Hong Kong Confederation of Trade Unions explained

Country:Hong Kong
Hong Kong Confederation of Trade Unions
Native Name Lang:zh-hant
President:Pun Tin-chi
Chairperson:Carol Ng
General Secretary:Lee Cheuk-yan
Colorcode:
  1. 058b4a
Headquarters:19/F, Wing Wong
Building, 557–559
Nathan Road,
Kowloon, Hong Kong
Affiliation1 Title:Regional affiliation
Membership:160,000
International:ITUC
Ideology:Labourism
Liberalism (HK)
Social democracy
Position:Centre-left
Seats1 Title:Legislative Council
Seats2 Title:District Councils
Seats2:-->
Colours: Green
T:香港職工會聯盟
Y:Hēunggóng Jīkgūng Wuih Lyùhnmàhng

The Hong Kong Confederation of Trade Unions (HKCTU) was a pro-democracy labour and political group in the Hong Kong. It was established on 29 July 1990. It had 160,000 members in 61 affiliates (mainly trade unions in various sectors) and representation in the Legislative Council of Hong Kong (LegCo) to challenge government policies and push for legal protection of worker and trade union rights. It was one of the two most influential labour groups in Hong Kong, with the other one being the pro-Beijing Hong Kong Federation of Trade Unions.

Beliefs

The principles put forward by the HKCTU were "Solidarity, Rice Bowl, Justice and Democracy". The group focused on the rights and interests of workers, and the development of a democratic political system in Hong Kong. It called for the right to collective bargaining and protection against dismissals for involvement in trade union activities.

Besides calling for universal suffrage of the Chief Executive of Hong Kong and LegCo, the group also supported the pro-democracy movement in mainland China, including the struggle for independent trade unions. It participated in a number of human rights and labour rights networks to oppose the suppression of labour movements in mainland China.

History

The HKCTU emerged from the Hong Kong Christian Industrial Committee (HKCIC), a church-sponsored labour organisation largely involved in the grassroots movements in the 1970s and 1980s.[1] [2] The Confederation was established in 1990 under the leadership of independent labour leader Lau Chin-shek. It was largely as a coalition of the independent and politically unaffiliated union organisations, most of which were new white-collar unions organising the civil service and professional or service employees in the public and subvented sectors, including the Hong Kong Professional Teachers' Union and the Hong Kong Social Workers General Union.[1]

The HKCTU inherited the vanguard image and the more liberal sector in the territory's pluralistic union movement. It became a partner and an ally of the pro-democracy camp and the Democratic Party,[1] in which Lau was the founding member. Lau Chin-shek won a seat in the 1991 LegCo direct election and Lee Cheuk-yan, the general secretary of the HKCTU, also won a seat in the 1995 LegCo election.

In 1993, HKCTU supported a strike by its affiliate Cathay Pacific Airways Flight Attendants Union (FAU). The strike, demanding a reduction of working hours from up to sixty-five hours per week and the reinstatement of three workers fired for refusing to work overtime, lasted for seventeen days and ended in victory.[3]

Days before transfer of sovereignty in 1997, with the support of the pro-democracy camp, the HKCTU successfully established statutory rights of collective bargaining of labour unions, which mandate employers to negotiate with labour unions on issues such as salaries, welfare and working hours, by introducing the Employee's Rights to Representation, Consultation and Collective Bargaining Bill as Lee Cheuk-yan's private member's bill. But the laws were soon abolished by the pro-Beijing appointed Provisional Legislative Council shortly after the transfer of sovereignty.

Members of HKCTU were involved in organising a number of local protests, including the pivotal 2003 July 1 march to oppose the enactment of anti-sedition laws under Article 23 of the Basic Law (organised by the Civil Human Rights Front of which HKCTU is a member), and other protests to struggle for labour rights and democracy in Hong Kong and in mainland China.

In the 1998 LegCo election, the group was represented by Lau Chin-shek (also a member of Democratic Party and The Frontier) and Lee Cheuk-yan (also a member of The Frontier) in the legislative council (LegCo). In 2012, the HKCTU co-founded the Labour Party.

In 2013, HKCTU supported a strike by its affiliate Union of Hong Kong Dockers. After a forty-day strike, the workers achieved a 9.8 percent pay rise, meal breaks and promises that there would be no retaliation against the strikers.[3]

HKCTU members voted to disband the union on October 3, 2021, following the 2019–2020 Hong Kong protests. At that time, co-founder and general secretary Lee Cheuk-yan was in jail for his involvement in the protests and chief executive Mung Siu Tat had announced on Facebook that he had left Hong Kong.[4] At least 29 Hong Kong trade unions had already been dissolved throughout 2021.[5]

Notable affiliates

Electoral performance

Legislative Council elections

ElectionNumber of
popular votes
% of
popular votes
GC
seats
FC
seats
EC
seats
Total seats+/−Position
200096,7527.3320005th
2004113,3046.402004th
200842,3662.80101
2012Labour ticket000
2016Labour ticket000

District Council elections

ElectionNumber of
popular votes
% of
popular votes
Total
elected seats
+/−
20034,0320.382
20072,2730.202
20114,0440.340

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Ng, Sek Hong. 227–228. Labour Law in Hong Kong. Kluwer Law International. 2010.
  2. News: Hong Kong Free Press. Cheng. Chris. 4 December 2017. Declassified: Hong Kong activists failed to broaden support after Tiananmen, governor said in 1989. 5 December 2017. Governor David Wilson's report to HMG
  3. News: Hong Kong's Trade Unions Are Under Attack. Tim Pringle. Peng Pai. The Jacobin. October 2021.
  4. News: Hong Kong opposition trade union group to disband. Reuters. Pak Yiu. 2021-09-19.
  5. News: Hong Kong trade union disbands as impact of security law deepens. Reuters. 2021-10-03.