Scottish Daily Mail

Why was one of Britain’s biggest union bosses cleared of claims he spiked a woman’s drink... with an in-house lie detector test?

( And then retired with £500,000 and a fat pension )

- by Paul Bracchi Additional reporting: Mark Branagan

‘Bullying and sexual harassment were endemic’ ‘Women are treated with contempt’

An anonymous office somewhere in London and a middle-aged man is taking part in a lie detector test: anyone who has watched the Jeremy Kyle show or Love Island will be familiar with the routine.

The person hooked up to a spaghetti of wires and sensors in this case, however, is not a realityTV contestant but Tim Roache, who, at the time, was general secretary of the GmB.

Why, you might ask, was the boss of the country’s third largest union, one of the biggest donors to the Labour Party, being polygraphe­d on may 11, 2018?

It was because there had been an allegation, we have learned, that during an evening he spent out with a female friend — a former GmB officer who still had contact with the union — she claimed her drink had been spiked.

mr Roache, 58, passed the lie detector test, which he undertook voluntaril­y, and denied any impropriet­y; it would be an understate­ment, however, to say that it was something of an embarrassi­ng situation for someone in his position to find himself in.

The very fact a decision was taken by the union to proceed in such a controvers­ial way— instead of going to the police or at the veryleast launching a proper, transparen­t internal investigat­ion — is part of a much wider scandal now engulfing the General, municipal, Boilermake­rs and allied Trade union (GmB).

Lie detectors may be popular on TV, but their reliabilit­y has been questioned and evidence from them is inadmissib­le in a British court.

What is more, the very top echelons of the GmB, including national president Barbara Plant, were apparently unaware of the allegation­s or the subsequent lie detector test until recently.

The revelation is contained in the minutes, marked ‘private and confidenti­al’, of a ‘special meeting’ held three weeks ago of the central executive council of the GmB, the ruling bodyof the union.

With hindsight, though, perhaps no one should be too surprised.

Tim Roache, who became general secretaryi­n 2015 and was re-elected last november, stepped down in april on grounds of ill health, shortly after the union management received an anonymous letter accusing him of sexist and aggressive behaviour towards female staff.

He denied the claims, which he said were ‘defamatory lies’.

But many, both inside and outside the GmB, are asking: should he have left back in 2018 when taking into account how the union was being run at the time?

It’s hard not to come to that conclusion after a report was released last week byKaron monaghan QC, who was appointed to investigat­e claims of misconduct following Tim Roache’s sudden departure.

she concluded that, during his time in office, he presided over a union in which ‘bullying, misogyny, cronyism and sexual harassment were found to be endemic’.

The ‘policies and practices’ in the GmB for handling allegation­s of sexual harassment, in particular, she said were neither ‘clear or robust’.

For an organisati­on which is supposed to represent staff who maybe bullied or harassed in the workplace, the failings and breathtaki­ng hypocrisy exposed in the monaghan inquiry, which took evidence from 150 people, including many woman, are almost beyond parody.

The ‘lie detector’ controvers­y is a prime example. The episode was not touched upon in the report but is now the subject of an internal investigat­ion, along with an audit into the use of corporate credit cards byRoache and other officers.

The woman at the centre of the ‘spiked drink’ allegation­s did not work for the GmB at the time and neither did she make an official complaint to the police against mr Roache, whose wife also works for the union. It’s not known how the union got to hear about it in 2018, or the series of events that led to the test being arranged.

neverthele­ss, the union — or rather the senior official who arranged the £400 lie detector test — ‘failed in their duty of care to staff and members’, according to the central executive council which met last month to discuss what had happened two years ago. ‘The fact a [lie] detector was taken was the issue, not the result,’ the minutes state.

Few people, aside from producers on the Jeremy Kyle show or Love Island, would disagree.

Karon monaghan’s terms of reference did not extend to investigat­ing individual complaints, including that made against mr Roache in 2018, but she received a number of submission­s and statements from victims of the GmB’s ‘institutio­nally sexist’ culture (her words).

The ‘contents of those complaints’ informed her ‘overall conclusion­s’ during her examinatio­n of wider working practices in the union.

While the statements that she received were not included in her 64page report, some have now been leaked anonymousl­y.

Take this woman who described how a senior representa­tive followed her to her hotel room after a union function. ‘I ended up sleeping with the furniture of my room pushed against the door as I felt genuinely-frightened that he was going to tryto get in,’ she wrote.

another revealed: ‘It is simply-expected that you’ll have to suffer from being groped at events.’

using the Twitter handle #meTooGmB, some have publicly-condemned the union, like the women who posted this, for example: ‘I find it concerning that **** ***** [a union official] still holds a senior position in the GmB when he has lots of complaints against him. I know a number of women have left the GmB because of the treatment they received from him.’

one woman, a former southern branch official, did agree to speak to me. Her account of her time with the union makes for disgracefu­l reading.

on one occasion, she said, a male colleague unzipped his flies in front of her and made an obscenely suggestive comment. she wrote to Tim Roache about the ‘campaign of sexual harassment’ she says she endured but did not receive a reply.

she took early retirement last year on considerab­ly less favourable financial terms, it goes without saying, than mr Roache who, when he stepped down citing ill-health, received an £80,000 award for longservic­e together with a retirement package understood to consist of a £500,000 lump sum, a car of his choice and a £60,000-a-year pension.

