Vale John Coombs

Published: 1 Sep 2021

 VALE JOHN COOMBS (1940-2021)

1 September 2021

It is with deep regret that the Maritime Union of Australia (MUA) marks the passing of former National Secretary John Coombs who passed away today at the age of 81.

John Coombs was national secretary and was a hugely important figure in the MUA and the broader union movement in Australia and internationally. He spent his life representing the interests of working people whom he cared for deeply.

Best known to the public as the leader of the MUA during the divisive 1998 Patrick waterfront dispute, John joined the Waterside Workers Federation in 1968 and became WWF delegate for Consolidated Cargo Care in 1972. Please find the statement from National Secretary and ITF President attached.

He was instrumental in setting up the Waterside Workers Credit Union where he was chair for 27 years and the Stevedoring Superannuation Fund which he also chaired.

MUA National Secretary Paddy Crumlin said “John will be greatly missed, a person of courage and character and enjoying the great wit and sense of humour of the Australian waterfront.  He was tough and courageous in the face of seemingly insurmountable odds and was a lightning rod for galvanizing actions against injustice and elitism, but also for aspirations of a genuine vision for Australian political, social, economic and industrial rights based on access and true process”

Former ACTU Secretary Bill Kelty paid tribute to John saying “John Coombs was a giant in the union movement. He stood on the shoulders of others before him in the MUA and he led his union in the greatest reforms and one of the most significant disputes of last century.

“John fought for and defended his members and the members of all unions. His contributions to the union movement and the rights of ordinary workers across the country was immeasurable.

“John was a great friend and warrior who loved his union and who was so loved by his union in return. We owe John Coombs a great debt.” Kelty said.

Retired National President of the MUA Jim Donovan said “John was one of the few self-taught people that could grasp every position that he held, and he did it so well. He took the job to heart and knew it was a big job, but he gave it all he had. He was a great unifier, and his leadership during the 1998 dispute was outstanding.”

 

 

Former Federal Labor Minister Greg Combet said: “No one who lived through the waterfront dispute in the late 1990s could forget John Coombs’ tenacity, passion, and integrity as the leader of his union. He was a titan of the labour movement.”

“He was also one of my dearest friends and colleagues for many years. All of the extraordinary and wonderful experiences we shared live vividly in my memories. Farewell my friend,” Mr Combet said.

ACTU secretary Sally McManus said: “For generations of trade unionists, John was the dragon slayer who led his union when they won against all the odds and all the might and power of the Government and employers. Twenty-three years later unionists still shout out the defiant “MUA – Here to Stay!” as under his leadership the MUA prevailed. This can never be forgotten.
Humble, strategic and a man of great integrity. John was much loved by all of us as for a period of time, we all looked to him to lead us on picket lines across the country. The union movement sends all our love to his partner Gwen and his family”

International transport Workers Federation (ITF) General Secretary Stephen Cotton paid tribute “John was a true internationalist and made an incredible impact on the lives of many maritime and transport workers around the world as executive board member and Vice Chair of the Dockers Section he was relentless in the protection of workers.”

John Coombs’ passing will be deeply felt by his many friends and colleagues.

Funeral details will follow.

 

VALE JOHN COOMBS from MUA National Secretary John Coombs 

 

 

On Behalf of the Maritime Union of Australia and the International Transport Workers’ Federation, and with great sadness it is my responsibility to inform you that John Coombs, Retired National Secretary of the Maritime Union of Australia has passed away this morning after a long illness.

 

On behalf of our membership, officers and staff here and around the world in the wider transport industry, we pass on our deepest sympathies and condolences to John’s wife Gwen, children Jenny and Stephen and their family.

 

John was a giant of the trade union movement both here and internationally and his small and wiry stature belied the size of his courage, determination, vision, and leadership that followed similarly in the traditions and great substance of maritime union leaders such as Jim Healy, Eliot V Elliott, Charlie Fitzgibbons, Pat Geraghty and Tas Bull.

 

John was a waterside worker in the port of Sydney and went on to become a National Official under the leadership of Norm Docker and Tas Bull taking over from Tas on his retirement.  John’s leadership was critical to the success of the establishment and consolidation of the key social and transformative national infrastructure in superannuation, universal health care, and maritime reform that was underpinned by maritime reform under the Hawke and Keating Labor Governments.

 

He worked very closely with the ACTU Secretary Bill Kelty in particular and worked alongside Greg Combet when he was an industrial officer for the union and subsequently in his role in the ACTU.

 

The formation and consolidation of the Maritime Union of Australia in the merger between the Seamen’s Union of Australia and the Waterside Workers Federation was one of his greatest achievements as a leader and the importance of that leadership was most clearly manifested in the Patrick dispute, where the Federal Government and Patrick Corporation entered into what the High Court found was the probable conspiracy against the Patrick workforce that was sacked on the one evening all over the country and replaced with non-union labour, carefully selected and trained to break unionism on the Australian waterfront and under Cabinet-in-Confidence documents as part of a wider attempt to undermine trade unionism in the Australian workplace. 

 

The great irony of John’s senior leadership in the union was that it was critical to the nation building initiatives of the Hawke Keating government and the Australian trade union movement through the ACTU in establishing the social compacts of superannuation, universal health care and other reforms that remain part of the decency and quality of life for all Australian working women and men and their communities. 

 

John then spent his last years of leadership in the front line combating the attempts of the Federal Government under John Howard and Peter Reith in undermining those reforms and attempting to sever the relationship between unions, employers and government that was, and remains critical to, their ongoing success.

