA) won a seat in the early years, and pursued an independent course throughout this period.[6]
Year | Representative | Union | Representative | Union |
---|---|---|---|---|
1921 | George Hicks | AUBTW | A. A. Purcell | NAFTA |
1928 | Frank Wolstencroft | ASW | ||
1940 | Luke Fawcett | AUBTW | ||
1949 | Jack McDermott | ASW | ||
1952 | George Lowthian | AUBTW | ||
1958 | John C. Hill | ASW | ||
1959 | George Smith | ASW | ||
1973 | Glynn Lloyd | UCATT | ||
1979 | Les Wood | UCATT |
Group 9: Cotton
editThe Cotton Group was the original Group 9; in 1968, it was merged into the Textiles Group. The cotton industry had a large number of small trade unions, and in 1934, the group had 46 members. Unusually, the majority of individual members of the unions were women, but the seats were always won by men, representing one of the three amalgamations to which most of the unions belonged: the Amalgamated Weavers' Association (AWA), the Amalgamated Association of Operative Cotton Spinners (AAOCS), and the Cardroom Amalgamation (CWA).[6]
Year | Representative | Union | Representative | Union |
---|---|---|---|---|
1921 | John William Ogden | AWA | Henry Boothman | AAOCS |
1930 | James Hindle | AWA | ||
1936 | William Wood | AAOCS | ||
1937 | James Bell | AWA | ||
1938 | Robert C. Handley | AAOCS | ||
1940 | Alfred Roberts | CWA | ||
1945 | Andrew Naesmith | AWA | ||
1953 | Lewis Wright | AWA | ||
1963 | Reduced to 1 seat[13] | |||
1968 | Merged into Textiles Group |
Group 10: Printing and Paper
editThe Printing and Paper Group was originally Group 8, but was renumbered in 1968. Almost all of its members were involved with printing, and in the early years, the seat was contested by four larger unions: the London Society of Compositors (LSC), National Society of Operative Printers and Assistants (NATSOPA), National Union of Printing, Bookbinding and Paper Workers (NUPBPW), and Typographical Association (TA).[6] Over the years, these undertook a series of mergers, forming new unions, including the Society of Graphical and Allied Trades (SOGAT).
Year | Representative | Union |
---|---|---|
1921 | Herbert Skinner | TA |
1932 | George Isaacs | NATSOPA |
1945 | E. W. Spackman | NUPBPW |
1947 | Robert Willis | LSC |
1965 | Richard Briginshaw | NATSOPA |
1975 | Bill Keys | SOGAT |
Group 11: Textiles
editThe Textiles Group was originally Group 10: Textiles (other than cotton). Although there were a wide variety of unions - 18 in 1934 - the National Union of Textile Workers (NUTW), and then its successor, the National Union of Dyers, Bleachers and Textile Workers (NUDBTW), almost always won the seat.[6] In 1968, the cotton group was merged in, forming Group 11: Textiles, and while the dyers generally won the seat (latterly as a section of the Transport and General Workers' Union (TGWU), the main cotton workers' union, the National Union of Textile and Allied Workers (NUTAW), held it for a few years.
Year | Representative | Union |
---|---|---|
1921 | Ben Turner | NUTW |
1929 | Arthur Shaw | NUDBTW |
1939 | George Bagnall | NUDBTW |
1948 | Wilfred Heywood | NUDBTW |
1957 | Leonard Sharp | NUDBTW |
1966 | Jack Peel | NUDBTW |
1972 | Joe King | NUTAW |
1975 | Fred Dyson | NUDBTW |
1979 | Bill Maddocks | NUDBTW |
1982 | Eddie Haigh | TGWU |
Group 12: Clothing
editThe Clothing Group was dominated by the National Union of Tailors and Garment Workers (NUTGW), which gradually absorbed the smaller unions of tailors. It also included unions for hosiery workers which eventually merged as the National Union of Hosiery and Knitwear Workers, and the two Felt Hatters' and Trimmers' Unions of Great Britain.[14] Originally Group 11, in 1968 it absorbed the Boot, Shoe and Leather Group, and was renumbered as Group 12.
Year | Representative | Union |
---|---|---|
1921 | Andrew Conley | NUTGW |
1949 | Anne Loughlin | NUTGW |
1953 | John E. Newton | NUTGW |
1970 | Jack Macgougan | NUTGW |
1979 | Alec Smith | NUTGW |
Group 12: Boot, Shoe and Leather
editThe Boot, Shoe and Leather Group was dominated by the National Union of Boot and Shoe Operatives (NUBSO). It also included smaller rivals, notably the Rossendale Union of Boot, Shoe and Slipper Operatives, unions of leather workers, and the National Union of Glovers.[14] The Boot, Shoe and Leather Group was the original Group 12, but in 1968 it was merged into the Clothing Group.
