Electrical, Electronic, Telecommunications and Plumbing Union


The Electrical, Electronic, Telecommunications and Plumbing Union, known as the EETPU, was a British trade union formed in 1968 as a union for electricians and plumbers, which went through three mergers from 1992 to now be part of Unite the Union.

History

The union was formed in July 1968 with the merger of the Electrical Trades Union and the Plumbing Trades Union to form the Electrical, Electronic & Telecommunications Union & Plumbing Trades Union, which became the Electrical, Electronic, Telecommunications & Plumbing Union in 1973. Archives of government papers show that "a period of severe industrial unrest" began in September 1970. Local authority manual workers wanted a £30 minimum weekly wage. A Committee of Inquiry recommended a 14.5 per cent increase, but the government considered it to be too high. In the winter that followed an electricity power workers strike caused the Cabinet to declare a national emergency. The first miners' strike followed in 1972.
For many years the EETPU owned and operated its own Technical Training Department which was based at Cudham Hall in Kent. This received much acclaim and press attention in its day.
In September 1982, Chapple became President of the Trades Union Congress and was succeeded by Eric Hammond in 1984. Chapple was elevated to the House of Lords as Lord Chapple of Hoxton in 1985.
In 1986 the union's members replaced print workers that had been sacked by News International, prompting the Wapping dispute that led to the irrevocable change of Fleet Street.

Expulsion from the TUC

The union had its own approach to making deals with companies, and thus often clashed with the TUC from which it was expelled for violating the Bridlington Agreement governing the transfer of members between TUC unions. The EETPU had developed a policy of signing single union agreements in companies where it had few members. In 1987, the TUC asked the EETPU to retract from these agreements at Yuasa, Thorn-EMI and Orion. The EETPU refused and its 225,000 workers were expelled. Around 5,000 members, led by John Aitkin, decided to split away in order to remain within the mainstream trade union movement, and founded the Electrical and Plumbing Industries Union.

Mergers

The union merged with the Amalgamated Engineering Union to become the Amalgamated Engineering and Electrical Union in May 1992, so the electricians were now part of the TUC. The AEEU was led by Ken Jackson, who belonged to the EETPU. The AEEU merged with the Manufacturing, Science and Finance to become Amicus in 2001. Amicus, the largest private sector union with 1.2m workers, was led by Derek Simpson since June 2002. Tony Dubbins, of the NGA in the Wapping dispute, became Joint Deputy General Secretary in 2004. Amicus merged with the Transport and General Workers' Union in May 2007 to become Unite the Union.

Amalgamations

A large number of small unions amalgamated with the EETPU:
The union sponsored many Labour Party candidates in each Parliamentary election.
ElectionConstituencyCandidateVotesPercentagePosition
1970 general electionSwindon25,73155.51
1970 general electionWakefield27,35258.11
1970 general electionWandsworth Central19,77654.01
Feb 1974 general electionSwindon24,09347.91
Feb 1974 general electionTooting18,79548.31
Feb 1974 general electionWakefield27,03251.31
Oct 1974 general electionSwindon24,12451.81
Oct 1974 general electionTooting18,53054.31
Oct 1974 general electionWakefield25,61654.81
1979 general electionIslington Central13,41551.51
1979 general electionSwindon25,21850.22
1979 general electionTooting18,64251.91
1979 general electionWakefield27,12450.91
1982 by-electionBirmingham Northfield15,90436.31
1983 general electionBirmingham Northfield19,83637.52
1983 general electionCaithness and Sutherland3,32514.33
1983 general electionKingston upon Hull West15,36141.91
1983 general electionSwindon20,91536.72
1983 general electionTooting19,64042.71
1983 general electionWakefield19,16640.41
1987 general electionBirmingham Northfield20,88939.22
1987 general electionKingston upon Hull West19,52751.91
1987 general electionTooting21,45744.21
1991 by-electionLangbaurgh22,44242.91
1992 general electionFolkestone and Hythe6,34712.13
1992 general electionGosport7,27513.63
1992 general electionKingston upon Hull West21,13957.31
1992 general electionLangbaurgh28,45443.12
1992 general electionTooting24,60148.21
1992 general electionWarley West21,38650.61

Leadership

General Secretaries

General Presidents

Plumbing National Secretaries