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History of trade unions in the United Kingdom

The history of trade unions in the United Kingdom covers British trade union organisation, activity, ideas, politics, and impact, from the early 19th century to the present.

18th–19th centuries edit

 
Meeting of the trade unionists in Copenhagen Fields, 21 April 1834, for the purpose of carrying a petition to the King for a remission of the sentence passed on the Dorchester labourers

Unions in Britain were subject to often severe repression until 1824, but were already widespread in cities such as London. Trade unions were legalised in 1824, when growing numbers of factory workers joined these associations in their efforts to achieve better wages and working conditions. Workplace militancy had also manifested itself as Luddism and had been prominent in struggles such as the 1820 Rising in Scotland, in which 60,000 workers went on a general strike, which was soon crushed. From 1830 on, attempts were made to set up national general unions, most notably Robert Owen's Grand National Consolidated Trades Union in 1834, which attracted a range of socialist from Owenites to revolutionaries. That organisation played a part in the protests after the Tolpuddle Martyrs' case, but soon collapsed.

An important development of the trade union movement in Wales was the Merthyr Rising in May 1831 where coal and steel workers employed by the powerful Crawshay family took to the streets of Merthyr Tydfil, calling for reform, protesting against the lowering of their wages and general unemployment. Gradually the protest spread to nearby industrial towns and villages and by the end of May the whole area was in rebellion, and for the first time in the world the red flag of revolution was flown – which has since been adopted internationally by the trades union movement and socialist groups generally.

Chartism edit

In the later 1830s and 1840s, trade unionism was overshadowed by political activity. Of particular importance was Chartism, the aims of which were supported by most socialists, although none appear to have played leading roles. Chartism was a working-class movement for political reform in Britain which emerged in 1836 and was most active between 1838 and 1848.[1] It took its name from the People's Charter of 1838 and was a national protest movement,[2] with particular strongholds of support in Northern England, the East Midlands, the Staffordshire Potteries, the Black Country, and the South Wales Valleys. Support for the movement was at its highest in 1839, 1842, and 1848, when petitions signed by millions of working people were presented to Parliament.[3] The petitions were rejected each time.[4][5]

The strategy employed was to use the scale of support which these petitions and the accompanying mass meetings demonstrated to put pressure on politicians to concede manhood suffrage. Chartism thus relied on constitutional methods to secure its aims, though there were some who became involved in insurrectionary activities, notably in the Newport Rising in November 1839.[6] The government did not yield to any of the demands, and suffrage had to wait another two decades.[5][7] Chartism was popular among some trade unions, especially London's tailors, shoemakers, carpenters, and masons. One reason was the fear of the influx of unskilled labour, especially in tailoring and shoe making. In Manchester and Glasgow, engineers were deeply involved in Chartist activities. Many trade unions were active in the general strike of 1842, which spread to 15 counties in England and Wales, and eight in Scotland. Chartism taught techniques and political skills that inspired trade union leadership.[8][9]

New establishments edit

Union activity from the 1850s to the 1950s in textiles and engineering was largely in the hands of the skilled workers. They supported differentials in pay and status as opposed to the unskilled. They focused on control over machine production and were aided by competition among firms in the local labour market.[10]

After the Chartist movement of 1848 fragmented, efforts were made to form a labour coalition. The Miners' and Seamen's United Association in the North-East, operated 1851–1854 before it too collapsed because of outside hostility and internal disputes over goals. The leaders sought working-class solidarity as a long-term aim, thus anticipating the affiliative strategies promoted by the Labour Parliament of 1854.[11]

More permanent trade unions were established from the 1850s, better resourced but often less radical. The London Trades Council was founded in 1860, and the Sheffield Outrages spurred the establishment of the Trades Union Congress in 1868. The legal status of trade unions in the United Kingdom was established by a Royal Commission on Trade Unions in 1867, which agreed that the establishment of the organisations was to the advantage of both employers and employees. Unions were legalised in 1871 with the adoption of the Trade Union Act 1871.

New Unionism: 1889–93 edit

The "aristocracy of labour" comprise the skilled workers who were proud and jealous of their monopolies, and set up labour unions to keep out the unskilled and semiskilled. The strongest unions of the mid-Victorian period were unions of skilled workers such as the Amalgamated Society of Engineers. Trade unionism was quite uncommon amongst semi-skilled and unskilled workers.[12] The union officials avoided militancy, fearing that strikes would threaten the finances of unions and thereby their salaries. An unexpected strike wave broke out in 1889–90, largely instigated by the rank and file. Its success can be explained by the dwindling supply of rural labour, which in turn increased the bargaining power of unskilled workers. The New Unionism starting in 1889 was a systematic outreach to bring in as union members the striking unskilled and semiskilled workers. Ben Tillett was a prominent leader of the London Dock strike of 1889. He formed the Dock, Wharf, Riverside and General Labourers' Union in 1889, which had support from skilled workers. Its 30,000 members won an advance in wages and working conditions.[13][14][15]

Unions played a prominent role in the creation of the Labour Representation Committee which effectively formed the basis for today's Labour Party.

Women edit

Women were largely excluded from trade union formation, membership, and hierarchies until the late 20th century. When women did attempt to challenge male hegemony and make inroads into the representation of labour and combination, it was largely due to the tenacity of middle-class reformers such as the Women's Protective and Provident League (WPPL) which sought to amiably discuss conditions with employers in the 1870s. It became the Women's Trade Union League.[16] Militant Socialists broke away from the WPPL and formed the Women's Trade Union Association, but they had little impact.[17] There were a few cases in the 19th century where women trade union members took initiative. In the 1875 West Yorkshire weavers' strike, women did play a central role,[18] and the 1888 London matchgirls strike (and subsequent formation of the Union of Women Matchmakers) was influential for the 1889 London Dock strike and the development of the New Unionism.[19]

Emerging Labour Party edit

The Labour Party's origins lie in the late 19th century, when it became apparent that there was a need for a new political party to represent the interests and needs of the urban proletariat, a demographic which had increased in number and had recently been enfranchised.[20] Some members of the trades union movement became interested in moving into the political field, and after further extensions of the voting franchise in 1867 and 1885, the Liberal Party endorsed some trade-union sponsored candidates. The first Lib–Lab candidate to stand was George Odger in the Southwark by-election of 1870. In addition, several small socialist groups had formed around this time, with the intention of linking the movement to political policies. Among these were the Independent Labour Party, the intellectual and largely middle-class Fabian Society, the Marxist Social Democratic Federation[21] and the Scottish Labour Party.

Since 1900 edit

1900–1945 edit

Politics became a central issue for the coal miners, whose organisation was facilitated by their location in remote one-industry villages. The Miners' Federation of Great Britain formed in 1888, and counted 600,000 members in 1908. Much of the 'old left' of Labour politics can trace its origins to coal-mining areas.[22]

Upheavals: 1910–1914 edit

The years 1910–1914 witnessed serious industrial unrest and an enormous increase in trade union membership, which affected all industries to varying extents.[23] The militants were most active in coal mining, textiles and transportation. Much of the militancy emerged from grassroots protests against falling real wages, with union leadership scrambling to catch up. The new unions of semiskilled workers were the most militant.[24] The National Sailors' and Firemen's Union directed strike activities in many port cities across Britain. The national leadership was strongly supported by local leaders, for example the Glasgow Trades Council. In Glasgow and other major cities there were distinctive local variations. Glasgow was more unified and coherent than most centres. The long-term result was seen in the strength of waterfront organisation on the Clyde River, marked as it was by the emergence of independent locally based unions among both dockers and seamen.[25]

First World War edit

Industrial production of munitions was a central feature of the war, and with a third of the men in the labour force moved into the military, demand was very high for industrial labour. Large numbers of women were employed temporarily.[26] Trade unions gave strong support to the war effort, cutting back on strikes and restrictive practices. Membership doubled from 4.1 million in 1914, to 8.3 million in 1920. The Trades Union Congress (TUC) accounted for 65% of union members in 1914, rising to 77% in 1920. Labour's prestige had never been higher, and it systematically placed its leaders into Parliament.[27]

The Munitions of War Act 1915 followed the Shell Crisis of 1915 when supplies of material to the front became a political issue. The Act forbade strikes and lock-outs and replaced them with compulsory arbitration. It set up a system of controlling war industries, and established munitions tribunals that were special courts to enforce good working practices. It suspended, for the duration, restrictive practices by trade unions. It tried to control labour mobility between jobs. The courts ruled the definition of munitions was broad enough to include textile workers and dock workers. The 1915 act was repealed in 1919, but similar legislation took effect during the Second World War.[28][29][30]

