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Legislation returns to the House of Lords today
(Thursday)
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UK government set to be hauled in front of ILO this
weekend to answer for its attacks on the right to strike and
trade union democracy
The TUC has today (Thursday) urged peers to “stand firm” and
oppose government plans to sack frontline workers getting sacked
for exercising their right to strike.
The call comes as the Strikes (Minimum Service Levels) Bill is
set to be debated in the House of Lords today.
Peers voted for amendments to stop workers being sacked for
striking when the Bill was in the Lords last month – but
Conservative MPs overturned the amendments when the legislation
returned to the Commons.
If passed without the amendment, the Bill will mean that when
workers lawfully vote to strike in health, education, fire,
transport, border security and nuclear decommissioning, they
could be forced to attend work – and sacked if they don’t
comply.
The UK’s actions have already come under scrutiny from
international organisations.
This weekend, the UK government is being hauled in front of the
ILO’s top supervisory body, the Committee on the Application of
Standards, to account for its adherence to its union freedom
rules and answer for its attacks on the right to strike and trade
union democracy.
1 in 5 workers could lose their right to strike
The TUC says the Conservative government must drop the Strikes
Bill in its entirety and protect the right to strike.
The union body has accused of attacking workers’ ability
to win a fair pay deal at work in the middle of a cost of living
crisis.
The TUC recently warned that the right to strike of a massive 1
in 5 workers in Britain is at risk because of the Bill.
That means 5.5 million workers in England, Scotland and Wales
could be affected by the legislation. Workers in Northern Ireland
aren’t subject to the Bill.
Those 5.5 million workers have their right to strike threatened
because – if passed unamended – the Bill will mean that when
workers lawfully vote to strike in health, education, fire,
transport, border security and nuclear decommissioning, they
could be forced to attend work – and sacked if they don’t
comply.
And the EHRC recently warned that the legislation could see all
striking workers in affected sectors losing their unfair
dismissal protection as whole strikes could be deemed illegal.
The Bill will give ministers the power to impose new minimum
service levels through regulation.
But MPs have been given few details on how minimum service levels
are intended to operate.
Unpopular Bill
The Bill has faced a barrage of criticism – including from
employer groups.
- The Rail Partners warned that
“operators could find themselves having too few staff to run a
normal service following industrial action” – adding that the
“situation would be even more acute if dismissal procedures
were followed with critical staff, including train drivers”
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NHS providers said “this
Bill risks damaging relationships in the NHS between trust
leaders and their staff, and between trust leaders and local
union representatives at a particularly fraught time, without
addressing any of the issues underlying current strike action”.
- And CIPD warned of the risk
“of low morale and performance, individual disputes and high
staff turnover and sickness absence” – adding “these can also
have a damaging impact on the level and quality of public
services”.
The House of Lords Delegated Powers and Regulatory Reform
Committee recently criticised the Bill for giving blanket powers
to UK ministers while providing virtually no detail.
The government’s own impact assessment on minimum service levels
in transport suggested that increase the frequency of strikes and
worsen industrial relations.
There has also been criticism from civil liberties
organisations, the joint committee on human
rights, House of Lords Delegated Powers
and Regulatory Reform Committee, race and gender equalities groups,
employment rights
lawyers,politicians around the world – and a whole host of
other organisations.
TUC General Secretary Paul Nowak said:
“Last month, peers overwhelmingly rejected the government’s
brazen attack on the right to strike.
“They must stand firm today – and oppose the Conservative
government’s pernicious plans once more.
“No one should be sacked for trying to win a better deal at work.
“But this draconian legislation would mean that when workers
democratically vote to strike, they could be forced to work and
sacked if they don’t comply.
“It’s undemocratic, unworkable and is very likely to breach our
commitments under international law. And it will poison
industrial relations and exacerbate disputes rather than help
resolve them.
“Rishi Sunak’s answer to the cost-of-living crisis is making it
harder for workers to win a pay rise.
“It's time to ditch this spiteful Bill for good and protect the
right to strike.”