Laurent Berger

Laurent Berger (born 27 October 1968 in Guérande, Loire-Atlantique) is a French trade unionist. He has been the general secretary of the French Democratic Confederation of Labour (CFDT) since November 28, 2012.

Laurent Berger
Chairman of the European Trade Union Confederation
Assumed office
May 2019
General secretary of the French Democratic Confederation of Labour (CFDT)
Assumed office
November 28, 2012
Preceded byFrançois Chérèque
General secretary of the Young Christian Workers (YCW)
In office
1992–1994
Personal details
Born (1968-10-27) October 27, 1968
Guérande, Loire-Atlantique
NationalityFrench
Alma materUniversity of Nantes

Life

Youth

Laurent Berger is the son of a worker of the Chantiers de l'Atlantique and of a child care assistant.[1]

During his studies, he was a supervisor in a high school. He joined the French Democratic Confederation of Labour at that time.[2][3] After he earned a master's degree in history from Nantes University,[4][5] he became a parmanent staff member of the Young Christian Workers (YCW) in 1991.[6] He was the general secretary of the YCW from 1992 to 1994.[1]

He was subsequently unemployed for six months and was intermittently a substitute teacher of history and geography.[3]

He was employed by a social insertion association in Saint-Nazaire to help long-term unemployed adults and RMI beneficiaries to find jobs. There, he created a CFDT section and became the staff representative of this association of nine employees.[7]

Union action

In 1996, Berger became a permanent staff member of the Saint-Nazaire CFDT local union.[7] He worked on employment and youth issues within the trade union.[7]

In 2003, he was elected general secretary of the CFDT regional union of Pays de la Loire[8] and joined the CFDT national office.[1]

On June 17, 2009, he was elected to the Confederal Executive Commission, the leading body of the CFDT,[9] where he was in charge of small business files.[1] After 2010, he was in charge of employment issues, securing career and integration paths. In this respect, he was the CFDT negotiator to state unemployment insurance and to youth employment.[1]

Berger was appointed as the deputy general secretary of CFDT on March 21, 2012.[10]

He was the head of a reflection on the functioning of the CFDT,[11] aimed at bringing the union closer to employees.[12]

After François Chérèque's resignation, Berger was elected as the general secretary by the CFDT national office on November 28, 2012.[13] He was re-elected with 98.31 percent of votes on March 5th, 2014 during a CFDT congress in Marseille.[14]

In 2016, Berger supported the Socialist government's labour law reform bill, in constrast with the FO and CGT unions.[15]

In June 2018, Berger was re-elected as the general secretary of the CFDT with more than 90 percent of votes. Under Berger's chairmanship, the CFDT became the largest trade union at union elections in the private sector (2017) but remained the second one at the elections in the Civil Service (2018). On December 11th, 2018, Berger tweeted that the CFDT had become the first trade union in France, overtaking the General Confederation of Labour (CGT).[16]

Berger has been the chairman of the European Trade Union Confederation since May 2019.[17]

Opinion against the National Front

In an interview with Francis Brochet for regional press group EBRA in the aftermath of the 2014 European Parliament election favourable towards the National Front, Laurent Berger stated: "For me, the National Front is always too high: this party (I am not talking about its voters) is a stain on democracy. We have the choice between an authoritarian society that will be into the 'We just have to' and look for a scapegoat, and a more appeased society of dialogue and listening. It is more complicated, but it will always be my choice."[18]

In April 2017, during the 2017 French presidential election, Berger announced he had "clearly taken a stance against Marine Le Pen and published arguments for [CFDT's] militants", even if he did not give any voting instructions.[19]

Publications

  • Laurent Berger, Claude Sérillon, Syndiquez-vous, Le Cherche midi, 2019 ISBN 978-2-7491-6249-2
  • Laurent Berger, dialogue with Denis Lafay, Au boulot ! Manifeste pour le travail, Éditions de l'Aube, 2018 ISBN 978-2-815928-01-4
  • Laurent Berger, Pascal Canfin, interviews with Philippe Frémeaux, Réinventer le progrès, Les Petits Matins, 2016 ISBN 978-2363832146
  • Laurent Berger, Permis de construire, Tallandier, 2015 ISBN 979-1021016460
gollark: PR stands for "PotatOS request".
gollark: You can make a PR.
gollark: Consistently bad, yes.
gollark: <@!160279332454006795> That's not useful particularly, as that would make `native_function` an upvalue.
gollark: However, it does NOT cause a crash as apparently I implemented better fallbacks than I thought, good job me, all hail gollark.

References

  1. "Laurent Berger : biographie express". istravail.com (in French). Archived from the original on 2012-10-28.
  2. "CFDT : Laurent Berger, "il a les épaules pour"". Le Nouvel Obs (in French).
  3. "Dauphin CFDT". Libération (in French).
  4. "Laurent Berger : du christianisme social à la tête de la CFDT". Les Echos (in French).
  5. "Laurent Berger, un coup de jeune à la CFDT". La Croix (in French). November 16, 2012.
  6. "Chérèque passe le témoin à Laurent Berger". Le Télégramme (in French).
  7. "Laurent Berger, le dauphin". Le Bien Public (in French).
  8. "Laurent Berger" (in French). LCI/TF1. Archived from the original on March 23, 2016. Retrieved December 12, 2019.
  9. "CFDT : Laurent Berger, "il a les épaules pour"". Le Nouvel Obs (in French).
  10. "Laurent Berger nommé n° 2 de la CFDT Laurent Berger à la tête de la CFDT : même François Chérèque confirme !". blog.lefigaro.fr (in French).
  11. "Actualité économique". LExpansion.com (in French).
  12. "La CFDT changera son logo mais restera fidèle à la couleur orange". L'Express (in French).
  13. "Page 404". cfdt.fr (in French).
  14. "CFDT : Laurent Berger réélu secrétaire général avec 98,31% des voix" (in French). RTL. June 5, 2014.
  15. "Berger: "la CFDT a toujours été taxée d'être trop proche du gouvernement"". BFM Business (in French). September 15, 2016.
  16. Waintraub, Judith (December 14, 2018). "Laurent Berger, la vraie force tranquille". Le Figaro Magazine (in French). p. 25.
  17. "Laurent Berger élu à la tête de la Confédération européenne des syndicats". Le Monde (in French). May 24, 2019. Retrieved December 12, 2019.
  18. "Berger : « Le pilotage à vue ne suffit pas »". L'Alsace (in French).
  19. "Laurent Berger : "Aucun homme providentiel ne peut faire face aux défis actuels"". La Vie (Interview) (in French). April 14, 2017.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.