In Glasgow, the heavy demand for munitions and warships strengthened union power. There emerged a radical movement called "Red Clydeside" led by militant trades unionists. Formerly a Liberal Party stronghold, the industrial districts switched to Labour by 1922, with a base among the Irish Catholic working class districts. Women were especially active solidarity on housing issues. However, the "Reds" operated within the Labour Party and had little influence in Parliament; the mood changed to passive despair by the late 1920s.[31]

The war saw in a further increase in union membership, as well as widespread recognition of unions and their increased involvement in management. Strikes were not patriotic, and the government tried to hold wages down. At war's end unions became quite militant in attempting to hold their gains; they were usually defeated. Membership grew from 4.1 million in 1914 to 6.5 million in 1918, peaking at 8.3 million in 1920 before relapsing to 5.4 million in 1923.[32]

1920s edit

The immediate postwar era saw a series of radical events, stimulated in part by the Russian Revolution of 1917. The trade unions, especially in Scotland, were militant. However the government compromised, and as the economy stabilised in the early 1920s the labour unions moved sharply to the right. An exception came with the coal miners' union, which faced lower wages in a declining industry hurt by lower prices, severe competition from oil, and sharply declining productivity in Britain's ageing coal mines.[33] Both in 1920 and in 1921, there were more labour disputes than at any time in the inter-war period, except in 1926.[34]

The 1926 general strike was declared by the Trades Union Congress for the benefit of the coal miners, but it failed. It was a nine-day nationwide walkout of one million railwaymen, transport workers, printers, dockers, ironworkers and steelworkers supporting the 1.5 million coal miners who had been locked out. Ultimately many miners returned to work, and were forced to accept longer hours and lower pay.

Additionally, in 1927 the government passed sweeping anti-union legislation under the Trade Disputes and Trade Union Act 1927. This imposed major curbs on union power, including outlawing sympathetic strikes and mass picketing, and ensuring that civil service unions were banned from affiliating with the TUC. The 1926 general strike was considered a grave mistake by TUC leaders such as Ernest Bevin. Most historians treat it as a singular event with few long-term consequences, but Martin Pugh says it accelerated the movement of working-class voters to the Labour Party, which led to future gains.[35][36] The 1927 Act made general strikes illegal and ended the automatic payment of union members to the Labour Party. That act was repealed by the Trade Disputes and Trade Unions Act 1946.

Foreign policy and the 1930s edit

The foreign policy of the trade unions was generally anti-Communist. Support for the Republican cause in the Spanish Civil War, 1936–39 was widespread on the left, attendees included conservatives and liberals as well. However, the Labour Party leadership deeply distrusted the communist element and rejected proposed unity campaigns.[37]

The British Trades Union Congress (TUC) split on support for non-intervention in the Spanish Civil War,[38] but the leaders Walter Citrine and Ernest Bevin used their block votes to pass motions supporting non-intervention at the TUC Congress in September 1936,[39] making non-intervention a TUC policy.[40] Like the Labour Party (which had also formerly supported non-intervention), between October 1936 and June 1937 and under pressure from the LSI and the International Federation of Trade Unions, Citrine, Bevin and the TUC repudiated non-intervention.[39]

The TUC, working in collaboration with the American Federation of Labor blocked a 1937 proposal to allow Soviet trade union membership in the International Federation of Trade Unions (IFTU). The TUC reversed its policy in 1938 to allow the Russians in, but one backed opposition in 1939 when Stalin and Hitler came to terms. When Britain entered the war, the TUC was a strong supporter, and it sent leaders to the United States to win American labour support. When Hitler invaded Russia in 1941, TUC sent leaders to Moscow as well, realising that Britain needed a military alliance against Hitler. Meanwhile, the AFL fought against any recognition of Soviet organisations, and fought its own battle with the Congress of Industrial Organizations. As a result of these manipulations, the foreign policy voice of organised labour in both Britain and the United States was seriously weakened. It played little role in the formation of the United Nations as the war ended. After the war, the British unions resumed a staunchly anti-communist and anti-Soviet position.[41][42] Communists did however occupy local positions of power especially in the coal miners' union.[43]

While involvement in foreign policy went poorly, British trade unions grew dramatically in membership and power during the Second World War.

Second World War edit

Unions were not initially formally involved in the war effort during the Second World War. They were more included after Winston Churchill came to power in May 1940 and appointed Ernest Bevin, the general secretary of the Transport and General Workers' Union, as the Minister of Labour and National Service in his war cabinet.[40][44]

Since 1945 edit

The unexpected landslide of the Labour Party in 1945 gave it a strong voice in national affairs, especially with Ernest Bevin as Foreign Minister.[45]

Trade unions reached their peak of membership, visibility, prestige and political power in the postwar era. A broad "post-war consensus" accepted their status, and they were heavily represented in the leadership of the Labour Party.[46][47] By the 1970s their power had grown further, but their prestige was in decline and the consensus disappeared. In the 1980s the Conservative Party led by Margaret Thatcher deliberately and significantly weakened the trade union movement. It has never recovered.[48]

The strong anti-communist policy persisted in the postwar era. The unions gave strong support to British participation in the Cold War and NATO, as well as international bodies such as the international Confederation of Free Trade Unions that excluded communist unions of the sort that joined the Soviet-dominated World Federation of Trade Unions. In some unions, especially the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM), the Communists did have some power, as typified by Mick McGahey, vice-president from 1972 to 1987, and Arthur Scargill, the president from 1982 to 2002. More effective in the Communist cause was Ken Gill, president of a large union and in 1974 the first Communist elected in decades to the TUC General Council. He focused on racial issues.[49] British unions collaborated with the AFL-CIO in the United States on international projects. In the 1980s, worldwide union attention focused on the Solidarity union movement in Poland, which finally succeeded in breaking the communist control of that country. Norman Willis, the general secretary of the TUC, vigorously promoted union support for Solidarity.[50] The nuclear disarmament movement, which played a major role in Labour Party internal politics in the 1980s, was primarily a middle-class movement that had little support in the labour movement.[51]

1978–79 edit

Major strike action by British unions during the 1978–1979 Winter of Discontent contributed to the downfall of the Labour government of James Callaghan. Callaghan, himself a trade-unionist, had previously appealed for unions to exercise pay restraint, as part of the British Government's policies at the time to try to curb rampant inflation. His attempt to try to limit unions to a 5% pay rise led to widespread official and unofficial strikes across the country during the winter of that year. Official and unofficial strike action by lorry drivers, rail workers, nurses and ambulance drivers precipitated a feeling of crisis in the country. The effects of the union action caused a major swing in voting intention. In November 1978, a Gallup poll suggested a 5% Labour lead in the opinion polls. Following the union action that Winter, in February 1979, the Conservatives had a 20% lead.

Thatcher and 1980s edit

Callaghan's government fell and Margaret Thatcher's Conservatives swept to victory in the subsequent general election and introduced new union laws in part to combat the industrial unrest that had plagued the previous Wilson and Callaghan governments. The unions in turn were her bitter enemies. Thatcher saw strong trade unions as an obstacle to economic growth and in the Employment Act 1980 and Employment Act 1982 passed restrictive legislation of the sort the Tories had long avoided.[52]

In his memoirs, the Secretary of State for Employment at the time, Norman Tebbit, said of the 1982 Act: "I have no doubt that Act was my greatest achievement in Government and I believe it has been one of the principal pillars on which the Thatcher economic reforms have been built."[53]

The National Union of Mineworkers (NUM) had long been one of the strongest labour unions. Its strikes had toppled the Heath government in the 1970s. However, the miners were not successful in their 1984-1985 strike. A strike was called by the Yorkshire region of the NUM in protest against proposed pit closures, invoking a regional ballot result from 1981. The National Executive Committee, led by Arthur Scargill, chose not to hold a national ballot on a national strike, as was conventional, but to declare the strike to be a matter for each region of the NUM to enforce. Scargill defied public opinion, a trait Prime Minister Thatcher exploited when she used the Ridley Plan, drafted in 1977, to defeat the strike.[54] Subsequently, over several decades, almost all the mines were shut down.[55]

More than 6,000 printing workers went on strike in 1986 in the Wapping dispute, for what they and their union saw as "unacceptable" terms of employment for jobs at The Sun newspaper's new HQ in Wapping. They too lost.[56]

