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Workers' Commissions | |
Comisiones Obreras | |
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Founded | 1976 |
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Headquarters | Madrid, Spain |
Location |
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Members | 920,870 (2018) 94,971 union representatives (2018).[1] |
Key people | Unai Sordo, general secretary |
Affiliations | International Trade Union Confederation European Trade Union Confederation |
Website | www.ccoo.es |
TheWorkers' Commissions (Spanish:Comisiones Obreras,CCOO) since the 1970s has become the largesttrade union in Spain. It has more than one million members, and is the most successful union in labor elections, competing with theUnión General de Trabajadores (UGT), which is historically affiliated with theSpanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE), and with theanarcho-syndicalistConfederación General del Trabajo (CGT), which is usually a distant third.
The CCOO were organized in the 1960s by theCommunist Party of Spain (PCE) and workers'Roman Catholic groups to fight againstFrancoist Spain, and forlabor rights (in opposition to the non-representative "vertical unions" in theSpanish Labour Organization). The various organizations formed a single entity after a 1976 Congress inBarcelona.
Along with other unions like theUnión Sindical Obrera (USO) and the UGT, it called ageneral strike in 1976, and carried out protests against the conditions in the country.Marcelino Camacho, a major figure of Spanish trade unionism and a PCE member, was CCOO'sGeneral Secretary from its foundation to 1985 - he was elected to theCongress of Deputies in the1977 election. However, CCOO disassociated from the PCE in the early 1990s and is nowadays a non-partisan, negotiation-prone union.
Taking as reference the clandestine unionOposición Sindical Obrera (OSO) the first workers' commissions were organized during 1960 inAsturies,Catalonia,Madrid and theBasque provinces ofGipuzkoa andBizkaia as labor disputes emerged outside theFrancoistnational-syndicalmovement. Originally the "commissions" were representative bodies of workers elected in assemblies. The first "comisiones" were boosted by theCommunist Party of Spain (PCE), Christian labor movements (JOC andHOAC [es]) and other groups opposed to theSpanish State. Gradually thead hoc commissions started to become permanent, creating a stable and well organized movement.
For many historians, one of the first places where the Workers' Commissions were formed was the valley ofLaciana (province of León), within the Minero Siderurgica de Ponferrada (MSP) industry. Another place that sometimes is also cited as the first isLa Camocha mine (Gijón) in 1957, during a strike.[2] TheAsturian miners' strike of 1962 ("La Huelgona") was the first massive action of the union and one of the first massive popular mobilizations against Francoist Spain.
The union was heavily repressed in Spain. In 1972 all the leadership of CCOO was jailed, being judged in the infamousProceso 1001. They remained imprisoned until the trial, more than a year later. This finally took place on 20 (day that coincided with the assassination of Prime MinisterLuis Carrero Blanco, which led to the suspension of the trial for a few hours), 21 and 22 December 1973. The defendants faced the accusation of belonging to an illegal and subversive organization, and of having links with theCommunist Party of Spain (PCE).[3] On December 30 convictions were announced, which coincided with requests of the prosecutor and whose severity was considered related to the murder ofCarrero Blanco. The convictions were the following:Marcelino Camacho, 20 years of jail;Nicolás Sartorius, 19; Miguel Ángel Zamora Antón, 12; Pedro Santiesteban, 12; Eduardo Saborido, 20; Francisco García Salve, 19; Luis Fernández, 12; Francisco Acosta, 12; Juan Muñiz Zapico Juanín, 18; and Fernando Soto Martín, 17. They were amnestied on 25 November 1975.
