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Exclusive: Graham claims financials ‘fake’ – but they were ‘on Unite Sharepoint’

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 28/03/2024 - 8:14am in

‘Unhinged’ claim challenged by screenshots – no response from Unite to request to confirm whether union management stands by bizarre comment from general secretary in letter to all staff, officers and organisers

As Skwawkbox covered earlier today, Unite general secretary Sharon Graham sent a bizarre email to all the union’s organisers, staff and officers that was described as ‘unhinged’, ‘flailing’ and ‘a rant’ by union insiders – and called ‘disgusting’ for its prioritisation of weapons-making jobs over opposing Israel’s genocide in Gaza and Britain’s complicity in it.

As well as its section on Palestine, Graham’s letter also attempted to defuse criticism of the union’s financial management – by claiming that the ‘preliminary’ financial report circulating among astonished officers, members and activists is a forgery in which ‘those with much to lose’ even copied the font and layout of a real Unite finance report:

Fake Finance Document

Those with much to lose from the new way forward, including curtailing money given to outside organisations and the new industrial focus, have escalated actions by producing a fake Unite Finance Document for release on Social Media. Most recently appearing on social media. The document was headed “Unite Finance Report” and mirrored (down to the same font and layout) Unite’s usual finance report style.  This had the sole aim of discrediting the leadership but most importantly it undermined the Union. It stated that the Union’s financial position was in difficulty since the General Secretary election. This is untrue and is now being dealt with legally.

Ms Graham did not name ‘those with much to lose’ – but those challenging her claim have pointed out that the screenshots of the ‘fake finance document’ appear to show that it was screengrabbed directly from Unite’s ‘Sharepoint’ system:

Sharepoint, a Microsoft platform, is a “web-based collaborative platform that integrates natively with Microsoft 365 … primarily sold as a document management and storage system, although it is also used for sharing information through an intranet, implementing internal applications, and for implementing business processes.” The Unite address shown on the screengrabs appears to indicate that the document was at least stored, and potentially created, on the union’s own dedicated server. It is unclear against whom the issue “is now being dealt with legally”, since no supposed culprits are identified.

The claim was perceived as so outlandish that union activists have been contacting Skwawkbox all day about it. One said:

This is unhinged, she just looks like she’s flailing all over the place.

Another commented:

This is a rant and she’s sent it to everyone, what is she thinking?

Skwawkbox wrote to Unite’s press office:

Ms Graham’s letter referred to in my previous email today also claims Unite financials were a forgery and even that someone has copied the layout and font of genuine reports to fool people. The claim has been described by Unite recipients as ‘unhinged’. Screenshots of the report show that it came from the Unite Sharepoint – is the union really claiming this was faked and stored on the official network??

No response, apart from a confirmation of receipt, was received by the reply deadline of 5pm or since. It would be extraordinarily thorough for someone to go to the lengths of adding Sharepoint details to a fake, but Unite was given the opportunity to say that it believes this was done and has not done so.

Graham also told recipients that Unite’s finances were “pushing up towards half a billion pounds”. Skwawkbox understands that they were around half a billion pounds when she took over as general secretary.

As Skwawkbox showed earlier, Graham’s letter had disgusted many who read it because it said that the union will always prioritise weapons-making jobs over the need to fight Israel’s genocide in Gaza – and appeared to imply that those working in that sector didn’t care about them being used in the slaughter of Palestinian women and children.

Sharon Graham has been alleged by insiders to have:

Her supporters also prevented debate and votes on Gaza at a meeting of the union’s elected executive earlier this month.

Apart from the issue of Gaza, her tenure as Unite boss has also been marked by a string of other allegations – which neither she nor the union has denied – including destruction of evidence against her husband in threat, misogyny and bullying complaints brought by union employees. She is also embroiled in both an employment tribunal for discrimination and a defamation lawsuit brought by Irish union legend Brendan Ogle for the union’s treatment of him and comments made about him by Graham and her close ally Tony Woodhouse.