New Labour and the 21st century edit

New Labour edit

Although the Labour Party won the 1997 general election, Tony Blair's New Labour was much less influenced by the unions than former Labour governments had been and Blair himself "[did] not bother to disguise his disdain for British trade unionism".[57] Blair's government also refused to repeal many of Thatcher's anti-union laws, despite the trade unions having provided most of the funding for his election campaign.[58]

2010s edit

 
Protesters in Bristol during the 2011 public sector strikes

In the 2010 Labour leadership election, trade unions were instrumental in Ed Miliband's victory over his brother when he won the support of three of Britain's four biggest unions.[59] This led to Miliband being regularly depicted as in the debt of the unions, earning the nickname 'Red Ed'.[59]

In 2011, up to two million public sector workers went on a 24-hour strike over pension cuts.[60] 76 percent of state-funded schools were affected,[61] with 62 percent of school being forced to close entirely.[60] The UK government had to recruit civil servants from other departments and fly embassy staff home to prevent long delays at borders and airports after 80 to 90 percent of staff in the Immigration Service Union went on strike.[62] 79,000 NHS staff (about 14.5 percent of the workforce) also went on strike.[63] According to the Office for National Statistics, 1.39 million working days were lost due to the strike.[64]

Membership decline edit

Membership declined steeply in the 1980s and 1990s, falling from 13 million in 1979 to around 7.3 million in 2000. In 2012, union membership dropped below 6 million for the first time since the 1940s.[65] From 1980 to 1998, the proportion of employees who were union members fell from 52% to 30%.[66][67] In 2021, it was reported that trade union membership had more than halved since 1979,[68] when 53 percent of workers were union members.[69]

Academic journals edit

  • The Labor History journal, a scholarly publication published by Taylor & Francis[70]
  • Labour History, a scholarly journal published in Australia by the Australian Society for the Study of Labour History (ASSLH)[71]
  • The Labour History Review, a scholarly journal published in the UK by the Society for the Study of Labour History[72]

See also edit

Unions

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Chartists". National Archives. Retrieved 21 July 2021.
  2. ^ "Chartism". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 21 July 2021.
  3. ^ "The Chartists". BBC Bitesize. Retrieved 21 July 2021.
  4. ^ Rob Attar (22 January 2019). "9 places connected to the Chartism movement". History Extra. Retrieved 21 July 2021.
  5. ^ a b "The Chartist movement". Parliament.uk. Retrieved 21 July 2021.
  6. ^ Max Morris (1948). "Chartism and the British Working-Class Movement". Science & Society. 12 (4): 400–417. JSTOR 40399912. Retrieved 21 July 2021.
  7. ^ "Second Reform Act 1867". Parliament.uk. Retrieved 21 July 2021.
  8. ^ Malcolm Chase, Chartism: A New History (Manchester University Press, 2007)
  9. ^ Keith Laybourn, A History of British Trade Unionism c.1770–1990 (1992) pp 33–34.
  10. ^ Roger Penn, Roger. "Trade union organization and skill in the cotton and engineering industries in Britain, 1850–1960." Social History 8#1 (1983): 37–55.
  11. ^ John Flanagan, "'A gigantic scheme of co-operation': The Miners' and Seamen's United Association in the North-East, 1851–1854." Labour History Review 74#2 (2009): 143–159.
  12. ^ John Field, "British historians and the concept of the labour aristocracy." Radical History Review 1978.19 (1978): 61–85.
  13. ^ Derek Matthews, "1889 and All That: New Views on the New Unionism." International Review of Social History 36#1 (1991): 24–58
  14. ^ Keith Laybourn, A History of British Trade Unionism (1992) pp 72–76
  15. ^ A. E. P. Duffy, "New Unionism in Britain, 1889–1890: A Reappraisal," Economic History Review (1961) 14#2 pp 306–319
  16. ^ Robin Miller Jacoby, "Feminism and Class Consciousness in the British and American Women's Trade Union Leagues, 1890–1925." in Liberating Women's History ed. Berenice Carroll (University of Illinois Press, 1976) pp: 137–60.
  17. ^ Gerry Holloway (2007). Women and Work in Britain since 1840. Routledge. p. 81ff. ISBN 9781134512997.
  18. ^ Melanie Reynolds, "'A Man Who Won't Back a Woman is No Man at All'. The 1875 Heavy Woollen Dispute and the Narrative of Women's Trade Unionism." Labour History Review 71#2 (2006): 187–198.
  19. ^ Louise Raw, "'Recognition at last! Matchwomen to be honoured with a blue plaque', Morning Star February 2022 https://morningstaronline.co.uk/article/recognition-last-matchwomen-be-honoured-blue-plaque
  20. ^ See, for instance, the 1899 Lyons vs. Wilkins judgement, which limited certain types of picketing
  21. ^ Martin Crick, The History of the Social-Democratic Federation
  22. ^ Vic Allen, The militancy of British miners (1981).
  23. ^ Joseph L. White, The Limits of Trade Union Militancy: The Lancashire Textile Workers, 1910–1914 (1978).
  24. ^ Andrew Miles and Mike Savage, The remaking of the British working class, 1840–1940 (Routledge, 2013). pp 80–81
  25. ^ Matt Vaughan Wilson, "The 1911 Waterfront Strikes in Glasgow: Trade Unions and Rank-and-File Militancy in the Labour Unrest of 1910–1914." International Review of Social History 53#2 (2008): 261–292.
  26. ^ John N. Horne, Labour at war: France and Britain, 1914–1918 (1991).
  27. ^ David Swift, "Patriotic labour in the era of the great war" (PhD. Dissertation, University of Central Lancashire, 2014) online Detailed bibliography on pp 220–235.
  28. ^ F. M. Leventhal, ed. Twentieth-Century Britain: An Encyclopedia (1995) p 78–80.
  29. ^ Beckett (2007), p 369
  30. ^ Gerry R. Rubin, "Law, War and Economy: The Munitions Acts 1915–17 and Corporatism in Context". Journal of Law and Society 11.3 (1984): 317–333.
  31. ^ Iain McLean, The Legend of Red Clydeside (1983)
  32. ^ B. R. Mitchell, Abstract of British Historical Statistics (1962)
  33. ^ Charles Loch Mowat, Britain between the wars: 1918–1940 (1955) pp 284–338.
  34. ^ Rodney Mace (1999). British Trade Union Posters: An Illustrated History. Sutton Publishing. p. 15. ISBN 0750921587.
  35. ^ Alastair Reid, and Steven Tolliday, "The General Strike, 1926", Historical Journal (1977) 20#4 pp. 1001–1012 in JSTOR
  36. ^ Martin Pugh, "The General Strike," History Today (2006) 56#5 pp 40–47
  37. ^ Charles Loch Mowat, Britain between the wars: 1918–1940 (1955) pp 579–82
  38. ^ Michael Alpert (1998). A New International History of the Spanish Civil War. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 65. ISBN 978-0-312-21043-4.
  39. ^ a b Tom Buchanan. "The Trades Union Congress and the Spanish Civil War". Warwick University. Retrieved 21 July 2021.
  40. ^ a b Rodney Mace (1999). British Trade Union Posters: An Illustrated History. Sutton Publishing. p. 78. ISBN 0750921587.
  41. ^ Geert Van Goethem, "Labor's second front: the foreign policy of the American and British trade union movements during the second world war." Diplomatic History 34.4 (2010): 663–680.
  42. ^ Andrew Thorpe, "Locking out the Communists: The Labour party and the Communist party, 1939–46." Twentieth Century British History 25.2 (2014): 221–250.
  43. ^ Hue Beynon and Terry Austrin. "The Performance of Power: Sam Watson a Miners' Leader on Many Stages." Journal of Historical Sociology 28.4 (2015): 458–490.
  44. ^ "Ernest Bevin (1881 - 1951)". BBC History. Retrieved 21 July 2021.
  45. ^ Alan Bullock, The Life and Times of Ernest Bevin: Foreign secretary, 1945–1951 (1983).
  46. ^ Richard Toye, "From 'Consensus' to 'Common Ground': The Rhetoric of the Postwar Settlement and its Collapse," Journal of Contemporary History (2013) 48#1 pp 3–23.
  47. ^ Dennis Kavanagh, "The Postwar Consensus," Twentieth Century British History (1992) 3#2 pp 175–190.
  48. ^ Earl Aaron Reitan (2003). The Thatcher Revolution: Margaret Thatcher, John Major, Tony Blair, and the Transformation of Modern Britain, 1979–2001. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 25. ISBN 9780742522039.
  49. ^ Robert Taylor , The TUC: From the General Strike to New Unionism (2000) p. 231
  50. ^ Idesbald Goddeeris (2012). Solidarity with Solidarity: Western European Trade Unions and the Polish Crisis, 1980–1982. Lexington Books. pp. 145–48. ISBN 9780739150726.
  51. ^ Ben Pimlott and Chris Cook, eds., Trade Unions in British Politics: The First 250 Years (1991) pp 201-3, 290-92.
  52. ^ Neil J. Mitchell, "Where traditional Tories fear to tread: Mrs Thatcher's trade union policy." West European Politics 10#1 (1987): 33–45.
  53. ^ Norman Tebbit, Upwardly Mobile (Futura, 1991), pp. 233, 241
  54. ^ Kenneth O. Morgan, "Gormley, Scargill and the Miners" in Morgan, Labour people: leaders and lieutenants, Hardie to Kinnock (1987) pp 289–300.
  55. ^ Francis Beckett and David Hencke, Marching to the fault line: The Miners' Strike and the battle for industrial Britain. (2009)
  56. ^ Brian Towers, "Running the gauntlet: British trade unions under Thatcher, 1979–1988." Industrial & Labor Relations Review 42#2 (1989): 163–188.
  57. ^ Robert Taylor (November 1997). "New Labour and the trade unions". Transfer: European Review of Labour and Research. 3 (3): 622–628. doi:10.1177/102425899700300312. S2CID 153409611. Retrieved 21 July 2021.
  58. ^ William Brown (January 2011). "Industrial Relations in Britain under New Labour, 1997-2010: A post mortem" (PDF). University of Cambridge. pp. 3–4. Retrieved 21 July 2021.
  59. ^ a b "The Longer View: Labour and the unions". BBC. Retrieved 21 July 2021.
  60. ^ a b Dan Milmo; Caroline Davies; Polly Curtis; Hélène Mulholland (30 November 2011). "Strikes over public sector pensions hit services across UK as 2 million walk out". The Guardian. Retrieved 21 July 2021.
  61. ^ "Public sector strikes disrupt services across England". BBC. 30 November 2011. Retrieved 21 July 2021.
  62. ^ "Huge public-sector strike hits the UK". Al Jazeera. 30 November 2011. Retrieved 21 July 2021.
  63. ^ "British workers strike over retirement benefits". CNN. 30 November 2011. Retrieved 21 July 2021.
  64. ^ "The history of strikes in the UK". Office for National Statistics. 21 September 2015. Retrieved 21 July 2021.
  65. ^ John Moylan (7 September 2012). "Union membership has halved since 1980". BBC. Retrieved 13 August 2022.
  66. ^ Andrew Charlwood, "The anatomy of union membership decline in Great Britain 1980–1998" (PhD . Diss. The London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE), 2013), Bibliography pp 212–22. online.
  67. ^ Bob Mason, and Peter Bain. "The determinants of trade union membership in Britain: a survey of the literature." Industrial & labor relations review 46.2 (1993): 332–351, asks what caused the decline: environmental determinants (such as the business cycle) or "interventionist" studies, which emphasise union behaviour (such as the involvement of full-time officials in recruiting).
  68. ^ Benjamin James Davies (18 January 2021). "The state of trade unions in the UK". openDemocracy. Retrieved 21 July 2021.
  69. ^ Tonia Novitz (September 2002). "A Revised Role for Trade Unions as Designed by New Labour: The Representation Pyramid and 'Partnership'". Journal of Law and Society. 29 (3): 487–509. doi:10.1111/1467-6478.00229. Retrieved 21 July 2021.
  70. ^ see website
  71. ^ see website
  72. ^ See website

