National Union of Journalists
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National Union of Journalists | |
Founded | 1907 |
---|---|
Headquarters | Headland House, 72 Acton Street, London, WC1X 8DP |
Location | |
Members | 20,693 (2022) [1] |
Key people | Laura Davidson, General Secretary (elect) Seamus Dooley, Assistant General Secretary and Irish Secretary Natasha Hirst, President Gerry Curran and Fran McNulty, Vice Presidents |
Affiliations | IFJ, TUC, STUC, ICTU, TUCG, NSSN, FEU |
Website | nuj |
The National Union of Journalists (NUJ) is a trade union supporting journalists in the United Kingdom and Ireland. The NUJ was founded in 1907[2] and has 20,693 members. It is a member of the International Federation of Journalists (IFJ), Trades Union Congress (TUC) affiliated, and a former member of the General Federation of Trade Unions (GFTU).
Structure
[edit]There is a range of National Councils beneath the NEC, covering different sections and areas of activity. There is an Industrial Council for each of the NUJ's "industrial" sectors:
- Broadcasting (BIC)
- Freelance (FIC)
- Magazine & Books (MABIC)
- New Media (NMIC)
- Newspapers & Agencies (NAIC)
- Public Relations & Communications.
The Photographers' Council, while not an industrial council, functions in the same way to campaign on issues relevant to the union's photographer, photojournalist and videographer members.
There are also National Executive Councils, covering all sectors, for Ireland and Scotland. The Irish Executive Council, which has a higher degree of autonomy, covers Northern Ireland as well as the Republic.[3] Since 2016, in response to Brexit, the Union's Continental European Council further expanded the NUJ's remit to include NUJ members working in Continental Europe, in particular for NUJ branches in Paris, Brussels and the Netherlands, to campaign on issues of common interest.
The union's structure is democratic, and its supreme decision-making body is its Delegate Meeting, a gathering of elected delegates from all branches across the UK, Ireland and Europe. Between Delegate Meetings, decisions lie with the NUJ's National Executive Council, a committee of 27 people, elected annually by members. The NEC is chaired by a President, elected, along with a Vice-President and Treasurer, at the Delegate Meeting.
The General Secretary (GS) is elected every five years by a national ballot of all members and is held to account and responsible to the National Executive Council (NEC). The current GS is Michelle Stanistreet. The General Secretary is responsible for the day-to-day running of the union and directing its staff. However, important decisions such as authorising industrial action must be taken by the NEC.
Leadership
[edit]General Secretaries
[edit]- 1907William Watts :
- 1918 Harry Richardson :
- 1936Clement Bundock Tim Gopsill and Greg Neale, Journalists: 100 Years of the NUJ :
- 1952 Jim Bradley :
- 1969 Ken Morgan :
- 1977Ken Ashton :
- 1985Harry Conroy :
- 1990 Steve Turner :
- 1992John Foster :
- 2001Jeremy Dear :
- 2011Michelle Stanistreet :
- 2024Laura Davidson(elect; starting January 2025)[4] :
Presidents
[edit]Presidents of the NUJ:[5]
- 1907: R. C. Spencer
- 1909: G. H. Lethem
- 1911: John Hunter Harley
- 1913: W. T. A. Beare
- 1914: F. E. Hamer
- 1916: E. Williams
- 1917: A. Martin
- 1918: F. J. Mansfield
- 1919: James Haslam
- 1920: J. E. Brown
- 1921: Thomas Jay
- 1922: T. A. Davies
- 1923: Walter Meakin
- 1924: T. K. Sledge
- 1925: Thomas Dickson
- 1926: A. J. Rhodes
- 1927: H. A. Raybould
- 1928: F. W. Bill
- 1929: H. D. Nichols
- 1930: W. G. Mitchell
- 1931: W. Betts
- 1932: J. G. Gregson
- 1933: James Hume Aitken
- 1934: E. J. T. Didymus
- 1935: R. S. Forsyth
- 1936: F. G. Humphrey
- 1937: F. P. Dickinson
- 1938: E. S. Bardsley
- 1939: James William Thomas Ley
- 1940: Ernest E. Hunter
- 1941: T. Foster
- 1942: D. M. Elliot
- 1943: A. Kenyon
