Workers Uniting is the name of the new international
union created by Unite - the biggest union in the UK and Republic
of Ireland and the United Steelworkers (USW), North America’s
largest private sector union, click here to
download a leaflet with further information
Workers Uniting will draw on the energies of the two unions more
than three million active and retired workers from the United
States, Canada, Great Britain and the Republic of Ireland who work
in virtually every sector of the global economy, including
manufacturing, service, mining and transportation.
“This union is crucial for challenging the growing power of
global capital,” said USW President Leo W. Gerard.
“Globalization has given financiers license to exploit workers in
developing countries at the expense of our members in the developed
world. Only global solidarity among workers can overcome this
sort of global exploitation wherever it occurs.”
"In addition to empowering the interests of our unions’ members,
said Derek Simpson, General Secretary of Unite’s Amicus section,
“our mission is to advance the interests of millions of workers
throughout the world who are being shamefully exploited.”
In a video broadcast at the USW’s convention, Tony Woodley,
General Secretary of Unite’s T&GU section said, “The creation
of our new union is only the beginning. We’re laying the
foundations of an even larger and stronger global union yet to
come.”
The new global union’s founding Constitution calls on its
combined membership to “build global union activism, recognizing
that uniting as workers across international boundaries is the only
way to challenge the injustices of globalization.”
Consistent with this calling, Workers Uniting will “match our
words with action and resources, utilizing our collective expertise
and knowledge through collective bargaining, organizing, global
political action and international solidarity.”
During the past year while discussions about the creation of a
new global union have been ongoing, the two unions have been
actively engaged in joint efforts to advance global union activism,
including:
- Extensive discussions about strategies that each of the unions
has adopted for saving manufacturing capacity in their respective
countries.
- Joint collective bargaining efforts with common employers in
the paper, chemical and titanium industries.
- International solidarity projects, such as efforts to protect
the rights and safety of trade unionists in Colombia and
Mexico.
- Participation by rank and file delegations of activists in each
other’s education, rapid response, health and safety, civil rights
and women’s conferences.
- Exposure to the political processes in each other’s countries,
including Democratic Party primaries and Labour Party
conference
Workers Uniting will be a fully functional and registered labor
organization in the UK, U.S., Ireland and Canada, with the ability
to fully represent all of the members of its founding unions. It
will be governed by a Steering Committee with equal membership from
each participating union.
The new union’s staff will be headed by an Executive Director
who will oversee an initial budget of several million dollars, and
a staff that includes Research, International Affairs, and
Communications specialists.
Both participating unions have pledged to have Workers Uniting
“challenge exploitation anywhere in the global economy, since it is
fundamentally unjust and is destructive of decent living standards
everywhere.” Toward this end, the new union, in conjunction with
the National Labor Committee, is creating a Global Labor Rights
Network that will have allied staff on the ground in Central
America, the Middle East, Asia, Eastern Europe, Africa and other
regions.
Signing of the merger document took place on July 2 in Las
Vegas, Nev. at the USW’s Constitutional Convention.