Further reading edit

  • Aldcroft, D. H. and Oliver, M. J., eds. Trade Unions and the Economy, 1870–2000. (2000).
  • Allen, V.L. Power in Trade Unions: A Study of Their Organization in Great Britain (1954) online
  • Bellamy, Joyce M. and John Saville, eds. Dictionary of Labour Biography (14 vol. 1977–2010).[1]
  • Bullock, Alan. The Life & Times of Ernest Bevin: Volume One: Trade Union Leader 1881 – 1940 (1960).
  • Boston, S. Women Workers and the Trade Unions (1980). covers 1874–1975.
  • Brivati, Brian and Heffernan, eds. The Labour Party: A Centenary History: 1900–2000 (2000)
  • Campbell, Alan. Scottish Miners, 1874–1939. Vol. 1: Industry, Work & Community; The Scottish Miners, 1874–1939. Vol. 2: Trade Unions and Politics (2000).
  • Campbell, A., Fishman, N., and McIlroy, J. eds. British Trade Unions and Industrial Politics: The Post-War Compromise 1945–64 (1999).
  • Charlesworth, Andrew, Gilbert, David, Randall, Adrian, Southall, Humphrey and Wrigley, Chris. An Atlas of Industrial Protest in Britain, 1750–1990 (1996).
  • Clegg, H.A. et al. A History of British Trade Unions Since 1889 (1964); A History of British Trade Unions Since 1889: vol. 2 1911–1933. (1985); A History of British Trade Unionism Since 1889, vol. 3: 1934–51 (1994), The major scholarly history; highly detailed.
  • Davies, A. J. To Build a New Jerusalem: Labour Movement from the 1890s to the 1990s (1996).
  • Field, Geoffrey G. Blood, Sweat, and Toil: Remaking the British Working Class, 1939–1945 (2011) DOI:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199604111.001.0001 online
  • Foote, Geoffrey. The Labour Party's Political Thought: A History, Macmillan, 1997 ed.
  • Hinton, James. Labour and Socialism: A History of the British Labour Movement, 1867–1974 (1983). online
  • Laybourn, Keith. A history of British trade unionism c. 1770–1990 (1992).
  • Lewenhak, Sheila. Women and trade unions: an outline history of women in the British trade union movement (E. Benn, 1977).
  • Minkin, Lewis. The Contentious Alliance: Trade Unions and the Labour Party (1991) 708 pp online
  • Musson, A E. Trade Union and Social History (1974).
  • Pelling, Henry. A history of British trade unionism (1987).
  • Pimlott, Ben, and Chris Cook. Trade Unions in British Politics: The First 250 Years (2nd ed. 1991).
  • Roberts, B C. The Trades Union Congress 1868–1921 (1958).
  • Rosen, Greg, ed. Dictionary of Labour Biography. Politicos Publishing, 2001, 665pp; short biographies of Labour Party leaders.
  • Taplin, E. The Dockers' Union. A Study of the National Union of Dock Labourers, 1889–1922 (Leicester UP, 1986).
  • Taylor, R. The TUC: From the General Strike to New Unionism (2000). excerpt
  • Thorpe, Andrew. A History of the British Labour Party (Palgrave Macmillan, 2008).
  • Webb, Sidney and Beatrice Webb. The History of Trade Unionism (1894, new edition 1920) Outdated famous history; online.
  • Wrigley, Chris, ed. A History of British industrial relations, 1875–1914 (Univ of Massachusetts Press, 1982), Wide-ranging essays by scholars, including study case studies of coal mining, cotton textiles, transport, and the iron trade.
    • Wrigley, Chris, ed. A History of British Industrial Relations 1914–1939 (1993).
  • Wrigley, Chris, ed. British Trade Unions, 1945–1995 (Manchester University Press, 1997)
  • Wrigley, Chris. British Trade Unions since 1933 (2002) 115 pp online

World wars edit

  • Adams, Tony. "Labour and the First World War: Economy, Politics and the Erosion of Local Peculiarity?." Journal of Regional and Local Studies 10 (1990): 23–47.
  • Braybon, G. Women Workers in the First World War (Routledge, 2010).
  • Brooke, Stephen. Labour's war: the Labour party during the Second World War (1992).
  • Burridge, Trevor D. British Labour and Hitler's war (Deutsch, 1976).
  • Bush, J. Behind the Lines: East London Labour, 1914–1919 (Merlin Press, 1984).
  • Calder, Angus. The people's war: Britain 1939–1945 (1969).
  • Cline, C.A. Recruits to Labour: The British Labour Party, 1914–1931 (Syracuse University Press, 1963).
  • Englander, David. "Troops and Trade Unions, 1919", History Today 37 (1987): 8–13.
  • Grieves, K. The Politics of Manpower, 1914–18 (Manchester UP, 1988).
  • Holford, J. Reshaping Labour: Organisation, Work and Politics – Edinburgh in the Great War and After (Croom Helm, 1988).
  • Horne, John N. Labour at war: France and Britain, 1914–1918 (1991).
  • Silbey, D. The British Working Class and Enthusiasm for War, 1914–1916 (Frank Cass, 2005).
  • Summerfield, Penny. Women workers in the Second World War: production and patriarchy in conflict (Routledge, 2013).
  • Swift, David. "Patriotic labour in the era of the great war" (PhD. Dissertation University of Central Lancashire, 2014) online Detailed bibliography on pp 220–35.