- 1944: R. J. Finnemore
- 1945: A. J. Gibson
- 1946: F. Treavett
- 1947: J. E. Jay
- 1948: L. R. Aldous
- 1949: H. D. Moxley
- 1950: Jim Bradley
- 1951: J. Taylor
- 1952: Henry Bate
- 1953: P. W. Jarrett
- 1954: E. A. Lofts
- 1955: A. D. Ramsay
- 1956: G. Reid
- 1957: T. Bartholomew
- 1958: G. R. Mead
- 1959: R. G. Venmore-Rowland
- 1960: M. J. Williamson
- 1961: P. G. Reid
- 1962: K. L. Ley
- 1963: William Heald
- 1964: G. Byrne
- 1965: L. H. Kirwan
- 1966: D. C. Tuckett
- 1967: G. A. Hutt
- 1968: Kenneth Holmes
- 1969: Cyril Kilner
- 1970: C. Bland
- 1971: Douglas Rees
- 1972: Harold Pearson
- 1973: John Bailey
- 1974: Ivan Peebles
- 1975: Ken Ashton
- 1975: Rosaline Kelly
- 1977: John Devine
- 1978: Denis Macshane
- 1979: Jacob Ecclestone
- 1980: Francis Beckett
- 1981: Harry Conroy
- 1982: Jonathan Hammond
- 1983: Eddie Barrett
- 1984: George Findlay
- 1985: Ray McGuigan
- 1986: Bob Keogh
- 1987: Lionel Morrison
- 1988: Barbara Gunnell and S. McGuire
- 1989: Paul McGill
- 1990: David Sinclair
- 1991: Chris Frost
- 1992: Jim Boumelha and R. Trevor
- 1993: John Toner
- 1994: Anita Halpin
- 1995: Kyran Connolly
- 1996: Jeremy Dear
- 1998: Mark Turnbull
- 1999: Christy Loftus
- 2000: Dave Toomer
- 2001: Rory MacLeod
- 2002: John Barsby
- 2003: George Macintyre
- 2004: Jim Corrigal
- 2005: Tim Lezard
- 2006: Chris Morley
- 2007: Michelle Stanistreet
- 2008: James Doherty
- 2009: Peter Murray
- 2011: Donnacha DeLong
- 2012: Barry McCall
- 2014: Andy Smith and Adam Christie
- 2016: Tim Dawson
- 2018: Sian Jones
- 2021: Pierre Vicary
- 2023: Natasha Hirst
Publications
[edit]The NUJ publishes a magazine called The Journalist. [6]
Controversies
[edit]In November 2024, several BBC journalists quit the NUJ and a dozen more journalists in the UK were in the process of handing in their NUJ membership cards. This came after they were urged by the NUJ to wear the colours of Palestinian flag (red, green and black) or a keffiyeh to mark a 'Day of Action For Palestine'.[7] Charlotte Henry who runs The Addition, a media and tech newsletter, announced that she was leaving the union because the industry had become a 'hostile environment for the Jews'.[8] The Board of Deputies of British Jews has condemned both the NUJ and the Trade Union Congress (TUC), its umbrella union organisation "for failing to support Jewish workers".[9]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "National Union of Journalists Form AR21 for year ended 30 September 2022" (PDF). GOV.UK. Retrieved 26 July 2023.
- ^ Tim Holmes; Liz Nice (10 November 2011). Magazine Journalism. SAGE Publications. p. 53. ISBN 978-1-4462-9203-7. Retrieved 26 November 2015.
- ^ "NUJ - About Us".
- ^ "Laura Davison elected as NUJ leader". Morning Star. 10 October 2024.
- ^ "List of former presidents". National Union of Journalists. Archived from the original on 22 January 2021. Retrieved 22 January 2021.
- ^ Journalist. WorldCat. OCLC 5301989.
- ^ "BBC staff quit union after being told to wear colors of Palestinian flag, keffiyeh". The Jerusalem Post | JPost.com. 28 November 2024. Retrieved 16 December 2024.
- ^ Frazer, Jenni (27 November 2024). "BBC staff quit journalists' union after being told to dress in Palestinian colours". Jewish News. Retrieved 16 December 2024.
- ^ Frazer, Jenni (27 November 2024). "BBC staff quit journalists' union after being told to dress in Palestinian colors". Ynetnews. Retrieved 16 December 2024.
External links
[edit]- Trade unions in the United Kingdom
- International Federation of Journalists
- 1907 establishments in the United Kingdom
- Organisations based in the London Borough of Camden
- Organizations established in 1907
- United Kingdom journalism organisations
- Journalism in Ireland
- Journalists' trade unions
- Trade unions based in London
- Trade unions affiliated with the Trades Union Congress
- Trade unions affiliated with the Scottish Trades Union Congress