Now back to the 1920s! Mick Lynch calls for GENERAL STRIKE if Liz Truss becomes Prime Minister and brings in measures to curb the unions
- RMT boss Mick Lynch called for a general strike if Liz Truss tries to disable unions
- Truss pledged to stop ‘militant action’ from unions if she wins the Tory leadership
- But Lynch vowed such legislation would lead to ‘coordinated industrial action’
- He says ‘dangerous situation’ risks taking the country back to ‘Victorian times’
A union boss has called for a general strike if Liz Truss becomes Prime Minister and brings in legislation to halt strikes affecting the country.
The Foreign Secretary has pledged to ensure ‘militant action’ from trade unions can no longer ‘paralyse’ the economy if she wins the Tory leadership contest.
Mick Lynch, general secretary of the Rail, Maritime and Transport (RMT) union, said ‘coordinated and synchronised industrial action’ would be needed if legislation is brought in.
He went on to say the ‘very dangerous situation’ risks taking the country back to ‘Victorian times’.
Mick Lynch (centre), general secretary of the Rail, Maritime and Transport (RMT) union, said ‘coordinated and synchronised industrial action’ would be needed if legislation is brought in to curb industrial action
Foreign Secretary Liz Truss has pledged to ensure ‘militant action’ from trade unions can no longer ‘paralyse’ the economy if she wins the Tory leadership contest
The comments came as strikes by members of the RMT and Transport Salaried Staffs Association crippled services on Wednesday, with only around one in five trains running and some areas having none at all.
Meanwhile, Aslef announced its members will walk out on Saturday, August 13, saying train firms failed to make a pay offer to help members keep pace with increases in the cost of living.
A general strike, which can only be called by the Trades Union Congress (TUC), is when a ‘substantial proportion’ of workers in multiple sectors refuse to work until their demands, usually around pay and working conditions, are met.
RMT supporters protest outside offices of Network Rail in Glasgow yesterday as 40,000 workers went on strike
The General Strike of 1926 was the largest industrial dispute in Britain’s history.
The Trades Union Congress (TUC) called the strike to prevent cuts to miners’ wages as well as demands from mine owners that they work an additional hour a day.
Throughout 1925 and 1926 tension increased with government and the mine owners on one side and the unions on the other. In March 1926 a Royal Commission headed by Sir Herbert Samuel recommended small wage cuts, but not longer hours.
These recommendations were not acceptable to the miners or the employers. The Trades Union Congress (TUC) General Council (TUC) threatened a strike of key workers on 4 May. Printers at the Daily Mail newspaper refused to print a leading article criticising the Trades Union Congress (TUC).
For the government, this action was unacceptable. All attempts at negotiation were broken off and the General Strike began on 4 May – lasting for nine days. The coal mine owners declared all strikers were locked out – and out of a job.
After the TUC called off the strike on May 12, the miners continued to strike for a further six months, but eventually hunger drove them back to work and were forced to accept longer hours, lower pay and local agreements.
Source: The National Archives
Mr Lynch told the i newspaper: ‘There is a whole host of measures that she (Ms Truss) is looking to bring in that will make it virtually impossible to have effective trade unionism and we think would effectively outlaw collective action.
‘I think that’s a turn to the extreme right on behalf of the Conservatives, and they’re playing to their reactionary base. I think there will be an enormous response from the trade union movement.
‘Only the TUC can call a general strike, we will be campaigning in that direction, but we need coordinated and synchronised industrial action against what they’re proposing.
‘I would be looking for a general strike if we can bring that off, but it’s up to others. We’re a small union compared to others. So we’ll have to see where that goes.’
Ms Truss has said her government would introduce legislation in the first 30 days of Parliament to guarantee a minimum level of service on vital national infrastructure.
She would also ensure strike action has significant support from union members by raising the minimum threshold for voting in favour of strike action from 40% to 50%.
The minimum notice period for strike action would be raised from two weeks to four weeks, and a cooling-off period would be implemented so that unions can no longer strike as many times as they like in the six-month period after a ballot.
Asked what she would do about the rail strikes, the Foreign Secretary told Sky News: ‘I would legislate to make sure that there are essential services on our railway.
‘It is completely wrong that the travelling public are being held ransom by militant unions. We can’t allow that to happen. We need to make sure our essential services run.
‘As I said, I am on the side of people who work hard, who go into work, who want to run their businesses. We can’t see them hampered by the activities of these militant unions.’
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