Now is the time for genuine negotiations, unions tell Government

Union leaders have called for an urgent meeting with the Chancellor.

Alan Jones
Wednesday 07 December 2022 17:47 EST
TUC general secretary Frances O’Grady (Stefan Rousseau/PA)
TUC general secretary Frances O’Grady (Stefan Rousseau/PA) (PA Wire)

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Unions have called on the Government to engage in “meaningful” pay talks and to stop its “smoke and mirrors” tactics over the wave of strikes sweeping the country.

In a joint letter to Chancellor Jeremy Hunt, TUC general secretary Frances O’Grady and the chair of the union public sector liaison group and general secretary of Unison, Christina McAnea, accused ministers of refusing to negotiate in good faith and of “hiding behind” pay review bodies.

Criticising the Government’s approach to negotiations, the union leaders said all requests for meaningful talks on pay have been stonewalled.

They said: “No public sector workers want to take strike action this winter. They are committed public servants who take great pride in their jobs and the communities they serve.

“But the Government has left them with no choice.

“Good industrial relations require both parties to be willing to negotiate in good faith and to have open conversations.

“When your Cabinet colleagues have met unions, they have repeatedly refused to talk about public sector pay. Ignoring the main issue on the table isn’t a negotiation.

“Ministers cannot continue to hide behind pay review bodies. The Government sets their remit.

“If ministers genuinely want to resolve these disputes, they must address what’s causing them.”

Now is not the time for smoke and mirrors. Now is the time for genuine negotiations

Union leaders

Highlighting “huge” pay cuts public sector workers have suffered, the union leaders warned: “With CPI inflation over 11% and RPI inflation above 14%, frontline workers are facing another massive real-terms hit to their wages.

Nurses, ambulance staff, teachers and millions of other key workers have already seen their living standards decimated with over a decade of pay cuts and wage freezes.

“Nurses today are earning £5,000 a year less in real terms than they were in 2010. And hospitals and schools are having to set up food banks for staff.

“This cannot go on.

“Every month dedicated employees are quitting public services in droves – tired of being taken for granted and of services being run down.”

They called for an urgent meeting with the Chancellor, saying: “It’s time to raise taxes on wealth – not workers.

“Now is not the time for smoke and mirrors. Now is the time for genuine negotiations.”

Nurses, ambulance workers and other NHS staff are due to strike in the coming weeks.

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