According to human rights group Euro Med Monitor, since 7 October last year Israel has killed over 40,000 Palestinians in Gaza and wounded more than double that number, overwhelmingly women and children and many of them with life-changing injuries, while Gaza’s health and school systems have been bombed into collapse, often using US- and UK-made weapons and systems. More than a million people have been forcibly displaced and Gaza is in famine because of Israel’s blockade of food and vital supplies. Israel is formally on trial for genocide before the International Court of Justice and ordered to stop its slaughter – and has been found by UN human rights investigators to be committing genocide.

The finance and Gaza comments are not the end of the issues with Graham’s email. Skwawkbox will cover further aspects shortly.

If you wish to republish this post for non-commercial use, you are welcome to do so – see here for more.

Video: Israeli Knesset member mocked and called liar by UN-linked parliament gathering

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 26/03/2024 - 1:07am in

Hard right advocate of ‘levelling’ Gaza derided for repeating debunked atrocity propaganda to 148th Assembly of Inter-Parliamentary Union

Danny Danon, a hard-right Likud member of Israel’s Knesset, has been derided as a liar and jeered by attendees at the 148th Assembly of the Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU), a UN-linked gathering of the world’s parliaments, which is taking place in Geneva.

Danon, who advocated for the ‘levelling’ of Gaza almost ten years before the Hamas raid on 7 October last year, blamed Hamas for Israel’s actions in Gaza, ignored the seventy-five years of illegal occupation and slaughter by Israel and regurgitated atrocity propaganda about child rapes and murders, which has been discredited for months – and was booed by delegates and angrily confronted by the Palestinian delegate, before being carpeted by Ireland’s representative for his ‘lots of lies’ on behalf of a ‘failed’ regime:

In 2013, Danon, an opponent of immigration from Africa to Israel – where discrimination against Black Jews is rife – advocated for punishment attacks against Palestinian civilians and infrastructure, including a suggestion that Israel “delete” one whole neighbourhood in Gaza in response for every rocket launched by the Palestinian resistance, an act of collective punishment that is a clear war crime under international law.

A year later, Danon advocated cutting off all electricity and fuel supplies to Gaza, prefiguring the blockade by Israel that has pushed hundreds of thousands of Palestinians into famine. A month later, Danon said that Israel should respond to the kidnapping of an IDF soldier by “levelling Gaza”. Since the resistance raid, he has been a prominent advocate for the ‘voluntary’ removal of all Palestinians from Gaza to other countries, yet he clearly thinks he has the right to demand obedience and belief from the global community.

The IDF has admitted that the number of its own people that it killed during the Hamas raid was ‘immense’ – an admission ignored entirely by the UK media. Israel has murdered over 40,000 Palestinians since 7 October and wounded double that amount in its levelling of Gaza, mostly women and children. It is using starvation as a weapon of war and has killed dozens of Israeli hostages while taking thousands of Palestinian hostages and, according to the UN, carrying out summary executions of civilians and raping and abusing Palestinian women and girls.

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Exclusive: Unite membership ‘falls by 210,000+’ under Graham

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 23/03/2024 - 11:06pm in

Huge membership fall since last official figure in late 2020, say insiders – but management hasn’t reported official membership despite requirement to do so every year – and continues to donate millions to anti-worker Labour party

Yesterday, Skwawkbox reported the collapse in the Unite union’s strike fund – the fund members rely on to pay their bills and feed their families when they are on strike – from £35m when current general secretary Sharon Graham took office to just £11m now. Some insiders say the fund was increased to £50m just before previous general secretary Len McCluskey retired, though Skwawkbox has not yet been able to confirm this.

£11m is only enough for about eight months, based on spending in each of the last two years.

Senior union figures have also complained that the union management is not being transparent about the union’s membership and has not signed off financial accounts since Ms Graham took over in 2021 Unions are required to report membership annually, but Unite has not done so – and risks severe sanction from the Certification Officer. One senior official of another union told Skwawkbox:

Unions have to declare membership every year to the Certification Officer. Unite doesn’t appear to have done so for several years and the CO could effectively decide to shut them down if she chooses.

