I'm not a natural Conservative voter but I do feel these reforms are long overdue, so I have to say I applaud Cameron for having the gonads to look at this. You'd never see Labour do this as they are still in the pockets of the unions to an extent, but for years some of the unions of running essential public services have been taking the piss with their willingness to inconvenience the public by calling strikes with a very small mandate.
To clarify, the proposed changes would mean that strikes affecting essential public services (listed as health, transport, fire services or schools) will need to be backed by 40% of eligible union members, and a minimum 50% turnout in strike ballots. The government also proposes to lift restrictions on the use of agency staff to replace striking workers.
That seems fair, surely? Nobody has removed the right to withdraw labour here. I think the debate is whether the right balance appears to have been struck. Personally, with this legislation, I think that it has.
And for a bit of balance, in some countries (Spain, for example), workers are not allowed to bring ANY public service to a halt with strike action. Provision for a bare minimum working service must be made.
Let's see what NSC thinks.
To clarify, the proposed changes would mean that strikes affecting essential public services (listed as health, transport, fire services or schools) will need to be backed by 40% of eligible union members, and a minimum 50% turnout in strike ballots. The government also proposes to lift restrictions on the use of agency staff to replace striking workers.
That seems fair, surely? Nobody has removed the right to withdraw labour here. I think the debate is whether the right balance appears to have been struck. Personally, with this legislation, I think that it has.
And for a bit of balance, in some countries (Spain, for example), workers are not allowed to bring ANY public service to a halt with strike action. Provision for a bare minimum working service must be made.
Let's see what NSC thinks.