Bob White is an important leader in the Canadian trade union and labour movement. He was born in Upper Lands, Northern Ireland, on April 28 1935, and emigrated to Canada at age 13, settling in Woodstock, Ontario.
In 1984 White encouraged the Canadian Membership of the U.A.W. to split away from the American union and form a new and separate entity, the Canadian Auto Workers Union (properly the National Automobile, Aerospace, Transportation and General Workers Union of Canada). An important event in the history of the Canadian labour movement, this split took place largely because the Canadian delegates to the U.A.W. conventions felt that they did not have a strength or voice at the American conventions and that the American "parent" union was not doing enough in the way of protecting the Canadian workers. The schism and the formation of the C.A.W. as a separate entity was successful and White was acclaimed as the first leader of the fledgling union at the first C.A.W. convention in 1985.
White has been a vocal opponent of U.S. missile testing on Canadian soil and encouraged other world leaders to take a pro-active role against U.S. led military initiatives and continues to be an outspoken critic of international trade agreements that he argues fail to recognize basic human and labour rights.
White has been an advocate for jobs, labour and human rights before several international forums including the G8 and the OECD (the organization of the 25 most industrial nations). White was the President of the Trade Union Advisory Committee (TUAC) of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). He was the first Canadian to hold the post. White is the chair of the Commonwealth Trade Union Council. White is also the chair of the Human and Trade Union Rights Committee of the 126 million-member International Confederation of Free Trade Unions, the largest trade union body in the world. He currently serves as President Emeritus of the CLC.
1935 births | Living people | Canadian labour union leaders | Trade unionists | Canadian Auto Workers | Officers of the Order of Canada | Irish Canadians
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