Swedish Metalworkers' Union Explained

Metall
Location Country:Sweden
Affiliation:LO, IMF
Members:409,412 (1975)
Full Name:Swedish Metalworkers' Union
Native Name:Svenska Metallindustriarbetareförbundet
Native Name Lang:sv
Founded:1888
Dissolved:January 2006
Merged:IF Metall
Headquarters:Stockholm, Sweden
Key People:Göran Johnsson, president

The Swedish Metalworkers' Union (Swedish: Svenska Metallindustriarbetareförbundet often shortened in text and speech to simply Metall) was a trade union in Sweden.

History

The union was founded in Stockholm on 21 May 1888, and had 555 members by the end of the year. Although the Swedish Foundry Workers' Union and the Swedish Sheet Metal Workers' Union both split away in 1893, the union grew rapidly. From 1895, it was able to support a full-time president, while in 1897 it set up an unemployment fund.[1] [2]

The union affiliated to the Swedish Trade Union Confederation in 1904, and although the Swedish Electricians' Union split away in 1906, by 1908, it had 33,826 members. Membership continued to grow steadily, with the foundry workers rejoining in 1962, and in 1975 it reached an all-time peak of 409,412 members. After that, it gradually declined, despite the affiliation of the Swedish Miners' Union in 1994, and by 2005 the membership number stood at 276,068. In January 2006, it merged with the Swedish Industrial Union to form IF Metall.[3]

Presidents

1925: Fritjof Ekman

1932: Gunnar Andersson

1937: Oscar Westerlund

1948: Arne Geijer

1956: Åke Nilsson

1971: Bert Lundin

1982: Leif Blomberg

1993: Göran Johnsson

References

  1. Book: Kjellberg . Anders . The Membership Development of Swedish Trade Unions and Union Confederations Since the End of the Nineteenth Century . 2017 . Lund University . 978-9172673106 . 82 - 86.
  2. Book: Ebbinghaus . Bernhard . Visser . Jelle . Trade Unions in Western Europe Since 1945 . 2000 . Palgrave Macmillan . Basingstoke . 0333771125 . 626 - 630.
  3. Book: 2005 . Trade Unions of the World . ICTUR . International Centre for Trade Union Rights . etal . 6th . John Harper Publishing . London, UK . 0-9543811-5-7.