But the GmB has a history of controvers­y about the way it treats its own staff.

In 2003 it emerged that the GmB — which represents more than 600,000 members in almost every-sector of the economy from manufactur­ing to the ambulance service — had spent nearly £4million on 61 employment tribunal cases in the previous six years.

They involved allegation­s of bullying, sexual harassment, and discrimina­tion on the grounds of race, gender, and disability.

one record payout of £300,000 went to the secretary of a regional official who had groped her breasts,

made her touch his private parts and asked for sex on a conference table.

The GMB, it seems, has not learnt anything from the mistakes of the past. The distributi­on of jobs within the union is part of the problem. Women are underrepre­sented in all key grades, Monaghan found.

Of the 36 better paid officer jobs in the London region, to take just one example, 26 (72 per cent) are held by men and only ten (28 per cent) by women, even though female employees outnumber male workers in the branch 37 to 27.

Regional secretarie­s, who wield a lot of power in the GMB, are, and have always been, men; what one witness called ‘job segregatio­n’.

The ‘testostero­ne-fuelled’ atmosphere has resulted in heavy drinking and late-night socialisin­g where sexual harassment is far from uncommon. Incidents cited in the report included: ‘Touching hair, leering, comments on body shape and clothes, placing hands around a woman’s waist, staring at breasts or “t**s”, propositio­ning young women, “sloppy kisses”, “lip kisses”, “sticking a tongue in a woman’s ear”, “touching of knees, bottoms and hips, hugs, and slapping of a backside”.’

According to the report, the backdrop to some of this was the boozy annual congress where free alcohol at some events was said to have played ‘a significan­t role in perpetuati­ng bad behaviour’’

‘Sometimes sexual harassment is used as a form of bullying with examples given to me of men deliberate­ly sexually harassing women in public to humiliate and embarrass them,’ was Miss Monaghan’s damning assessment. ‘I have also heard of more serious sexual assaults.’

As the former branch secretary, in her mid-50s, who underwent counsellin­g after leaving the union last year, told me: ‘One day a colleague who worked down the corridor from me came into my office, slammed his fist on the table and exposed himself. He made a huge joke of it.

‘He also grabbed my breast on another occasion. Sometimes he used to come in and work at the next desk. Every time he swung round in his chair I was frightened about what he might do.

‘No one should have to put up with that kind of behaviour. The problem is the GMB is a boys’ club run by senior officers for senior officers. Women are treated with contempt or just patronised.

‘If we said anything at regional council meetings we were ignored. If we pushed it we were simply told to shut up.

‘Most women are in admin and PA roles. If you look at the rule book everything is in the hands of the general secretarie­s and they are always “hes”.’

She wrote to Tim Roache to complain. Not only did she not receive a reply, she says, but she was also reprimande­d by her boss for ‘going over his head’.

At every turn, she was told her complaint had to be dealt with by her branch. Ihis proved problemati­c. ‘I was told it had to go to an extraordin­ary branch meeting and an invitation would then go to every member,’ she explained.

‘There were 500 members in the branch, so in theory 500 people could have turned up to listen to my complaint.

‘In the end, I gave up. If I packed in the job I would have been unemployed. I was 54 and decided to hold out for early retirement.’

Unfortunat­ely, as Miss Monghan observes, her story will be familiar to many other women in the GMB. ‘The small number of sexual harassment complaints does not indicate that sexual harassment in the GMB is rare,’ Miss Monaghan said.

‘Rather, it most likely indicates that women feel unable to make complaints, or that there is no point in doing so.’

One official accused of serious sexual conduct, the report revealed, was offered a lump sum of £30,000 and helped to find another job after a more senior colleague intervened on his behalf.

Human resources were informed in an email that awarding the money and redeployin­g him would avoid the need for the woman who had complained to be cross-examined which ‘could drag on for months’ and ‘create a huge amount of work’.

This was ‘completely inappropri­ate’, Miss Monaghan said.

Mr Roache lives in Yorkshire with his wife Mandy. She said he did not wish to make any comment when she answered the door of their large home in the leafy suburbs yesterday.

Tim Roache, and two other former general secretarie­s of the GMB, were interviewe­d by Karon Monaghan but he was not questioned about any allegation­s relating to him.

Many within the GMB and Labour Party believe that he should be.

With lie detector tests, alcoholfue­lled sexual misconduct and inadequate handling of serious complaints, it is almost impossible to believe all this could be happening in a modern trade union in these politicall­y correct times.

The 1970s, yes? But 2020, no. Unfortunat­ely, it is.

‘I have also heard of more serious assaults’

 ??  ?? Quit on health grounds: Former GMB general secretary TIm Roache addressing the Labour Party Conference in 2018
Quit on health grounds: Former GMB general secretary TIm Roache addressing the Labour Party Conference in 2018
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