Sydney, September 18: Thousands of Australian workers on Wednesday walked off job sites to join protests against the federal government's crackdown on a major construction trade union. Members and supporters of the Construction, Forestry, and Maritime Employees Union (CFMEU) joined rallies in Sydney and Melbourne to protest against the government's decision to force the construction arm of the union into administration.

The government in August placed all branches of the construction arm of the CFMEU into administration in response to allegations of corruption and criminal infiltration. Workers on Wednesday walked off job sites for the second time to support the CFMEU after similar protests in August. Speaking to protesters in Melbourne, CFMEU National Secretary Zach Smith said that the government's move would lead to worse wages and conditions for Australian workers, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation reported. What Is Right To Disconnect Law? Know All About Australia’s Fair Work Amendment Act That Allows Employees To Ignore Work Calls After Working Hours.

Protest Against CFMEU Crackdown in Sydney

"An attack on one union is an attack on all," he said. "Our victory is assured if we stand together and fight together and today we will be sending a very clear message across those corporate board rooms, across the halls of parliament that we're drawing a line in the sand," Xinhua news agency reported quoting local media. Troy Gray, secretary of the Electrical Trades Union in the Australian state of Victoria, reportedly threatened a three-day strike from next Wednesday if employers don't stop the "attack" on working conditions, according to the Guardian Australia. Australia is Set to Make Sweeping Changes to Financial-services Laws That Will Tighten ... - Latest Tweet by Bloomberg.

Responding to Wednesday's protests, Australia's Employment and Workplace Relations Minister Murray Watt said that the government is not targeting CFMEU members, union members or construction workers at all, the Age reported. "We're doing this to ensure that their union gets back to its job, which is representing the interests of those workers," he told reporters in Canberra. Unions previously said that they would go to court to challenge laws that allowed the government to take control of the construction union for a minimum of three years.

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