- George Burt (Canada)
George Burt (17 August 1903 — 6 September 1988) was Canadian Director of the
United Auto Workers (UAW/CAW) from 1939 to 1968.His father was a brickmaker and active trade unionist. Burt worked as an apprentice plumber before getting a job on the
General Motors assembly line inOshawa, Ontario in 1929. Like many auto workers, his pay was so low that he was forced to go on welfare at times during theGreat Depression . In 1937, theCongress of Industrial Organizations came to Canada to organize the Oshawa plant which went out on strike for 12 days in April forcing GM to recognize the union. Burt became treasurer of the newly formed UAW local 222. The local's president wasCharles Millard who also served as Canadian director of the UAW. Millard was an anti-Communist and attempted to purge Communists and leftists from the union and promote thesocial democratic Co-operative Commonwealth Federation . A "unity caucus" of Communists, left wing CCFers and militants ran Burt as their candidate against Millard in 1939. Burt was elected Canadian director of the CAW and would remain in that position for almost thirty years. He would also serve as vice-president of theCanadian Congress of Labour and president of theOntario Provincial Federation of Labour (1951-1953) a forerunner of theOntario Federation of Labour ." [http://www.canadianencyclopedia.ca/index.cfm?PgNm=TCE&Params=A1ARTA0001122 Burt, George] " in "The Canadian Encyclopedia" (accessed 3 November 2006).]Under Burt's leadership, the Canadian UAW organized
Ford andChrysler . Burt was arrested once in 1940 for allegedly interfering with war production when he participated in a picket across the street from Windsor's Chrysler plant." [http://www.caw.ca/whoweare/ourhistory/cawhistory/ch4/p2c4_2.html Getting a Voice] " in "The CAW: The Birth and Transformation of a Union" (accessed 3 November 2006).]In 1945, Burt was endorsed by both the
Ontario Liberal Party and the CommunistLabour-Progressive Party as one of a slate of three UAW "Liberal-Labour" candidates running in CCF held seats in Windsor in the Ontario provincial election but was defeated. It was not until December 1948 that the UAW fully endorsed the CCF.According to labour historian Sam Gindin, Burt supported the left when it was the dominant faction in the late 1930s and 1940s but, during the
Cold War , moved away from the Communists and became a supporter of moderate UAW leaderWalter Reuther .In 1961 he was a member of the
New Democratic Party 's founding committee.ee also
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Canadian Auto Workers References
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