The Journal

Unions hit out at plan to block strike action

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GOVERNMENT plans for a minimum staffing requiremen­t during rail strikes have been slammed as “desperate nonsense”.

Unions reacted with anger to an interview in a Sunday newspaper by the Transport Secretary just days before a ballot result set to bring the threat of a national rail strike closer.

More than 40,000 members of the Rail, Maritime and Transport union (RMT) at Network Rail and train operators have been voting on whether to launch a campaign of industrial action over jobs, pay and conditions.

RMT general secretary Mick Lynch said he expected support for strikes when the ballot result is announced later this week.

“We are asking for job security and a guarantee of no compulsory redundanci­es, and we will not accept imposition of detrimenta­l pay and conditions.”

Transport Secretary Grant Shapps told The Sunday Telegraph that ministers are looking at drawing up laws which would make industrial action illegal unless a certain number of staff are working.

Referring to a pledge in the Conservati­ve manifesto for minimum services during strikes, he said: “We had a pledge in there about minimum service levels.

“If they really got to that point, then minimum service levels would be a way to work towards protecting those freight routes and those sorts of things.”

In response, Mr Lynch said: “Any attempt by Grant Shapps to make effective strike action illegal on the railways will be met with the fiercest resistance from RMT and the wider trade union movement.

“The Government need to focus all their efforts on finding a just settlement to this rail dispute, not attack the democratic rights of working people.”

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