Plans by Vauxhall-owner Stellantis to build a new electric van at
its Ellesmere Port site in Cheshire give the factory’s ‘world
class workforce the bright future they deserve’, Unite, the UK’s
leading union, said today (Tuesday 6 July).
Unite, which has long campaigned for new models to be built at
the factory, said the decision ended years of uncertainty over
the plant’s future.
The move to build the electric van at Ellesmere port safeguards
more than 1,000 jobs and puts Vauxhall at the cutting edge of van
production in the UK.
Speaking from the plant, Unite general secretary Len McCluskey
said: “This is a great day and one that gives Ellesmere Port’s
world class workforce the bright future they deserve.
“Unite has battled for years to secure the future of this site.
Our members have been unfailing in their efforts, and I have
lobbied Stellantis’s CEO Carlos Tavares and the top levels of
government personally on numerous occasions.
“At times the uncertainly has been unbearable but these plans
have ended that, with Ellesmere Port’s workers now set to proudly
play a leading role in the UK’s green transport revolution.”
Unite Ellesmere Port convenor added: “This is
a day for celebration and the culmination of a years-long
campaign by Unite's reps and members at the plant to secure its
long-term future.
“Everyone at Ellesmere Port can now breathe a huge sigh of relief
as they look forward to playing a trail-blazing role in the next
generation of van-making in the UK.”