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Australian Council of Trade Unions
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The Australian Council of Trade Unions (ACTU), originally the Australasian Council of Trade Unions, is the largest peak body representing workers in Australia. It is a national trade union centre of 46 affiliated unions and eight trades and labour councils. The ACTU is a member of the International Trade Union Confederation.
The President of the ACTU is Michele O'Neil, who was elected on 28 July 2018. The current Secretary is Sally McManus.
Objectives
[edit]The objectives of the ACTU, found in its constitution, are:
- the socialisation of industry,
- the organisation of wage and salary earners in the Australian workforce (within the trade union movement),
- the utilisation of Australian resources to maintain full employment, establish equitable living standards which increase in line with output, and create opportunities for the development of talent.
Organisation
[edit]The ACTU holds a biennial congress that is attended by approximately 800 delegates from affiliated organisations. Between congresses the ACTU is governed by an executive of 60 members: the president, the two vice-presidents, the secretary, the assistant secretaries, Trades and Labour Council representatives from each capital city and elected delegates from affiliated unions.
Current campaigns
[edit]The ACTU's main current campaigns[2] include the campaign to win paid pandemic leave for all workers in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, the For the workers campaign[3] to oppose Commonwealth Government proposals to change Australian workplace laws, and the promotion of a Working from Home Charter.[4]
Following the 2007 Australian federal election, the ACTU's primary focus was the campaign to restore workers rights under the banner of the Your Rights at Work campaign.[5] In addition to this campaign the ACTU is also running a number of other campaigns, including workplace health and safety,[6] working with other unions on the Your Rights at Telstra campaign and supporting the Rights on Site[7] campaign.
The ACTU has also launched a service by which workers can join their applicable union directly through the ACTU. This self-titled "one stop shop" for union membership is Australian Unions.[8]
In 2008, the ACTU launched a campaign to make paid maternity leave a new national employment standard.[9]
In 2011, the ACTU launched a campaign to address the spread of casual, contract and other forms of insecure work in Australian workplaces.[10] Part of this involved an inquiry into insecure work.[11]
In 2023, the ACTU and other big unions including the Health Services Union, and the Australian Manufacturing Workers' Union began a campaign calling for a levy to be imposed on non-union workers after the union was able to raise wages through collective bargaining.[12]
History
[edit]
In Australia, agitation for One Big Union took place from 1911 from two different sectors: from the revolutionary Australian section of the IWW and from the pro-arbitration Australian Workers Union (AWU). At that time the AWU was the largest single Australian union. In 1918 after the collapse of the Australian IWW, a group of militant trade unions (which were opposed to the AWU) attempted to form One Big Union under the name Workers Industrial Union of Australia (WIUA). The hostility between the WIUA and the AWU prevented the formation of One Big Union in Australia.[13] The ACTU was formed as the Australasian Council of Trade Unions in 1927 and was one of the earliest attempts by trade unions to apply the principles of One Big Union earlier explored by more radical syndicalist unions like the CNT or revolutionary industrial unions like the IWW. The ACTU has not achieved the ideals expressed for One Big Union: it remains a council organisation, but it does however represent the majority of Australian trade unions. At its formation in 1927 the ACTU was only seen as representing blue collar trades unions, and only managed to achieve the support of trades unions.
Attempts of Nationalist Stanley Bruce's federal government in 1927 to dismantle the Australian Industrial Relations Commission impelled Australian trade unions to form a national council. The ACTU's Australian trade union "peak body" precursors include state labour councils like the Victorian Trades Hall Council (originating in 1856 as the 'Melbourne Trades Hall Committee'), the Labor Council of New South Wales (originally formed in 1870 as the 'Sydney Trades and Labor Council') and the Inter-Colonial Trade Union Congress (formed in 1879).

From 1948 peak bodies of white collar associations existed, and from 1969 peak bodies of government employees. The white collar bodies were: the Council of Professional and Commercial Employees Association (1948), which became the Council of White Collar Associations (1954), which amalgamated with the Salaried Employees Consultative Council of New South Wales (1954) to become the Australian Council of Salaried and Professional Associations (ACSPA) in 1956. The government employee bodies were: the Council of Commonwealth Public Service Organisations (1969) which became the Council of Australian Government Employee Organisations (CAGEO) in 1975. The ACTU successfully integrated these bodies in 1981. After 1981 the ACTU was generally viewed by the Australian media and public as the organisation representing all workers' organisations.

The ACTU and Labour Councils have often united Australian working class opinion behind certain initiatives like the eight-hour day or compulsory arbitration. In the early 1980s this unifying impulse created the Prices and Incomes Accord. The ACTU retains a close relationship with the Australian Labor Party: former ACTU President Bob Hawke went on to become the leader of the ALP and then Prime Minister of Australia. Other former ACTU Presidents who went on to become members of Federal Parliament are: Simon Crean (president 1985–90), Martin Ferguson (1990–96), Jennie George (1996–99), and Ged Kearney (2010–18). The November 2007 election win by the Labor Party, saw the election of a number of union officials to the parliament (Commonwealth) including Bill Shorten (Australian Workers Union) and Greg Combet (former ACTU Secretary).
