Angela Rayner pledges to introduce legislation banning zero-hours contracts

Angela Rayner pledges to introduce legislation banning zero-hours contracts

Angela Rayner has given a ‌“cast iron guarantee” that Labour would bring in a new⁢ bill to ban zero-hours contracts and repeal ⁣anti-strike ⁣laws within 100 days of a new government.

The deputy ​Labour leader,⁢ who leads for‌ the party on workers’ rights, told the⁣ TUC’s annual conference that it was putting improving the lives of workers at its core, and would bring in a “proper living wage”⁤ to raise pay.

Her pledges⁢ came after claims from Unite, a major Labour donor and one of the ⁣biggest⁤ unions, previously expressed fears some commitments to workers’ rights were being watered‌ down.

But speaking in Liverpool, Rayner said ⁢she came to the conference “with one message: the next Labour government will build an economy that works for ​working people, with a new deal for working people”.

She said Labour’s commitments for the first 100 days after​ taking ‌office included banning zero-hours contracts, ending blacklisting, and repealing two “spiteful and⁣ bitter” major anti-union ‍laws from 2016⁢ and this⁣ year.

The⁢ shadow deputy prime minister also ⁢mentioned⁣ strengthening sick pay, fair pay agreements in social care, giving​ trade unions access to workplaces and ‌ending the gender pay gap.

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“Work will finally pay, rights will be properly enforced, ⁤and ‍crucially it ⁣will strengthen the role of trade unions⁣ in our ⁢society,” she said.

“This is vital, because the​ new deal wasn’t sent down on some tablet by politicians, it was developed ‌in collaboration ​with ​you – the trade union movement – ⁣and it will be ​delivered with you.

“Key to this, we will update trade union laws to make them fit ‌for the 21st century, because for too long these have failed to keep pace with the hard reality on the ground.”

Rayner gave the⁤ keynote speech after⁣ several addresses to the TUC in previous years⁣ by Keir Starmer, who attended a dinner of‍ union leaders in Liverpool on Monday night. Sources said he was very well-received, although Unite’s general secretary, Sharon Graham, did not attend.

Rayner’s⁢ speech ​was strongly welcomed by the TUC, the organising body for trade unions, which⁢ said ‌Labour’s offer would be transformative ‍and the biggest upgrade in workers’ rights ⁣in a generation, in contrast to‍ “the Tories’ dire record on workers’​ rights and pay”.

Paul Nowak, the TUC’s general secretary, said the Conservatives had “presided over an explosion in insecure work and the ‍longest pay squeeze in modern history. And⁢ they ⁣are now launching a full-scale attack on the ⁢right to strike.”

Sharon Graham, the general secretary of ⁤Unite, said she was in no doubt that the country​ “clearly would​ be better off ⁢with a Labour government”.

But she added:​ “That said, as the general secretary of Unite,⁣ my job is to fight ⁢for workers and ensure Labour commits to making⁢ the‍ lives of working people better. As with all things the devil will be ‍in the detail and the words on the page….

2023-09-12 08:44:05
Source⁤ from www.theguardian.com

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