Year | Representative | Union |
---|---|---|
1921 | Edward L. Poulton | NUBSO |
1930 | William R. Townley | NUBSO |
1937 | George Chester | NUBSO |
1949 | James Crawford | NUBSO |
1957 | Lionel Poole | NUBSO |
1959 | Sydney Robinson | NUBSO |
Group 13: Glass, Pottery, Chemicals, Food, Drink, Tobacco, Brushmaking and Distribution
editGroup 13 was highly diverse. The most important unions were those involved in distribution, the National Amalgamated Union of Shop Assistants, Warehousemen and Clerks (NAUSAWC) and the National Union of Distributive and Allied Workers (NUDAW), which later merged to form the Union of Shop, Distributive and Allied Workers.[14] In 1952, a second seat was added, and this was invariably filled by representatives of smaller unions, the largest of which were the Bakers', Food and Allied Workers' Union (BFAWU) and the National Society of Pottery Workers (NSPW). There were many smaller unions, and the Tobacco Workers' Union (TWU) secured representation for a few years.
Year | Representative | Union | Representative | Union | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1921 | John Turner | NAUSAWC | Created 1952[5] | ||
1925 | John Leslie | NAUSAWC | |||
1926 | Joseph Hallsworth | NUDAW | |||
1947 | A. W. Burrows | USDAW | |||
1949 | Alan Birch | USDAW | |||
1952 | Harold Hewitt | NSPW | |||
1962 | Alf Allen | USDAW | |||
1964 | Ernest Haynes | BFAWU | |||
1969 | Stan Gretton | BFAWU | |||
1973 | Doug Grieve | TWU | |||
1979 | Bill Whatley | USDAW |
Group 14: Agriculture
editFor most of the period, the National Union of Agricultural and Allied Workers (NUAAW) was the only union in Group 14. The Scottish Farm Servants' Union, initially also in this group, merged into the Transport and General Workers' Union early on.[14]
Year | Representative | Union |
---|---|---|
1921 | Robert Barrie Walker | NUAAW |
1928 | Bill Holmes | NUAAW |
1945 | Alf Dann | NUAAW |
1953 | Harold Collison | NUAAW |
1970 | Reg Bottini | NUAAW |
1978 | Jack Boddy | NUAAW |
Group 15: Public Employees
editGroup 15 brought together unions of state and local authority workers. However, the Trade Union Act 1927 banned state employees from joining the TUC, leaving the group dominated by the National Union of Public Employees (NUPE), Mental Hospital and Institutional Workers' Union (MHIWU), National Union of County Officers and Fire Brigades Union (FBU).[14] The ban was lifted after World War II, but a new group was added for civil servants. Despite this, the public employees group steadily grew in size, the affiliation of the National and Local Government Officers' Association and the National Union of Teachers being particularly important, while the Confederation of Health Service Employees (COHSE) absorbed the MHIWU.
Year | Representative | Union | Representative | Union | Representative | Union | Representative | Union | Representative | Union |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1921 | John William Bowen | UPW | Created 1965[12] | Created 1968[9] | Created 1970 | Created 1977[10] | ||||
1928 | George Gibson | MHIWU | ||||||||
1948 | Claude Bartlett | COHSE | ||||||||
1963 | Sydney Hill | NUPE | ||||||||
1965 | Walter Anderson | NALGO | ||||||||
1968 | Alan Fisher | NUPE | Terry Parry | FBU | ||||||
1970 | Edward Britton | NUT | ||||||||
1973 | Geoffrey Drain | NALGO | ||||||||
1974 | Fred Jarvis | NUT | ||||||||
1977 | Albert Spanswick | COHSE | ||||||||
1981 | Ken Cameron | FBU | ||||||||
1982 | Rodney Bickerstaffe | NUPE |
Group 16: Civil Servants
editThe Civil Servants Group was added in 1946, when unions of civil servants were first permitted to affiliate to the TUC.
Year | Representative | Union | Representative | Union | Representative | Union |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1946 | Created 1946[15] | |||||
1946 | Charles Geddes | UCW | Seat added 1952[5] | Seat added 1977 | ||
1952 | Douglas Houghton | IRSF | ||||
1957 | Ron Smith | UCW | ||||
1960 | George Green | CSCA | ||||
1963 | Cyril Plant | IRSF | ||||
1967 | Thomas Jackson | UCW | ||||
1977 | Tony Christopher | IRSF | Ken Thomas | CPSA | ||
1982 | Alan Tuffin | UCW | Alistair Graham | CPSA |
Group 17: Non-Manual Workers
editThe Non-Manual Workers Group consisted of clerks, insurance staff, workers in entertainment, and doctors. Many of its unions grew rapidly during this period, with the Association of Professional, Executive, Clerical and Computer Staff (APEX), National Association of Theatrical and Kine Employees (NATKE) and Association of Cinematograph, Television and Allied Technicians (ACTT) becoming important.[14] The National Federation of Insurance Workers - later part of the National Union of Insurance Workers - was also sizable,[6] but never gained a seat on the council, unlike the smaller Musicians' Union.