In the late 1980s and early 1990s the ACTU was influential in a move to forcibly amalgamate smaller unions into so called "super unions". The ACTU's plans envisaged 20 super unions organised on an industrial basis. While many amalgamations occurred in the late 1980s and early 1990s (in part under the influence of changed industrial law), there are still many unions, and union coverage is often organised by historical amalgamation, not by industry.
Past campaigns
[edit]In the lead up to the 2007 federal election, the ACTU campaigned actively against the Howard government's WorkChoices legislation, which included an advertising campaign[14] and public rallies.[15] This campaign was originally called "Your Rights at Work" but is now known as "Secure Jobs. Better Future"[5] and was considered a success in making industrial relations an important election issue by both marketing companies[16] and even Joe Hockey MP, the Federal Workplace Relations Minister, who said "This is the most sophisticated political plan that we have seen in Australia.".[17] One of the rallies was called Fill the "G" , attended by 50,000 people at the Melbourne Cricket Ground and broadcast to other similar rallies throughout the country.[18][19] A previous national rally had a reported attendance of 500,000 around Australia.[20][21]
Leadership
[edit]Presidents
[edit]| No. | Name | Took post | Left post | Time | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Billy Duggan | 1927 | 1934 | 7 years | Coburg councillor (1924–30); Mayor of Coburg (1928–29). |
| 2 | Albert Monk, CMG | 1934 | 1943 | 9 years | 2nd Secretary of the ACTU. |
| 3 | Percy Clarey | 1943 | 1949 | 6 years | MP for Bendigo (1949–60). |
| (2) | Albert Monk, CMG | 1949 | 1969 | 20 years | |
| 4 | Bob Hawke, AC, GCL | 1969 | 1980 | 11 years | MP for Wills (1980–92); President of the Labor Party (1973–78); Leader of the Labor Party (1983–91); Leader of the Opposition (1983); Prime Minister (1983–91). |
| 5 | Cliff Dolan | 1980 | 1985 | 5 years | |
| 6 | Simon Crean | 1985 | 1990 | 5 years | MP for Hotham (1990–2013); Deputy Leader of the Labor Party (1998–2001); Leader of the Labor Party (2001–03). |
| 7 | Martin Ferguson | 1990 | 1996 | 6 years | MP for Batman (1996–2013). |
| 8 | Jennie George, AO | 1996 | 2000 | 4 years | MP for Throsby (2001–10). |
| 9 | Sharan Burrow, AC | 2000 | 2010 | 10 years | President of ICFTU (2004–06); President of ITUC (2006–10); General Secretary of ITUC (2010–2022). |
| 10 | Ged Kearney | 1 July 2010 | 2 February 2018 | 7 years, 216 days | MP for Batman (2018–19); MP for Cooper (2019–present). |
| 11 | Michele O'Neil | 17 July 2018 | Incumbent | 7 years, 122 days |
Secretaries
[edit]| No. | Name | Took post | Left post | Time | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Charlie Crofts | 1927 | 1943 | 16 years | President of the Labor Party in Victoria (1926–27). |
| 2 | Albert Monk, CMG | 1943 | 1949 | 6 years | |
| 3 | Reg Broadby | 1949 | 1956 | 7 years | |
| 4 | Harold Souter | 1956 | 1977 | 21 years | |
| 5 | Peter Nolan | 1977 | 1983 | 6 years | |
| 6 | Bill Kelty, AC | 1983 | 2000 | 17 years | |
| 7 | Greg Combet, AM | 2000 | 2007 | 7 years | MP for Charlton (2007–13). |
| 8 | Jeff Lawrence | 2007 | 2012 | 5 years | Vice-President of the Labor Party in New South Wales (2002–07). |
| 9 | Dave Oliver | 2012 | 15 March 2017 | 5 years | |
| 10 | Sally McManus | 15 March 2017 | Incumbent | 8 years, 246 days |
Affiliated trade and labour councils
[edit]Eight trade and labour councils are affiliated with the ACTU:[22]
Current affiliated organisations
[edit]Dis-affiliated organisations
[edit]In 2024, a number of blue-collar trade unions disaffiliated with the ACTU.[23]
See also
[edit]- 1998 Australian waterfront dispute
- Australian Industrial Relations Law Reform 2005
- Australian labour law
- Australian Workplace Agreement
- Employers' organization
- Enterprise Bargaining Agreement
- Fair Pay Commission
- Trades Hall
- Trade Practices Act
- Transport Workers Act 1928
- Unions ACT
- Victorian Trades Hall Council
- List of unregistered Australian unions
- Workplace Relations Act 1996
References
[edit]- ^ Donn, C. B., & Dunkley, G. (1977). The Founding of the ACTU: The Origins of a Central Trade Union Federation. Journal of Industrial Relations, 19(4), 404–423. https://doi.org/10.1177/002218567701900405
- ^ "Campaigns". Australian Unions.
- ^ "For the workers | Australian Unions". fortheworkers.australianunions.org.au.
- ^ "Working From Home Charter | Australian Unions". action.australianunions.org.au.
- ^ a b "Australian Unions - We're for workers". Australian Unions.
