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Amalgamated Engineering and Electrical Union

Former trade union of the United Kingdom


Summary

Former trade union of the United Kingdom

FieldValue
nameAEEU
location_countryUnited Kingdom
affiliationTUC, CSEU
members835,019 (1994)
full_nameAmalgamated Engineering and Electrical Union
imageAmalgamated_Engineering_and_Electrical_Union_logo.jpg
founded1 May 1992
dissolved2001
mergedAmicus
headquarters110 Peckham Road, London

The Amalgamated Engineering and Electrical Union (AEEU) was a British trade union. It merged with the MSF to form Amicus in 2001.

History

The union was founded in 1992, when the Amalgamated Engineering Union (AEU) finally achieved a merger with the Electrical, Electronic, Telecommunications and Plumbing Union (EETPU), after a hundred years of off-and-on discussions. The new union took the name Amalgamated Engineering and Electrical Union.

The AEU had been affiliated to the Trades Union Congress, while the EETPU was not, so the merged organisation held a ballot on the question of affiliation; members voted for the new union to affiliate. The AEEU was also the largest member of the Confederation of Shipbuilding and Engineering Unions.

Membership of the new union continued to fall in line with the decline in employment in the sectors it covered. By 2001, its membership had fallen to 728,200. That year, it merged with the Manufacturing, Science and Finance union to form Amicus.

General Secretaries

:1992: Gavin Laird and Paul Gallagher :1994: Paul Gallagher :1995: Ken Jackson

Presidents

:1992: Bill Jordan and Ken Jackson :1994: Bill Jordan :1994: John Weakley (acting) :1996: Davey Hall

References

References

  1. Lloyd, John. (1990). "Light and Liberty: A History of EEPTU". Weidenfeld and Nicolson.
  2. (2009). "Historical Directory of Trade Unions: Including unions in building and construction, agriculture, fishing, chemicals, wood and woodworking, transport, engineering and metalworking, government, civil and public service, shipbuilding, energy and extraction in the United Kingdom and Ireland". Ashgate Publishing.
  3. Peter Barberis et al, ''Encyclopedia of British and Irish Political Organizations'', p.79
  4. ''The IHSM Health and Social Services Year Book 1998/99'', p.192
  5. James C. Docherty and Sjaak van der Velden, ''Historical Dictionary of Organized Labor'', pp.24-25
Wikipedia Source

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