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Special Interview
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Michael Martin: A Man of Good Character |
(The following is an interview with Michael Martin,
Member of Parliament (MP) and Speaker of the
House of Commons of the British Parliament. This
interview was granted to Sheet Metal Workers' Local
Union No. 104 on May 1, 2001. Brother Martin began
his path to the top as an apprentice, then
journeyman British Union Sheet Metal Worker.
Sheet Metal Workers' Local Union No. 104 wishes to
thank Brother Martin for allowing us the time and
opportunity for this interview. We also wish to
thank our friend, Brother John Barnes, for helping
to arrange for this interview.)
Sheet Metal Workers' Local Union No. 104:
Thank you for taking the time to speak with us Mr.
Speaker, we appreciate this opportunity. I've been
reading much of the material about your life and
really applaud your coming from the trade and
reaching the position that you have. This is the
kind of activism that many of us strive for here in
the United States.
THE RIGHT HONORABLE MICHAEL MARTIN MP, SPEAKER:
Thank very much. That's good of you to say that.
Sheet Metal Workers' Local Union No. 104:
I saw two different ages for when you first entered
your apprenticeship. One report said 15 and one said
16. Which age did you enter the trade at?
THE RIGHT HONORABLE MICHAEL MARTIN MP, SPEAKER:
Well, it would be 16. Because, I started as a
steward boy at 15, before you started the trade
proper. So, I would leave school at 15 and go into
the same factory that I served my apprenticeship in
and then on your 16th birthday you would start the
formal apprenticeship.
Sheet Metal Workers' Local Union No. 104:
What's the minimum age there right now, and what was
it when you entered.
THE RIGHT HONORABLE MICHAEL MARTIN MP, SPEAKER:
The minimum when I entered was 16, and I would
probably say that nowadays the minimum age would
probably be 16, because a young person can leave
school at 16. But, certainly they wouldn't be able
to be a manual early-paid employee at 15. A young
person nowadays could go straight from school and
could enter an apprenticeship. But nowadays
apprenticeships last 3 years and sometimes 4 years.
Whereas in my days, it was a 5 year minimum
apprenticeship. So, you would start at 16, and you
wouldn't complete the apprenticeship until you were
21. That part about starting at 15 and working is
what would be regarded as a young laborer—it was a
form of cheap labor—and the 5 year apprenticeship
was a way keeping the young tradesman's wage down as
long as they possibly could.
Sheet Metal Workers' Local Union No. 104:
Is it much like that today?
THE RIGHT HONORABLE MICHAEL MARTIN MP, SPEAKER:
Much like today. There was no compulsory obligation
to pay a better lease to the young apprentices. Some
companies did give better lease, but there was no
obligation.
Sheet Metal Workers' Local Union No. 104:
Did they send you to day school as an apprentice, or
did you start by taking night classes.
THE RIGHT HONORABLE MICHAEL MARTIN MP, SPEAKER:
It was classes at night. Because the company I
worked for, I would say that they were a very penny
pinching company, and all that they were interested
was really cheap labor. In fact, that's what
directed me in the direction of the trades union
movement.
Many of the conditions I worked under were
dangerous, and sometimes as a young boy I didn't
appreciate how dangerous they were. To send an
apprentice away to a lease, would have meant that
they were paying something in those days, 10p
sterling. And so it was seen as a source-unit of
labor—and that was the type of people you were
dealing with. As a member, I worked with an
electrical engineering company that made electrical
heaters, the type of things you see in factories
and, indeed, homes. And, asbestos compressed board
was a good insulator of heat, and also it didn't
carry electricity. It meant that the because of the
elements in the fire, you could use asbestos board.
They actually had me doing the asbestos, the white
asbestos board. And, in fact, as an apprentice I
quite enjoyed doing that, because, as you know with
metal, the metal is often coated in an oil, which
can stick to your clothes. And after that, this
white powder was much more preferential to the oil
of the 16ga. and 20ga. material. Nor did I know that
it was a very dangerous material.
Sheet Metal Workers' Local Union No. 104:
So the trade union education, the classes you took,
those were once you turned out as a journeyperson?
THE RIGHT HONORABLE MICHAEL MARTIN MP, SPEAKER:
Yes. The trade union education was nothing to do
with the technical side of things. The classes at
night were more to do with the skill classes, which
were what they call vocational classes. But, I also
did attend, and find more interesting to go to, the
classes run by the trade union movement, which gave
you training in, what you would call, plant
bargaining, and also health and safety, and also
public speaking. The TUC, the Trades Union Council,
and the STUC ran that. It was very good for me
because, to be honest with hindsight, maybe I should
have stuck more to the technical side of my calling,
but this interested me, the public speaking, and the
trade union negotiations and health and safety. And,
what we had was the TUC had the skill, and I think
it was called the National Joint Colleges, I can't
remember the proper name. But, there was a lecturer
in Glasgow, and he was paid by the TUC. His name was
Tom McKenna. And, Tom would come up at 7 o'clock
three nights a week. He would teach the history of
the trade union movement. He would teach you a bit
of negotiations. And, he would also teach you on
public speaking.
Now, what the teacher would also do, when he saw
that you were a keen student, and three nights a
week was quite heavy going, when he saw you were a
keen student he would start to offer you weekend
schools. And, this is where he would undertake to
book a hotel and, perhaps if it was on a subject
like negotiations, he would get some of the top
trade union leaders in Scotland to come and lecture
to us and answer questions. This, I find, was
absolutely excellent. Tom was a very good,
fun-loving Scotsman and there was also a facility
for social entertainment because people worked in
different factories, and if anybody got out of hand
with the drinking, as it were, and they
overindulged, they'd find that they weren't invited
back to our seminar. So, I was always invited back.