But well-placed Unite insiders have now told Skwawkbox that the latest internal estimates show a catastrophic fall. Unite’s membership in late 2020, the last official figure, was 1.081m:

  • Automotive Industries 72,453
  • Aerospace & Shipbuilding 63,238
  • Chemicals, Pharmaceuticals, Process and Textiles 43,134
  • Civil Air Transport 65,892
  • Community Youth workers and not for profit 42,985
  • Docks, Rail, Ferries & Waterways 17,228
  • Education 17,335
  • Energy and Utilities 32,485
  • Engineering, Manufacturing and Steel 57,753
  • Finance and Legal 61,559
  • Food Drink and Agriculture63,589
  • Government, Defence, Prisons & Contractors 10,751
  • Graphical Paper and Media & Information Technology 36,810
  • Health 88,770 Local Authorities 61,783
  • Passenger Transport 76,861
  • Road Transport Commercial, Logistics and Retail Distribution 62,619
  • Service Industries 50,564
  • Construction, Allied Trades and Technicians 68,083
  • Community 14,971
  • Unknown 6,668
  • Retired 65,503

Total 1,081,034

According to internal estimates, it is now around 870,000 – a fall of a fifth (19.5%) from the 2020 figure Graham inherited – and is still falling. By a different measurement, sources say that the 2020 figure was 1.28m, which would mean a fall of almost 400,000 in two and a half years.

Against that backdrop, according to the Electoral Commission the union under Graham has donated around £4m since the winter of 2021 to Keir Starmer’s Labour, despite Starmer’s assault on democracy, betrayal of and contempt for striking workers, blocking of union candidates in parliamentary seats and his support for ‘spycops’ and anti-protest laws.

Sharon Graham’s failure to speak out on Gaza and behind the scenes attempts to quell free speech on the issue since Israel’s genocide there began last October has outraged many members and others. She

Graham has been publicly silent about the slaughter, but has:

  • been criticised for banning Unite officials and national banners from pro-Gaza protests
  • banned and smeared films and books exposing the ‘Labour antisemitism’ scam, placed an official under investigation who refused to cancel a Palestine solidarity fringe event at Labour’s 2023 annual conference
  • allegedly told her chief of staff to threaten a soon-to-retire official with the loss of a pension bonus if he did not soften his support for Palestinians

Her supporters also prevented debate and votes on Gaza at last week’s meeting of the union’s elected executive.

Ms Graham’s tenure as Unite boss has also been marked by a string of other allegations – which neither she nor the union has denied – including alleged destruction of evidence against her husband in threat, misogyny and bullying complaints brought by union employees. She is also embroiled in both an employment tribunal for discrimination and a defamation lawsuit brought by Irish union legend Brendan Ogle for the union’s treatment of him and comments made about him by Graham and her close ally Tony Woodhouse – a situation that has caused outrage among Unite members and politicians in Ireland.

Unite has been contacted for comment.

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What Leo Varadkar’s Resignation Means for Fine Gael, Sinn Féin, and the Future Of Ireland

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 22/03/2024 - 1:15am in

Leo Varadkar was once Fine Gael’s rising star. Serving as Ireland’s youngest Taoiseach and the first to be openly gay or from an ethnic minority background, Varadkar was the manifestation of a changing Ireland when he was elected head of government in 2017.

Now, at only 45, the Fine Gael leader has called time on both his premiership and leadership of the party. The announcement of Varadkar’s resignation has been referred to as a political earthquake, but harbingers of this seismic shift were evident for some time.

Earlier this week Galway East TD Ciaran Cannon confirmed his exit from politics at the end of this term – he became the tenth sitting Fine Gael TD to opt out of running in the general election, representing almost a third of the party’s parliamentary representatives.

This is a party that knows the tide has gone out, and after 13 years in government a new star is cresting: Sinn Féin. Sinn Féin has emerged as a dominant political force across the island of Ireland; the only major all-island party now holds the office of First Minister in Northern Ireland and is the largest party of local government.

In the 2020 general election in the Republic of Ireland, Sinn Féin had a ten-point increase in its first preference vote share, besting both of its conservative counterparts, Fine Gael, and Fianna Fáil.

Despite these results, Sinn Féin was iced out of a coalition government, and a tripartite agreement between Fine Gael, Fianna Fáil and the Green party became the new – or rather not-so-new – ruling parties.

Ireland has taken enormous strides in shirking off its conservative shroud, but conservatism has maintained its grip on politics. It is widely considered that Sinn Féin underestimated its potential for growth in 2020, with more first preference votes than candidates, it won’t make the same mistake this time.

