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Left Archive: TUCCAR (Trade Union Coordinating Committee Against Repression) Bulletin 1977 February 4, 2013

Posted by WorldbyStorm in TUCCAR (Trade Union Coordinating Committee Against Repression), Uncategorized.
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TuCCAR

To download the above please click on the following link: TUCCAR, 1977

Many thanks to Alan Mac Simoin for writing the following and scanning the accompanying document. This is on foot of the advert for TUCAR in the Socialist Worker Review posted in the Left Archive a number of weeks back.

The attached bulletin is from the Trade Union Coordinating Committee Against Repression. This grouping, which soon changed its name to the less cumbersome Trade Union Campaign Against Repression, was set up in 1977 by a mixture of left republican and socialist trade unionists concerned about the growing use of the courts in industrial disputes and the increasing curtailment of civil liberties on both sides of the border.

Among those involved were Christina Carney and Phil Flynn, both of whom were officials of the Local Government & Public Service Union
(which became the main component of IMPACT). Flynn was later better known as a vice-president of Sinn Fein, and later again as the Irish face of Royal Bank of Scotland and alleged money launderer for the Provos.

While most members were republicans or leftists with varying degrees of sympathy for republicanism, not all fitted this description. At one conference in Belfast about seven or eight members voted against a motion supporting “self-determination for the Irish people”. Their argument was that the “Irish people” in that context implied a cross-class nationalist interest, and they were only concerned with what was good for working class people.

TUCCAR’s biggest success was undoubtably in May 1977, when they called a strike in Belfast in protest at the death of AUEW shop steward Brian Maguire at the hands of the RUC in Castlereagh barracks. About 2,000 came out, from jobs like the Royal Victoria Hospital and the Kennedy Way industrial estate. All the strikes were in nationalist West Belfast, though I do know that some large jobs in East Belfast were leafleted by a couple of younger members. And that was a very courageous thing to do at the time.

In the South much activity was based around getting the issues
discussed and motions passed in the unions. There was also support
for the Liffey Dockyard workers, who were in court after occupying
their job and raising the Starry Plough during a 1978 strike over
blacklisting.

Comments»

1. Jim Monaghan - February 4, 2013

Peoples Democracy was involved. What does anyone know of Trade Unionists for Irish Unity.

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WorldbyStorm - February 4, 2013
2. Starkadder - February 4, 2013

I don’t know much about this group, but it’s mentioned
briefly in the book
“Northern Ireland: between civil rights and civil war ” by
O’Dowd, Rolston, and Tomlinson.

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3. mbt shoes - August 22, 2013

The overall trends on the Paris Fashion Week runways took inspiration from the 1960’s, 1970’s and 1980’s.

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4. Sara McQuaid - May 17, 2021

Is it possible to know more about how Christina Carney and Phil Flynn were specifically involved in the paper?

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WorldbyStorm - May 17, 2021

I’m not entirely sure. I imagine the only way would be through someone who was involved – Alan of course sadly passed away two years ago.

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banjoagbeanjoe - May 18, 2021

I’d say Carney and Flynn would be happy enough to talk about it themselves. They shouldn’t be too hard to find.

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