Historiography edit

  • Callaghan, John, et al. eds., Interpreting the Labour Party: Approaches to Labour Politics and History (2003) online; also online free; 210pp
  • Taylor, Antony. "The Transnational Turn in British Labour History." Labour History Review 81.1 (2016)
  • Zeitlin, Jonathan. "From labour history to the history of industrial relations." Economic History Review 40.2 (1987): 159–184. in JSTOR

  1. ^ see history of the project

history, trade, unions, united, kingdom, history, trade, unions, united, kingdom, covers, british, trade, union, organisation, activity, ideas, politics, impact, from, early, 19th, century, present, contents, 18th, 19th, centuries, chartism, establishments, un. The history of trade unions in the United Kingdom covers British trade union organisation activity ideas politics and impact from the early 19th century to the present Contents 1 18th 19th centuries 1 1 Chartism 1 2 New establishments 1 3 New Unionism 1889 93 1 4 Women 1 5 Emerging Labour Party 2 Since 1900 2 1 1900 1945 2 1 1 Upheavals 1910 1914 2 1 2 First World War 2 1 3 1920s 2 1 4 Foreign policy and the 1930s 2 1 5 Second World War 2 2 Since 1945 2 2 1 1978 79 2 2 2 Thatcher and 1980s 2 3 New Labour and the 21st century 2 3 1 New Labour 2 3 2 2010s 2 4 Membership decline 3 Academic journals 4 See also 5 Notes 6 Further reading 6 1 World wars 6 2 Historiography18th 19th centuries edit nbsp Meeting of the trade unionists in Copenhagen Fields 21 April 1834 for the purpose of carrying a petition to the King for a remission of the sentence passed on the Dorchester labourers Unions in Britain were subject to often severe repression until 1824 but were already widespread in cities such as London Trade unions were legalised in 1824 when growing numbers of factory workers joined these associations in their efforts to achieve better wages and working conditions Workplace militancy had also manifested itself as Luddism and had been prominent in struggles such as the 1820 Rising in Scotland in which 60 000 workers went on a general strike which was soon crushed From 1830 on attempts were made to set up national general unions most notably Robert Owen s Grand National Consolidated Trades Union in 1834 which attracted a range of socialist from Owenites to revolutionaries That organisation played a part in the protests after the Tolpuddle Martyrs case but soon collapsed An important development of the trade union movement in Wales was the Merthyr Rising in May 1831 where coal and steel workers employed by the powerful Crawshay family took to the streets of Merthyr Tydfil calling for reform protesting against the lowering of their wages and general unemployment Gradually the protest spread to nearby industrial towns and villages and by the end of May the whole area was in rebellion and for the first time in the world the red flag of revolution was flown which has since been adopted internationally by the trades union movement and socialist groups generally Chartism edit Main article Chartism In the later 1830s and 1840s trade unionism was overshadowed by political activity Of particular importance was Chartism the aims of which were supported by most socialists although none appear to have played leading roles Chartism was a working class movement for political reform in Britain which emerged in 1836 and was most active between 1838 and 1848 1 It took its name from the People s Charter of 1838 and was a national protest movement 2 with particular strongholds of support in Northern England the East Midlands the Staffordshire Potteries the Black Country and the South Wales Valleys Support for the movement was at its highest in 1839 1842 and 1848 when petitions signed by millions of working people were presented to Parliament 3 The petitions were rejected each time 4 5 The strategy employed was to use the scale of support which these petitions and the accompanying mass meetings demonstrated to put pressure on politicians to concede manhood suffrage Chartism thus relied on constitutional methods to secure its aims though there were some who became involved in insurrectionary activities notably in the Newport Rising in November 1839 6 The government did not yield to any of the demands and suffrage had to wait another two decades 5 7 Chartism was popular among some trade unions especially London s tailors shoemakers carpenters and masons One reason was the fear of the influx of unskilled labour especially in tailoring and shoe making In Manchester and Glasgow engineers were deeply involved in Chartist activities Many trade unions were active in the general strike of 1842 which spread to 15 counties in England and Wales and eight in Scotland Chartism taught techniques and political skills that inspired trade union leadership 8 9 New establishments edit Union activity from the 1850s to the 1950s in textiles and engineering was largely in the hands of the skilled workers They supported differentials in pay and status as opposed to the unskilled They focused on control over machine production and were aided by competition among firms in the local labour market 10 After the Chartist movement of 1848 fragmented efforts were made to form a labour coalition The Miners and Seamen s United Association in the North East operated 1851 1854 before it too collapsed because of outside hostility and internal disputes over goals The leaders sought working class solidarity as a long term aim thus anticipating the affiliative strategies promoted by the Labour Parliament of 1854 11 More permanent trade unions were established from the 1850s better resourced but often less radical The London Trades Council was founded in 1860 and the Sheffield Outrages spurred the establishment of the Trades Union Congress in 1868 The legal status of trade unions in the United Kingdom was established by a Royal Commission on Trade Unions in 1867 which agreed that the establishment of the organisations was to the advantage of both employers and employees Unions were legalised in 1871 with the adoption of the Trade Union Act 1871 New Unionism 1889 93 edit The aristocracy of labour comprise the skilled workers who were proud and jealous of their monopolies and set up labour unions to keep out the unskilled and semiskilled The strongest unions of the mid Victorian period were unions of skilled workers such as the Amalgamated Society of Engineers Trade unionism was quite uncommon amongst semi skilled and unskilled workers 12 The union officials avoided militancy fearing that strikes would threaten the finances of unions and thereby their salaries An unexpected strike wave broke out in 1889 90 largely instigated by the rank and file Its success can be explained by the dwindling supply of rural labour which in turn increased the bargaining power of unskilled workers The New Unionism starting in 1889 was a systematic outreach to bring in as union members the striking unskilled and semiskilled workers Ben Tillett was a prominent leader of the London Dock strike of 1889 He formed the Dock Wharf Riverside and General Labourers Union in 1889 which had support from skilled workers Its 30 000 members won an advance in wages and working conditions 13 14 15 Unions played a prominent role in the creation of the Labour Representation Committee which effectively formed the basis for today s Labour Party Women edit Women were largely excluded from trade union formation membership and hierarchies until the late 20th century When women did attempt to challenge male hegemony and make inroads into the representation of labour and combination it was largely due to the tenacity of middle class reformers such as the Women s Protective and Provident League WPPL which sought to amiably discuss conditions with employers in the 1870s It became the Women s Trade Union League 16 Militant Socialists broke away from the WPPL and formed the Women s Trade Union Association but they had little impact 17 There were a few cases in the 19th century where women trade union members took initiative In the 1875 West Yorkshire weavers strike women did play a central role 18 and the 1888 London matchgirls strike and subsequent formation of the Union of Women Matchmakers was influential for the 1889 London Dock strike and the development of the New Unionism 19 Emerging Labour Party edit Main article History of the Labour Party The Labour Party s origins lie in the late 19th century when it became apparent that there was a need for a new political party to represent the interests and needs of the urban proletariat a demographic which had increased in number and had recently been enfranchised 20 Some members of the trades union movement became interested in moving into the political field and after further extensions of the voting franchise in 1867 and 1885 the Liberal Party endorsed some trade union sponsored candidates The first Lib Lab candidate to stand was George Odger in the Southwark by election of 1870 In addition several small socialist groups had formed around this time with the intention of linking the movement to political policies Among these were the Independent Labour Party the intellectual and largely middle class Fabian Society the Marxist Social Democratic Federation 21 and the Scottish Labour Party Since 1900 edit1900 1945 edit Politics became a central issue for the coal miners whose organisation was facilitated by their location in remote one industry villages The Miners Federation of Great Britain formed in 1888 and counted 600 000 members in 1908 Much of the old left of Labour politics can trace its origins to coal mining areas 22 Upheavals 