PM ‘won’t give in’ to rail unions
PRIME Minister Boris Johnson put the public on notice for further strike action as Downing Street said it would “not give in” to demands from the rail unions.
Mr Johnson warned commuters they must be ready to “stay the course” and urged rail bosses and unions to agree on a modernisation package to safeguard the future of the industry.
Mr Johnson told the Cabinet that, without fundamental changes to the way the system operates, rail firms risk going bust and passengers face ever-higher prices that could ultimately lead to them abandoning train travel.
The Prime Minister addressed his team yesterday as commuters endured the biggest rail strike in a generation, causing transport misery for millions, with further action by the RMT union set for Thursday and Saturday.
Mr Johnson called for the “union barons to sit down with Network Rail and the train companies” and agree to a package of reforms.
About 40,000 members of the Rail, Maritime and Transport (RMT) union at Network Rail and 13 train operators have walked out in a bitter dispute over pay, jobs and conditions.
The strike is causing “significant disruption and inconvenience up and down the country”, the Prime Minister said.
The action is making it “more difficult for people to get to work, risking people’s appointments, making it more difficult for kids to sit exams – all sorts of unnecessary aggravations”.
Mr Johnson set out why he believed the strikes are “so wrong and so unnecessary”, pointing to the levels of support offered to the industry during the pandemic and the “colossal” investment in rail infrastructure.
“We believe in our railways, we believe in our railway infrastructure as a vital part of levelling up across the country,” he said.
But he added that in order to make the promised investments “we have got to have reform in the way that the railways work”.
“It cannot be right that some ticket offices... are selling roughly one ticket per hour,” he said.
“We need to get those staff out from behind plate glass, on to the platforms, interacting with passengers.”
But in a sign that there could be more trouble to come as a result of the dispute between the RMT, Network Rail and train firms, Mr Johnson said: “We need, I’m afraid, everybody – and I say this to the country as a whole – we need to get ready to stay the course. To stay the course, because these reforms, these improvements in the way we run our railways, are in the interests of the travelling public, they will help to cut costs for farepayers up and down the country.”