The party has held the top spot in every poll since 2020, often with a 10-point lead on its closest rival. Breaking the cycle of conservatism is the logical next step in Ireland’s journey to being a more progressive society.

The restructuring of Fine Gael represents a recalibration of Irish politics, when a comparable number of Fianna Fail TDs opted not to run for re-election in 2011 the party’s vote collapsed, losing 51 seats, and coming in at third place.

Fine Gael is preparing for a change, the ascension of Sinn Féin – will leave Fine Gael with two options; the opposition benches, or a coalition with a party it has long detested.

A leadership contest was anticipated with several runners and riders in the mix, but over the course of just twelve hours a coronation has taken place. Current Education Minister Simon Harris will be elevated to Taoiseach for the remaining term of this government, a little less than twelve months. He will snag Varadkar’s title as youngest Taoiseach by a matter of months.

Harris will play the youth card, but what gains did Varadkar make as the youngest Taoiseach for Ireland’s young people? They still face a crippling lack of opportunities, and housing. An October General election had been mooted, that now seems unlikely, a new Taoiseach will prolong this term of government with Harris needing as long as he can get in order to make his mark on the party, and the public, before the next election.

An analysis of Varadkar’s time in office will naturally get underway, for those of us in Northern Ireland his efforts to limit the impact of Brexit and increase focus and investment in the North did not go unnoticed.

Of his predecessors Varadkar was the most “green”, he moved the party further into its United Ireland credentials, albeit not enough. How might a new leader fair on the biggest question of the last century? Current Education Minister Simon Harris is the bookie’s favourite. At 37 – should he succeed – he would snag Varadkar’s title as youngest Taoiseach by a matter of months.

Speaking in 2021 on a border poll, Harris said, “My generation has never really been given an opportunity to get involved in a discussion about the future of our island and what a new Ireland would mean to us and our families and communities.”

What steps would Harris take to change that? Harris will play the youth card, but what gains did Varadkar make as the youngest Taoiseach for Ireland’s young people? They still face a crippling lack of opportunities and housing.

Another contender in the mix is Rural Affairs Minister Heather Humphreys, a Presbyterian from border county Monaghan. If successful, she would be the first woman to be elected Taoiseach – a milestone Sinn Fein’s Mary Lou McDonald has been vying for at the next election. Other runners and riders include Minister for Public Expenditure Paschal Donohoe, and Justice Minister Helen McEntee.

As for Varadkar, being the first at anything can carry higher levels of scrutiny and pressure. With his hat-trick, Varadkar faced a constant barrage of abuse and harassment, particularly across social media, often more personalised as well as racist or homophobic in nature.

Public life comes with a cost, in the era of social media, that cost is becoming increasingly higher. Varadkar’s departure may have been a shock, particularly after a strong US visit during St Patrick’s week, in which he spoke frankly about the horrors unfolding in Gaza, and the need for international intervention, but it might not be the last. I wouldn’t be surprised if his coalition partner, Michael Martin, the leader of Fianna Fáil, follows suit in stepping down.

If he does, expect a strong pro-United Ireland candidate like Jim O’Callaghan to step in; That’s the undercurrent here, politics in Ireland is changing.

This next decade will be about the constitutional question, all of Ireland’s political parties aspire to unite the Island, what remains to be seen, is which party has the leadership to make it happen.

Irish people see their history in Palestinians’ eyes

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 20/03/2024 - 6:49pm in

This Tweet includes words that I think to be important from the Irish Taoiseach (prime minister):

I think he really does reflect Irish feeling when he says this.

But also some aspects of Scottish opinion as well.

And maybe the opinion of many in Wales as well.

But I doubt Westminster focussed political parties will ever understand that when they have not come close to doing so to date.

Exclusive: pro-Graham faction blocks exec Palestine motions

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 19/03/2024 - 12:49am in

Anti-genocide members narrowly defeated in outcome described as a ‘disgrace’ as pro-Graham faction backs her silence on Gaza

Two motions on Palestine were ruled out last Thursday during the Unite union’s week-long meeting of its executive, after supporters of the union’s general secretary Sharon Graham backed the chair’s ruling that they should not be discussed. The excuse for the ruling was that supporting Palestinians in Gaza was not part of the union’s service to its members.

