Union Power Struggle: AWU vs. CFMEU in Queensland's Construction Sector Under Inquiry

December 6, 2025
Union Power Struggle: AWU vs. CFMEU in Queensland's Construction Sector Under Inquiry
  • The AWU’s state secretary, Stacey Schinnerl, testifies that CFMEU leaders are pressing to yield to their demands and highlights the AWU’s broader role in civil construction.

  • Inquiry hearings are expected to resume in February to continue examining potential misconduct, bias, and political influence in Queensland’s major project policy and union activity.

  • The inquiry investigates ties between CFMEU leaders, the workplace safety regulator, and political actors, including alleged arrangements involving public servants and government-backed legal positions.

  • Schinnerl warned in March 2021 that a planned addition to transport department policy could conflict with federal law and allow CFMEU access to agreements without majority membership.

  • Key contractors on major projects like Cross River Rail, Gold Coast Light Rail, and Centenary Bridge figure in the narrative due to perceived concessions to the CFMEU or access arrangements.

  • Queensland Council of Unions secretary Jacqueline King describes CFMEU-led dysfunction within the regulator and attempts to influence legislation tied to union access and permit loopholes.

  • A 2018- era review considered whether AWU and CFMEU policies extended union coverage to major projects over $100 million, scrutinized during the inquiry.

  • Schinnerl claims advisers aligned with CFMEU, and she drafted a letter noting "infected bias" that could undermine government decisions; de Brenni acknowledged the concerns in his briefing.

  • References to potential police referrals and investigations into actions by former CFMEU leaders, with further hearings and a final report due by August after a $20 million inquiry.

  • Schinnerl describes attempts by CFMEU leaders to extend influence across major civil projects and to pressure regulators, contractors, and the former Labor government.

  • Dispute over the third stage of the Gold Coast light rail, where changes could enable CFMEU-entered agreements contrary to AWU interests; the third stage was awarded to the CFMEU despite AWU gains earlier.

  • Emails and meetings from early 2021 show AWU secretary Stacey Schinnerl detailing Best Practice Industry Conditions she believed would artificially boost CFMEU influence on civil construction projects.

  • Questions arise over a police memorandum of understanding with the Office of Industrial Relations that allegedly misrepresented law and enabled CFMEU officials to access worksites without federal permits; Schinnerl links CFMEU to former construction compliance director Helen Burgess.

  • Historical alignment—CFMEU with the Labor Left and AWU with the Labor Right—provides context for the evolving union dynamics in the hearings.

  • Federal CFMEU secretary Zach Smith is described as proposing a demarcation agreement to curb violence, but Schinnerl says the effort targeted coverage rather than genuine representation.

  • Testimony details violence, threats, intimidation, and humiliation used to expand CFMEU influence amid disputes over site access and worker representation.

  • Uncovering alleged breaches of formal rules by CFMEU leaders has sparked public scrutiny of Queensland’s labor movement.

  • The inquiry offers broader insights into how union power is exercised in construction and its potential impact on the economy.

  • Schinnerl cites a May 2025 CFMEU executive plan to take over the AWU, including a funded plan and $1 million to enable a joint AWU membership strategy to control the state AWU branch in a future election.

Summary based on 2 sources


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