1910 1914 edit Main article Great Unrest The years 1910 1914 witnessed serious industrial unrest and an enormous increase in trade union membership which affected all industries to varying extents 23 The militants were most active in coal mining textiles and transportation Much of the militancy emerged from grassroots protests against falling real wages with union leadership scrambling to catch up The new unions of semiskilled workers were the most militant 24 The National Sailors and Firemen s Union directed strike activities in many port cities across Britain The national leadership was strongly supported by local leaders for example the Glasgow Trades Council In Glasgow and other major cities there were distinctive local variations Glasgow was more unified and coherent than most centres The long term result was seen in the strength of waterfront organisation on the Clyde River marked as it was by the emergence of independent locally based unions among both dockers and seamen 25 First World War edit Further information History of the United Kingdom during World War I Labour and Home front during World War I Britain Industrial production of munitions was a central feature of the war and with a third of the men in the labour force moved into the military demand was very high for industrial labour Large numbers of women were employed temporarily 26 Trade unions gave strong support to the war effort cutting back on strikes and restrictive practices Membership doubled from 4 1 million in 1914 to 8 3 million in 1920 The Trades Union Congress TUC accounted for 65 of union members in 1914 rising to 77 in 1920 Labour s prestige had never been higher and it systematically placed its leaders into Parliament 27 The Munitions of War Act 1915 followed the Shell Crisis of 1915 when supplies of material to the front became a political issue The Act forbade strikes and lock outs and replaced them with compulsory arbitration It set up a system of controlling war industries and established munitions tribunals that were special courts to enforce good working practices It suspended for the duration restrictive practices by trade unions It tried to control labour mobility between jobs The courts ruled the definition of munitions was broad enough to include textile workers and dock workers The 1915 act was repealed in 1919 but similar legislation took effect during the Second World War 28 29 30 In Glasgow the heavy demand for munitions and warships strengthened union power There emerged a radical movement called Red Clydeside led by militant trades unionists Formerly a Liberal Party stronghold the industrial districts switched to Labour by 1922 with a base among the Irish Catholic working class districts Women were especially active solidarity on housing issues However the Reds operated within the Labour Party and had little influence in Parliament the mood changed to passive despair by the late 1920s 31 The war saw in a further increase in union membership as well as widespread recognition of unions and their increased involvement in management Strikes were not patriotic and the government tried to hold wages down At war s end unions became quite militant in attempting to hold their gains they were usually defeated Membership grew from 4 1 million in 1914 to 6 5 million in 1918 peaking at 8 3 million in 1920 before relapsing to 5 4 million in 1923 32 1920s edit The immediate postwar era saw a series of radical events stimulated in part by the Russian Revolution of 1917 The trade unions especially in Scotland were militant However the government compromised and as the economy stabilised in the early 1920s the labour unions moved sharply to the right An exception came with the coal miners union which faced lower wages in a declining industry hurt by lower prices severe competition from oil and sharply declining productivity in Britain s ageing coal mines 33 Both in 1920 and in 1921 there were more labour disputes than at any time in the inter war period except in 1926 34 The 1926 general strike was declared by the Trades Union Congress for the benefit of the coal miners but it failed It was a nine day nationwide walkout of one million railwaymen transport workers printers dockers ironworkers and steelworkers supporting the 1 5 million coal miners who had been locked out Ultimately many miners returned to work and were forced to accept longer hours and lower pay Additionally in 1927 the government passed sweeping anti union legislation under the Trade Disputes and Trade Union Act 1927 This imposed major curbs on union power including outlawing sympathetic strikes and mass picketing and ensuring that civil service unions were banned from affiliating with the TUC The 1926 general strike was considered a grave mistake by TUC leaders such as Ernest Bevin Most historians treat it as a singular event with few long term consequences but Martin Pugh says it accelerated the movement of working class voters to the Labour Party which led to future gains 35 36 The 1927 Act made general strikes illegal and ended the automatic payment of union members to the Labour Party That act was repealed by the Trade Disputes and Trade Unions Act 1946 Foreign policy and the 1930s edit The foreign policy of the trade unions was generally anti Communist Support for the Republican cause in the Spanish Civil War 1936 39 was widespread on the left attendees included conservatives and liberals as well However the Labour Party leadership deeply distrusted the communist element and rejected proposed unity campaigns 37 The British Trades Union Congress TUC split on support for non intervention in the Spanish Civil War 38 but the leaders Walter Citrine and Ernest Bevin used their block votes to pass motions supporting non intervention at the TUC Congress in September 1936 39 making non intervention a TUC policy 40 Like the Labour Party which had also formerly supported non intervention between October 1936 and June 1937 and under pressure from the LSI and the International Federation of Trade Unions Citrine Bevin and the TUC repudiated non intervention 39 The TUC working in collaboration with the American Federation of Labor blocked a 1937 proposal to allow Soviet trade union membership in the International Federation of Trade Unions IFTU The TUC reversed its policy in 1938 to allow the Russians in but one backed opposition in 1939 when Stalin and Hitler came to terms When Britain entered the war the TUC was a strong supporter and it sent leaders to the United States to win American labour support When Hitler invaded Russia in 1941 TUC sent leaders to Moscow as well realising that Britain needed a military alliance against Hitler Meanwhile the AFL fought against any recognition of Soviet organisations and fought its own battle with the Congress of Industrial Organizations As a result of these manipulations the foreign policy voice of organised labour in both Britain and the United States was seriously weakened It played little role in the formation of the United Nations as the war ended After the war the British unions resumed a staunchly anti communist and anti Soviet position 41 42 Communists did however occupy local positions of power especially in the coal miners union 43 While involvement in foreign policy went poorly British trade unions grew dramatically in membership and power during the Second World War Second World War edit Unions were not initially formally involved in the war effort during the Second World War They were more included after Winston Churchill came to power in May 1940 and appointed Ernest Bevin the general secretary of the Transport and General Workers Union as the Minister of Labour and National Service in his war cabinet 40 44 Since 1945 edit The unexpected landslide of the Labour Party in 1945 gave it a strong voice in national affairs especially with Ernest Bevin as Foreign Minister 45 Trade unions reached their peak of membership visibility prestige and political power in the postwar era A broad post war consensus accepted their status and they were heavily represented in the leadership of the Labour Party 46 47 By the 1970s their power had grown further but their prestige was in decline and the consensus disappeared In the 1980s the Conservative Party led by Margaret Thatcher deliberately and significantly weakened the trade union movement It has never recovered 48 The strong anti communist policy persisted in the postwar era The unions gave strong support to British participation in the Cold War and NATO as well as international bodies such as the international Confederation of Free Trade Unions that excluded communist unions of the sort that joined the Soviet dominated World Federation of Trade Unions In some unions especially the National Union of Mineworkers NUM the Communists did have some power as typified by Mick McGahey vice president from 1972 to 1987 and Arthur Scargill the president from 1982 to 2002 More effective in the Communist cause was Ken Gill president of a large union and in 1974 the first Communist elected in decades to the TUC General Council He focused on racial issues 49 British unions collaborated with the AFL CIO in the United States on international projects In the 1980s worldwide union attention focused on the Solidarity union movement in Poland which finally succeeded in breaking the communist control of that country Norman Willis the general secretary of the TUC vigorously promoted union support for Solidarity 50 The nuclear disarmament movement which played a major role in Labour Party internal politics in the 1980s was primarily a middle class