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Title: This is not SIPTU! Author: Ciaran Casey Date: 1995 Language: en Topics: SAC, Sweden, reportback, Workers Solidarity Source: Retrieved on 24th November 2021 from http://struggle.ws/ws95/sac44.html Notes: Published in Workers Solidarity No. 44 ā Spring 1995.
CHRISTMAS saw many emigrants return for the holidays. One was Ciaran
Casey who went to Sweden twenty years ago and is currently International
Secretary of his union, the Central Organisation of Swedish Workers
(SAC). This union describes itself as syndicalist and libertarian
socialist. Workers Solidarity spoke to Ciaran and learnt
concentrations in the post office, public transport, local authorities,
childcare and education. While job losses have weakened the traditional
SAC bases in forestry and construction they have been recruiting
increasingly among public sector workers and from the refugee and
immigrant communities.
five full-time national officers must stand for election every four
years and are encouraged not to serve more than two terms. The eleven
āombudspersonsā are the skilled negotiators who can be called on by
local union branches. They have to run for election every five years.
All staff receive the same wage, whether general secretary or
telephonist. That wage is the average industrial wage. Officials, unlike
in other unions, cannot be elected delegates to SAC congress or any
other decision making body.
the membership in a workplace which decides whether to accept or eject
an agreement or go on strike. The national executive only has a say if
the local branch (which retains a portion of membersā subscriptions)
needs extra cash. In that case the executive will decide if SAC can
afford to give more help.
Part of this money goes to build contacts with militant unions in the
third world,. At present they are talking to free trade unionists and
libertarian socialists in Nepal, China, Indonesia and Bangladesh (where
they are assisting trade unionists campaigning against child labour).
including assisting the emerging free trade unions in Eastern Europe and
running aid convoys to the mining town of Tuzla in Bosnia.
the environment, and calls for a 6 hour day as an answer to
unemployment. It not only fights for higher pay and better working
conditions today, but also declares for a libertarian/anarchist
revolution that will put the working class in control and end both
inequality and authoritarianism.