The Non-Manual Workers Group was originally Group 16 and was renumbered on the creation of the Civil Servants Group, in 1946.
Year | Representative | Union | Representative | Union |
---|---|---|---|---|
1921 | Joe Williams | MU | Created 1968[9] | |
1925 | Herbert Henry Elvin | NUCAW | ||
1940 | Tom O'Brien | NATKE | ||
1968 | Leslie Littlewood | ABS | ||
1970 | Alan Sapper | ACTT | ||
1971 | Roy Grantham | APEX | ||
1975 | John Morton | MU |
Group 18: General Workers
editThere were initially a large number of unions of general workers, but within a couple of decades, they had all been absorbed into two large general unions - the National Union of General and Municipal Workers (NUGMW), which became the sole union in this group, and the Transport and General Workers' Union, which was instead placed in Group 3.[14] The General Workers Group was originally Group 17 and was renumbered on the creation of the Civil Servants Group, in 1948.
Year | Representative | Union | Representative | Union | Representative | Union | Representative | Union |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1921 | John Beard | WU | Joseph Nicholas Bell | NAUL | John Davenport | UOGL | Will Thorne | NUGW |
1922 | Arthur Hayday | NUGMW | ||||||
1923 | J. H. Moore | NLWU | ||||||
1924 | John Davenport | TGWU | ||||||
1930 | Reduced to 3 seats in 1930 | |||||||
1934 | Charles Dukes | NUGMW | Will Sherwood | NUGMW | ||||
1937 | Herbert Bullock | NUGMW | Harry N. Harrison | NUGMW | ||||
1947 | Tom Williamson | NUGMW | ||||||
1948 | Herbert Eastwood | URWGB | ||||||
1949 | Tom Eccles | NUGMW | ||||||
1950 | Frederick Hayday | NUGMW | ||||||
1959 | Jack Cooper | NUGMW | ||||||
1962 | Bernard Swindell | NUGMW | ||||||
1966 | David Basnett | NUGMW | ||||||
1973 | Alex M. Donnet | NUGMW | Jack Eccles | NUGMW | ||||
1976 | Ken Baker | NUGMW |
Group 19: Women Workers
editIn 1921, the Women's Trade Union League became the Women's Section of the TUC, and most women's trade unions merged into their counterparts. In exchange, the TUC agreed to create a two-member group, to ensure that women workers had representation on the council.[16] The group was originally numbered 18, and was renumbered on the creation of the Civil Servants Group.
Year | Representative | Union | Representative | Union |
---|---|---|---|---|
1921 | Julia Varley | TGWU | Margaret Bondfield | NUGW |
1923 | Mary Quaile | TGWU | ||
1925 | Margaret Bondfield | GMWU | ||
1926 | Julia Varley | TGWU | ||
1929 | Anne Loughlin | NUTGW | ||
1935 | Florence Hancock | TGWU | ||
1949 | Anne Godwin | NUCAW | ||
1958 | Ellen McCullough | TGWU | ||
1963 | Marie Patterson | TGWU | Winifred Baddeley | AEU |
1968 | Audrey Prime | NALGO | ||
1977 | Ada Maddocks | NALGO |
The group was expanded to five seats in 1981.
