Communication Workers Union
The Communication Workers Union is the biggest union for the communications industry in the UK with 250,000 members. We represent members in postal, administrative, financial and telephone companies including Royal Mail Group and BT, o2, Virgin Media, Orange, ComputaCenter and the Alliance and Leicester. Our members' expertise includes engineering, computing, clerical, mechanical, driving, retail, financial and manual skills.
The CWU's Statement of Values aims:
- To provide first class collective and individual representation for all CWU members;
- To achieve security of employment for all members;
- To offer individual membership services of the highest quality;
- To expand trade union membership throughout the communications industry;
- To promote, by industrial and political means, the success of the industries in which our members work;
- To campaign against all forms of discrimination;
- To further these objectives by promoting the influence of the union throughout the national and international community.
We also offer our members extra benefits, such as free legal advice, a free will-writing service, and discounted motor, home and travel insurance.
We are a campaigning union and work hard to get our voice - YOUR voice - heard on a variety of subjects such as fair pay, just terms and conditions, health and safety, equal opportunities and politics. We are affiliated to the TUC and UNI.
Our strength comes from working and campaigning together. Please join us if you haven't already.
Our website can be found at: www.cwu.org
Please also check out CWU TV at: www.cwutv.org
Latest Press Releases
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Filter by year:
- CWU goes for BT strike ballot
- Privatisation back to old politics
- Royal Mail results show success in public sector
- Privatisation is unpopular old politics
- CWU response to Yell results
- CWU urges Vodafone to invest in workforce
- Strong results show BT can afford more on pay
- CWU members back Royal Mail deal
- CWU postal members urged to vote for a fresh start
- Postcomm survey shows post remains central