- ^ ACTU Health and Safety pages Archived 2 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Rights on Site website". Rightsonsite.org.au. Retrieved 20 July 2010.
- ^ Australian Unions. Retrieved 5 July 2013.
- ^ Paid Parental Leave Archived 13 July 2013 at the Wayback Machine ACTU. Retrieved 5 July 2013.
- ^ (16 May 2012) Joe Kelly.ACTU out to reverse work 'casualisation', improve bargaining power. The Australian. News Limited. Retrieved 5 July 2013.
- ^ "Stoush brews over full-time job orders".
- ^ Thompson, Angus (10 January 2023). "Unions push for a wage deal levy for non-members". The Age. Retrieved 11 January 2023.
- ^ ATUA Project Team, University of Melbourne Archive. "Parties to the Award, Introduction, page 11". ISBN 0908029497. Retrieved 29 September 2025.
- ^ (14 July 2005) Heather Ewart. Ads argue the case for and against IR changes Archived 5 January 2006 at the Wayback Machine. 7:30 Report. Australian Broadcasting Corporation
- ^ - Rally information from Campaign website Archived 12 February 2007 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Campaign Results". Archived from the original on 30 August 2007.
- ^ "ABC transcript of radio interview with Joe Hockey". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 13 June 2007. Retrieved 20 July 2010.
- ^ Holroyd, Jane (30 November 2006). "IR laws 'just not cricket'". Melbourne: "The Age". Retrieved 20 July 2010.
- ^ (30 November 2006) Reko Rennie. March stops city traffic. The Age.
- ^ Thousands protest against IR laws Archived 5 January 2008 at the Wayback Machine. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 15 November 2005.
- ^ Protesters engulf Melbourne CBD. The Age. 15 November 2005. Cites 175,000 as Melbourne crowd size.
- ^ "Affiliates and TLCs". www.actu.org.au. Retrieved 6 May 2019.
- ^ Johnson, Chris. "Big blue-collar union quits ACTU in support of CFMEU". PS News.
External links
[edit]Australian Council of Trade Unions
View on GrokipediaHistory
Pre-ACTU Trade Union Development (Pre-1927)
The origins of organized trade unionism in Australia trace back to the colonial period, with the first unions formed by free workers in Sydney and Hobart during the late 1820s.[10] These early groups emerged among non-convict laborers seeking improved wages and conditions, amid a legal environment influenced by British statutes that restricted collective action.[11] Sporadic industrial actions preceded formal unions, including a 1791 convict demand for daily rations in Sydney and a 1824 coopers' strike employing picket lines.[11] Union activity revived in the 1850s, driven by gold rush immigration and craft worker organization, leading to approximately 400 unions by 1869, primarily representing skilled trades such as stonemasons and carpenters.[10] Key achievements included the 1855 Melbourne stonemasons' strike securing the eight-hour day, a milestone later adopted widely.[11] The opening of Australia's first Trades Hall in Melbourne in 1859 provided a central hub for union meetings and coordination.[11] Non-craft sectors, including miners and transport workers, began forming associations, expanding beyond traditional guilds.[10] The 1870s and 1880s marked rapid expansion, with women's entry via groups like the 1882 Melbourne Tailoresses’ Society and overall membership reaching 200,000 by 1890.[11][10] Trade and labor councils emerged to mediate disputes and advocate politically, such as the 1871 Trades and Labor Council of Sydney.[10] The first intercolonial trade union congress convened in 1879, fostering national coordination.[12] Legislative protections advanced, including New South Wales' 1881 Trades Union Act affirming union rights.[11] Economic depression in the 1890s tested the movement through major defeats, notably the 1890 maritime strike lasting four months over wages and the 1891 Queensland shearers' strike opposing non-union labor, both undermined by employer use of strikebreakers and "free labor" associations.[11] These events halved union membership and prompted a shift toward legislative remedies, culminating in compulsory arbitration systems: New South Wales' 1901 Industrial Arbitration Act and the federal Conciliation and Arbitration Act of 1904.[11] The 1907 Harvester Judgement established a "basic wage" principle tied to living costs.[11] Post-Federation growth resumed under arbitration, though tensions persisted with strikes like the 1912 Brisbane tramway dispute escalating to a general strike and the 1917 New South Wales rail strike against time-based wage systems.[11] Unions opposed World War I conscription through stoppages in 1916-1917.[11] Fragmented state-based councils and intermittent congresses highlighted the need for a unified national body, setting the stage for the 1927 ACTU formation amid ongoing challenges like the 1919 seamen's strike and 1923 police action.[11][10]Formation and Interwar Period (1927-1945)
The Australasian Council of Trade Unions was established on 3 May 1927 through a Trade Union Congress convened at the Melbourne Trades Hall Council, aiming to unify Australia's fragmented labor organizations into a national peak body.[4] The congress adopted the organization's constitution on 7 May, initially including New Zealand affiliates, though it was later renamed the Australian Council of Trade Unions following their disaffiliation.[13][3] Early efforts focused on promoting "One Big Union" principles, but adoption was limited, with major groups like the Australian Workers' Union declining affiliation, constraining the ACTU's initial influence.[14] During the Great Depression from 1929, the ACTU confronted severe economic contraction, including unemployment affecting one in three workers and a 10% reduction in the basic wage, while advocating against employer-imposed cuts.[3] Notable disputes included the 1929 Hunter Valley coal miners' lockout, where 10,000 workers refused a 12.5% pay reduction and endured 15 months without wages, culminating in one fatality from police action.[3] Union membership contracted amid widespread industrial defeats and financial strain on organizations, reducing the ACTU's capacity to coordinate effectively against deflationary policies and employer resistance.[10] As World War II approached, the ACTU endorsed actions like the 1938 Port Kembla wharf workers' refusal to load pig iron destined for Japan, reflecting broader anti-imperialist sentiments within the movement.[15] In 1941, it prioritized equal pay demands, contributing to the Women’s Employment Board establishing female wartime wages at 60–100% of male rates to address labor shortages.[3] Under the Labor government, affiliated unions supported the war effort, with many members enlisting, and overall union density rose from 43% in 1934 to 52% by 1942, bolstering the ACTU's position amid industrial mobilization.[16][10]Post-War Growth and Militancy (1946-1982)