movement that had little support in the labour movement 51 1978 79 edit Main article Winter of Discontent Major strike action by British unions during the 1978 1979 Winter of Discontent contributed to the downfall of the Labour government of James Callaghan Callaghan himself a trade unionist had previously appealed for unions to exercise pay restraint as part of the British Government s policies at the time to try to curb rampant inflation His attempt to try to limit unions to a 5 pay rise led to widespread official and unofficial strikes across the country during the winter of that year Official and unofficial strike action by lorry drivers rail workers nurses and ambulance drivers precipitated a feeling of crisis in the country The effects of the union action caused a major swing in voting intention In November 1978 a Gallup poll suggested a 5 Labour lead in the opinion polls Following the union action that Winter in February 1979 the Conservatives had a 20 lead Thatcher and 1980s edit Further information 1984 1985 United Kingdom miners strike Callaghan s government fell and Margaret Thatcher s Conservatives swept to victory in the subsequent general election and introduced new union laws in part to combat the industrial unrest that had plagued the previous Wilson and Callaghan governments The unions in turn were her bitter enemies Thatcher saw strong trade unions as an obstacle to economic growth and in the Employment Act 1980 and Employment Act 1982 passed restrictive legislation of the sort the Tories had long avoided 52 In his memoirs the Secretary of State for Employment at the time Norman Tebbit said of the 1982 Act I have no doubt that Act was my greatest achievement in Government and I believe it has been one of the principal pillars on which the Thatcher economic reforms have been built 53 The National Union of Mineworkers NUM had long been one of the strongest labour unions Its strikes had toppled the Heath government in the 1970s However the miners were not successful in their 1984 1985 strike A strike was called by the Yorkshire region of the NUM in protest against proposed pit closures invoking a regional ballot result from 1981 The National Executive Committee led by Arthur Scargill chose not to hold a national ballot on a national strike as was conventional but to declare the strike to be a matter for each region of the NUM to enforce Scargill defied public opinion a trait Prime Minister Thatcher exploited when she used the Ridley Plan drafted in 1977 to defeat the strike 54 Subsequently over several decades almost all the mines were shut down 55 More than 6 000 printing workers went on strike in 1986 in the Wapping dispute for what they and their union saw as unacceptable terms of employment for jobs at The Sun newspaper s new HQ in Wapping They too lost 56 New Labour and the 21st century edit New Labour edit Although the Labour Party won the 1997 general election Tony Blair s New Labour was much less influenced by the unions than former Labour governments had been and Blair himself did not bother to disguise his disdain for British trade unionism 57 Blair s government also refused to repeal many of Thatcher s anti union laws despite the trade unions having provided most of the funding for his election campaign 58 2010s edit nbsp Protesters in Bristol during the 2011 public sector strikes In the 2010 Labour leadership election trade unions were instrumental in Ed Miliband s victory over his brother when he won the support of three of Britain s four biggest unions 59 This led to Miliband being regularly depicted as in the debt of the unions earning the nickname Red Ed 59 In 2011 up to two million public sector workers went on a 24 hour strike over pension cuts 60 76 percent of state funded schools were affected 61 with 62 percent of school being forced to close entirely 60 The UK government had to recruit civil servants from other departments and fly embassy staff home to prevent long delays at borders and airports after 80 to 90 percent of staff in the Immigration Service Union went on strike 62 79 000 NHS staff about 14 5 percent of the workforce also went on strike 63 According to the Office for National Statistics 1 39 million working days were lost due to the strike 64 Membership decline edit Membership declined steeply in the 1980s and 1990s falling from 13 million in 1979 to around 7 3 million in 2000 In 2012 union membership dropped below 6 million for the first time since the 1940s 65 From 1980 to 1998 the proportion of employees who were union members fell from 52 to 30 66 67 In 2021 it was reported that trade union membership had more than halved since 1979 68 when 53 percent of workers were union members 69 Academic journals editThe Labor History journal a scholarly publication published by Taylor amp Francis 70 Labour History a scholarly journal published in Australia by the Australian Society for the Study of Labour History ASSLH 71 The Labour History Review a scholarly journal published in the UK by the Society for the Study of Labour History 72 See also edit nbsp Organised labour portal nbsp United Kingdom portal Conspiracy and Protection of Property Act 1875 Criminal Law Amendment Act 1871 Employers and Workmen Act 1875 History of the British Labour Party History of the socialist movement in the United Kingdom Labour Party UK Labor history deals with the scholarly historiography The Australian labour movement including its history Unions List of trade unions in the United Kingdom Trade unions in the United Kingdom Amalgamated Society of Boilermakers Shipwrights Blacksmiths and Structural Workers ASBSBSW Amalgamated Textile Warehousemen s Association 1894 1986 Amalgamated Textile Workers Union 1974 1985 Association of Professional Executive Clerical and Computer Staff APEX Coopers Federation of Great Britain CFGB Furniture Timber and Allied Trades Union FTAT GMB 1889 present formerly named General Municipal Boilermakers and Allied Trade Union Municipal Employees Association to 1924 National Amalgamated Union of Labour NAUL to 1924 National Federation of Women Workers NFWW 1906 1921 National Union of General and Municipal Workers GMWU 1924 present National Union of Mineworkers National Union of Railwaymen National Union of Tailors and Garment Workers NUTGW Rubber Plastic and Allied Workers Union Trades Union Congress United Textile Factory Workers Association 1886 and 1974 Notes edit Chartists National Archives Retrieved 21 July 2021 Chartism Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 21 July 2021 The Chartists BBC Bitesize Retrieved 21 July 2021 Rob Attar 22 January 2019 9 places connected to the Chartism movement History Extra Retrieved 21 July 2021 a b The Chartist movement Parliament uk Retrieved 21 July 2021 Max Morris 1948 Chartism and the British Working Class Movement Science amp Society 12 4 400 417 JSTOR 40399912 Retrieved 21 July 2021 Second Reform Act 1867 Parliament uk Retrieved 21 July 2021 Malcolm Chase Chartism A New History Manchester University Press 2007 Keith Laybourn A History of British Trade Unionism c 1770 1990 1992 pp 33 34 Roger Penn Roger Trade union organization and skill in the cotton and engineering industries in Britain 1850 1960 Social History 8 1 1983 37 55 John Flanagan A gigantic scheme of co operation The Miners and Seamen s United Association in the North East 1851 1854 Labour History Review 74 2 2009 143 159 John Field British historians and the concept of the labour aristocracy Radical History Review 1978 19 1978 61 85 Derek Matthews 1889 and All That New Views on the New Unionism International Review of Social History 36 1 1991 24 58 Keith Laybourn A History of British Trade Unionism 1992 pp 72 76 A E P Duffy New Unionism in Britain 1889 1890 A Reappraisal Economic History Review 1961 14 2 pp 306 319 Robin Miller Jacoby Feminism and Class Consciousness in the British and American Women s Trade Union Leagues 1890 1925 in Liberating Women s History ed Berenice Carroll University of Illinois Press 1976 pp 137 60 Gerry Holloway 2007 Women and Work in Britain since 1840 Routledge p 81ff ISBN 9781134512997 Melanie Reynolds A Man Who Won t Back a Woman is No Man at All The 1875 Heavy Woollen Dispute and the Narrative of Women s Trade Unionism Labour History Review 71 2 2006 187 198 Louise Raw Recognition at last Matchwomen to be honoured with a blue plaque Morning Star February 2022 https morningstaronline co uk article recognition last matchwomen be honoured blue plaque See for instance the 1899 Lyons vs Wilkins judgement which limited certain types of picketing Martin Crick The History of the Social Democratic Federation Vic Allen The militancy of British miners 1981 Joseph L White The Limits of Trade Union Militancy The Lancashire Textile Workers 1910 1914 1978 Andrew Miles and Mike Savage The remaking of the British working class 1840 1940 Routledge 2013 pp 80 81 Matt Vaughan Wilson The 1911 Waterfront Strikes in Glasgow Trade Unions and Rank and File Militancy in the Labour Unrest of 1910 1914 International Review of Social History 53 2 2008 261 292 John N Horne Labour at war France and Britain 1914 1918 1991 David Swift Patriotic labour in the era of the great war PhD Dissertation University of Central Lancashire 2014 online Detailed bibliography on pp 220 235 F M Leventhal ed Twentieth Century Britain An Encyclopedia 1995 p 78 80 Beckett 2007 p 369 Gerry R Rubin Law War and Economy The Munitions Acts 1915 17 and Corporatism in Context Journal of Law and Society 11 3 1984 317 333 Iain McLean The Legend of Red Clydeside 1983 B R Mitchell Abstract of British Historical