The chair was challenged and the issue went to a vote, in which eighteen exec members voted against the ruling, twenty supported it and two abstained.

One exec member told Skwawkbox:

It was a disgrace. The two motions were both from London and Eastern re Palestine, both were ruled out by the Chair because ‘Unite members are priority’. This ruling was challenged by a member but the left lost the challenge and we were not given the opportunity to debate.

This is not the notionally-left chair’s ‘first offence’ regarding Gaza. Another senior Unite figure told Skwawkbox:

A lot of the United Left [left-wing Unite caucus] are unhappy with the new chair , especially over Gaza as he stopped the debate last EC and sided with Sharon.

The meeting’s start on Monday was marked by a protest by Unite members outraged by Graham’s public silence on Gaza and behind-the-scenes actions to block shows of solidarity with its people and discussion of the UK’s – including Keir Starmer, with whom Graham has become increasingly cosy – complicity in Israel’s genocide.

Graham has been publicly silent about the slaughter, but has:

  • been criticised for banning Unite officials and national banners from pro-Gaza protests
  • banned and smeared films and books exposing the ‘Labour antisemitism’ scam, placed an official under investigation who refused to cancel a Palestine solidarity fringe event at Labour’s 2023 annual conference
  • allegedly told her chief of staff to threaten a soon-to-retire official with the loss of a pension bonus if he did not soften his support for Palestinians

An email from her official union address to an angry member also dismissed the genocide perpetrated on the civilians of Gaza.

Ms Graham’s tenure as Unite boss has also been marked by a string of other allegations – which neither she nor the union has denied – including alleged destruction of evidence against her husband in threat, misogyny and bullying complaints brought by union employees. She is also embroiled in both an employment tribunal for discrimination and a defamation lawsuit brought by Irish union legend Brendan Ogle for the union’s treatment of him and comments made about him by Graham and her close ally Tony Woodhouse.

This latest development will further fuel the outrage of Unite’s many members sickened by Israel’s mass murder of innocents and the union’s silence. Skwawkbox understands that the names of those who voted to support the gagging of the executive on the issue will be published soon.

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Photos/video: members protest at Unite HQ over Graham’s betrayal of Gaza

General secretary’s actions and action prompts demo at union’s executive meeting

Unite union members furious at Sharon Graham’s continued silence on Israel’s genocide in Gaza – and her attempts behind the scenes to prevent officials representing the union at rallies and marches, as well as her ban on film showings and book readings on Unite premises and her attempt to cancel a pro-Palestine event, demonstrated outside Unite’s Holborn headquarters yesterday during a meeting of the union’s executive.

Around fifty protesters, including some with experience of the fight against South African apartheid, gathered with banners calling for a free Palestine and an end to the genocide, to hear speakers and chant for freedom.

Anti-apartheid campaigner Dr Jonathan Fluxman, of Doctors in Unite, spoke to the demo about the racist atrocity propaganda that Israel and much of the western media are using to dehumanise the Palestinians:

Another speaker talked of the solidarity of Jews around the world with the oppressed Palestinians:

And the protesters joined in the South African freedom call and response, “Amandla – Awethu”, ‘Power to the people’:

Sharon Graham has been slammed for her actions – and inaction – relating to Palestine and the Israeli regime’s genocide in Gaza. She has been publicly silent about the slaughter, but has been criticised for banning Unite officials and national banners from pro-Gaza protests, banned and smeared films and books exposing the ‘Labour antisemitism’ scam, placed an official under investigation who refused to cancel a Palestine solidarity fringe event at Labour’s 2023 annual conference – and senior Unite sources have alleged that she told her chief of staff to threaten a soon-to-retire official with the loss of a pension bonus if he did not soften his support for Palestinians. An email from her official union address to an angry member dismissed the genocide perpetrated on the people of Gaza.

Ms Graham’s tenure as Unite boss has also been marked by a string of other allegations – which neither she nor the union has denied – including alleged destruction of evidence against her husband in threat, misogyny and bullying complaints brought by union employees. She is also embroiled in both an employment tribunal for discrimination and a defamation lawsuit brought by Irish union legend Brendan Ogle for the union’s treatment of him and comments made about him by Graham and her close ally Tony Woodhouse.

