British trade union leader and academic (born 1984)
For the American radio personality, see
Joe Grady.
Jo Grady (born 7 April 1984) is a senior lecturer in Employment Relations at The University of Sheffield, and a British trade union leader who serves as the general secretary of the University and College Union (UCU).[1]
Biography
Grady was born in Wakefield in 1984, while her father was part of the UK miners' strike.[2] She studied at Wakefield College, a further education institution, and then became the first member of her family to attend university, studying industrial relations at Lancaster University. Grady completed a PhD on trade union responses to neoliberal pensions reforms at Lancaster in 2011.[3] In 2009, she began working as a lecturer in Trade Union Studies at the University of Leicester.[2][4]
Grady joined the University and College Union (UCU) in 2006, and became joint secretary of its University of Leicester branch in 2016.[5] She then moved to work at the University of Sheffield, and became active in the UCU branch there, as its pensions officer. In 2018, she was elected to the union's national dispute committee for the Universities Superannuation Scheme, and she enthusiastically supported the union's strike that year over cuts to the scheme. In 2019 she was elected to the union's National Executive Committee.[2][6]
The General Secretary of UCU, Sally Hunt, stood down in February 2019, and Grady ran in the resulting election. Her campaign was noted for its strong online presence, and prominent badges and posters. She defeated Jo McNeill and Matt Waddup, taking 64% of the vote in the final round of voting.[2][4][6]
In May 2023, Grady agreed to pay "substantial damages" to political commentator Paul Embery after a libel claim was made against her following tweets that he said falsely portrayed him as "a misogynist, a pervert and a liar" that were made in response to him highlighting the anti-social behaviour of a group of women on a train.[7]
In March 2024 Grady was re-elected as UCU General Secretary by a mere 182 votes.[8][9]
Since then she has been mired in controversy after UCU staff took strike action over a dispute which includes issues around institutional racism, organisational dysfunction, and the breach of the staff union's recognition agreement after she agreed that another union would be recognised for UCU managers.[10][11] The dispute remains unresolved.
References