Year | Representative | Union | Representative | Union | Representative | Union | Representative | Union | Representative | Union |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1981 | Ada Maddocks | NALGO | Gina Morgan | AUEW | Marie Patterson | TGWU | Muriel Turner | ASTMS | Pat Turner | GMB |
1983 to present
editAfter many years of discussion, a comprehensive restructure of the council was agreed in 1982, and took place following the annual TUC meeting in September 1983. Initially, the new council had 53 members, with those unions with more than 100,000 members gaining automatic seats and therefore becoming eligible to nominate members without them being subject to a vote of other unions. Six seats were initially reserved for women.[17][18]
Section A: Larger unions
editCurrent members
editGMB | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Year | Representative | Representative | Representative | Representative |
1983 | David Basnett | Jack Eccles | Ken Baker | 3 seats until 1989 |
1985 | Dick Pickering | |||
1986 | John Edmonds | Derek Oliver Gladwin | ||
1989 | Donna Covey | Roy Grantham | ||
1992 | Alec Smith | |||
1993 | Frank Wilkinson | |||
1997 | Sheila Bearcroft | Eddie Warrillow | ||
1999 | Jean Foster | |||
2000 | Paul Kenny | |||
2003 | Kevin Curran | |||
2004 | 3 seats 2004-2009 | |||
2005 | Allan Garley | |||
2009 | Malcolm Sage | |||
2011 | Paul McCarthy | |||
2014 | Neil Derrick | Tim Roache | ||
2020 | 3 seats from 2020 | |||
2021 | Farzana Jumma | Barbara Plant | Gary Smith |
National Association of Schoolmasters Union of Women Teachers (NASUWT) | ||
---|---|---|
Year | Representative | Representative |
2002 | In Section B until 2002 | |
2002 | Nigel de Gruchy | Sue Rogers |
2003 | Eamonn O'Kane | |
2004 | Chris Keates | |
2009 | Jerry Bartlett | |
2010 | Brian Cookson | |
2017 | Patrick Roach | |
2020 | Michelle Codrington-Rogers |
National Education Union (NEU) | |||
---|---|---|---|
Year | Representative | Representative | Representative |
2017 | Formed by merger of ATL and NUT | ||
2017 | Mary Bousted | Kevin Courtney | Philipa Harvey |
2020 | Louise Atkinson | ||
2021 | 2 seats from 2021 to 2023 | ||
2023 | Daniel Kebede | Louise Regan | Niamh Sweeney |
UNISON | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Year | Representative | Representative | Representative | Representative | Representative | Representative | Representative | |
1993 | Formed by merger of COHSE, NALGO and NUPE | |||||||
1993 | Rodney Bickerstaffe | Rita Donaghy | Jean Geldart | Ina Love | Alan Jinkinson | Hector Mackenzie | Six seats until 2005 | |
1995 | Alison Shepherd | Chris Connolly | ||||||
1996 | Dave Prentis | Wendy Evans | ||||||
2000 | David Anderson | |||||||
2001 | Liz Snape | Veronica Dunn | Keith Sonnet | |||||
2003 | Sofi Taylor | |||||||
2005 | Bob Abberley | Jane Carolan | ||||||
2006 | Six seats in 2006 | |||||||
2007 | Gerry Gallagher | Eleanor Smith | ||||||
2010 | Angela Lynes | Six seats 2010-2015 | ||||||
2012 | Chris Tansley | |||||||
2013 | Karen Jennings | |||||||
2015 | Roger McKenzie | |||||||
2018 | Josie Bird | Davena Rankin | Six seats from 2018 | |||||
2021 | Andrea Egan | Paul Holmes | Christina McAnea | Kath Owen | Tony Wright | |||
2023 | Julia Mwaluke | Libby Nolan | Steve North |
Unite | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Year | Representative | Representative | Representative | Representative | Representative | Representative | Representative | Representative | Representative | Representative | |
2007 | Formed by merger of Amicus and TGWU | ||||||||||
2007 | Gail Cartmail | Tony Dubbins | Len McCluskey | Brenda Sanders | Derek Simpson | Tony Woodley | Pat Stuart | Dougie Rooney | Martin Mayer | Paul Talbot | |
2008 | Tony Burke | Tony Woodhouse | |||||||||
2009 | Reduced to 8 seats | ||||||||||
2011 | Jane Stewart | Steve Turner | Andrew Murray | ||||||||
2012 | Reduced to 7 seats | ||||||||||
2014 | Maggie Ryan | ||||||||||
2021 | Sharon Graham | Reduced to 6 seats | |||||||||
2023 | Sarah Carpenter | Angela Duerden | Andy Green |
Union of Shop, Distributive and Allied Workers (USDAW) | |||
---|---|---|---|
Year | Representative | Representative | Representative |
1983 | Bill Whatley | One seat until 1989 | |
1986 | Garfield Davies | ||
1989 | Bernadette Hillon | Two seats until 2012 | |
1997 | Bill Connor | ||
1998 | Marge Carey | ||
2004 | John Hannett | ||
2006 | Pauline Foulkes | ||
2007 | Fiona Wilson | ||
2012 | Tony Dale | ||
2018 | Ruth Cross | Paddy Lillis | |
2021 | Joanne Cairns | ||
2023 | Two seats from 2023 |
Former members
editAEU/AEEU | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Year | Representative | Representative | Representative | Representative | ||||
1983 | Terence Duffy | Edward Scrivens | Gerry Russell | Jack Whyman | ||||
1984 | 3 seats in 1984 | |||||||
1985 | Jack Whyman | |||||||
1986 | Bill Jordan | 3 seats 1986-1988 | ||||||
1987 | John Weakley | |||||||
1989 | Gina Morgan | |||||||
1990 | Jimmy Airlie | Maureen Rooney | ||||||
1992 | 3 seats in 1992 | |||||||