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The Yeats sisters: a magnificent celebration

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 09/03/2024 - 7:31pm in

I watched Imelda May’s fascinating programme on Sky Arts last night, in which she explored the story of the Yeats sisters, Elizabeth and Susan, who were usually known as Lolly and Lily.

Now apparently (and certainly to me) unknown, they were the sisters of the Irish poet, William Butler Yeats. They were profoundly influential in his life, not least, because they printed and published the first editions of many of his works through their Dublin based Cuala Press.

I was pleased that both their father and brothers made only peripheral appearances in this programme. It was, rightly, a celebration of two profoundly intelligent and diligent women who through their work had a major impact on the arts and crafts movement in Ireland, and beyond, in the period from 1900 to 1940.

Lily Yeats’ work as an embroiderer and artist was displayed, and it was truly magnificent, especially (in my opinion) when she avoided people and animals and instead celebrated the landscape.

What, however, truly fascinated me was the work of the Press itself .

I love letter press printing. There is something extraordinarily powerful about this form of creation, which becomes art in itself.

What I do, have to admit, though is that the love in question is the result of an idea that I have held dear since I was a teenager. That is that a person possessed of an idea, the means to put it on paper, and a mechanism to reproduce it has the most powerful possible tool to influence the world in which they live. I have never changed my belief about this and I know that my fascination with writing and everything to do with its recreation will, for me, never end. I did in that sense feel a very powerful affinity with what Lolly Yeats, in particular, was doing with the Cuala press.

The fact that they first published so many of the writers whose work I absorbed in my twenties and thirties when I was seeking to understand Ireland, its history, its independence and the movement that eventually delivered that freedom was something of which I was not previously aware. That left me both enthused, and a little annoyed. That these sisters’ role went unacknowledged whilst their brother is so well-known is such a powerful symbol of cultural oppression, and makes the point that International Women’s Day, which this programme marked, is still deeply relevant.

It also helps that I am an enormous fan of Imelda May’s work that now exist in an increasing variety of forms. She is herself a force of nature, willing to take the risk to say things that others know, but are not willing to express. She was the right person to explore the Yeats sisters’ courage, and her enthusiasm was both obvious and very genuine.

I have been writing with the intention of seeing my words in print since my early teenage years. The roles of the publisher, editor, designer and printer are too often ignored in all of that process. Last night’s programme was a true celebration of two exceptional sisters and I am delighted to have watched it. It was great work by all involved.

Exclusive: Graham’s Unite ‘spending €150,000 A DAY’ on lawyers in Ogle abuse case

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 05/03/2024 - 12:05am in

1.35 million euros flushed on legal team over 9-day case according to union sources – and that’s just the tribunal, with the defamation suit to follow

Image: S Walker

Sources within the union say that Sharon Graham’s Unite is spending spending €150,000 a day just on the fees of its legal team to defend the discrimination tribunal case brought against Unite by leading Irish trade unionist Brendan Ogle – a staggering €1,350,000 across the planned nine days of the Workplace Relations Commission hearing in Dublin, not including court and other costs.

Ogle brought his complaint against his union employers after he was sidelined, following his successful battle against neck cancer, to an office fifty miles away from his Dublin home, despite a promise from Ms Graham’s predecessor Len McCluskey that his job would be kept open for him pending the outcome of his treatment. Cancer qualifies as a protected characteristic under equality legislation in both Ireland and the UK.

Ogle told the tribunal last week that another senior Unite employee in Ireland called him to a meeting after his return to work and told Ogle that:

he’d been told by Sharon Graham to draw up a strategic plan for the Republic of Ireland and I was not to be in it.

The case could, presumably, easily have been settled for no more, and probably considerably less, than €1.35m – but Unite has deployed no fewer than seven lawyers to defend it:

1 Senior barrister
1 Junior barrister
1 Legal Director
3 Solicitors
2 Legal Execs

Ogle, in contrast, has a junior barrister and a solicitor.

As well as the employment tribunal case, Brendan Ogle is also suing Graham, her ally Tony Woodhouse and Unite for defamation over comments made about him to union members at different events. Unite is employing the same legal firm – one of the world’s most expensive and profitable – in the defamation case, probably at similar or even greater cost.

