General Confederation of Labour of Luxembourg explained

The General Confederation of Labour of Luxembourg (CGT-L) French: Confédération générale du travail luxembourgeoise is a trade union federation in Luxembourg.

The federation was established in 1927, on the initiative of unions representing railway and metal workers in Luxembourg. By the 1970s, its largest affiliate was the Luxembourg Workers' Union, which attempted to form a single general union for all workers. It became the Independent Luxembourg Trade Union Confederation (OGBL), but with many unions deciding not to merge into it, the CGT-L remained in existence.[1]

The CGT-L operates as a loose umbrella organisation, and shares much of its leadership with the OGBL. As the largest and most representative trade union federation in the country, it is affiliated to the European Trade Union Confederation, and the International Trade Union Confederation.

The number of affiliates of the CGT-L has declined, as a series of mergers have taken place. In 2020, one of its two affiliates, the National Federation of Railway Workers, Transport Workers, Civil Servants and Luxembourg Employees, agreed to merge into the other, the OGBL. It is unclear whether this will lead to the dissolution of the CGT-L.[2]

Former affiliates

Union Abbreviation Founded Left Reason not affiliated Membership (1965)[3]
Federation of Hotel Personnel GANYMED 1927 750
FLTL 1864 2005 Merged into OGBL 400
Federation of Prison Wardens of Luxembourg 1963 Merged into FNCTTFEL N/A
FGIL 1900 1979 Merged into OGBL
LAV 1920 1979 Merged into OGBL 20,000
FNCTTFEL 1909 2020 Merged into OGBL 10,000
Union of Foremen and Senior Machinists 1949 1,250

Presidents

Barthélémy Barbel

1956: Antoine Krier

1970: Mathias Hinterscheid

1977: John Castegnaro

2004: Jean-Claude Reding

2014: André Roeltgen

2019: Nora Back

Notes and References

  1. Book: Trade Unions of the World . 2005 . John Harper Publishing . London . 0954381157 . 204 - 205 . 6.
  2. News: L'intégration provisoire du Landesverband dans l'OGBL est entrée en application . 21 August 2021 . RTL . 2 July 2020.
  3. Book: Wirtz . W. Willard . Directory of Labour Organizations: Europe . 2 . 1965 . United States Department of Labor . 18.1 - 18.3.