Statistics 1962 Charles Loch Mowat Britain between the wars 1918 1940 1955 pp 284 338 Rodney Mace 1999 British Trade Union Posters An Illustrated History Sutton Publishing p 15 ISBN 0750921587 Alastair Reid and Steven Tolliday The General Strike 1926 Historical Journal 1977 20 4 pp 1001 1012 in JSTOR Martin Pugh The General Strike History Today 2006 56 5 pp 40 47 Charles Loch Mowat Britain between the wars 1918 1940 1955 pp 579 82 Michael Alpert 1998 A New International History of the Spanish Civil War Palgrave Macmillan p 65 ISBN 978 0 312 21043 4 a b Tom Buchanan The Trades Union Congress and the Spanish Civil War Warwick University Retrieved 21 July 2021 a b Rodney Mace 1999 British Trade Union Posters An Illustrated History Sutton Publishing p 78 ISBN 0750921587 Geert Van Goethem Labor s second front the foreign policy of the American and British trade union movements during the second world war Diplomatic History 34 4 2010 663 680 Andrew Thorpe Locking out the Communists The Labour party and the Communist party 1939 46 Twentieth Century British History 25 2 2014 221 250 Hue Beynon and Terry Austrin The Performance of Power Sam Watson a Miners Leader on Many Stages Journal of Historical Sociology 28 4 2015 458 490 Ernest Bevin 1881 1951 BBC History Retrieved 21 July 2021 Alan Bullock The Life and Times of Ernest Bevin Foreign secretary 1945 1951 1983 Richard Toye From Consensus to Common Ground The Rhetoric of the Postwar Settlement and its Collapse Journal of Contemporary History 2013 48 1 pp 3 23 Dennis Kavanagh The Postwar Consensus Twentieth Century British History 1992 3 2 pp 175 190 Earl Aaron Reitan 2003 The Thatcher Revolution Margaret Thatcher John Major Tony Blair and the Transformation of Modern Britain 1979 2001 Rowman amp Littlefield p 25 ISBN 9780742522039 Robert Taylor The TUC From the General Strike to New Unionism 2000 p 231 Idesbald Goddeeris 2012 Solidarity with Solidarity Western European Trade Unions and the Polish Crisis 1980 1982 Lexington Books pp 145 48 ISBN 9780739150726 Ben Pimlott and Chris Cook eds Trade Unions in British Politics The First 250 Years 1991 pp 201 3 290 92 Neil J Mitchell Where traditional Tories fear to tread Mrs Thatcher s trade union policy West European Politics 10 1 1987 33 45 Norman Tebbit Upwardly Mobile Futura 1991 pp 233 241 Kenneth O Morgan Gormley Scargill and the Miners in Morgan Labour people leaders and lieutenants Hardie to Kinnock 1987 pp 289 300 Francis Beckett and David Hencke Marching to the fault line The Miners Strike and the battle for industrial Britain 2009 Brian Towers Running the gauntlet British trade unions under Thatcher 1979 1988 Industrial amp Labor Relations Review 42 2 1989 163 188 Robert Taylor November 1997 New Labour and the trade unions Transfer European Review of Labour and Research 3 3 622 628 doi 10 1177 102425899700300312 S2CID 153409611 Retrieved 21 July 2021 William Brown January 2011 Industrial Relations in Britain under New Labour 1997 2010 A post mortem PDF University of Cambridge pp 3 4 Retrieved 21 July 2021 a b The Longer View Labour and the unions BBC Retrieved 21 July 2021 a b Dan Milmo Caroline Davies Polly Curtis Helene Mulholland 30 November 2011 Strikes over public sector pensions hit services across UK as 2 million walk out The Guardian Retrieved 21 July 2021 Public sector strikes disrupt services across England BBC 30 November 2011 Retrieved 21 July 2021 Huge public sector strike hits the UK Al Jazeera 30 November 2011 Retrieved 21 July 2021 British workers strike over retirement benefits CNN 30 November 2011 Retrieved 21 July 2021 The history of strikes in the UK Office for National Statistics 21 September 2015 Retrieved 21 July 2021 John Moylan 7 September 2012 Union membership has halved since 1980 BBC Retrieved 13 August 2022 Andrew Charlwood The anatomy of union membership decline in Great Britain 1980 1998 PhD Diss The London School of Economics and Political Science LSE 2013 Bibliography pp 212 22 online Bob Mason and Peter Bain The determinants of trade union membership in Britain a survey of the literature Industrial amp labor relations review 46 2 1993 332 351 asks what caused the decline environmental determinants such as the business cycle or interventionist studies which emphasise union behaviour such as the involvement of full time officials in recruiting Benjamin James Davies 18 January 2021 The state of trade unions in the UK openDemocracy Retrieved 21 July 2021 Tonia Novitz September 2002 A Revised Role for Trade Unions as Designed by New Labour The Representation Pyramid and Partnership Journal of Law and Society 29 3 487 509 doi 10 1111 1467 6478 00229 Retrieved 21 July 2021 see website see website See websiteFurther reading editFurther information Trades Union Congress Bibliography Aldcroft D H and Oliver M J eds Trade Unions and the Economy 1870 2000 2000 Allen V L Power in Trade Unions A Study of Their Organization in Great Britain 1954 online Bellamy Joyce M and John Saville eds Dictionary of Labour Biography 14 vol 1977 2010 1 Bullock Alan The Life amp Times of Ernest Bevin Volume One Trade Union Leader 1881 1940 1960 Boston S Women Workers and the Trade Unions 1980 covers 1874 1975 Brivati Brian and Heffernan eds The Labour Party A Centenary History 1900 2000 2000 Campbell Alan Scottish Miners 1874 1939 Vol 1 Industry Work amp Community The Scottish Miners 1874 1939 Vol 2 Trade Unions and Politics 2000 Campbell A Fishman N and McIlroy J eds British Trade Unions and Industrial Politics The Post War Compromise 1945 64 1999 Charlesworth Andrew Gilbert David Randall Adrian Southall Humphrey and Wrigley Chris An Atlas of Industrial Protest in Britain 1750 1990 1996 Clegg H A et al A History of British Trade Unions Since 1889 1964 A History of British Trade Unions Since 1889 vol 2 1911 1933 1985 A History of British Trade Unionism Since 1889 vol 3 1934 51 1994 The major scholarly history highly detailed Davies A J To Build a New Jerusalem Labour Movement from the 1890s to the 1990s 1996 Field Geoffrey G Blood Sweat and Toil Remaking the British Working Class 1939 1945 2011 DOI 10 1093 acprof oso 9780199604111 001 0001 online Foote Geoffrey The Labour Party s Political Thought A History Macmillan 1997 ed Hinton James Labour and Socialism A History of the British Labour Movement 1867 1974 1983 online Laybourn Keith A history of British trade unionism c 1770 1990 1992 Lewenhak Sheila Women and trade unions an outline history of women in the British trade union movement E Benn 1977 Minkin Lewis The Contentious Alliance Trade Unions and the Labour Party 1991 708 pp online Musson A E Trade Union and Social History 1974 Pelling Henry A history of British trade unionism 1987 Pimlott Ben and Chris Cook Trade Unions in British Politics The First 250 Years 2nd ed 1991 Roberts B C The Trades Union Congress 1868 1921 1958 Rosen Greg ed Dictionary of Labour Biography Politicos Publishing 2001 665pp short biographies of Labour Party leaders Taplin E The Dockers Union A Study of the National Union of Dock Labourers 1889 1922 Leicester UP 1986 Taylor R The TUC From the General Strike to New Unionism 2000 excerpt Thorpe Andrew A History of the British Labour Party Palgrave Macmillan 2008 Webb Sidney and Beatrice Webb The History of Trade Unionism 1894 new edition 1920 Outdated famous history online Wrigley Chris ed A History of British industrial relations 1875 1914 Univ of Massachusetts Press 1982 Wide ranging essays by scholars including study case studies of coal mining cotton textiles transport and the iron trade Wrigley Chris ed A History of British Industrial Relations 1914 1939 1993 Wrigley Chris ed British Trade Unions 1945 1995 Manchester University Press 1997 Wrigley Chris British Trade Unions since 1933 2002 115 pp online World wars edit Adams Tony Labour and the First World War Economy Politics and the Erosion of Local Peculiarity Journal of Regional and Local Studies 10 1990 23 47 Braybon G Women Workers in the First World War Routledge 2010 Brooke Stephen Labour s war the Labour party during the Second World War 1992 Burridge Trevor D British Labour and Hitler s war Deutsch 1976 Bush J Behind the Lines East London Labour 1914 1919 Merlin Press 1984 Calder Angus The people s war Britain 1939 1945 1969 Cline C A Recruits to Labour The British Labour Party 1914 1931 Syracuse University Press 1963 Englander David Troops and Trade Unions 1919 History Today 37 1987 8 13 Grieves K The Politics of Manpower 1914 18 Manchester UP 1988 Holford J Reshaping Labour Organisation Work and Politics Edinburgh in the Great War and After Croom Helm 1988 Horne John N Labour at war France and Britain 1914 1918 1991 Silbey D The British Working Class and Enthusiasm for War 1914 1916 Frank Cass 2005 Summerfield Penny Women workers in the Second World War production and patriarchy in conflict Routledge 2013 Swift David Patriotic labour in the era of the great war PhD Dissertation University of Central Lancashire 2014 online Detailed bibliography on pp 220 35 Historiography edit Callaghan John et al eds Interpreting the Labour Party Approaches to Labour Politics and History 2003 online also online free 210pp Taylor Antony The Transnational Turn in British Labour History Labour History Review 81 1 2016 Zeitlin Jonathan From labour history to the history of industrial relations Economic History Review 40 2 1987 159 184 in JSTOR see history of the project Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of trade unions in the United Kingdom amp oldid 1210995550, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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