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About the TUC

Trades Union Councils

Trades Union Councils bring together unions to work and campaign around issues affecting working people in their local workplaces and communities. Trades Union Councils aim to:

  • raise public awareness of rights at work and the union role in enforcing those rights.
  • promote organising and recruitment drives to build union membership.
  • support union and community campaigns for dignity and respect in the workplace and beyond.

With the threats of racism and fascism, changes in the labour market and debates over the future of public services, the trade union voice in the community is as important as ever. The capacity of trades union councils to provide a local response and to organise trade unionists into coalitions with other progressive forces is crucial. They do this by providing services which keep local trade unionists up to date with developments within the wider trade union movement, and by taking up relevant local industrial and community issues.

Trades Union Council web links

Battersea & Wandsworth Trades Union Council
Barnstaple TUC
Birmingham Trades Union Council
Blackburn and District Trades Council
Brent Trades Union Council
Chelmsford & District Trades Union Council
Croydon Trades Union Council
Greater London Association of Trades Councils
Hackney Trades Union Council
Halifax and District - Calderdale
Harlow Trades Union Council
Harrogate Trades Union Council
Oldham TUC
Torfaen Trades Union Council
West Yorkshire County Association of Trades Union Councils
Wolverhampton, Bilston & District TUC

How Trades Union Councils work

Trades Union Councils consist of trade unions or branches of trade unions which meet within the area covered by that council, or which have members working or living in the area. A union branch will normally affiliate to the trades union council in the area in which it meets. Each branch will then send delegates to the trades union council's meetings. These branches pay an affiliation fee. Their delegates elect officers from amongst themselves to represent the views and priorities of the constituent branches and to take responsibility for working for and supporting the policy of Congress and the TUC General Council. This is because trades union councils are registered with the TUC, rather than being entirely independent bodies. The Annual Conference of Trades Union Councils takes place over a May weekend.

For more details about Trades Union Councils, you can read the TUC's latest guide, Unions in the Community.

Briefing document (400 words) issued 10 Dec 2000


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