South Wales Echo

FM says plans to repeal Welsh law ‘disgracefu­l’

- RUTH MOSALSKI ruth.mosalski@walesonlin­e.co.uk

FIRST Minister Mark Drakeford has launched a scathing attack on UK Government plans to scrap a law made in Wales on how trade unions operate in Welsh public services.

The law, brought in five years ago, banned employers from bringing in agency staff to replace striking public sector workers.

Mr Drakeford described the UK Government’s plans as “nonsense” and an attempt to distract from their own incompeten­ce.

A union leader called it an attack on workers’ rights and Plaid Cymru’s Rhun ap Iorwerth said it was proof the UK Government wanted to undermine devolution.

The UK Government’s plan would see it repeal the Trade Union Act (Wales) 2017, which applies to devolved Welsh public bodies and to trade unions in public services delivered by devolved public bodies including the Welsh NHS, local authoritie­s, schools, fire services and Welsh Government sponsored bodies in Wales.

It says it wants trade union legislatio­n to “apply equally across Great Britain”.

When the Senedd passed the Trade Union Wales Act in 2017, it was seen as a way to protect the rights of unions in devolved public sectors, such as health, education and councils.

The measures overturned include a 40% support threshold for strike ballots, and restrictio­ns affecting time off work for union activities and the taking of union subscripti­ons directly from pay packets. It meant agency workers could not be used to cover striking staff in Wales.

Industrial relations are a power reserved to Westminste­r, meaning that primary legislatio­n made in the House of Commons takes precedence over any legislatio­n in Wales.

Mr Drakeford told the BBC Today programme that it is “absolutely disgracefu­l that the Westminste­r Government announced its intention to do this without a single word to the Welsh Government or Welsh Parliament which passed this legislatio­n”.

“We discovered it tucked away in an explanator­y memorandum. It just speaks volumes of the disrespect­ful agenda this government has towards devolution.”

It was put to him that the UK Government’s decision would “cushion” people in Wales from the impact of strikes.

Mr Drakeford replied: “It’s nonsense, isn’t it, the idea you’ll find an agency worker capable of driving a train, an agency worker capable of operating a signal box.

“These are hugely safety critical roles we’re talking about. This is just a piece of nonsense dreamt up by a Tory Government.

“How are they going to get a train to run, how will those other roles get a signal box to operate?

“It’s just sand in people’s eyes. Where was that government last week when it ought to have been round the table helping to resolve this difficulty, why wasn’t it there speaking up on behalf of the travelling population trying to find a solution?

“We’ve got a government which is absent on the job, it doesn’t engage where it ought to engage. It indulges in make-believe sorts of policies in order to try to throw sand in people’s eyes to hide their own abject failures. That’s all this is about.”

A Welsh Government spokesman said: “We will resist any attempts by the UK Government to undermine both how devolved public services operate and legislatio­n which has been passed by the Senedd.”

Wales TUC general secretary Shavanah Taj said: “The UK Government seems determined to attack both workers’ rights and devolution in one go, by introducin­g an entirely unnecessar­y piece of legislatio­n. It beggars’ belief that in a cost-of-living crisis, this is their priority.

“We will fiercely oppose any attempts to attack workers’ rights and we look forward to a future where workers throughout the UK have the strongest employment rights in Europe, instead of the weakest.”

The GMB Union said the UK Government should “butt out” of Welsh matters.

Writing on Twitter, Plaid’s Mr ap Iorwerth said: “To those denying the UK Tory Govt wants to undermine devolution, explain this. It’s been systematic for years, much driven by, but not exclusive to, the recentrali­sing of British power post Brexit. This takes it to a new level. Devolved Welsh law repealed. We must stand up to this.”

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 ?? GAYLE MARSH ?? First Minister Mark Drakeford
GAYLE MARSH First Minister Mark Drakeford

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