The Finnish General Workers' Union (Finnish: Suomen Työläisliitto) was a general union representing workers in Finland.
The union was established in 1930 by the Social Democratic Party, to accept workers who had resigned from the Finnish Trade Union Federation (SAJ), unhappy at its communist leadership.
[2] It remained affiliated to the SAK when many unions left to form a new Finnish Trade Union Federation, which in 1969 merged with the SAK to form the Central Organisation of Finnish Trade Unions.
The General Workers' Union affiliated to the new federation, its membership having grown to 15,766.
[1] By 1970, most of the union's membership was in the chemical industry and general manufacturing.