Historic win for A Voice for Members in Vic CPSU

July 15, 2025
Issue 
Public servants campaigning for the A Voice For Members ticket in June. Photo: A Voice For Members/Facebook

Rank-and-file unionism is being celebrated after A Voice For Members聽(AVFM) ticket won the Community and Public Sector Union (CPSU) election in Victoria.

The are yet to be released by the Australian Electoral Commission, but scrutineers for Jiselle Hanna and the AVFM ticket say the ticket has won five CPSU executive positions and 23 out of 34 Branch Council positions.

It was the first time in 32 years that the former leader Karen Batt and her CPSU United ballot team have contested an election.

While Batt and the Jacinta Allan Labor government are said to be surprised, given that conditions are being eroded, wage growth is glacial and employment precarious, they should not be.聽

AVFM built a of solidarity and active participation that sought to respond to the critical issues.聽聽

Dissatisfaction with the recent round prompted the AVFM to form. CPSU United described the agreement as a huge success, claiming it had negotiated a significant wage rise and benefits. But it failed to challenge the mandated wage cap and accepted a 12% wage rise over four years, lagging behind inflation.

The Australian Nurses and Midwives Federation (ANMF), the Police Association of Victoria and the Victorian Ambulance Union have challenged the unfair wage caps. The ANMF won a 28.4% pay rise over four years.

The CPSU not only failed to advocate for its members, its capitulation to the government-mandated wage cap helped undermine other unions in their enterprise bargaining negotiations.

for a member-led union willing to take on the fight for better working conditions and to stand with other unions鈥 in their battles for just wages.聽

While wages has fallen behind inflation, VPS employees also face precarious employment. Helen Silver鈥檚 Silver Review is assessing 鈥渋nefficiencies鈥 and has said she wants to return the VPS to its pre-pandemic size. If unchallenged this will likely lead to jobs cuts; the 2025 budget has flagged 1200 jobs will go with hundreds more expected to follow.聽

The then AVFM ticket responded by mobilising union members to attend a series of actions at the Victorian parliament. AVFM members then constructed the 鈥淕old Review鈥, a comprehensive counterproposal to Silver鈥檚.

The Gold Review proposed alternative cuts to keep the number of public servants intact. They included a levy on major banks, a rise in online betting taxes, culling VPS executive positions, consolidating government accommodation and ending subsidies for fossil fuels.

AVFM鈥檚 Gold Review highlighted that public service was already smaller than its pre-pandemic size relative to the total public sector and that, ultimately, large-scale cuts are a false economy.

Its well researched analysis and rejection of Labor鈥檚 proposed job cuts drew media attention.

AVFM coordinated an impressive union member-led ground campaign in June. Government departments in the CBD were leafleted almost daily by AVFM. Members door-knocked thousands of houses across the state, making a particular effort to engage with the regional CPSU members in Bendigo, Wodonga and Geelong.

It was the first time in a long time for many to hear from the union. With more volunteers joining each week, the effect was compounding.聽

AVFM鈥檚 sustained effort to mobilise members with its platform led to one of the highest election turnouts in CPSU history. 聽The ticket won roughly 70% of total votes cast.

The celebration following the historic win was attended by hundreds of CPSU members and other unionists, further demonstrating the significance of the victory.

[Conor Macleod was part of the 聽ticket and is a member of the聽Community and Public Sector Union.]

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