“Together for fair deal for workers”
More than 100 member organizations representing over 45 million workers across Europe gathered in Berlin from May 23-26, 2023 for the Congress of the European Trade Union Confederation (ETUC). The event also marked the ETUC’s 50th anniversary. After five decades of struggle, the ETUC has never lost sight of its objective: to continue the fight for a fair and sustainable future for workers and their families.
The Congress is not only a place to bring together the European trade union movement in all its diversity, but also a moment to recapitulate on the past four years, and on what remains to be achieved in the next four.
The ETUC highlighted the challenges facing European trade unions today, and those they will have to face in the future, in a rapidly changing economic and social context. The economic and cost-of-living crisis currently affecting Europe is just the tip of the iceberg, concealing a series of problems that have worsened over recent decades: the weakening and privatization of public services, inequalities in social protection, job insecurity, labor shortages, the relocation of European industries and the rise of the extreme right in the EU are just a few examples.
Added to this is the emergence of new business models that are turning workers’ daily lives upside down, notably with the rise of artificial intelligence in the workplace and the transition to ecologically fair business models. Faced with the rapid pace and impact of these developments, a new approach is essential to protect workers.
In the action program adopted at its Congress, the ETUC calls on European trade unionists and all those who uphold the ideals of the European trade union movement to take ambitious action. In particular, the program commits the ETUC to :
Other congress topics included the Parliament’s employment policy agenda, the rise of the extreme right in Europe, and the forthcoming European elections in 2024.
As is the case at every congress, the new composition of the ETUC secretariat was adopted:
Luxembourg was represented at the ETUC Congress by Véronique Eischen, member of the OGBL Executive Board, Jean-Claude Reding, vice-president of the Chambre des salariés du Luxembourg, Georges Merenz, president of the Landesverband (FNCTTFEL) and vice-president of the OGBL. The LCGB was represented by Katia Neves, in charge of the joint European Secretariat of the OGBL and the LCGB (SECEC).
As an ETUC member organization, the OGBL supports the ETUC’s ambitious action program. Given its importance for employees in Luxembourg, it will also be the subject of discussions and an action plan within its bodies.
Posted by OGBL, June 5, 2023
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