The tactic of CCOO wasentryism, i.e.: infiltration in theVertical Unions of Francoism. This tactic culminated in the union elections of 1975, where CCOO got the overwhelming majority of the delegates elected in the major companies in the country. CCOO led numerous strikes and labor mobilizations in late Francoism and theSpanish Transition.[4]
Since thedemocratic transition until 1987 its secretary general was the historic union leaderMarcelino Camacho, also a prominent leader of thePCE anddeputy between 1977 and 1981. In 1976 CCOO held the Assembly of Barcelona, where the modern class trade union confederation was formed. CCOO was legalized on 27 April 1977. Themurder of 5 labor lawyers in 1977 (members of the union and the PCE) in Madrid that year was followed by a massive funeral, more than 250,000 people participated, and the strikes that followed helped the legalization of the organization. In those years the union is growing rapidly in membership, like the rest of unions and leftist parties. From 1976 to 1978, CCOO went from 30,000 to 1,823,907 members. However, after the signing of theMoncloa Pacts, this figure gradually begun to descend, passing to 702,367 in 1981 and 332,019 in 1986. This negative trend in membership started to change since 1987.[5] In those years CCOO also suffered various splits. In 1976 theConfederación de Sindicatos Unitarios de Trabajadores (CSUT), a group of CCOO members affiliated with theParty of Labour of Spain (PTE) split from the organization. In May 1977 CCOO suffered another split, this time from supporters of themaoistWorkers' Revolutionary Organisation (ORT), that formed theSindicato Unitario.[6]
The year after legalization in 1978, CCOO held its I Confederal Congress, whereMarcelino Camacho was reelected, what would happen again in the Second (1981) and III (1984) congresses. CCOO also was the most voted union (37.8% of the representatives) in theworkers representative elections of 1978, the first democratic ones in thehistory of Spain. In this last congress, different factions emerged, including a majority linked toPCE (led byMarcelino Camacho) and three minorities, respectively linked to theWorkers' Party of Spain – Communist Unity (PTE-UC) (calledcarrillistas and led by Julián Ariza); theCommunist Party of the Peoples of Spain (PCPE); and theRevolutionary Communist League and theCommunist Movement (known asIzquierda Sindical).[7] In 1980, CCOO received an important part of theUSO members, that belonged to thesocialist self-management current. In 1986 the union participated in the historical mobilizations against the permanence of Spain inNATO. CCOO asked for a "NO" vote in theNATO referendum.
CCOO called 4 general strikes in the government ofFelipe González: 1985, 1988, 1992 and 1994; against the economic and employment policy of thePSOE government. Especially massive and historic was the1988 Spanish general strike, organized jointly with theUGT, which had a 95% of following, and forced the government to totally withdraw the Youth Employment Plan.
Since the Fourth Congress (1987), the union's general secretary wasAntonio Gutiérrez, reelected in the V Congress (1991). During his mandate CCOO distanced itself from thePCE and a preference for negotiations and the social pacts over strikes and conflictivity was promoted. This was criticized by a faction known as theCritical Sector of CCOO, supported byMarcelino Camacho and Agustin Moreno, in the sixth Congress (1996). TheCritical Sector of CCOO has continued to organize the most pro-PCE sector of CCOO since then.
In the VII Congress (2000) José Maria Fidalgo was chosen as the new secretary general, being re-elected at the Eighth Congress in April 2004.[8] In 2002 CCOO and UGT called for ageneral strike against a decree of the government ofJosé María Aznar that made firings cheaper, eliminatedagricultural subsidies and encouraged job insecurity, known as thedecretazo. After protests the measure was withdrawn almost entirely. In this cycle CCOO reached again over one million members. CCOO also opposed theIraq War and participated in themassive protests against it.
CCOO held its IX Confederal Congress in December 2008, with 1.2 million members and 120,000 elected delegates in the workplaces ofSpain at the time. At the Ninth CongressIgnacio Fernández Toxo was elected general secretary, surpassing by 28 votesJosé María Fidalgo.[9]
Between 1987 and 2000, the union's general secretary wasAntonio Gutiérrez;[10] he was followed byJosé María Fidalgo (1997–2009), often criticized by the left wing of the union. The CCOO and the UGT, summoned three general strikes (1988, 1992 and 1994) against the economic policy of theFelipe González government, and one on June 20, 2002, against the government ofJosé María Aznar and its plan to change theunemployment insurance system.
The current General Secretary isIgnacio Fernández Toxo. On September 29, 2010, the CCOO called ageneral strike to protest theJosé Luis Rodríguez Zapatero government's plans to raise the retirement age and cut spending.[11]
Tenure | Name |
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1976–1987 | Marcelino Camacho |
1987–2000 | Antonio Gutiérrez |
2000–2008 | José María Fidalgo |
2008–2017 | Ignacio Fernández Toxo |
2017–present | Unai Sordo |
CCOO is organized territorially in local, provincial,regional/nationality levels (in regional unions or in nationality confederations) and in a Spain-wide level. Equally and in a parallel way CCOO is organized at the sectoral level, from local unions in a company to the federal branch. The decision-making bodies at the federal level are the Confederal Congress, the Confederal Council and the Confederal Executive Committee.