I must say that gave me good groundwork on the type
of thing I enjoyed doing. And, I must say it would
have been through those schools that I was able to
become a full-time officer. I undertook to become,
after a period, a Shop Steward in the trade, and I
also went to Rolls Royce and Harrington, which is a
big factory which specializes in the aero-engine
industry, I was chosen to become a full-time officer
with the National Union of Public Employees, NUPE
for short. And, they like to have shop stewards from
an engineering background because a lot of the
membership were porters and culinary workers in the
rail service, and many of them were not necessarily
skilled in the art of negotiation. So, they would
recruit from without their own union. And, I
thoroughly enjoyed that experience.
Sheet Metal Workers' Local Union No. 104:
It sounds like a lot of this experience is paying
off for you in your position today. In light of your
great successes, I'm trying to equate how per capita
you have so many politically active members from
sheet metal and the trade unions who have now gone
on to become members of Parliament, and what similar
program could instill a greater sense of activism in
our own membership. I'm wondering if you would
equate that to these Saturday classes that…
THE RIGHT HONORABLE MICHAEL MARTIN MP, SPEAKER:
Yes. Yes. Well, what I can say is that I didn't set
out to be a member of Parliament. I didn't set out
to become Speaker of the House of Commons. But, I
did have an ambition to be a Shop Steward. And, the
reason I wanted to be a Shop Steward was to help my
fellow man, simple as that. And, I always believe
that people in the trade union movement are
volunteers. They've got this thing in them, it could
be a motivation or it could be a desire to be a good
human being as they want to help their fellow man.
And, I always took the view that if I could become a
Shop Steward, then I could help and improve the
working conditions of those around me. Not for
selfish reasons, but a view that I could do
something small and someone else could then take
over until we get a workforce where there's good
wages and conditions. Because I was brought up in a
home where my father was basically a laborer, and he
was forced to go to sea because he couldn't find
work on the land. And, my grandfather was hurt by
the terrible depression and he was seven years
unemployed. So, I know the importance of work, and
also the importance of good wages and conditions. I
feel that if a man or a woman is going as a
breadwinner in a home, and they are working in
decent conditions and a decent environment, then
it's going to be a better family life. And, of
course, a good family life is going to mean that
we're going to have a good society and a caring
society. So, what I would say is that I would give
encouragement to all of your members that don't go
into education with a great ambition that you're
going to seek a high office. The idea is to go in
there so that you are better equipped to help your
brothers and sisters. And, anything else that comes
from that, whether you become a full-time officer or
get involved in the political field, then that's a
bonus. Isn't it. That's a bonus. All I can say is
that I get involved politically because I enjoy
politics.
I think there's a lot of wonderful human beings in
the Labor and the Trade Union movement and also in
politics in general. What I would say is that, as
members get involved in education, then they will
learn, and they will learn from the people that have
gone before them. And, they will be better equipped;
they will have more of a quality of life within the
trade union movement. And, they will find that
people will encourage them to go on. And that is
what I would say in my life, trade unionists
encouraged me to go on and to take office. Sometimes
when I felt that I wasn't confident enough to do the
job, they gave me encouragement. As people see that
you are conscientious, then they will give you
encouragement to go on and to push yourself. And,
that is a very important thing. One final thing I
would say is this, every day I have to make
important decisions, and I always am able to draw on
my Shop Steward experiences. I chair one of the most
important bodies in the United Kingdom, and some
would say in the world because it is the mother of
Parliament, and I still draw on the experience that
I received when I was the Chairman of the Shop
Stewards Committee. I say, well, if you can handle
an angry sheet metal worker, you can handle an angry
Member of Parliament.
Sheet Metal Workers' Local Union No. 104:
I agree Mr. Speaker. I think that a commitment to
Labor, if you are truly committed from your heart,
you bring with that a sense of service.
THE RIGHT HONORABLE MICHAEL MARTIN MP, SPEAKER:
You put it in that—a sense of service. And, also, we
should never forget where we came from, and I came
from very humble beginnings. I am very proud of
that; I've never been ashamed of it. And,
fortunately for me, I still have all my brothers and
sisters and if I get too big for my boots, they're
the ones that will soon tell me. "Don't get any big
ideas, Michael." And, also, I still keep in touch
with my old pals in the trade union movement. I was
on the phone yesterday to Wally Jepsen, and when the
boys come up to the House of Commons, I always print
in to see them. I'm in Glasgow every weekend. And,
of course, I have a constituency. I'm still a Member
of Parliament and I have to look after people's
problems. All I can say is that the conditions that
I had as a young boy, as a metal worker, they
weren't so good. But, I went out to companies, like
Rolls Royce, where the conditions were good. And,
they were good there because of the Shop Stewards
and the Trade Union Movement. They fought bit by bit
to get better conditions, shift allowances, to do
away with dangerous practices, and to see that
people were treated with dignity. All I would like
to thank, many of those men and women that I didn't
know because they were before my time, but I would
only like to hope that I put a bit back in to the
community and also to society. I think that that's
an important thing that you try to put more back
into the community than what you get out of it.
Sheet Metal Workers' Local Union No. 104:
Thank you very much Mr. Speaker, and best wishes to
you from the Sheet Metal Workers' International
Association.
THE RIGHT HONORABLE MICHAEL MARTIN MP, SPEAKER:
It was nice to speak to you, and give my regards to
all the people in the Sheet Metal Workers' Union.
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