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Central Única dos Trabalhadores

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CUT
Unified Workers' Central
Central Única dos Trabalhadores
Founded28 August 1983
HeadquartersSão Paulo, Brazil
Location
MembersApprox. 7.5 million
Key people
Sergio Nobre, President
AffiliationsITUC
Websitewww.cut.org.br

Central Única dos Trabalhadores (English: Unified Workers' Central), commonly known by the acronym CUT, is the main national trade union center in Brazil.

History

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CUT was formed on 28 August 1983 in São Bernardo do Campo, São Paulo, during the First National Congress of the Working Class. Alongside the Workers' Party (PT) and the Landless Workers' Movement (MST), CUT was one of the key organizations to challenge the military rule of 1964–1985 during its final stages, organizing strikes in automobile factories located in the ABC Region.

Nowadays, CUT is the largest and most important trade union federation in Brazil, representing over 7.4 million workers in all productive areas. It is also the largest trade union center in Latin America and the fifth largest in the world. Nevertheless, it continues to face obstacles because of corporatist laws that curb the workers' rights to organize. CUT generally supports a democratic socialist political ideology and is close to PT and its leaders, many of which had been union leaders in the past.

CUT was organized to oppose the so-called "old labour movement", associated with the late President Getúlio Vargas and his Brazilian Labour Party (PTB). The main practice of varguismo and its leaders was to try to integrate trade unions and the Ministry of Labor, once the President had based his policy for the area using the Carta del Lavoro of Fascist Italy as a role model. CUT arose as an alternative to this model, claiming to be part of the "new labour movement", independent from the federal government. However, its close ties with PT made CUT a source of criticism after Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, PT's most prominent member, took office as President.

In March 2004, some union leaders unsatisfied with the organization's close ties with the Lula administration split from CUT in order to form the Coordenação Nacional de Lutas (Conlutas, English: National Coordination of Struggles).[1] Conlutas represents between 30 and 40 percent of the CUT leadership, and it is closer to the United Socialist Workers' Party (PSTU) and the Socialism and Liberty Party (PSOL) – dissidences of PT themselves – than PT.[2] The following year, leaders tied to PSOL and the Brazilian Communist Party (PCB) formed the Instrumento de Luta e Organização da Classe Trabalhadora (Intersindical, English: Instrument of Struggle and Organisation of the Working Class)[3] and, in 2007, leaders linked to the Communist Party of Brazil (PCdoB) formed the Central dos Trabalhadores e Trabalhadoras do Brasil (CTB, English: Central of Male and Female Workers of Brazil).

Affiliates

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The following federations are affiliated to CUT:[4]

Union Abbreviation
Confederation of Technical and University Workers CONFETU
Confederation of Workers in the Federal Public Service CONDSEF
Confederation of Workers in the Municipal Public Service CONFETAM
Democratic Brazilian Confederation of Workers in the Food Industry CONTAC
National Confederation of Construction Workers' Unions CONTICOM
National Confederation of Education Workers CNTE
National Confederation of Family Farming Workers CONTRAF BRASIL
National Confederation of Financial Workers CONTRAF
National Confederation of Metallurgists CNM
National Confederation of Social Security Workers CNTSS
National Confederation of the Chemical Branch CNQ
National Confederation of Transport and Logistics Workers CNTTL
National Confederation of Vigilant Workers and Service Providers CNTV-PS
National Confederation of Workers in the Apparel Industry CNTRV
National Confederation of Workers in Commerce and Services CONTRACS
National Federation of Journalists FENAJ
National Federation of Retired and Retired Workers FENAPI
National Federation of State and Federal District Employees and Public Employees FENASEPE
National Federation of Technical Assistance and Rural Extension and Public Sector Workers FASER
National Federation of Workers in Data Processing Companies FENADADOS

Leadership

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Presidents

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1983: Jair Meneguelli[5]
1994: Vicente Paulo da Silva[5]
2000: João Felicio[5]
2003: Luiz Marinho[5]
2005: João Felicio[5]
2006: Artur Henrique da Silva Santos[5]
2012: Vagner Freitas[5]
2019: Sérgio Nobre

General Secretaries

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1983: Paulo Paim
Gilmar Carneiro
1997: João Antonio Felicio
2000: Carlos Alberto Grana
2003: João Antonio Felicio
2005: Artur Henrique da Silva Santos
2006: Quintino Severo
2012: Sérgio Nobre
2019: Carmen Foro

See also

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References

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  1. ^ ""Desiludidos" com a CUT e o PT, sindicalistas da Conlutas fazem 1° congresso nacional prometendo greves". Últimas Notícias. 2008-07-05. Retrieved 2019-07-23.
  2. ^ Greenleft.org Archived 2006-02-11 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ O PCB, a Intersindical e a criação de uma nova central sindical
  4. ^ "Entidades nacionais". CUT. Retrieved 29 December 2020.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g "Há 32 anos nascia a Central Única dos Trabalhadores (CUT)". CUT. Retrieved 29 December 2020.

Sources

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