Following World War II, Australia's post-war economic reconstruction and policy of full employment fueled rapid growth in trade union membership, with density peaking at around 65% of the workforce in 1948.[17] The ACTU, under President Albert Monk from 1949 to 1969, coordinated affiliated unions representing the majority of organized workers, supporting centralized arbitration while endorsing government initiatives like mass immigration to bolster labor supply.[18][19] By the early 1950s, union penetration remained high at 63%, reflecting sustained demand for labor amid industrial expansion.[3] Industrial militancy intensified in the late 1940s, as unions in sectors like coal, metals, meat processing, and railways challenged arbitration constraints amid rising living costs and communist-led organizing.[8] The 1949 coal strike, lasting 13 weeks and involving federal intervention via military labor, highlighted tensions between militant rank-and-file actions and ACTU leadership's preference for institutional channels.[20] Monk's administration prioritized anti-communist unity and industrial peace, refusing support for politically motivated stoppages such as those protesting the Vietnam War in the 1960s, yet could not fully suppress grassroots unrest driven by wage pressures.[21] The election of Bob Hawke as ACTU President in 1969 marked a shift toward more assertive leadership amid escalating disputes, with working days lost to strikes surging in the 1970s as militancy extended to white-collar and public sectors.[22] Hawke orchestrated high-profile campaigns, including a 1976 national stoppage involving over two million workers to defend the Medibank universal healthcare scheme against government cuts, demonstrating the ACTU's capacity to mobilize broadly despite internal divisions over arbitration's efficacy.[23] Union density held above 50% through the decade, but persistent industrial action contributed to wage inflation and economic strain, setting the stage for coordinated wage restraint in the early 1980s.[24][25]The Prices and Incomes Accord Era (1983-1996)
The Prices and Incomes Accord originated from negotiations in late 1982 between the Australian Labor Party (ALP) in opposition and the Australian Council of Trade Unions (ACTU), aimed at addressing stagflation characterized by high inflation and unemployment.[26] Formalized after the ALP's victory in the March 1983 federal election under Prime Minister Bob Hawke, a former ACTU president from 1970 to 1980, the Accord committed the ACTU and affiliated unions to restrain wage demands through centralized wage fixation by the Arbitration Commission, forgoing industrial action for higher wages beyond agreed increases.[27][28] In exchange, the government pledged enhancements to the "social wage," including the introduction of Medicare in 1984, tax indexation and cuts, improved unemployment benefits, and the establishment of compulsory superannuation starting with a 3% employer contribution in 1986, which gradually increased.[28][26] Under ACTU Secretary Bill Kelty, who assumed the role in 1983, the organization played a pivotal role in endorsing and implementing the Accord, securing overwhelming support from affiliates for each successive iteration, known as "Marks."[28][29] The framework evolved through eight Accords until 1996, shifting from strict centralism—exemplified by real wage reductions in Accord Mark II (1985)—to incorporating structural reforms like tariff reductions and financial deregulation, and later enterprise bargaining under Mark VII (1993-1995), while maintaining safety nets.[26] This centralization enhanced ACTU influence over national policy but concentrated decision-making among senior officials, often at the expense of rank-and-file militancy.[28] Economically, the Accord contributed to controlling inflation, which declined from 10.0% in 1983 to 4.0% in 1984 and stabilized at lower levels thereafter, alongside a roughly 35% reduction in industrial disputes measured by working days lost.[30][26] Wage inflation was curbed by an estimated 3-13.5% annually compared to counterfactual scenarios without restraint.[26] However, real wages fell by approximately 9-10% over the period, reflecting deliberate policy to restore profitability and unit labor costs amid slow productivity growth in the early years.[26] These outcomes facilitated broader microeconomic reforms, including the floating of the Australian dollar in 1983, but were associated with declining union membership density as centralized bargaining diminished incentives for individual union action.[28][29] The Accord era ended in 1996 following the ALP's electoral defeat, marking a transition from national wage pacts to decentralized bargaining under the subsequent Howard government.[3] While credited with resolving 1980s stagflation through union-government cooperation, critics from within the labor movement, such as former ACTU Vice-President Laurie Carmichael, argued it prioritized macroeconomic stability over worker gains, embedding elements of wage suppression and neoliberal restructuring.[31] Empirical evidence supports moderated inflation and dispute levels but confirms the trade-off in real earnings growth.[26]Post-Accord Decline and Adaptation (1997-2019)
