• 20.11.2009 Press release

    ETUC congratulates Herman Van Rompuy and Baroness Ashton

    Brussels, 20/11/2009 John Monks said that the ETUC is looking forward to working with them in their important new jobs and expected them to help forge a new, more influential Europe. “Both are excellent candidates for the highest offices with a record of working well with trade unions. We count on them to take the EU forward.”
  • 17.11.2009 Press release

    ETUC rejects predictions of failure of Copenhagen Conference

    Brussels, 17/11/2009 The ETUC is concerned about political announcements predicting that the Copenhagen Conference in December will not result in a legally binding treaty on climate change. Putting off the signature of a treaty under discussion for months would be a bad political signal for the planet and would seriously burden future generations.
  • 16.11.2009 Press release

    ETUC and Social Platform urge EU policy makers to take more effective action on equality

    Brussels, 16/11/2009 The declaration, titled “Fight discrimination and guarantee equality for all”, was issued by the European Trade Union Confederation (ETUC) and Social Platform. It urged decision makers to take action on the following six points: 1) Ensure the adoption by the European Council of the proposed Article 13 Directive protecting against discrimination on the grounds of age, disability, religion or belief, and sexual orientation in all areas of life
  • 10.11.2009 Press release

    Banks have a public responsability

    Brussels, 10/11/2009 "They have a moral and public responsibility for the damage they have caused and it is now high time that they contribute to the reparations. Millions of workers are losing their jobs. Millions of young people cannot find a job or are hopping from one unstable job to another precarious one. It is a question of moral justice to help the innocent victims instead of paying bonuses to those who are responsible for the mess”.
  • 09.11.2009 Press release

    Macroeconomic dialogue: ETUC says "no" to wage and social spending cuts

    Brussels, 09/11/2009 According to the ETUC, the economic policy mix is erring on two major points: - Policy is massively supporting the bankers but bank lending to the real economy is not starting again. - In the face of a weak and fragile recovery, fiscal policy should not go for premature ‘exit strategies’ but maintain and improve demand policy measures by investing in social and green infrastructure.
  • 09.11.2009 Speech

    Macroeconomic dialogue

    Brussels, 09/11/2009 At the recent Tripartite Social Summit, I quoted the ancient Roman playwright, Platus. I make no apology for repeating his apt remark to our present circumstances. Platus said “I am a rich man as long as I do not repay my creditors”. Or as many bankers might express it, “we are rich men as long as we get almost free money and guarantees from Governments, and give priority to repairing our own balance sheets.”
  • 05.11.2009 Press release

    ETUC looks forward to the entry into force of the Lisbon Treaty

    Brussels, 05/11/2009 This advance is an encouragement in our continuing campaign to ensure a proper interpretation of the Treaty’s internal market provisions and against the unbalanced rulings of the European Court of Justice in the Laval, Viking, Rüffert and Luxemburg cases.
  • 02.11.2009 Press release

    Autumn 2009 Economic Forecasts: is economy in the eye of the storm?

    Brussels, 02/11/2009 The ETUC considers that, instead of organising and setting dates for a premature fiscal exit strategy, policy makers should discuss how to maintain and even strengthen the fiscal stimulus strategy. The latter should be done by rolling out the public investment infrastructure that is necessary for the ‘greening’ of the European economy. European economic policy must break with the ‘Brussels Frankfort’ consensus.
  • 29.10.2009 Speech

    Tripartite Social Summit

    Brussels, 29/10/2009 I read the other day an apt quotation by the ancient Roman playwright, Platus, who remarked “I am a rich man as long as I do not repay my creditors”. Or as many bankers might express it – “we are rich men as long as we get almost free money and guarantees from Governments.”
  • 28.10.2009 Press release

    Agreement on Climate Change: we need a Social and industrial strategy

    Brussels, 28/10/2009 As ETUC Confederal Secretary Joël Decaillon puts it: ’ The decisions taken at this European Council and later at the Copenhagen Summit will be key moments in judging whether Europe and the world have the will to undertake the necessary changes both to protect the climate and to bolster social cohesion’.
  • 27.10.2009 Speech

    Transatlantic Economic Council Meeting with Co-Chairs

    Washington, 27/10/2009 The European Trade Union Confederation welcomes this invitation to submit our views to the Transatlantic Economic Council. This is the first occasion on which we, together with the American Federation of Labor – Congress of Industrial Organizations, de facto the Transatlantic Labour Dialogue, have been invited to participate in this process.
  • 21.10.2009 Press release

    Copenhagen: a successful agreement is also a social agreement

    Brussels, 21/10/2009 The ETUC demands: •  An ambitious, binding and comprehensive international agreement aiming to limit the global rise in temperatures to maximum 2°C, in accordance with the scenarios laid down by the IPCC, reducing at least 25%-40% by developed countries by 2020 below 1990 levels. • An enhanced European contribution to finance the global mitigation of climate change.
  • 20.10.2009 Press release

    Europe needs an unemployment exit strategy, not just a fiscal exit strategy

    Brussels, 20/10/2009 For the ETUC, European financial ministers are missing the key point: The economy is not going through a temporary downturn but is facing instead a prolonged weakness of demand and economic activity because of excessive private sector debt loads. Therefore, the real issue right now is not how to withdraw fiscal stimulus but how to maintain and significantly improve fiscal stimulus so as to help the private sector in reducing its debts, without at the same time causing a protracted slump in economic activity.
  • 14.10.2009 Speech

    Europe – What now? - Brussels Labour (International Branch of the British Labour Party)

    Brussels, 14/10/2009 Thank you for the privilege of inviting me to give the John Fitzmaurice lecture this year. I honour his memory and I follow in distinguished footsteps including those of Neil Kinnock, Margot Wallström and Geoff Hoon to address an old question about where Europe might be heading in the months and years ahead, an old question but one set against a rapidly changing landscape.
  • 05.10.2009 Press release

    Shock at murder attempt against President of DISK, ETUC Turkish affiliate

    Brussels, 05/10/2009 John Monks, ETUC General Secretary declared: 'It is a blow for the European trade unions to hear that an unknown person got into the DISK President's office and fired at him. We were relieved to hear that the wounds are not serious. These kinds of attempts are not acceptable. Trade union action is a right and trying to take the life of one of the leaders flouts this fundamental right'.
  • 05.10.2009 Speech

    Climate Change, new industrial policies, and exiting the crisis

    London, 05/10/2009 Commissioner Spidla, colleagues, we meet today to discuss climate change, the implications for existing jobs, the potential for new jobs, and the contribution this can make to helping resolve the economic crisis that we are currently in.
  • 02.10.2009 Press release

    Climate change: the ETUC launches a campaign for new low-carbon industrial policies

    Brussels, 02/10/2009 Finding solutions to climate disturbances is a huge challenge. Climate protection cannot be tackled simply from the environmental point of view, it is also crucial to address the social issues if we do not want to see the inequalities exacerbated. This is why the ETUC is calling on decision-makers to pledge to address climate change by likewise taking account of the social and employment aspects.
  • 23.09.2009 Press release

    ETUC urges G20 leaders to turn the fight against gross inequalities, unemployment and precarious work into a new engine for world economic growth

    Brussels, 23/09/2009 The G20 has to take strong action on effective financial market regulation. To limit executive pay and bonuses would be useful and desirable but it is not enough. Binding decisions on financial market supervision and sufficient capital reserves requirements are the key to ensuring that such a crisis cannot happen again. It is also important to tackle tax heavens.