Daily Mail

New law to beat strike mayhem

As rail talks end in recriminat­ion, bid to keep the UK running with agency workers

- By Jason Groves, David Churchill and Andy Jehring

MINISTERS will rush forward new anti-strike laws today as militant rail unions inflict misery on millions of travellers again.

Business Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng will unveil new legislatio­n ending the ban on using agency workers to break strikes, which has been in place for almost 50 years.

Talks to end the rail strikes broke down acrimoniou­sly last night, leaving commuters facing another day of major disruption as the RmT orders 40,000 rail workers to walk out again.

Travellers were warned they could face months of chaos on the railways after the negotiatio­ns descended into mudslingin­g.

Transport Secretary Grant Shapps accused the RmT of lying after it claimed he had ‘wrecked’ negotiatio­ns by ordering network Rail to push ahead with voluntary redundanci­es.

ministers fear Britain could face a summer of strikes as unions flex their muscles in pursuit of inflation-busting pay rises.

The national Education union yesterday warned that schools could be next in line for strike action unless ministers stump up ‘inflation-plus pay increases for all teach

‘Millions subjected to misery and disruption’

ers’. unions representi­ng doctors, nurses, civil servants and postal workers are also threatenin­g industrial action over pay. Some have even demanded settlement­s 5 per cent above inflation – which yesterday hit 9.1 per cent.

The ban on using agency staff to fill in for striking workers has been in place since 1973, with even margaret Thatcher baulking at its removal.

But ministers say lifting it could help ‘mitigate’ the impact of strikes by allowing employers to bring in trained staff to keep services running.

mr Kwarteng told the Daily mail: ‘ This week we’ve seen millions of people subjected to misery and disruption as the RmT decided to push ahead with one of the biggest rail walk-outs in decades.

‘We cannot and will not tolerate trade unions holding the country to ransom by grinding crucial public services and businesses to a halt. By acting today and removing these 1970s- era restrictio­ns, we’re ensuring that those businesses most impacted by strike action across all sectors, not just rail, will have the freedom to fill vital roles with temporary, negotiator­s last night stormed out skilled staff.’ of talks to avert today’s strikes

Labour vowed to oppose the after network Rail wrote a letter move last night, with deputy saying it was going ahead with leader angela Rayner describing it 1,800 staff cuts. as a ‘recipe for disaster’. The union, which is striking over

Frances O’Grady, of the Trades jobs and pay, said it would not get union Congress, also slammed the back around the table unless the proposal as ‘unworkable’. letter was withdrawn, sparking a

She said: ‘Bringing in less qualified furious stand-off. agency staff to deliver important It means another 24-hour walkout services will endanger public on the railways will go ahead safety, worsen disputes and today, with another on Saturday poison industrial relations.’ RmT looking almost certain. RmT general secretary mick Lynch took aim at the Transport Secretary, saying: ‘Grant Shapps has wrecked these negotiatio­ns by not allowing network Rail to withdraw their letter threatenin­g redundancy for... our members.

‘until the Government unshackles network Rail and the train operating companies, it is not going to be possible for a negotiated settlement to be agreed.’

mr Shapps described the claim as a ‘total lie’ and called on the union to ‘ stop wasting time’ and get back to the negotiatin­g table.

The row came as it emerged the RmT was informally offered a rise of more than 3 per cent in return for modernised work practices.

Rail chiefs have accused union barons of holding the country to ransom over ‘archaic’ methods which see up to nine engineers sent just to ‘change a plug socket’.

Commuters faced more misery yesterday as union tactics meant only 60 per cent of services were able to run because of the knockon from Tuesday’s strikes.

huge crowds built up outside Tube and rail stations, with some opening as late as 8.30am during rush hour. network Rail signallers and control room staff who would usually have worked overnight to make sure trains left on time yesterday missed their shifts after taking part in Tuesday’s strike.

Secondary legislatio­n to scrap the ban on agency workers will be introduced today and is expected

to take effect next month. Government sources acknowledg­e that some skilled roles, such as railway signallers, will be impossible to replace.

But they believe other vital roles, such as train dispatcher­s, could be carried out by agency staff. Yesterday the Prime Minister clashed with Keir Starmer over Labour’s support for the strike, highlighti­ng the Daily Mail’s revelation that 25 Labour MPs joined striking rail workers on the picket lines on Tuesday.

Boris Johnson branded their behaviour ‘a disgrace’ and said Sir Keir’s authority was ‘on the line’ after a string of frontbench MPs ignored the threat of disciplina­ry action to join workers.

The Labour leader again refused to condemn activists staging the biggest strike for 30 years and blamed the Government for the disruption.

Like Tuesday’s walkout, less than a fifth of trains will run today and only for 11 hours. Up to 50 per cent of services will run on key inter-city routes.

HOW many men or women does it take to change a plug socket? Nine, if they belong to the dinosaur rail unions.

No, that’s not a joke (except on the longsuffer­ing taxpayer and travelling public).

It’s one of many risible, archaic working practices that plague the railways, wasting billions – and which the RMT pig-headedly refuses to abandon. With the savings achieved via an ambitiousl­y reformed, modernised transport network, it would be easier to pay rail workers more.

But like King Canute and the tide, RMT chief Mick Lynch wants to hold back progress. Ultimately, the outcome will be the same. For now, the irascible Marxist has again stomped out of talks with rail bosses, consigning the public to more strike misery.

So it’s welcome that to limit disruption, ministers will end the ban on temporary workers replacing staff who down tools.

Of course, Sir Keir Starmer still refuses to condemn the militant unions. As Boris Johnson pointed out yesterday, Labour backs the strikers, not the strivers.

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