1993 | Jimmy Airlie | |||||||
1994 | Ken Jackson | |||||||
1995 | John Allen | Bill Morgan | ||||||
1996 | Robert Elsom | Davey Hall | ||||||
1998 | Dougie Rooney | Brendan Fenelon | ||||||
1999 | Mark Tami | |||||||
2001 | Merged with MSF to form Amicus |
Amicus | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Year | Representative | Representative | Representative | Representative | Representative | Representative | Representative |
2001 | Formed by merger of AEEU and MSF | ||||||
2001 | Roger Lyons | Dougie Rooney | Maureen Rooney | Paul Talbot | ? | ||
2002 | Sharon Allen | Danny Carrigan | Ken Jackson | ||||
2003 | Linda McCulloch | Derek Simpson | Five seats in 2003 | ||||
2004 | Lucy Kelly | Ed Sweeney | Six seats from 2004 | ||||
2005 | Gail Cartmail | Tony Dubbins | |||||
2007 | Merged with TGWU to form Unite |
Communication Workers' Union (CWU) | ||
---|---|---|
Year | Representative | Representative |
1995 | Formed by merger of NCU and UCW | |
1995 | Tony Young | Jeannie Drake |
2002 | Billy Hayes | |
2008 | Tony Kearns | |
2015 | Moved to Section B |
Confederation of Health Service Employees (COHSE) | ||
---|---|---|
Year | Representative | Representative |
1983 | David Williams | 1 seat until 1989 |
1987 | Hector Mackenzie | |
1989 | Judith Carter | |
1993 | Merged with NALGO and NUPE to form UNISON |
Graphical, Paper and Media Union (GPMU) | ||
---|---|---|
Year | Representative | Representative |
1992 | Formed by merger of NGA and SOGAT | |
1992 | Dennis Hill | Tony Dubbins |
1993 | Tony Burke | |
2002 | Moved to Section B |
Manufacturing, Science and Finance (MSF) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Year | Representative | Representative | Representative | Representative |
1988 | Formed by merger of ASTMS and TASS | |||
1988 | Anne Gibson | Ken Gill | Two seats until 1989 | |
1989 | Roger Lyons | Jack Carr | ||
1992 | Three seats from 1992 | |||
1993 | Barbara Switzer | |||
1999 | Paul Talbot | |||
2000 | Sharon Allen | |||
2001 | Merged with AEEU to form Amicus |
National and Local Government Officers' Association (NALGO) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Year | Representative | Representative | Representative | Representative |
1983 | Bill Gill | John Daly | Norrie Steele | 3 seats until 1989 |
1987 | Rita Donaghy | |||
1989 | Ada Maddocks | |||
1990 | Alan Jinkinson | |||
1991 | Jean Geldart | Jim White | ||
1993 | Merged with COHSE and NUPE to form UNISON |
National Union of Public Employees (NUPE) | |||
---|---|---|---|
Year | Representative | Representative | Representative |
1983 | Rodney Bickerstaffe | Lily Stevens | 2 seats until 1989 |
1984 | Dilwyn Davies | ||
1985 | B. Ward | ||
1986 | Joyce Winsett | ||
1987 | Ron Baird | ||
1988 | Michael Page | ||
1989 | Ina Love | ||
1990 | Bill Thorburn | ||
1991 | Jean Biggs | ||
1992 | Anna McGonigle | ||
1993 | Merged with COHSE and NALGO to form UNISON |
National Union of Teachers (NUT) | ||
---|---|---|
Year | Representative | Representative |
2001 | In Section B until 2001 | |
2001 | Pat Hawkes | Doug McAvoy |
2004 | Steve Sinnott | |
2005 | Lesley Auger | |
2008 | Christine Blower | Dave Harvey |
2016 | Kevin Courtney | Philipa Harvey |
2017 | Merged with ATL to form NEU |
Public and Commercial Services Union (PCS) | ||
---|---|---|
Year | Representative | Representative |
1998 | Formed by merger of CPSA and PSTCU | |
1998 | Gwenda Binks | Barry Reamsbottom |
2002 | Janice Godrich | Mark Serwotka |
2016 | Moved to Section B |
Transport and General Workers' Union (TGWU) | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Year | Representative | Representative | Representative | Representative | Representative | Representative |
1983 | Douglas Gray | Walter Greendale | Brian Nicholson | Larry Smith | Moss Evans | 5 seats 1983 to 1984 |
1984 | Ron Todd | |||||
1985 | 4 seats 1985 to 1989 | |||||
1986 | Wilf Jowett | |||||
1988 | Peter Hagger | Bill Morris | Daniel Duffy | |||
1989 | Margaret Prosser | Maureen Twomey | ||||
1992 | Jack Adams | 5 seats 1992 to 1995 | ||||
1995 | Peter Landles | |||||
1996 | 4 seats from 1996 | |||||
1997 | Marie Vannet | |||||
2000 | Barry Camfield | |||||
2002 | Jane McKay | |||||
2003 | Tony Woodley | |||||
2004 | Jimmy Kelly | Patricia Stuart | ||||
2005 | Merged with Amicus to form Unite |
Union of Construction, Allied Trades and Technicians (UCATT) | ||
---|---|---|
Year | Representative | Representative |
1983 | Les Wood | 1 seat until 1989 |
1985 | Albert Williams | |
1989 | Jack Henry | |
1991 | Peter Lenahan | |
1992 | George Brumwell | |
1993 | Moved to Section B |
Union of Communication Workers (UCW) | ||
---|---|---|
Year | Representative | Representative |
1983 | Alan Tuffin | 1 seat until 1990 |
1990 | Margaret Morritt | |
1992 | 1 seat from 1992 | |
1993 | Alan Johnson | |
1995 | Merged with NCU to form CWU |
Section B: Unions with 30,000 to 200,000 members
editSection B originated as part of Section A, unions with 100,000 to 200,000 members being automatically entitled to one seat on the council.