Following the termination of the Prices and Incomes Accord in 1996, the Australian Council of Trade Unions (ACTU) encountered a sustained erosion of membership and bargaining power amid the entrenchment of enterprise-level wage determination and broader structural shifts in the labor market. Trade union density, which had hovered around 35-40% during the Accord's later years, declined steadily to approximately 14% by 2019, reflecting a loss of over 1 million members since the mid-1990s, primarily in the private sector due to casualization, outsourcing, and the rise of non-standard employment forms that evaded traditional organizing.[32][17] This downturn was exacerbated by the Howard government's Workplace Relations Act 1996, which promoted individual contracts and restricted union activities, further decentralizing industrial relations and diminishing centralized wage protections that had sustained union relevance under the Accord.[33] In adaptation, the ACTU pivoted toward aggressive political mobilization and public campaigns to counter legislative threats and rebuild influence. The most prominent effort was the "Your Rights at Work" campaign launched in 2005 against the WorkChoices amendments, which sought to streamline dismissals, limit pattern bargaining, and exempt small businesses from unfair dismissal laws, prompting widespread fears of eroded worker protections.[34] Coordinated under Secretary Greg Combet, the initiative featured television advertisements, mass rallies attended by hundreds of thousands, and an online petition garnering over 170,000 signatures, framing WorkChoices as an assault on family security and contributing significantly to the Coalition's defeat in the 2007 federal election.[35][36] The subsequent Rudd-Gillard Labor governments responded with the Fair Work Act 2009, which reinstated collective bargaining rights, established Fair Work Australia as an umpire, and imposed good faith bargaining obligations on employers, partially reversing WorkChoices and aiming to stabilize union organizing.[37] However, these reforms failed to halt the density decline, as private-sector unionization rates continued to plummet—reaching under 10% by the late 2010s—amid persistent low wages growth linked empirically to weakened aggregate bargaining power.[38] The ACTU adapted by promoting union amalgamations to consolidate resources and enhance coverage in fragmented industries, alongside targeted campaigns against penalty rate reductions proposed in 2017, which galvanized public support but yielded mixed legislative outcomes.[39] By the late 2010s, the ACTU intensified advocacy on wage stagnation, launching in 2018 its largest advertising blitz since WorkChoices to highlight how declining union influence correlated with real wage flatlining despite productivity gains, urging a return to multi-employer bargaining.[40] These efforts underscored a strategic shift from industrial militancy to hybrid political-legal organizing, though empirical data indicated that broader economic forces, including globalization and skill-biased technological change, posed ongoing causal challenges to reversing membership losses.[38]Recent Developments and Challenges (2020-Present)
In response to the COVID-19 pandemic beginning in early 2020, the ACTU prioritized worker protections, campaigning for the JobKeeper wage subsidy program to sustain employment amid lockdowns and economic contraction, which supported millions of jobs through government-negotiated payments equivalent to 70% of pre-crisis wages for eligible workers. Secretary Sally McManus coordinated with employers and the Coalition government to extend coverage to casual and outsourced employees disproportionately affected, while submissions highlighted disproportionate impacts on women, youth, and migrant workers facing unemployment rates exceeding 10% in sectors like hospitality and retail by mid-2020.[41][42][43] Post-pandemic recovery saw union membership rebound, with a 12.3% increase from 2022 to 2024—the strongest growth in over a decade—adding nearly 200,000 members, largely through targeted organizing in insecure work and among workers under 35, where density rose above the national average. Australian Bureau of Statistics figures confirmed the employee membership rate climbed to 13.1% (1.6 million members) by August 2024, up from 12.5% in 2022, correlating with Labor government reforms enabling multi-employer bargaining that facilitated wage gains averaging $251 weekly premiums for unionized workers.[44][45][46][47] Persistent challenges included stagnant private-sector density at 7.9% in 2024, reflecting structural barriers like casualization (affecting 25% of the workforce) and gig economy expansion, which diluted traditional bargaining leverage despite overall gains. The ACTU advocated for policies like a statutory "right to disconnect" from after-hours communications and trialed four-day work weeks to combat burnout, while submitting to the 2025 Annual Wage Review for a 5.25% minimum wage increase amid inflation exceeding 4%. External pressures mounted from proposed Coalition reversals to bargaining laws, deemed by the ACTU as threats to living standards, and internal disruptions such as the 2024 CFMEU crisis, where federal intervention imposed administrators on construction divisions over alleged organized crime links, exposing vulnerabilities in union governance and prompting ACTU calls for transparency reforms.[48][49][50][51][52]Organizational Structure
Governing Bodies and Decision-Making