 

Regardless of the fake news and political spin of the time John’s contribution in that time effectively identified the political and ideological nature of the attack in a way that resonates in Australia and around the world today.  The Australian public and working community mobilised into one of the most extraordinary fightbacks in the face of the Patrick sackings ever seen in this country or indeed internationally.

 

The widespread community picket lines and international support in an industry that is critical to the national interest continues to stand as a great tribute to his and the trade union movement ongoing importance to Australian values.

 

The union under Charlie Fitzgibbons negotiated the first industry superannuation arrangements for maritime workers in 1967 that led on to the wider industry superannuation under the Hawke government in the late ‘80s.  John was a long-time board member and chair of the Stevedoring Employees Retirement Fund and subsequently Maritime Super.  He was also instrumental in the consolidation of community banking that was first established by the union in the late ‘60s.  He was long time chair of the Waterside Workers Credit Union now Unity Bank that has consistently provided loans and mortgages for maritime workers.

 

John retired to care for his eldest son Gary who developed multiple sclerosis and became a significant advocate on behalf of all MS sufferers in particular, and the disability sector in general.

 

Mildly spoken, formally or semi-formally dressed in the style of trade union officers of that time, humble in his aspirations, but a strong and courageous trade union leader in the tough and demanding trade unionism of the waterfront, John has left an indelible mark on both our union and the Australian aspirational way of life for a fairer more just and economically effective nation.

 

He was also renowned for his work on the Executive of the International Transport Workers Federation and was known for his determined advocacy for workers rights and trade union rights in all sectors of the transport industry and the wider trade union movement.  His leadership and the prior leadership of the MUA helped lay the groundwork for the recognition of other Australian trade union leaders such as Sharan Burrow the General Secretary of the International Trade Union Confederation.

 

John will be greatly missed, a person of courage and character and enjoying the great wit and sense of humour of the Australian waterfront.  He was tough and courageous in the face of seemingly insurmountable odds and was a lightning rod for galvanizing actions against injustice and elitism, but also for aspirations of a genuine vision for Australian political, social, economic and industrial rights based on access and true process.

 

He came from the deep traditions of political and industrial activism within our union and Australian trade unions.  He was an inspiration to a whole new generation of young new trade union leaders that cut their teeth on the extraordinary and cynical circumstances of the Patrick dispute and are now in the forefront of trade union leadership today.

 

John was a person of deep family values, totally reliable in his friendship and comradeship, he will be greatly missed because of the qualities of his character, but also greatly appreciated for the work of his life on behalf of working women and men, particularly in reconciliation and justice for First Nations People’s over his lifetime on the job, in office and in retirement.

 

Again, from the MUA and ITF our deepest sympathies and condolences to Gwen and the extended Coombs family and all of his brothers and sisters, comrades and friends in Australia and around the world.

 

Arrangements for his funeral service will be made available after determination.

 

Vale John Coombs, a long life well lived.  Rich in achievement and leaving an ongoing legacy of inspiration and determination in the face of any circumstance.  Now at rest.

 

Paddy Crumlin

President ITF

International President CFMMEU

National Secretary MUA

 

TRIBUTES 

Niek Stam, National Secretary of FNV Havens, Netherlands

In 1995 I met John Coombs for the first time. From that moment we were best friends and colleagues. John is a very charismatic person and very good in analysing the situation. And a great negotiator.

In Rotterdam port we say “you’re dead if nobody remember you anymore”. John R.I.P. we will always respect and remember you.

Willie Adams ILWU President, USA 

Paddy, MUA family our condolences on behalf of the ILWU family. It is with great sadness to hear that the heart beats of Bro John Coombs are still forever. John was a working class union leader, a hero who led from the front with dignity, intelligence, and the skills of a general fighting a Strategic
War.

One of John’s finest hours leading the mighty mua in battle in 1998 against Patrick’s trying to bust the MUA.

John your leadership was on display for not only dockers around the world, but for the working class on solidarity, determination, focus, discipline, and just pure courage, guts. In your honor John we will mourn your loss brother, thanks for giving us Everything in your tank we will fight like hell for the living. Gwen, family you're in our prayers rest in power brother John. Paddy, MUA family, thanks for sharing John with us, lonely are the brave. Your ilwu family

Dennis A. Daggett, Executive Vice President, ILA, USA

Very sorry to hear this news.  Please accept our deepest Condolences….  This has certainly been a tough year and a half.  We lost some Giants in our movement…. God bless!

 

Craig Harrison National Secretary, Maritime Union of New Zealand

On behalf of the Maritime Union of New Zealand, please accept our condolences and respect on the passing of John Coombs. John was held in high regard by our Union.

His leadership of the MUA at the time of the Patrick Dispute had an international impact. There is no doubt that if there had been a different outcome in that dispute, employers around the Pacific would have followed in the attack on organized labour.

As it was the MUA stood fast, and we all benefited from the message that maritime workers are an internationally organized force to be reckoned with. The international links that were forged and strengthened at that time have remained in place ever since. John’s life-time record of work includes the formation of the MUA and establishment of industry super funds, and these achievements speak for themselves.He leaves a great legacy, and we share your sorrow at his loss, while celebrating his life. Please pass on to John’s family our sympathy and best wishes.

 

 

 

 

 



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Authorised by P Crumlin, Maritime Union of Australia, Sydney