Year | APEX | ASTMS | BIFU | CPSA | EETPU | NASUWT | NGA | NUM | NUR | NUT | POEU/ NCU | SOGAT | TASS |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1983 | Roy Grantham | Clive Jenkins | Leif Mills | Alistair Graham | Eric Hammond | Fred Smithies | Joe Wade | Mick McGahey | Jimmy Knapp | Fred Jarvis | Bryan Stanley | Bill Keys | Ken Gill |
1984 | Ray Alderson | Tony Dubbins | |||||||||||
1985 | Alistair Graham | Brenda Dean | |||||||||||
1986 | Kate Losinska | Arthur Scargill | John Golding | ||||||||||
1987 | John Macreadie | Expelled in 1987 | |||||||||||
1988 | Merged into MSF | John Ellis | Moved to Section B in 1988 | E. George | Merged into MSF |
In 1989, these unions were moved to a new Section B, but there were no changes to their entitlement of seats.
Year | ATL | CPSA | GPMU | NASUWT | NCU | NUCPS | NUR | NUT | Prospect | SOGAT | UCATT | UCU | UNIFI |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1989 | Affiliated 1998 | John Ellis | Section A until 2002 | Nigel de Gruchy | Anthony Young | Leslie Christie | Jimmy Knapp | Doug McAvoy | Founded 2001 | Brenda Dean | Section A until 1993 | Founded 2006 | Leif Mills |
1992 | Barry Reamsbottom | John Sheldon | Moved to Section C | Merged into GPMU | |||||||||
1993 | George Brumwell | ||||||||||||
1995 | Merged into CWU | ||||||||||||
1996 | Merged into PSTCU | Ed Sweeney | |||||||||||
1998 | Peter Smith | Merged into PCS | |||||||||||
2000 | |||||||||||||
2001 | Moved to Section A | Paul Noon | |||||||||||
2002 | Tony Dubbins | Moved to Section A | |||||||||||
2003 | Mary Bousted | ||||||||||||
2004 | Merged into Amicus | ||||||||||||
2005 | Merged into Amicus | Alan Ritchie | |||||||||||
2006 | Sally Hunt | ||||||||||||
2011 | George Guy |
Unions with 30,000 to 99,999 members moved to Section B in 2012.
Year | ATL | CSP | Community | CWU | EIS | Equity | FBU | MU | NAHT | NUJ | POA | Prospect | PCS | RCM | RMT | SoR | UCATT | UCU |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2012 | Mary Bousted | Lesley Mercer | Michael J. Leahy | Section A until 2015 | Larry Flanagan | Christine Payne | Matt Wrack | John F. Smith | Section C until 2019 | Michelle Stanistreet | Steve Gillan | Mike Clancy | Section A until 2016 | Affiliated 2015 | Bob Crow | Section C until 2023 | Steve Murphy | Sally Hunt |
2013 | ||||||||||||||||||
2014 | Claire Sullivan | Roy Rickhuss | Peter Pinkney | |||||||||||||||
2015 | Dave Ward | In Section C in 2015 | Jon Skewes | Mick Cash | Brian Rye | |||||||||||||
2016 | Michelle Stanistreet | Mark Serwotka | ||||||||||||||||
2017 | Merged into NEU in 2017 | Horace Trubridge | Merged into Unite in 2017 | |||||||||||||||
2018 | ||||||||||||||||||
2019 | Paul Whiteman | Jo Grady | ||||||||||||||||
2020 | Stephen Spence | |||||||||||||||||
2021 | Paul W. Fleming | Section C from 2021 | Mick Lynch | |||||||||||||||
2022 | Naomi Pohl | Suzanne Tyler | ||||||||||||||||
2023 | Andrea Bradley | Dean Rogers |
Section C: Other unions
editUnions with fewer than 100,000 members were placed in Section B until 1989.