Branch federations are:
Union | Abbreviation | Founded |
---|---|---|
Federation of Citizens' Services | FSC | 2009 |
Federation of Construction and Services | FCS | 2014 |
Federation of Education | FE | 1978 |
Federation of Health and Social Health | FSS | 1977 |
Federation of Industry | FI | 2014 |
Federation of Services | Servicios | 2014 |
Pensioners and Senior Citizens Federation | FPJ | 1978 |
Union | Abbreviation | Founded | Left | Reason not affiliated | Membership (1981)[12] | Membership (1994)[12] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Federation of Agriculture | FECAMPO | 1977 | 2000 | Merged into FEAGRA | 15,689 | 17,899 |
Federation of Agrifood | FEAGRA | 2000 | 2016 | Merged into FI | N/A | N/A |
Federation of Banking and Savings | FEBA | 1976 | 1997 | Merged into COMFIA | 7,868 | 31,863 |
Federation of Communication and Transport | FCT | 1997 | 2009 | Merged into FSC | N/A | N/A |
Federation of Construction and Woodworkers | FECOMA | 1984 | 2014 | Merged into FCS | N/A | 44,581 |
Federation of Energy | 1998 | Merged into FM | 6,057 | 8,754 | ||
Federation of Financial and Administrative Services | COMFIA | 1997 | 2014 | Merged into Servicios | N/A | N/A |
Federation of Food Processing | FAYT | 1977 | 2000 | Merged into FEAGRA | 21,511 | 31,625 |
Federation of Metal | 1976 | 1993 | Merged into FM | 103,161 | N/A | |
Federation of Metalworkers and Miners | FM | 1993 | 2014 | Merged into FI | N/A | 124,020 |
Federation of Paper, Graphic Arts, Communications and Entertainment | FESPACE | 1994 | 1997 | Merged into FCT | N/A | 13,903 |
Federation of Private Services | FSP | 1984 | 2014 | Merged into FCS | N/A | 31,681 |
Federation of Public Administration Employees | FSAP | 1977 | 2009 | Merged into FSC | 5,444 | 63,519 |
Federation of the Sea | 1987 | Merged into FETCOMAR | N/A | N/A | ||
Federation of Textile, Leather, Chemical and Allied Industries | FITEQA | 1994 | 2014 | Merged into FI | N/A | 51,053 |
Federation of Transport and Communications | FTC | 1978 | 1987 | Merged into FETCOMAR | 36,092 | N/A |
Federation of Transport, Communication and Sea | FETCOMAR | 1987 | 1997 | Merged into FCT | N/A | 74,361 |
Federation of the Unemployed | 1,778 | 10,574 | ||||
National Federation of Chemicals | 1977 | 1994 | Merged into FITEQA | 19,913 | N/A | |
National Federation of Commerce | 1978 | 1996 | Merged into FECOHT | 8,655 | 19,769 | |
National Federation of Construction | 1977 | 1984 | Merged into FECOMA | 43,745 | N/A | |
National Federation of Entertainment | 1977 | 1994 | Merged into FESPACE | 917 | N/A | |
National Federation of Graphic Arts | 1977 | 1994 | Merged into FESPACE | 9,357 | N/A | |
National Federation of Hotel and Tourism Workers | FEHT | 1978 | 1996 | Merged into FECOHT | 9,320 | 23,196 |
National Federation of Insurance | FES | 1977 | 1997 | Merged into COMFIA | 1,129 | 2,913 |
National Federation of Leather | 1984 | 9,111 | N/A | |||
National Federation of Mining | 1976 | 1993 | Merged into FM | 15,118 | N/A | |
National Federation of Textiles | 1984 | 17,646 | N/A | |||
National Federation of Textiles and Leather | 1984 | 1994 | Merged into FITEQA | N/A | N/A | |
National Federation of Trade, Hotels and Tourism | FECOHT | 1996 | 2014 | Merged into Servicios | N/A | N/A |
National Federation of Wood | 1984 | Merged into FECOMA | 14,451 | N/A |
There are 3 internal currents in CCOO:
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