NASUWT: Workers paying the price for Government’s economic failures
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The NASUWT-The Teachers’ Union has told TUC Congress it will resist
by any means necessary the Government’s attempts to undermine or
remove the right to strike. Leading a debate on workers’ rights at
the event in Liverpool, Dr Patrick Roach called out the
Government’s failure to protect minimum service levels as a result
of their failure to invest in our schools and other public
services. He called for the repeal of all anti-trade union laws,
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The NASUWT-The Teachers’ Union has told TUC Congress it will resist by any means necessary the Government’s attempts to undermine or remove the right to strike. Leading a debate on workers’ rights at the event in Liverpool, Dr Patrick Roach called out the Government’s failure to protect minimum service levels as a result of their failure to invest in our schools and other public services. He called for the repeal of all anti-trade union laws, stronger rights for unions to be able to organise in and get access to workplaces and for unions to be given the right to conduct industrial action ballots online. Dr Roach said: “The Government’s systematic assault on our public services has left our key workers broken, our schools crumbling, unable to recruit and retain teachers, headteachers and support staff, and pushed our NHS and other public services to the brink of collapse. “Pupils, parents, patients and the public at large are being denied the services they have a right to expect because of this Government’s deliberate under-investment in important public services, not because of workers taking lawful industrial action. “Our legal action against the Government’s attempts to use agency workers to break strike action resulted in a High Court declaration that the Government’s actions were unlawful. “The Government Strikes Act is an egregious, pernicious, spiteful and vindictive piece of legislation and we will resist it by any means available to us.” ENDS Notes to editors TUC Congress is being held at the ACC in Liverpool from 10th-13th September. A copy of the motion which was debated is below: Campaign against the Minimum Service Levels (MSLs) legislation Conference asserts that anti-trade union restrictions represent a direct attack on workers’ rights to fair pay, decent jobs and good terms and conditions. Congress decries the fact that trade unions are subjected to draconian legislation that severely impacts on workers’ ability to organise and defend their rights at work. Congress is concerned that increasing use of insecure, intermittent and precarious employment relationships has resulted in widespread job insecurity and denies workers access to basic employment rights, many of which are at serious risk of being further eroded. Congress notes that not content with their complete betrayal of workers following the P&O scandal the Tory government’s Strikes (Minimum Service Levels) Bill now represents the biggest attack on trade union rights and values since the Taff Vale judgement against the Amalgamated Society of Railway Servants, which ruled unions could be sued and compelled to pay for damages for the impact of their strike action. Congress condemns the MSLs legislation. The new Bill compels unions to instruct members to comply with work notices to cross picket lines. Members not complying can be dismissed and unions not complying lose their immunity from prosecution. Congress notes the Bill gives the government sweeping powers to extend minimum service levels across the economy, curtailing the ability of every trade union to protect their members during the ongoing cost of living crisis and beyond. Conference notes that in June, a tripartite ILO Committee told the government to bring the Strikes law and other labour law into line with the UK’s obligations, consulting with social partners, and to report back by 1 September 2023. Congress welcomes Humza Yousaf’s pledge to the STUC congress that the Scottish Government “will never issue or enforce a single work notice” under the legislation. Congress agrees that we have no choice but to build mass opposition to the MSLs laws, up to and including a strategy of non-compliance and non-cooperation to make them unworkable, including industrial action. Congress congratulates the unions and the TUC who took the UK government to court and defeated new laws that allowed employers to use agency workers to break strikes. Congress agrees with the high court that the government acted unfairly, unlawfully, and irrationally. Unions will always act to safeguard workers’ rights. Congress calls on the next Labour government to immediately repeal MSLs, the Trade Union Act 2016 and take urgent steps to remove other anti-union laws. Congress pledges 100 per cent solidarity with any trade unions attacked under these MSL laws. Congress agrees we must use all means necessary to defeat the unjust MSLs laws and calls on the General Council to proactively seek to:
− the repeal of the Trade Union Act 2016 and all other anti-trade union legislation − stronger rights for unions to access workplaces, win recognition, and establish collective bargaining rights − the right for trade union members to vote online during industrial action ballots, and statutory elections for executive committees and general secretaries.
the MSLs legislation and issue work notices and work with the trade union movement to render MSLs inoperable
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