Year | Name | Union | Name | Union | Name | Union | Name | Union | Name | Union | Name | Union | Name | Union | Name | Union | Name | Union | Name | Union | Name | Union |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1983 | Ray Buckton | ASLEF | Ken Cameron | FBU | Tony Christopher | IRSF | Bob Garland | AEU-Foundry | Doug Grieve | TWU | John Lyons | EMA | Charles P. McCarthy | NSMM | John Morton | MU | Laurie Sapper | ACTT | Bill Sirs | ISTC | Alec Smith | NUTGW |
1984 | David Lambert | KFAT | Bill McCall | IPCS | Bob Stevenson | NUFLAT | Bert Lyons | TSSA | ||||||||||||||
1985 | Roy Evans | ISTC | Roy Grantham | APEX | Eric Nevin | MNAOA | ||||||||||||||||
1986 | John Morton | MU | ||||||||||||||||||||
1987 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
1988 |
In 1989, the section for small unions was renamed Section C, and was reduced to eight members.
Year | Name | Union | Name | Union | Name | Union | Name | Union | Name | Union | Name | Union | Name | Union | Name | Union |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1989 | Bill Brett | IPMS | Clive Brooke | IRSF | Roy Evans | ISTC | David Lambert | KFAT | John Lyons | EMA | John Morton | MU | Alec Smith | NUTGW | Bob Stevenson | NUFLAT |
1990 | Dennis Scard | MU | John Newman | NUMAST | ||||||||||||
1991 | Ken Cameron | FBU | David Evans | POA | ||||||||||||
1992 | Keith Brookman | ISTC | Reduced to 7 seats in 1992 | |||||||||||||
1993 | Jimmy Knapp | RMT | ||||||||||||||
1996 | Tony Cooper | EMA | ||||||||||||||
1998 | John Chowcat | NAEIAC | ||||||||||||||
1999 | Michael J. Leahy | Community | Brian Orrell | NUMAST | ||||||||||||
2000 | Andy Gilchrist | FBU | Ged Nichols | Accord | Richard Rosser | TSSA |
Increased to 11 members in 2001.
Year | Name | Union | Name | Union | Name | Union | Name | Union | Name | Union | Name | Union | Name | Union | Name | Union | Name | Union | Name | Union | Name | Union |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2001 | Jonathan Baume | FDA | Brian Caton | POA | Paul Gates | KFAT | Andy Gilchrist | FBU | Michael J. Leahy | Community | Judy McKnight | NAPO | Ged Nichols | Accord | Paul Noon | IMPS | Brian Orrell | NUMAST | Mick Rix | ASLEF | Richard Rosser | TSSA |
2002 | Jeremy Dear | NUJ | Paul Mackney | NATFHE | ||||||||||||||||||
2003 | Bob Crow | RMT | Paul Gates | KFAT | ||||||||||||||||||
2004 | Gerry Doherty | TSSA | Ged Nichols | Accord | ||||||||||||||||||
2005 | Doug Nicholls | CYWU | Tim Poil | NGSU | ||||||||||||||||||
2006 | Matt Wrack | FBU | ||||||||||||||||||||
2007 | John F. Smith | MU | ||||||||||||||||||||
2008 | Christine Payne | Equity | ||||||||||||||||||||
2009 | Mark Dickinson | Nautilus | ||||||||||||||||||||
2010 | Bob Crow | RMT | Steve Gillan | POA | ||||||||||||||||||
2011 | Michelle Stanistreet | NUJ | Simon Weller | ASLEF |
In 2012, unions with 30,000 to 99,999 members were moved to Section B, and Section C was reduced to seven members.
Year | Name | Union | Name | Union | Name | Union | Name | Union | Name | Union | Name | Union | Name | Union |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2012 | Manuel Cortes | TSSA | Mark Dickinson | Nautilus | Ged Nichols | Accord | Dave Penman | FDA | Tim Poil | NGSU | Eddie Saville | HCSA | Simon Weller | ASLEF |
2013 | ||||||||||||||
2014 | ||||||||||||||
2015 | ||||||||||||||
2016 | Nick Cusack | PFA | ||||||||||||
2017 | ||||||||||||||
2018 | Brian Linn | Aegis | ||||||||||||
2019 | Martin Furlong | COP | ||||||||||||
2020 | ||||||||||||||
2021 | ||||||||||||||
2022 | ||||||||||||||
2023 | Sarah Woolley | BFAWU |
Section D: Women
editYear | Representative | Union | Representative | Union | Representative | Union | Representative | Union | Representative | Union | Representative | Union |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1983 | Olwyn Davies | NUPE | Ada Maddocks | NALGO | Gina Morgan | AEU | Marie Patterson | TGWU | Muriel Turner | ASTMS | Pat Turner | GMB |
1985 | Margaret Prosser | TGWU | ||||||||||
1987 | Bernadette Hillon | USDAW | Ina Love | NUPE |
Reduced to four members in 1989.
