Macau Federation of Trade Unions

The Macau Federation of Trade Unions (MFTU)[a] is a pro-Beijing labour and political group in Macau. It is the largest and most influential labour group in the city, with over 50,000 members in 43 associated trade unions.[1] Presided by Ho Sut Heng[2] and chaired by Lee Chong Cheng,[3] it currently holds four seats in the Legislative Assembly.[4]

Macau Federation of Trade Unions
Chinese name澳門工會聯合總會
Portuguese nameFederação das Associações dos Operários de Macau
PresidentHo Sut Heng
ChairpersonLee Chong Cheng
Founded20 January 1950; 74 years ago (1950-01-20)
HeadquartersFederation of Trade Unions Building, 2–6 Rua da Ribeira do Patane, Macau
Membership (2010)50,000+
Ideology
National affiliationAll-China Federation of Trade Unions
Regional affiliationPro-Beijing
Colours  Red
Legislative Assembly
4 / 33
Website
www.faom.org.mo
Macau Federation of Trade Unions
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese澳門工會聯合
Simplified Chinese澳门工会联合总会
Abbreviation
Traditional Chinese工聯總會
Simplified Chinese工联总会
Portuguese name
PortugueseFederação das Associações dos Operários de Macau

History edit

The MFTU and a few other pro-Beijing organisations formed an electoral alliance named the "Union for Development" in the run-up to the 1992 legislative and municipal elections.

The MFTU is one of the three major pro-Beijing organisations which have dominated politics in Macau since the 1999 handover, the other two being the Macau Chinese Chamber of Commerce and the General Union of Neighbourhood Associations of Macau.[5]

Four members of the MFTU were elected to the Legislative Assembly in the 2021 legislative election. They were Lam Lon Wai, Lei Chan U, Ella Lei Cheng I, and Leong Sun Iok.[4]

Gallery edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^
    • Chinese: 澳門工會聯合總會, abbr. 工聯總會
    • Portuguese: Federação das Associações dos Operários de Macau, abbr. FAOM

References edit

  1. ^ "Macau Workers' Organizations". www.ilo.org. International Labour Organization. 15 June 2010.
  2. ^ Meneses, João Paulo (29 August 2020). "Special Report – 'The Future is Feminist'". Macau Business. Retrieved 21 September 2022.
  3. ^ "China: Macau Federation of Trade Unions needs change". International Labour Organization. February 2011.
  4. ^ a b Moura, Nelson (14 June 2022). "Trade union federation legislators request for some restrictions under labour law proposal to be removed". Macau Business. Retrieved 22 September 2022.
  5. ^ Ip, Eric C. (25 April 2019). Hybrid Constitutionalism: The Politics of Constitutional Review in the Chinese Special Administrative Regions. Cambridge University Press. p. 192. ISBN 978-1-107-19492-2. Retrieved 30 September 2022.