Mining unions CFMMEU divorce bid knocked back
The mining unionâs attempt to exit the CFMMEU, once hailed as the most powerful force in Australiaâs labour movement, has been blocked by Australiaâs national industrial tribunal, forcing it to remain within the bitterly divided organisation as it plots another way out.
Three Fair Work Commissioners decided on Tuesday the Mining and Energy Division of the Construction, Forestry, Maritime, Mining and Energy Union did not meet the legal threshold for its members to vote on whether they wanted to withdraw from the larger union.
Mining union boss Tony Maher has vowed to press on with his divisionâs attempt to leave the CFMMEU.Credit:Alex Ellinghausen
It leaves the union with two obvious choices if, as the miners have vowed, they still want to leave: ask the courts to review Tuesdayâs decision or use laws introduced by the Coalition last year that provide an alternative route for divisions of lawbreaking unions to split.
That path poses other challenges, such as requiring the mining union to show it was not involved in the CFMMEUâs long history of industrial law breaches. It could also have implications for which members remain with the mining and energy division, and which remain with the CFMMEU.
The conflict within the CFMMEU dates from 2019 when its powerful Victorian construction division secretary, John Setka, was accused of harassing his wife via texts. Mr Setka pleaded guilty to one criminal offence of using a carriage service to harass, and another of persistently breaching a court order.
Mr Setka took the view that others had been insufficiently supportive of him, setting off a cascade of conflict that left the mining division wanting to withdraw and the manufacturing division likely to follow.
But the 20,000-member mining divisionâs plan failed as it didnât satisfy the Fair Work Commission it was created within five years of its application to split.
It had claimed it was created in 2018 when the Maritime Union of Australia and Textile, Clothing and Footwear Union of Australia joined the CFMMEU but the Fair Work Commission held it was much older.
âThe history of amalgamations involving the organisation now known as the CFMMEU shows that the M&E Division in its current iteration has been a part of the organisation now known as the CFMMEU since 5 May 1995,â the commission said.
Mining division president Tony Maher said the decision was a disappointing setback but vowed to keep pursuing a vote to leave the CFMMEU, from which the mining division is already operating autonomously.
âMembers around the country have indicated their strong support for moving forward as an independent Mining and Energy Union,â Mr Maher said. âWe are committed to giving all members a vote on this issue.â
The CFMMEUâs national construction secretary, Dave Noonan, called on the mining and energy division to accept the commissionâs decision and resolve disputes within the union, rather than through the process created by the Coalition.
âThey are not the friends of workers, as their drive to casualise our industries shows,â Mr Noonan said. âWe all need to focus on the issues confronting members: job security, safety, wages and conditions. This can best be achieved by a union of 100,000 plus members, not by splitting our strength.â
Attorney-General Michaelia Cash said the case showed the divisions within the CFMMEU and noted the mining division could still withdraw using the new method.
âItâs not surprising that parts of the CFMMEU want to disassociate themselves from the persistent lawlessness promoted by many individuals within that union,â Senator Cash said.
On Tuesday Mr Setka defended himself against another allegation from his now-estranged wife, Emma Walters, that he had assaulted her last month by hitting her head against a table five times following an argument.
On ABC Radio in Melbourne Mr Setka described the allegations as âfalseâ.
âI have not been charged ...over the years there has been many, many allegations made against me which always amount to nothing, thatâs about all I can say,â he said.
âI walk around, I hold my head up high, Iâve got nothing to be ashamed of, Iâve done nothing wrong.â
Nick Bonyhady is industrial relations reporter for The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age, based between Sydney and Parliament House in Canberra.Connect via Twitter or email.Ben Schneiders is a multi-award winning investigative journalist at The Age with a focus on workplace issues, politics, business and corruption.Connect via Twitter, Facebook or email.
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