Good afternoon, and thanks for following our live coverage of today’s CFMEU rallies in Melbourne and Sydney.
If you’re just joining us, here are some highlights:
- Melbourne CFMEU members started their rally at Trades Hall today. CBD streets became a sea of high-vis as thousands made their way to Flagstaff Gardens.
- The Electrical Trades Union’s Victorian secretary Troy Gray was a key speaker at the Melbourne event. He said a proposed 72-hour stoppage could cripple construction in the state. “We put the industry on notice,” he said.
- Workplace Minister Murray Watt has not committed to intervening on the Electrical Trade Union’s threat of a wildcat strike.
- Gray also said bikies only represented a fraction of the total membership, and told a cheering Melbourne crowd: “There has been no better union official than John Setka.”
- Victoria Police said an estimated 25,000 people attended the rally in Melbourne and officers made no arrests.
- The CFMEU’s national secretary Zach Smith told the Melbourne crowd that while governments come and go, the union would “be here for another 170 years” and more.
- About 5000 CFMEU members and their comrades also downed tools in Sydney to rally at Belmore Park, where mounted police kept a watchful eye and chants of “union power” rang out.
- NSW Police said no arrests were made, with a superintendent telling this masthead that officers were primarily there for crowd control.
- The Sydney crowd marched to NSW Parliament, where ousted CFMEU state secretary Darren Greenfield said people had been “trying to muddy my name for 45 f---ing years”.
- CFMEU delegate Denis McNamara, who is accused of roughing up a Nine photographer outside a union meeting, called for “discipline” and “no abuse of media” during the march. He foreshadowed an “intensified struggle” against the federal government over the appointment of an administrator.
- Also in Sydney, union leader Paul McAleer claimed legislation that deposed the CFMEU’s leadership was undemocratic and “about handcuffing the fighting, militant trade union”.
- NSW Greens MP Abigail Boyd watched union leaders speak outside NSW Parliament.
- NSW Police is yet to determine how many people attended Sydney’s rally but has so far reported no arrests.
And that’s all for our live coverage of the CFMEU rallies today. Thanks for reading.