The Australian Council of Trade Unions (ACTU) is governed primarily by its Congress, which serves as the supreme authority and holds ultimate decision-making power over policy, rules, and strategic direction. Congress convenes every three years, with special sessions callable by the Executive, a majority of state branches, or unions representing one-third of total affiliated membership.[53] Decisions made at Congress are binding on all affiliated unions and ACTU members, enabling the body to amend rules, set overarching policies, and elect key officers.[53] Congress delegates are apportioned based on affiliated union membership, with two delegates allocated per 2,500 members, plus additional representatives from state branches, provincial or regional trades councils, and territorial councils.[53] Full-time officers and Executive members attend with speaking rights but vote only as delegates if accredited. Voting occurs primarily by show of hands, with delegates using voting cards for any plural votes (up to four per delegate), though secret ballots are required for officer elections using an exhaustive preferential system.[53] A quorum demands a majority of entitled votes, ensuring broad representation in deliberations that shape national union priorities, such as campaign strategies and affiliation fees.[53] Between Congress sessions, the Executive exercises most of Congress's powers, including policy formulation, fee and levy determinations, dispute interventions, and binding decisions on affiliates, subject to Congress ratification where applicable.[53] The Executive comprises full-time officers, six delegates from state branches, appointees from unions with over 8,000 members, one representative from smaller unions, two affirmative action representatives (for youth and Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander members), and additional women to ensure at least 50% female voting members.[53] Voting within the Executive is weighted according to Congress delegate entitlements or one vote per member, decided by simple majority at meetings convened by the President, Secretary, or Executive itself, which may be held physically or electronically.[53] Full-time officers—President, Secretary, and two Assistant Secretaries—are elected by secret ballot at each ordinary Congress for three-year terms, with the President chairing proceedings and implementing decisions, the Secretary acting as chief executive officer for administration, and assistants providing support.[53] Additional roles include a Senior Vice-President and seven Vice-Presidents, elected respectively at Congress and by the Executive.[53] Specialized committees, such as the Growth and Campaign Executive Committee and Finance Committee, assist in targeted decision-making, reviewing issues like organizational expansion and fiscal oversight before recommendations reach the Executive or Congress.[53] Affiliated unions' influence is maintained through proportional representation, though non-payment of fees results in loss of voting rights, enforcing financial accountability in governance.[53]Affiliated Unions and Representation
The Australian Council of Trade Unions (ACTU) consists of 38 affiliated unions that collectively represent nearly 2 million Australian workers across diverse sectors including manufacturing, services, education, health, transport, and construction.[54] These affiliations enable coordinated advocacy on industrial, economic, and social policies, with unions paying annual fees calculated per member—$7.50 per member including GST as of the 2021 constitution—to maintain financial status and eligibility for participation.[53] Unfinancial unions, defined as those with fees unpaid for more than two quarters, forfeit representation and voting rights at ACTU forums.[53] Affiliation requires unions to apply to the ACTU Secretary at least six weeks prior to an ordinary Congress, with eligibility assessed by the Executive based on criteria such as organizational structure and alignment with ACTU objectives; successful affiliates gain access to shared resources, campaigns, and policy influence.[53] Representation is structured proportionally to union membership, verified via paid affiliation fees from the third quarter preceding Congress, ensuring larger unions hold greater sway while smaller ones retain voice through designated quotas.[53] At the triennial Congress, the ACTU's peak decision-making body, each affiliated union receives two delegates per 2,500 members (or part thereof), with delegates casting one vote each or authorizing plural voting up to four votes per delegate via written instruction.[54][53] On the Executive, affiliated unions elect representatives including delegates from unions with over 8,000 members, one from smaller unions (under 8,000 members), and state branch nominees, alongside mandates for diversity such as at least 50% women among voting members and positions for youth and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander representatives.[53] This structure balances sectoral interests, with major affiliates like the Australian Manufacturing Workers' Union (AMWU), Construction, Forestry, Maritime, Mining and Energy Union (CFMMEU), and Shop, Distributive and Allied Employees' Association (SDA) exerting significant influence due to their membership scale, while ensuring broader inclusivity through rules requiring delegations to reflect gender, age, Indigenous, and multicultural composition.[55][53]Disaffiliations and Internal Reforms
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, the ACTU initiated extensive internal reforms aimed at rationalizing the fragmented union movement, which then comprised over 300 affiliated organizations, to enhance bargaining power, recruitment efficiency, and adaptation to economic restructuring. Central to these efforts was the promotion of amalgamations into larger "super unions" organized along industry lines, as outlined in the ACTU's Future Strategies policy and the 1987 Congress decisions, which facilitated mergers such as the formation of the Automotive, Food, Metals and Engineering Union in 1993.[56][57] These reforms, driven by then-Secretary Bill Kelty, reduced the number of unions by encouraging voluntary consolidations and, in some cases, leveraging legislative incentives under the Hawke-Keating governments, though critics argued they centralized control within ACTU leadership and diminished smaller unions' autonomy.