Electrical, Electronic, Telecommunications and Plumbing Union

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The Electrical, Electronic, Telecommunications and Plumbing Union (EEPTU) was a former British Trade Union.[1]

ETU

The union was originally founded as the Electrical Trades Union.[1]

In 1956, Woodrow Wyatt's The Peril in Our Midst, published by a front organisation of the Information Research Department (IRD), claimed that under the influence of the World Federation of Trade Unions, ETU president Frank Foulkes and General Secretary Frank Haxell were working in the interests of Moscow. Wyatt's information came from MI5 via the IRD.[2]

Wyatt also campaigned against Communist ballot-rigging in the ETU. A 1961 court ruling found that Communists controlled the union and that Foulkes and Haxell had rigged the election for General Secretary against Jock Byrne, who replaced Haxell as a result of the case. Les Cannon would replace Foulkes in 1963.

The role of the secret state in these events was largely missed in many subsequent accounts not least in Arthur Bottomley's The Use and Abuse of Trade Unions]], published by the IRD front Ampersand in 1963, which stated:

the ETU was cleaned up, not as a result of outside protest and agitation (though this undoubtedly played a part) but by the slogging, painstaking and dedicated efforts of a group of socialist trade unionists.[3]

EEPTU

In 1968, following mergers the union became the Electrical, Electronic and Telecommunications Union - Plumbing Trades Union and then the Electrical, Electronic, Telecommunications and Plumbing Union.[1]

The EEPTU was expelled from the TUC in 1988. It merged with the AUEW in 1992. The EEPTU wing of the combined union was re-admitted to the TUC in 1993.[1] The union was part of further mergers into Amicus in 2001 and Unite in 2007.[4]

People

President/General Secretary

Others

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 David Butler and Gareth Butler, Twentieth Century British Political Facts 1900-2000, Macmillan, 2000, p.390.
  2. Paul Lashmar and James Oliver, Britain's Secret Propaganda War 1948-1977, Sutton Publishing, 1998, p.157.
  3. Quoted in Paul Lashmar and James Oliver, Britain's Secret Propaganda War 1948-1977, Sutton Publishing, 1998, p.157.
  4. Geoffrey Goodman, Eric Hammond, The Guardian, 3 June 2009.