Skip to main content
The Morning Star Shop
STUC celebrates ‘stunning’ rise in young trade unionists
Attendees at the STUC Youth Conference [STUC]

THE STUC has hailed a big rise in membership, with more than 20,000 new young workers joining a union last year.

Young workers from across Scotland headed to Clydebank for the 84th STUC youth conference at the weekend and were buoyed by data from the Labour Force Survey revealing that membership among 16 to 34-year-olds had rocketed by 21,772 — a 12 per cent leap — taking the total to 186,293 in 2023.

Overall trade union membership grew by 2.6 per cent to 664,000 in Scotland over the same period. STUC general secretary Roz Foyer described the figures as stunning, adding:

“Whether it be challenging bad hospitality bosses, coming together to create worker co-ops or standing up for our climate and the future of our planet, young workers’ courage and commitment to our cause is irrepressible.

Welcoming the news, STUC youth committee chairman Josh Morris said: “Over the past year, we’ve seen young workers demonised and derided while we battle an onslaught of bad bosses, precarious work, low wages, cuts to our services and high housing costs.

“But young workers have refused to back down. We have a new government now and we must hold their feet to the fire and ensure that young workers’ concerns are taken seriously and acted on. 

“We need to scrap the Conservative Party’s anti-union legislation and we need to see an end to precarious work in all its forms.

“Bad bosses must be held to account and young workers are leading the way, particularly in the hospitality sector, to bring about real change.  I’m proud of the work we’ve all done over the last year and hope to see it renewed and continued after this conference.”

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
Prime Minister Keir Starmer speaking at the launch of the Government's 10-year health plan during a visit to the Sir Ludwig Guttman Health & Wellbeing Centre in east London, July 3, 2025
Scotland / 4 July 2025
4 July 2025
Prime Minister Keir Starmer during a reception for London Tech Week, at no 10 Downing Street, London, June 10, 2025
Aw That / 5 July 2025
5 July 2025

Twelve months into Labour’s landslide sees non-violent protesters face proscription for opposing genocide and working people, the sick and the elderly having fear beaten into them daily in the name of profit, writes MATT KERR

Similar stories
Models of men and women on a pile of coins and bank notes
Britain / 5 November 2024
5 November 2024
Roz Foyer General Secretary of STUC ahead of Scottish Labour
Britain / 30 October 2024
30 October 2024
But general secretary Roz Foyer says decision to keep two-child cap and winter fuel payment are ‘especially disappointing’
A woman showing signs of depression (picture posed by a mode
Britain / 23 October 2024
23 October 2024