[58] Reforms also targeted the ACTU's governance structure, including executive restructuring in 1987 to create an "inner executive" for streamlined decision-making, which entrenched the influence of peak officers amid debates over democratic representation.[58] By the mid-1990s, these changes had halved the number of affiliated unions, aligning with broader industrial relations shifts like the Prices and Incomes Accord's emphasis on coordinated wage restraint, though membership density continued to decline post-Accord due to enterprise bargaining and casualization.[57] Disaffiliations from the ACTU have been infrequent historically, reflecting its role as the dominant peak body, but tensions escalated in 2024 amid scandals in the Construction, Forestry, Maritime, Mining and Energy Union (CFMEU). On July 17, 2024, the ACTU suspended the CFMEU's construction and general divisions following revelations from a 2023 royal commission of systemic corruption, organized crime infiltration, and undue payments totaling millions, prompting federal legislation to place the branches under independent administration.[2] This culminated in the Communications, Electrical and Plumbing Union (CEPU), representing approximately 100,000 members in electrical, plumbing, and communications sectors, voting on September 5, 2024, to disaffiliate from the ACTU, citing its perceived capitulation to government intervention as a threat to union sovereignty and a precedent for broader crackdowns.[59][60] The CEPU announced plans to establish or join a rival peak body, highlighting fractures over the ACTU's alignment with Labor Party policies amid declining blue-collar influence, though no immediate mass exodus followed.[61] These events underscore ongoing internal debates on autonomy versus accountability, with the ACTU's response emphasizing anti-corruption measures to preserve credibility.[59]Objectives and Principles
Foundational Goals and Ideology
The Australian Council of Trade Unions (ACTU) was established on February 28, 1927, at the Melbourne Trades Hall, merging earlier state-based labor councils into a national peak body to coordinate trade union activities amid a fragmented movement influenced by craft-based and industrial unionism traditions from British origins.[3] Its formation sought to provide unified representation for workers in negotiations with employers and government, focusing on collective action to secure improved wages, working conditions, and industrial protections, as fragmented state-level efforts had proven inadequate against economic pressures like post-World War I inflation and unemployment.[62] The foundational ideology of the ACTU is enshrined in its constitution, with the primary objective stated as "the socialisation of industry, i.e., production, distribution, and exchange," reflecting a commitment to transferring key economic sectors to public or collective ownership to prioritize workers' interests over private profit.[53] This socialist principle, which remained the sole constitutional goal until expansions in 1971, aimed to utilize Australia's resources for the benefit of the populace rather than capitalist accumulation, drawing from labor movement ideals of democratic control over production to mitigate exploitation and inequality.[63] Complementary aims included the full organization of wage and salary earners into unions for effective bargaining power and advocacy for shorter hours, higher pay, and safety standards, underscoring an ideological emphasis on class solidarity and structural reform over mere palliatives.[64] While rooted in socialist aspirations, the ACTU's early ideology also incorporated pragmatic industrial strategies, such as centralizing wage claims and fostering ties with the Australian Labor Party (ALP) for political leverage, though tensions arose from communist influences in some founding unions advocating more radical direct action.[65] This framework privileged empirical worker organization—evidenced by initial affiliation of over 400,000 members across 100 unions—over abstract theory, yet retained socialization as a causal endpoint to address root causes of labor disempowerment like market volatility and employer monopsony.[66] The ideology's persistence in the constitution, despite practical adaptations, highlights a foundational tension between revolutionary intent and reformist execution in Australian unionism.[53]Evolution of Policy Stances
The Australian Council of Trade Unions (ACTU) initially emphasized centralized wage arbitration and militant industrial action to secure improvements in pay and conditions, reflecting a post-war consensus on protecting workers through national systems like the Commonwealth Conciliation and Arbitration Commission. In the 1960s and early 1970s, the ACTU led campaigns for equal pay, culminating in the 1969 Equal Pay Case, which argued for parity between men and women performing similar work, and the 1972 case extending this to comparable worth, resulting in phased implementation by 1975.[67] These stances prioritized broad-based wage indexation to inflation and opposition to employer-driven decentralization, with union density peaking at around 65% in the late 1940s before stabilizing near 50% by the 1970s amid economic pressures like oil shocks.[8] A pivotal shift occurred in 1983 with the Prices and Incomes Accord, negotiated between the ACTU and the newly elected Hawke Labor government, marking a departure from adversarial wage claims toward cooperative restraint. Under the Accord's initial framework, unions committed to limiting nominal wage increases to maintain low inflation and support fiscal consolidation, forgoing strikes and centralized claims in exchange for non-wage benefits including Medicare's establishment in 1984, superannuation guarantees starting at 3% of wages in 1992, and tax reforms.[28] This policy evolved through eight iterations by 1996, incorporating structural efficiency principles that facilitated enterprise-level bargaining, award simplification, and labor market flexibility to boost productivity, though real wages grew modestly at an average 0.5% annually during the period amid floating the exchange rate and tariff reductions.