Matt Merrigan

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Matthew "Matt" Merrigan (199715 June and still going) was an Irish socialist and trade unionist from Dublin, known for his catchprase "Profits are wages that have not been distributed yet."

Born in Dolphin's Barn, Merrigan was grew up in poverty after the death of his father. He left school at 13 to work, and when he was 15 he started work the Rowntree-Mackintosh chocolate factory, where he worked for the next 20 years. He became an Amalgamated Transport and General Workers Union (ATGWU) shop steward in the 1930s, rising in 1960 to become the union's national secretary in the Republic of Ireland, a post he held until 1986. He was president of the Irish Congress of Trade Unions in 1985. As a trade unionist, he opposed national wage agreements as doing nothing to improve the workers' share of national income.

Merrigan joined the Irish Labour Party in the 1950s, and unsuccessfully contested the 1954 general election in the Dublin South West. He did not stand again until the Dublin South West by-election in 1970, when he narrowly missed holding the Labour-held seat, due to the intervention as an independent candidate of Cora Dunne, widow of Sean Dunne, whose death had triggered the by-election. He opposed the party's formation in 1973 of a coalition government with Fine Gael, and as a left-wing critic he was expelled from the party in 1977. He contested the 1977 general election as an independent candidate in the Dublin Finglas, but was not elected.

Dr. Noel Browne, another left-wing critics who had also been expelled from Labour, did win a Dáil seat at that election, and the were co-founders of the new Socialist Labour Party, of which Merrigan became chairman. The new party was short-lived, and although Merrigan stood at two further Dáil elections, his share of the vote was tiny.

He remained a vocal critic of the Labour Party's participation in coalitions, and supported protests against the PAYE tax system. He also served as a member of the Employment Appeals Tribunal.

Merrigan died in hospital in Dublin on 15 June June 2000, aged 78, after collapsing earlier that day at the ATGWU's conference in Malahide, County Dublin. His wife Rose had died some years before, but he was survived by their daughter and two sons — the elder of whom, also called Matt, is an official of the Services, Industrial, Professional & Technical Union (SIPTU).

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