Domain Registration

Winter strikes: is the UK facing a ‘Christmas of discontent’?

  • November 12, 2022
  • Sport

A meeting to discuss co-ordinated industrial action between unions will be held on Monday among those who have either already committed to strikes or are currently preparing votes for their members. This also includes the Rail, Maritime and Transport (RMT) union, Aslef, the union for train drivers, the GMB and three teacher unions

The vote by the PCS comes immediately after a similar move by the Royal College of Nursing (RCN), which voted this week to strike for the first time in its 106-year history, “leading to fears that death rates will rise if the walkouts spread”, the Daily Mail said. 

Other health service workers “could well follow suit”, said The Guardian. “About 350,000 NHS employees from more than 250 health trusts and boards across England, Wales and Northern Ireland are being asked to vote for strike action over pay this winter, according to Unison,” said the paper.

Royal Mail workers are also set to strike on Saturday and Monday, at least 70,000 university staff will walk out later this month and broad disruption is expected on the London Underground and National Rail networks and as part of a dispute about pensions, pay and jobs.

Striking workers at Heathrow could disrupt travel plans for football fans hoping to go to the World Cup in Qatar. Dock workers, river inspectors, flood forecasting officers, coastal risk management officers and delivery workers are also considering industrial action.

What next?

It has been decades since the UK experienced industrial unrest “on anything like the scale seen during the 1978-79 winter”, said the Financial Times (FT). But with inflation at a 40-year high, “disruption comparable to 1978 now looks plausible”, said the paper.

The backdrop to the strikes is a “dispiriting combination of long-term pay restraint, the challenges of working in overstretched public services, and the long shadow of the pandemic”, said Heather Stewart in The Guardian. Union bosses point the finger of blame squarely at the Conservative government. 

Keir Starmer, meanwhile, told the TUC Congress last month that Labour was on the side of “working people”. However, said The Sunday Times in an editorial, “working people include those inconvenienced as well as those on picket lines”. 

Between now and the next election, said Stephen Bush in the FT, Labour politicians will say that “these strikes and public service pressures are the product of Conservative economic choices”. And in response the government will insist that the fault lies with Labour for their ongoing empowerment of unions to carry out industrial action.

Article source: https://www.theweek.co.uk/news/uk-news/958481/winter-strikes-is-the-uk-facing-a-christmas-of-discontent

Related News

Search

Get best offer

Booking.com