45-50 % of Glen Electric Newry's workforce could be made redundant

“We are calling for urgent intervention from the Stormont Executive and the local council to defend workers at this site by staving off job losses. If the intention is to move these jobs elsewhere for cheaper labour costs then this must be challenged."

SIPTU members on a picket in Newry below a picture of Marc Mac Seáin with megaphone and a quote "45-50% of jobs could go in a huge blow to Newry"

Speaking after an anonymous source revealed that between 45-50 % of Glen Electric Newry's workforce could be made redundant, People Before Profit's Newry & Armagh Representative Marc Mac Seáin condemned the move, calling on the Executive and local council to intervene urgently to protect workers’ jobs:

"It is deeply worrying that a local company plans to axe a huge proportion of its workforce, leaving workers out of a job. Glen Electric reported a pre-tax profit of £126.5m in 2024 so this decision is clearly not one which they are being forced to make from a position of financial precarity. Shamefully, this comes on the heels of previous promises to invest in the decades-old Newry site, leaving workers totally blindsided by the about-turn. When we approached Glen Electric for comment they made no statement.

“We are calling for urgent intervention from the Stormont Executive and the local council to defend workers at this site by staving off job losses. If the intention is to move these jobs elsewhere for cheaper labour costs then this must be challenged.

“We offer our full support to the workers and to their union in whatever action they pursue to mitigate the loss of jobs in Newry. We understand SIPTU in consultation to secure employment for their members.”

A worker in the Glen Electric Newry factory also commented:

"Newry employees facilitated the move of production operations to China & Lithuania in good faith as new products and investment were promised to Newry they now feel they have been shafted as it now seems to be the aim of the company to systematically downsize and eventually move all its business out of Ireland and its UK based manufacturing sites. It's a very sad day to see this happening as Glen electrics (now a global business) reduces its workforce to ultimately a skeleton crew founded in Newry, January 1973. Many at the Newry sites now fear for their job security as they see it as the beginning of the end, as it has been also announced they're to close one its sites in Greenbank industrial estate and sell it off for profit."