User:Warofdreams/NEC

Members of the Labour Party National Executive Committee.

Members before 1918
The National Executive Committee was created in 1900 as the central body of the new Labour Representation Committee. Ben Cooper proposed a committee of twelve trade unionists and five representatives of socialist societies. Joseph Burgess suggested only seven trade union members, with the aim of cutting costs, and his motion was passed. Some delegates argued that the trade unionists should be elected from members of the Parliamentary Committee of the Trades Union Congress, but this was rejected, on the grounds that some members of the Parliamentary Committee did not support the new organisation. Instead, attendees at the LRC's founding conference voted for trade unionists of their choice. Of the members from socialist societies, two were to be nominated by the Independent Labour Party, two by the Social Democratic Federation (SDF) and one by the Fabian Society. However, in the first year, the SDF chose not to nominate any members.

Changes were gradually made to the NEC, firstly by adding a place for a representative of trades councils, local Labour parties and women's organisations, and then by increasing the number of trade union places to eleven. The SDF soon disaffiliated, and the principle was established that the three places for representatives of socialist societies would be open to any affiliated groups and, like the other places, would be annually elected by members of that section, through a ballot at the party's annual conference.

The Committee was reorganised in 1918 by Arthur Henderson. He created a body with twenty-one members: eleven from trade unions or socialist societies, five from local parties, four women and the treasurer. While these members were nominated by their respective sections, they were voted for by the whole of the annual conference, which was dominated by the trade unions. In 1937, the local parties were instead given seven seats, and were permitted to elect their own representatives.

Trade unions
Election to the trade union section was generally uncontroversial. Because members of the General Council of the Trades Union Congress were not permitted to also serve on the NEC, most trade unions nominated their second-most prominent figure. Uniquely, the National Union of Mineworkers held an election to determine its nominee. From the 1940s to the 1970s, some leading trade union figures were members of the Communist Party of Great Britain and therefore ineligible to hold a Labour Party post. In these cases, unions instead nominated more junior figures, often to the right of the union as a whole. In general, the larger unions have each held one place, with genuine competition among smaller unions only for the last position. When a member has left the NEC mid-year, their place has been filled by the highest-placed unsuccessful candidate, which has often led to a smaller union gaining representation temporarily.

The section was reduced to twelve seats in 1930.

The section was increased to 15 seats in 2017.

Socialist societies
The Socialist, Co-operative and Professional Organisations section was created in 1930, and long had a single representative. While the Independent Labour Party (ILP) initially dominated the section, it disaffiliated in 1931, leaving the largest affiliate as the Royal Arsenal Co-operative Society (RACS). By the 1950s, it had 16,000 of the 25,000 votes in the section, and its nominees were virtually guaranteed to win the seat. In 1958, Tom Agar won the RACS nomination, the only left-wing candidate it put forward; in other years, its candidates were associated with the right of the party.

Constituency Labour Parties
In 1998, the section was reduced to six seats, at three of which must be held by women.

In 2018, the section was increased to nine seats.

Women
The women's section was created in 1918, when the Women's Labour League became a full part of the Labour Party. The section has been elected by the whole party, a situation which has often been controversial, particularly with constituency parties arguing that they alone should selected the representatives. Despite this, very few women were put forward by trade unions, and most of the nominations of constituency labour parties were sitting Members of Parliament. For many years, the section was filled by members of the right-wing of the party, supported by right-wing trade union leaders, but it became more competitive from the 1960s. The section was abolished in 1998, when new rules were introduced, requiring at least half of the members of each other section to be women.