will today (Tuesday 15 September) call on the
government to replace the furlough scheme and outlaw ‘firing and
re-hiring’ practices as part of a “genuine national plan” for
jobs.
Speaking at the TUC Congress 2020, Starmer will accuse the Prime
Minister of failing to get the basics of testing or a plan for
care homes right over the summer and of attempting to “re-open
old wounds over Brexit.” He will address the PM directly, saying:
“Get your priorities right. Get on with defeating this virus.”
The leader of the Labour Party will use the address to call on
the government to work with business, trade unions and the Labour
Party to avoid the “scarring effect mass unemployment will have
on communities and families across the country.”
While Labour has always said the furlough scheme cannot go on
forever, the party has consistently warned of the dangers of a
one-size-fits-all removal of support from businesses and people
still impacted by coronavirus restrictions. Starmer is expected
to say that “with a bit of imagination and acting in the national
interest, a better approach is possible.”
The principles Starmer will set out for replacing the job
retention scheme are inspired by schemes that have been mooted or
are in force in other parts of the world. They include:
• Expanding part-time working and rewarding employers who give
people hours rather than cut jobs
• Providing training and support for those who can’t come back
full-time
• Targeting sectors most in need – including retail, aviation and
those hit by local lockdowns
• Providing certainty for workers and businesses
On replacing the furlough scheme, Starmer is expected to say:
“At this moment of national crisis we should take inspiration
from our past. Be willing to put party differences aside and work
together in the interest of the country. Imagine how powerful it
would be if we could form a genuine national plan to protect
jobs, create new ones and investing in skills and training? I’m
making an open offer to the Prime Minister: work with us to keep
millions of people in work. Work with the trade unions and work
with businesses. Do everything possible to protect jobs and to
deliver for working people.”
Starmer will also condemn ‘fire and re-hire’ – where people are
given notice of redundancy and then hired back on worse pay and
conditions – as “not just wrong but against British values.” He
will call for government to outlaw them.
He is expected to say: “These tactics punish good employers, hit
working people hard and harm our economy. After a decade of pay
restraint – that’s the last thing working people need, and in the
middle of a deep recession – it’s the last thing our economy
needs.”
Starmer is also expected to pay tribute to the union movement,
praising its work during the coronavirus crisis, saying:
“When it came to protecting millions of jobs and keeping people
safe at work it was the union movement that stood up. Without you
there would have been no furlough scheme. No life raft for seven
million people. The trade unions have always been the unsung
heroes of our national story - and through this crisis you have
helped to write another proud chapter.”