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Unite boss to face leadership challenge amid concerns over rise of Reform
Sharon Graham was criticised by some within the union movement recently for her attack on the energy secretary, Ed Miliband. Photograph: Stefan Rousseau/PA View image in fullscreen Sharon Graham was criticised by some within the union movement recently for her attack on the energy secretary, Ed Miliband. Photograph: Stefan Rousseau/PA Unite boss to face leadership challenge amid concerns over rise of Reform Simon Dubbins to announce he has secured required number of nominations to challenge Sharon Graham Sharon Graham, the leader of the UK’s second biggest union, Unite, is to face a challenge as general secretary over claims the union is not doing enough to challenge the rise of Reform UK . Simon Dubbins, who started out as a print worker and has been an international director with the union since 2008, will announce on Tuesday that he has secured the required number of nominations to mount a challenge. Graham was criticised by some within the union movement last week for her attack on the energy secretary, Ed Miliband, and his net zero agenda, which she said would be a “ noose around the neck ” of job creation. She supports more drilling for fossil fuels in the North Sea. A senior trade union source said there was widespread unease that Graham’s anti-Miliband, pro-drilling stance played into the hands of Reform’s leader, Nigel Farage. “[Graham’s] interventions are boosting Farage and his crypto backers. And her attack on Ed played right into the hands of the Labour right,” the source said. Unite has members in almost every sector of the economy and Dubbins’ team say they have the backing of more than 250 workplaces, including some of the union’s largest branches. Dubbins said: “Our campaign for a new start for our union has won overwhelming backing from our organised membership in half the usual time. Members are tired of old divisions and frustrated with a leadership more obsessed with playing political games than stopping job losses and the attacks we face.” Dubbins said the growth in the popularity of Reform, including among union members , was one of the most pressing political issues facing working people. He said Unite had failed to do enough to challenge the party and had a “unique responsibility to heal divisions, win workers back from the false promises of Farage, and ultimately stop a Reform government”. “Reform will never be on the side of working people. From council workers to migrant workers, our members are under attack. Our union will defend you and we will take the fight to Reform and the far right,” he said. On North Sea oil and gas, Dubbins said workers could not “be abandoned as the Vauxhall Luton workers were or the miners were before them”. He said the transition to a low-carbon economy needed to secure jobs and livelihoods, adding: “We are sceptical of any plan that does not start with that.” But he argued that the fast-growing green economy was key to securing well-paid, long-term unionised jobs for Unite members, and he