Transport and General Workers Union
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The Transport and General Workers Union (T&G, also referred to as TGWU) was one of the largest unions in the United Kingdom and Ireland up until it merged with Amicus in 2007 and became Unite. Internal tobacco industry documents show that the T&G and other unions have been used by the tobacco industry for decades to “support the industry’s cause in Government and Brussels lobbies” and “as a public relations vehicle to help combat the anti-smoking lobby”.1
Opposed the 2001 EU Tobacco Products Directive
As a member of the Tobacco Workers’ Alliance, the T&G played an active role in organising protests against the 2001 TPD,23including a protest in London on 22 November 2000 “in a bid to persuade the Government to step in and save 10,000 British jobs threatened by Brussels plans to ban EU tobacco exports”.3
A study examining the tobacco industry’s response to the 2001 TPD found that T&G’s lobbying activities were part of a comprehensive third party strategy to undermine the TPD.4
- See Industry Interference and the 2001 EU Tobacco Products Directive to learn more about the tobacco industry’s efforts to oppose the 2001 TPD.
Stakeholder in UK debate on Better Regulation
T&G has been an active actor in the policy debate around Better Regulation. In February 1999, it was part of an “experts debate” organised by the UK Government’s advisory Better Regulation Task Force to discuss “how to increase public confidence in government’s handling of risk”.5