
Tom McDonald, a veteran leader of Australia鈥檚 trade union and Communist movements, died in Gosford Hospital on April 18 at the age of 95.
Tom as a 鈥渦nion legend鈥 who fought for universal superannuation, accident pay for injured workers, long service leave and the minimum wage system. It said Tom had a 鈥渓ifelong commitment to passing on what one generation had learnt onto another鈥.
鈥淭om McDonald was [at various stages] the national secretary of the Building Workers Industrial Union (BWIU) and vice president of the ACTU.聽[The BWIU amalgamated with other unions in the early 1990s to form the Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union (CFMEU).]
鈥淭om聽started work as a ships鈥 carpenter and joiner at Sydney鈥檚 Cockatoo Docks at a time of very low wages, terrible safety standards, no support for injured workers, long hours, insecurity and no superannuation. By the time he retired as leader of his union 1991 he had transformed his industry.鈥
Dave Noonan, CFMEU National Construction and General Division Secretary, wrote: 鈥淭om聽was a legend of our union; a driving force in the formation of the CFMMEU and the establishment of superannuation for construction workers.
鈥淭om聽came from a background of poverty in the Sydney suburb of Glebe and became a socialist. He never forgot where he came from and never gave up the good fight for workers鈥 rights, social justice and economic equality.
鈥淭om聽inspired generations of unionists in leading his own union, and in mentoring many union leaders at Organising Works.鈥
In her 1999 review of Intimate Union: Sharing a Revolutionary Life, an autobiographical book by Tom and his lifelong partner Audrey, Melanie Sjoberg wrote: 鈥淭om聽vividly recalls his early memories of struggles with other workers to consolidate awards and to clean up the building industry and discusses the NSW Builders Labourers Federation鈥檚 (BLF) green bans. He says the [pro-Moscow] Socialist Party [which split from the Communist Party of Australia in 1971] mistakenly characterised these as trendy, isolated attempts to protect the environment 鈥 in reality they were a consistent campaign as part of a broad movement.
鈥淭om聽defines the [1980s Prices and Incomes] Accord as a conscious agreement between government and the ACTU which created the most highly centralised and regulated wages system in Australian history. He states the Accord 鈥榓chieved what the [Industrial Relations Commission] was never quite able to achieve: an end to union inspired wage increases outside the arbitration system鈥. This aroused opposition from workers and challenged union leaders with the task of policing and disciplining members.
鈥淭om聽says the Accord brought significant gains in social reforms, such as superannuation and family policy, but there was less success in the battle against deregulation of the finance sector, the entry of foreign banks or achieving a more interventionist industry policy. Unfortunately, he doesn鈥檛 draw a balance sheet on this. The Accord provided the largest ever shift in income from the working class to government and big business.鈥
Tom first joined the early Socialist Party of Australia (SPA) and later split in 1984, along with other union officials, to become part of the Association of Communist Unity (ACU) after the SPA took a position against the class-collaborationist Accord. Tom was allied to the pro-Accord 一品探花 of the ACTU, the Communist Party of Australia and the Labor Party.
Tom and Audrey published a joint memoir聽in 2016 titled Dare to Dream: The memoirs of Tom and Audrey McDonald.聽Steve Frenkel鈥檚 review described it as 鈥渁 clear, animated and absorbing account of two significant labour聽movement veterans鈥 recounting the 鈥渢rials, tribulations and successes of聽Tom聽and Audrey聽McDonald聽in their respective, yet overlapping domains of trade unionism (Tom), the聽women鈥檚 movement (Audrey), peace and international working-class solidarity and left-wing politics.
鈥淏ut it is more than this, Dare to Dream聽is about social聽relationships: family and the many comrades who shared their values and engaged in聽struggles for social change.鈥
Tom is survived by his partner Audrey and their three children.