Dan Murphy (trade unionist)

Daniel Anthony Murphy (born 10 November 1946) is a former Irish trade union leader.

Born in Cork, Murphy left school at the age of nineteen, and immediately found work as an Executive Officer in the Aviation Division of the Department of Transport and Power. He moved to the personnel division in 1968 but, before the end of the year, left to take up the post of General Secretary of the Association of Executive Officers of the Civil Service,[1] a small trade union with around 1,500 members.[2]

Murphy immediately affiliated the union to the Irish Congress of Trade Unions (ICTU). He renamed it as the "Civil Service Executive Union", and later as the "Public Service Executive Union", and persuaded a number of smaller unions to merge into it.[2]

Murphy was elected as President of the ICTU in 1981/82. He championed the Social Partnership system; on his retirement in 2009, Fiona Lee said that "It is doubtful if we could have had Social Partnership for the past 20 years without Dan Murphy's vision and dedication".[3] In 2010, he was appointed as chair of the civil service platform for implementing the Croke Park Agreement.[4]

References

  1. Irish Times, Who's who, what's what and where in Ireland (1973), p.240
  2. 1 2 John B. Smethurst and Peter Carter, Historical Directory of Trade Unions, vol.6, p.375
  3. "Union boss retires after 40 years", Daily Mirror, 21 January 2009
  4. Martin Wall, "Siptu calls for new national agreement", Irish Times, 11 September 2011
Trade union offices
Preceded by
Michael Magner
General Secretary of the Public Service Executive Union
1968–2009
Succeeded by
Tom Geraghty
Preceded by
Jack Curlis
President of the Irish Congress of Trade Unions
1981–1982
Succeeded by
David Wylie
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