Year | Representative | Union | Representative | Union | Representative | Union | Representative | Union |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1989 | Liz Symons | FDA | Pam Thomas | SOGAT | Diana Warwick | AUT | Margaret Morritt | UCW |
1990 | Jeannie Drake | NCU | ||||||
1992 | Pat Hawkes | NUT | Pat Dwyer | UCW | ||||
1995 | Helen McGrath | KFAT | Jocelyn Prudence | CSP | ||||
1996 | Anita Halpin | NUJ | ||||||
1997 | Penny Holloway | AUT | ||||||
1999 | Anita Halpin | NUJ | Jenny Thurston | Prospect | ||||
2000 | Lesley Mercer | CSP | ||||||
2001 | Anita Halpin | NUJ | ||||||
2002 | Julie Grant | ATL | ||||||
2003 | Sally Hunt | AUT | ||||||
2005 | Sue Ferns | Prospect | ||||||
2007 | Julia Neal | ATL | ||||||
2009 | Joanna Brown | SCP | ||||||
2011 | Alice Robinson | ATL | ||||||
2012 | Sue Mather | Community | ||||||
2013 | Niamh Sweeney | ATL | ||||||
2014 | Linda Rolph | Accord | ||||||
2016 | Annette Mansell-Green | BDA | ||||||
2017 | Vicky Knight | UCU | ||||||
2018 | Janice Godrich | PCS | ||||||
2019 | Isabelle Gutierrez | MU | Jane Loftus | CWU | ||||
2021 | Heather McKenzie | NEU | ||||||
2023 | Vacant |
Sections E, F and G: Black workers
editYear | Section E | Section F | Section G | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Representative | Union | Representative | Union | Representative | Union | |
1994 | Bob Purkiss | TGWU | Gus Boateng | UCW | Gloria Mills | Unison |
1995 | Mohan Dhamrait | NUT | ||||
2000 | Mohammad Taj | Unite | ||||
2001 | Leslie Mannaseh | Prospect | ||||
2015 | Micky Nicholas | FBU | ||||
2017 | Susan Matthews | Unite | ||||
2018 | Ian Lawrence | Napo |
Section H: Disabled workers
editCreated 2001
Year | Representative | Union |
---|---|---|
2001 | Mark Fysh | Unison |
2011 | Seán McGovern | Unite |
2020 | Dave Allen | Unite |
2023 | Martyn Gwyther | Unite |
Section I: LGBT workers
editCreated 2001
Year | Representative | Union |
---|---|---|
2001 | David Lascelles | GMB |
2006 | Maria Exall | CWU |
Section J: Young workers
editCreated 2001
Year | Representative | Union |
---|---|---|
2001 | Phil Pinder | TGWU |
2004 | Matthew McGregor | TGWU |
2005 | John Walsh | Unite |
2011 | Fern McCaffrey | GMB |
2016 | Craig Dawson | GMB |
2018 | Charlie Gray | GMB |
References
edit- ^ a b Trades Union Congress, "General Council and TUC structure"
- ^ Maor, Moshe (1997). Political Parties and Party Systems. London: Routledge. p. 121. ISBN 0415082846.
- ^ Laybourn, Keith (1999). Modern Britain Since 1906: A Reader. London: I. B. Tauris & Co. p. 141. ISBN 1860642985.
- ^ Calhoun, Daniel Fairchild (1976). The United Front!: The TUC and the Russians, 1923-1928. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 38–40. ISBN 0521210569.
- ^ a b c Trades Union Congress, Report of Proceedings at the 83rd Annual Trades Union Congress, p.299
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Souvenir of the Trades Union Congress. Weymouth: Sherren and Son. 1934. pp. 14–30.
- ^ Trades Union Congress, Report of the 103rd Annual Trades Union Congress, p.42
- ^ Trades Union Congress, Report of the 1968 Annual Trades Union Congress, p.143
- ^ a b c d e Trades Union Congress, Report of the 100th Annual Trades Union Congress, p.144
- ^ a b Trades Union Congress, Report of the 109th Annual Trades Union Congress, p.27
- ^ Labour Research, Vols.62-63, p.235
- ^ a b Labour Research, vols.54-55, p.159
- ^ Report of Proceedings at the 1961 Annual Trades Union Congress, p.509
- ^ a b c d e f g Cole, G. D. H. (1939). British Trade Unionism To-Day.
- ^ Trades Union Congress, Report of the 1948 Annual Trades Union Congress, p.301
- ^ Boone, Gladys (1968). The Women's Trade Union Leagues in Great Britain and the United States of America. New York: AMS Press. pp. 26–42.
- ^ Arthur Marsh, Trade Union Handbook, 3rd Edition (1984), pp.72-74
- ^ Trades Union Congress, "TUC General Council members Archived 2017-06-19 at the Wayback Machine"