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Free Luxembourgish Workers' Union


FieldValue
nameFLA
location_countryLuxembourg
affiliationWFTU
members10 000 (1946)
full_nameFree Luxembourger Workers' Union
native_nameFreie Lëtzebuerger Arbechterverband
founded1945
dissolved1965
key_peopleNic Momper, Jos Grandgenet

The Free Luxembourger Workers' Union (, abbreviated 'FLA') was a national trade union centre in Luxembourg, active between 1945 and 1965.

Founding

FLA was founded in 1945, after a split in the Luxembourg Workers' Union (LAV). The founders of FLA revolted against the anti-communist stance of the LAV leadership.

Onset of the Cold War

At the time of its foundation FLA had around 10-11 000 members. As of 1946, FLA was the largest trade union centre amongst blue-collar workers. It was the majority union in metal industries and mines (with the exception of the mines at Dudelange, were LAV retained their prominence). However, it began to decline with the onset of the Cold War. From 1949 onwards the influence of FLA declined. An important factor contributing to this development was the exclusion of FLA from collective bargaining negotiations, a policy upheld by both the Luxembourgish employers as well as the trade union competitors (LAV and the LCGB). FLA was however able to retain a foothold in industries in small and medium-sized companies in rural areas of the country for some time.

In the 1950 elections to the Labour Chamber, FLA trailed behind both LAV and LCGB.

Later phase and dissolution

In 1958 FLA, along with three other WFTU-affiliated labour centres in Western Europe (CGT, CGIL, EVC) set up a Common Market Action Committee.

In 1965 FLA was dissolved. At the time of its dissolution, it had around 1500 members. Most of them joined LAV unions.

References

References

  1. Campbell, Joan. ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=23dUzlVxphMC European Labor Unions].'' [[Westport, Connecticut]]: Greenwood Press, 1992. p. 284
  2. "Archived copy".
  3. http://library.fes.de/library/netzquelle/english/eugew/history/pdf/buschak.pdf {{Bare URL PDF. (March 2022)
  4. "Chambre des Députés du Grand-Duché de Luxembourg".
  5. "Archived copy".
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