Trade Disputes Act 1906
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The Trade Disputes Act 1906 (short title 6 Edward VII, c. 47) was an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom passed under the Liberal government of Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman. The Act declared that unions could not be sued for damages incurred during a strike, after the Taff Vale Case of 1901, which created a precedent that trade unions could be held liable for damages caused by industrial action.
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[edit] Background
The Liberal Party was returned with a large majority in the House of Commons in the general election of 1906. A minority in the new Cabinet, including Campbell-Bannerman and John Burns, wanted to introduce a Bill stating that trade unions could not be liable for damages. However the majority opinion in the Cabinet, led by H. H. Asquith and other members with legal experience, argued that this would make unions too powerful and instead proposed to limit the application of the law of agency in respect to union activities.[1] The latter faction prevailed and a Bill was introduced on 28 March, 1906 by the Solicitor General for England and Wales, William Robson. Many of the radical MPs did not understand the complicated legal wording of the Bill and so trade union MPs, led by W. Hudson, introduced their own Bill. This was severely criticised by the Attorney General for England and Wales, John Lawson Walton, "who tore it to pieces in his best forensic style".[2] Without warning his colleagues Campbell-Bannerman spoke in favour of the trade unionists' Bill:
"I have never been, and I do not profess to be now, very intimately acquainted with the technicalities of the question, or with the legal points involved in it. The great object then was, and still is, to place the two rival powers of capital and labour on an equality so that the fight between them, so far as fight is necessary, should be at least a fair one. ...I always vote on the second reading of a Bill with the understood reservation of details, which are to be considered afterwards. That is the universal practice. Shall I repeat that vote today? [Cries of "Yes".] I do not see any reason under the sun why I should not".[3]
The Conservative MP George Wyndham said he had heard Campbell-Bannerman's peroration with blank amazement as it was incredible that he should on Friday request that MPs vote for a Bill which his Attorney-General had strongly denounced on Wednesday. Asquith and the rest of the Government opposition to the trade unionists' Bill argued against it inside the Cabinet but the outcome of the Committee dealing with the Bill in August was to favour the trade unions' alternative.[4]
[edit] Assessments
George Dangerfield wrote in his The Strange Death of Liberal England:
It gave the Unions an astounding, indeed an unlimited immunity. Labour was jubilant. The most powerful Government in history had been compelled, by scarcely more than a single show of power, to yield to the just demands of organized workers.[5]
The English constitutional theorist A. V. Dicey argued that the Act conferred
upon a trade union a freedom from civil liability for the commission of even the most heinous wrong by the union or its servant, and in short confer[red] upon every trade union a privilege and protection not possessed by any other person or body of persons, whether corporate or incorporate...[this Act] makes a trade union a privileged body has ever before been deliberately created by an English Parliament.[6]
The pro-capitalist Joseph Schumpeter in his book Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy said of the Act:
It is difficult, at the present time, to realize how this measure must have struck people who still believed in a state and in a legal system that centered in the institution of private property. For in relaxing the law of conspiracy in respect to peaceful picketing—which practically amounted to legialization of trade-union action implying the threat of force—and in exempting trade-union funds from liability in action for damages for torts—which practically amounted to enacting that trade unions could do no wrong—this measure in fact resigned to the trade unions part of the authority of the state and granted to them a position of privilege which the formal extension of the exemption to employers' unions was powerless to affect.[7]
It remained in force until 1971. For the centenary of the Act, the Trades Union Congress campaigned for a Trade Union Freedom Bill.
[edit] Notes
- ^ John Wilson, CB. A Life of Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman (London: Purnell Book Services Limited, 1973), p. 505.
- ^ Wilson, p. 505.
- ^ Wilson, p. 505.
- ^ Wilson, p. 505.
- ^ George Dangerfield, The Strange Death of Liberal England (Stanford University Press, 1997), p. 185.
- ^ A. V. Dicey, Lectures on the Relation between Law and Public Opinion in England during the Nineteenth Century: Second Edition (London: Macmillan, 1919), pp. xlv-xlvi.
- ^ J. A. Schumpeter, Capitalism, Socialism, and Democracy (New York: 1942), p. 321.