One union source told Skwawkbox:

That’s the entire annual subs at full rate of 5,769 members. Sharon hasn’t published an Annual Report since she became general secretary. That’s unheard of – and for someone who has spent so much time accusing others of malpractice, it’s extraordinary.

The union’s ‘disgusting’ abuse toward Ogle on his return from cancer treatment triggered widespread outrage among grassroots members, politicians and community groups – anger so serious that an entire sector branch threatened to disaffiliate entirely from Unite, the well-known ‘Right2Water’ campaign said it will no longer work with Unite, Unite’s Community section in Ireland condemned the ‘injustice inflicted’ on him and members picketed general secretary Sharon Graham’s long-delayed visit to Dublin last month.

Sharon Graham’s tenure at Unite has also been marked by a string of other serious allegations, which neither she nor the union has ever denied – of abuse, cover-up and failure to protect women:

In addition, she has been exposed behind the union’s decision to ban showings in Unite’s buildings of a film exposing racism, smears, rigging and abuse by the Labour right and has appeared to grow increasingly cosy with red-Tory Labour ‘leader’ Keir Starmer, despite Starmer’s lies, his contempt for democracy, his u-turns on promises to Unite members and his regime’s repeated blocking of Unite-backed parliamentary candidates.

Unite did not respond to a request for comment.

Update: more than two hours after the response deadline – and an hour after publication of this article – Unite responded with a generic denial:

“This story – like the other stories that The Skwawkbox has published as part of its smear campaign – is untrue.”

The statement, which did not specify whether the amount spent is higher or lower or by how much, went on to smear this site, implying the scrutiny of Ms Graham’s spending and activity was linked to a Birmingham hotel and conference centre project and Ms Graham’s ‘findings’ about it.

Ms Graham was part of the group of senior Unite figures that approved the Birmingham project. Her close ally Tony Seaman was the ‘project-specific convenor’ on the project, a role that appears to have been created especially to accommodate him. Unite, with Graham as general secretary, subsequently whitewashed racism findings against Mr Seaman, despite agreeing that he had made racist comments.

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Ogle v Unite: ‘no decision today’ on whether to subpoena Sharon Graham to appear in Dublin

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 01/03/2024 - 2:43am in

Legal team reserving issue pending analysis of transcripts so far – general secretary could face prosecution for failing to comply if summonsed

Leading Irish union figure Brendan Ogle’s legal team will not make a decision today on whether to subpoena Unite general secretary Sharon Graham to appear at the next phase of Ogle’s discrimination case against the union in Dublin, which is expected to take place in early April.

Yesterday saw a heated argument in the Workplace Relations Commission hearing room about whether Graham will be required to testify in the case. Ogle’s lawyers insisted that she must be legally summonsed to attend if Unite’s legal team does not call her as a witness. Unite’s barrister Mark Harty insisted furiously, and it must be said rather bizarrely, that Graham is not relevant to the case and may not be ‘amenable’ to subpoena, as if such a legal summons is a matter of whether one feels like being summoned. Graham and her alleged words about getting rid of Ogle – who supported her rival Howard Beckett during the 2021 general secretary election – have featured prominently in the case so far.

If a subpoena is eventually requested and issued, the summons is enforceable and failure to appear and give evidence under a subpoena is a prosecutable criminal offence under Ireland’s ‘Employment (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 2018‘.

Sharon Graham has previously cancelled appearances in the Republic, avoiding members’ anger and scrutiny over the union’s ‘disgraceful’ treatment of Brendan Ogle. The situation caused such outrage in Ireland that union members picketed Graham’s long-delayed visit to Dublin, Unite’s Community section condemned it as ‘disgusting’ and a whole sector branch threatened to disaffiliate.

After Unite’s legal team said they will not be calling Graham to testify, Workplace Relations Commission Adjudicator Elizabeth Spelman told both legal teams that before a subpoena can be requested, Ogle’s lawyers should write to Graham and ask her to appear, then apply for a subpoena if/when she refuses.

Skwawkbox is in Dublin to cover the case directly. If you would like to help cover the costs of the trip and can do so without hardship, please select from the options below.

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