Unión Sindical Obrera

USO
Full name Unión Sindical Obrera
Founded 1961
Members 120,000 members.
10,000 union representatives
Affiliation ETUC, ITUC
Key people Julio Salazar, general secretary
Office location Madrid, Spain
Country Spain
Website www.uso.es

The Unión Sindical Obrera (USO) is a Spanish trade union. Founded as a clandestine organization in 1961during the dictatorship of Francisco Francothe union was an outgrowth of Roman Catholic organizations dedicated to Catholic social teaching, particularly on the dignity of work. Influenced by the French Democratic Confederation of Labour (CFDT), which also had Catholic roots but was by that time drifting away from any formal relation to the church, USO declared itself from the outset to be secular and socialist. Like the CFDT, after 1968 USO advocated autogestion (workers' self-management).[1]

After the Spanish transition to democracy, the group split, with one faction uniting to the Unión General de Trabajadores (historically affiliated with the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party or PSOE), another joining the Workers' Commissions (Comisiones Obreras, affiliated with the Communist Party of Spain), and a third continuing as a small, independent trade union.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 Sonia Ramos González, «Unión Sindical Obrera: nacidos para desaparecer» (2014), Ruiz de Aloza (Granada), in Spanish. passim.


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