Daily Mail

LABOUR ISN’T WORKING!

As millions of ordinary Britons suffer in rail strike mayhem, 25 Left-wing MPs defy their party by joining picket lines. And where was Sir Keir? Hiding away all day like a coward

- By Jason Groves, David Churchill and Kumail Jaffer

THE Labour Party was in chaos over crippling rail strikes last night.

As militant unions caused travel misery for millions, Keir starmer faced a mutiny by his own MPs.

At least 25 of them ignored the party’s stance and joined the picket lines even as their constituen­ts were struggling to get to work.

and senior figures, including sir Keir’s own deputy angela rayner, backed the RMT union in its bid to bring the country to its knees.

The Labour leader was accused of going into ‘hiding’ after he refused to comment on the biggest industrial dispute for 30 years.

Boris Johnson said the strike was ‘wrong and unnecessar­y’ and called for a return to negotiatio­ns. transport secretary Grant shapps accused Labour and the unions of ‘taking us back to the bad old days’ of the 1970s.

He added: ‘i pity poor Keir starmer, a man trying to ride two horses at once.

‘He knows this strike is pointlessl­y destructiv­e but his warning has been

flatly ignored by shadow frontbench­ers and backbenche­rs in thrall to unions who are prepared to place sectional interests above those of the country.

‘He is facing a crisis of authority. The Left senses his weakness and is humiliatin­g him with every Labour MP’s appearance on a picket line. He has lost his grip on his own party.’

Yesterday’s strike by 40,000 rail workers caused massive travel disruption, with fewer than 20 per cent of services thought to have run.

Travellers were left stranded or forced to take to congested roads as the strike saw rail bosses cancel all services on some lines and shut down early.

Commuters face further disruption today ahead of another all- out strike tomorrow in a bitter dispute about pay and rail reforms. As the Prime Minister vowed to ‘stay the course’ against union militants amid fears that strikes could spread like wildfire through the public sector:

RMT boss Mick Lynch called on union bosses to coordinate industrial action across every town and city to cause maximum disruption;

Some 19 of the Labour MPs who joined the picket lines yesterday have declared nearly £ 900,000 in funding from trade unions, analysis of the register of members’ financial interests showed;

A YouGov poll found the public opposed yesterday’s strike by a margin of 45:37;

Network Rail boss Andrew Haines revealed negotiator­s had got within a ‘gnat’s whisker’ of a deal on Monday before the RMT decided to press ahead with the strikes;

A former top aide to Sir Keir said he would face an ‘explosion’ if he tried to sack Labour MPs who defied him to back the strikes;

Downing Street warned that public sector pay would be held well below inflation;

Union dinosaur Arthur Scargill joined a rail picket line in West Yorkshire;

London commuters faced extra misery as 10,000 Undergroun­d workers walked out in a separate dispute;

The Communicat­ions Workers Union balloted 115,000 postal workers over strike action following a 2 per cent pay offer from bosses.

Sir Keir yesterday took a vow of silence on the rail dispute, with aides saying he would make no public comment either for or against the strikes.

A spokesman for the Labour leader said: ‘Unlike the Government, our focus is firmly on the public. The Tories are in charge – the responsibi­lity for this week’s chaos lies firmly with them.’

Mrs Rayner took advantage of the leadership vacuum at the top of the Labour Party to make clear she backed the strikes, which are due to be repeated on Saturday as well as tomorrow.

‘Workers have been left with no choice,’ she said.

‘No one takes strike action lightly. I will always defend their absolute right to do so for fairness at work.’

Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar also defied Sir Keir to back the strike, which has left no rail services operating north of Glasgow today.

Mr Sarwar joined strikers on a picket line in Edinburgh to show ‘solidarity’, and said the crisis was ‘entirely of the Government’s making’.

Sir Keir’s office told Labour frontbench­ers on Monday that they would be discipline­d if they joined picket lines outside stations.

But at least four members of Sir Keir’s top team ignored the warning, including shadow minister Alex Sobel, whip Navendu Mishra and parliament­ary aides Kate Osborne and Paula Barker.

Mr Mishra accused ministers of ‘treachery’, adding: ‘As a proud trade unionist, I stand with all workers on our railway network who are taking industrial action to fight for their jobs and keep passengers safe.’

Others joining picket lines across the country included former leadership contender Rebecca Long Bailey and former shadow cabinet members John McDonnell, Diane Abbott and Richard Burgon.

Sir Keir ordered his MPs last week not to condemn the rail strikes. But he has also refused to say whether he supports the dispute.

Sharon Graham of the Unite union said: ‘The Labour Party was founded by the trade unions and we expect Labour MPs to defend workers, by words and by actions. To instruct Labour MPs not to be on picket lines speaks volumes. You don’t lead by hiding. No one respects that.’

 ?? ?? Red line: Labour MPs at London’s Victoria station yesterday, from left: Beth Winter (Cynon Valley), Kim Johnson (Liverpool Riverside), Rachael Maskell (York Central), Ian Mearns (Gateshead), Richard Burgon (Leeds East), Zarah Sultana (Coventry South), Ian Byrne (Liverpool West Derby), Rebecca Long-Bailey (Salford and Eccles), Dan Carden (Liverpool Walton), Paula Barker (Liverpool Wavertree)
Red line: Labour MPs at London’s Victoria station yesterday, from left: Beth Winter (Cynon Valley), Kim Johnson (Liverpool Riverside), Rachael Maskell (York Central), Ian Mearns (Gateshead), Richard Burgon (Leeds East), Zarah Sultana (Coventry South), Ian Byrne (Liverpool West Derby), Rebecca Long-Bailey (Salford and Eccles), Dan Carden (Liverpool Walton), Paula Barker (Liverpool Wavertree)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom