The Scotsman

P&O chief executive branded ‘the most hated man in Britain’

- By ALASTAIR DALTON adalton@scotsman.com

P&O chief executive Peter Hebblethwa­ite was condemned as “the most hated man in Britain” and “a failure of a chief executive” as he faced MSPS on Tuesday.

It came as he told the Scottish Parliament’s net zero, energy and transport committee that 39 of the 800 sacked P&O crew live in Scotland.

Scottish Labour MSP Monica Lennon also described the sackings as an “extreme act of corporate terrorism” and called on the chief to resign.

However, Mr Hebblethwa­ite said: “I have no plans to resign. "I need to see this through. "I need to get this business back up on its feet, I need to make it competitiv­e, viable and give us an opportunit­y to grow in the future”.

But Ms Lennon told him: “You are a failure of a chief executive and most likely right now, in a crowded field, the most hated man in Britain.”

He justified the staff being sacked by saying: “No union could possibly accept our proposal” to make such dramatic changes.

He said these were about a “fundamenta­lly different operatingm­odel” rather than changes to rates of pay, but suggested the new crews would only be paid when they worked.

He said: “We are compensati­ng people in full for that failure to consult.”

Mr Hebblethwa­ite added that crew on the Cairnryanl­arne route will continue to be paid the national minimum wage because it is a domestic UK route.

He stressed :“this is not about Larne-cairnryan, this is about us having a crew model across the entire organisati­on that is consistent and competitiv­e.”

He also denied there had been any pressure from the company’s shareholde­r – Dubai-based DP World – to make the cuts.

The chief said “none of the options” for changes to shorebased staff at Cairnryan considered last year would be taken forward.

Scottish Conservati­ve MSP Liam Kerr asked Mr Hebblethwa­ite whether he was a “fit and proper person” to discharge his legal duties when he had wilfully broken the law –“one of the strongest laws that Parliament had sought to put in place”.

He said: “I did consider that and I believe I have discharged those duties.

"My duties as a director were to make this business viable andiw as faced with the option of a programme of change or the closure of the business.

"I took the only route available to me to preserve thousands and thousands of jobs.”

SNP MSP Fiona Hyslop, the committee’s deputy convener, told him :“in my 20 plus years as a member of the scottish parliament, I’m not sure I have come across an issue with an employer that has united right across the chamber such hostility.

"The people we represent, even those not in the south of Scotland or in Cairnryan, are absolutely disgusted that a company of your reputation has treated people with such disrespect and lack of dignity .”

Mr Hebblethwa­ite said the European Causeway, one of P&O’S ferries on the Cairnryan route, had been found to have 20 defects – 12 technical, four administra­tive and four crewrelate­d – and was “not ready to return to service yet”.

P&O sailings on the route have remained suspended since the sackings.

 ?? ?? 0 P&O chief executive Peter Hebblethwa­ite speaks to MSPS
0 P&O chief executive Peter Hebblethwa­ite speaks to MSPS

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