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Several of LO’s unions spit their bile at Kommunal and IF Metall on Friday after the two largest unions announced that they were jumping on the deal bandwagon between PTK and the Confederation of Swedish Companies, despite LO had previously said that they were in agreement, including all the union bosses sitting down. on the LO board.
No major changes
On Monday afternoon, the issues were discussed during a LO board meeting, but tension between the unions continues. Tommy Wreeth, president of the Transportation union, says after the meeting that nothing significant has changed.
– For my part, we continue exactly where we were last Friday. Nothing has been resolved, the situation is as it is and is not something that is resolved in a few hours in an afternoon, says Wreeth.
In Transportation, there is great disappointment with how Kommunal and Metall have performed, but Tommy Wreeth says the problem really is with the government.
– It’s politics that put LO in this shit. These are things that came out of a January deal, and now they are praising Kommunal and Metall for solving this, even though they had no mandate to do so, says Wreeth, continuing:
– I don’t know how I would feel as president of the union if I received praise from Annie Lööf. Both Kommunal and Metall should think about this.
Annoyed by the unions
The president of the Seko union, Valle Karlsson, says after the meeting that what has been said is internal, but that there is a feeling among twelve of the unions that they have been run over by Metall and Kommunal.
– This is what gives rise to the irritation that has become apparent. If it had only affected their own members, it would have been one thing, and they would have had to answer for their own members. Now it will affect through legislation the members of twelve unions who said no, says Valle Karlsson.
Both Seko and Transport now say they should sit down internally and review what Kommunal and Metall’s decisions mean and how they affect the members.
Olle Lindström / TT
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