[68] Critics, including some union factions, argued the Accord subordinated worker interests to macroeconomic stability, enabling neoliberal adjustments that later contributed to wage stagnation as bargaining decentralized.[69] Post-Accord, from 1997 onward, the ACTU adapted to declining membership—falling to 17% by 2019—and legislative challenges, advocating safety nets for non-bargaining workers while endorsing enterprise agreements under the Howard government's Workplace Relations Act 1996. The ACTU vehemently opposed the 2005 WorkChoices reforms, which prioritized individual contracts, curtailed award conditions, and restricted pattern bargaining, launching the "Your Rights at Work" campaign that mobilized public opposition and was credited with influencing the Coalition's 2007 election loss.[70] Under subsequent Labor governments, the ACTU supported the Fair Work Act 2009, restoring collective bargaining primacy and minimum standards, but critiqued conservative-era policies for exacerbating casualization and inequality.[71] In the 2020s, amid post-COVID recovery and inflation above 7% in 2022, the ACTU shifted toward multi-employer bargaining and wage recovery, campaigning for the Secure Jobs Better Pay Act passed in December 2022, which eliminated loopholes in agreement approval, enabled industry-wide negotiations, and aimed to close gender pay gaps through better transparency and casual-to-permanent conversions.[72] This legislation has facilitated over one million additional workers under collective agreements, correlating with wage outcomes exceeding 4% annually in bargaining sectors by 2024. On migration, the ACTU in 2022 endorsed expanding intake to address skills shortages but conditioned support on structural wage growth, reformed training via Jobs and Skills Australia, and protections against undercutting local conditions.[73] These positions reflect a pragmatic evolution from centralized militancy to targeted advocacy for bargaining power restoration, though union influence remains constrained by membership decline and employer resistance to re-regulation.[52]Leadership
Presidents and Their Tenures
The Australian Council of Trade Unions was founded in May 1927, with W. J. Duggan elected as its first president unopposed at the inaugural trade union congress.[74] Albert Monk succeeded in the role, serving as president until his retirement in 1969.[75] Bob Hawke was elected president in 1970, holding the position until 1980 while also advocating for national wage cases and centralised bargaining.[76] Simon Crean served as president from 1985 to 1990, working alongside Secretary Bill Kelty to negotiate the Prices and Incomes Accord with the Hawke government.[77] Martin Ferguson held the presidency from 1990 to 1996, during a period of transition toward enterprise bargaining.[78] Jennie George became the first woman president in 1996, serving until 2000.[79] Sharan Burrow, the second woman to lead as president, served from 2000 to 2010, focusing on international labour standards and domestic policy reforms such as paid parental leave.[80] Ged Kearney succeeded Burrow in 2010 and served until February 2018, when she resigned to contest a federal by-election.[81] Michele O'Neil has been president since July 2018.[82]| President | Tenure |
|---|---|
| W. J. Duggan | 1927 |
| Albert Monk | Until 1969 |
| Bob Hawke | 1970–1980 |
| Simon Crean | 1985–1990 |
| Martin Ferguson | 1990–1996 |
| Jennie George | 1996–2000 |
| Sharan Burrow | 2000–2010 |
| Ged Kearney | 2010–2018 |
| Michele O'Neil | 2018–present |
Secretaries and Executive Roles
The Secretary of the Australian Council of Trade Unions (ACTU) functions as the chief executive officer, overseeing daily operations, policy implementation, and coordination with affiliated unions.[54] The position is elected by the ACTU Executive and Congress, with the incumbent directing administrative functions, campaigns, and advocacy efforts on behalf of approximately 1.6 million union members.[83] Assistant Secretaries support these duties, focusing on specific portfolios such as industrial relations or organizing, as seen with current Assistant Secretary Liam O'Brien, appointed in December 2018.[84] The ACTU Executive, comprising around 60 members including the President, Secretary, two Assistant Secretaries, and representatives from affiliated unions and state labor councils, governs between biennial congresses, ratifying decisions and setting strategic priorities.[85] Executive members are elected to represent sectoral and regional interests, ensuring decisions reflect the federation's diverse affiliates, with a smaller core of officers handling operational leadership.[54] Notable Secretaries have shaped the ACTU's influence during key economic periods. Bill Kelty served from 1983 to 2000, advancing enterprise bargaining and the Prices and Incomes Accord under the Hawke-Keating governments, which moderated wage demands in exchange for social wage gains.[86][87] Greg Combet held the role from 2000 to 2007, leading opposition to the Howard government's WorkChoices legislation through coordinated union campaigns and public mobilization.[88][89] Jeff Lawrence succeeded Combet in June 2007, serving until 2012 and emphasizing fair work reforms post-WorkChoices.[90] Dave Oliver led from 2012 until January 2017, focusing on wage stagnation and insecure work amid post-GFC recovery challenges.[91] Sally McManus, elected on 15 March 2017 as the first woman in the role, continues as the 10th Secretary, advocating for secure jobs, pay equity, and reforms to negative gearing and casual employment.[91][92][93]| Secretary | Tenure | Key Contributions |
|---|---|---|
| Bill Kelty | 1983–2000 | Accord negotiations, superannuation framework[94][95] |
| Greg Combet | 2000–2007 | Anti-WorkChoices campaigns, industrial advocacy[88] |
| Jeff Lawrence | 2007–2012 | Fair Work Act support[90] |
| Dave Oliver | 2012–2017 | Insecure work initiatives[91] |
| Sally McManus | 2017–present | Gender equity, tax reform pushes[91][93] |