NSSN 742: Lobby TUC General Council to #NameTheDate for a national demo against Starmer’s cuts

  • Lobby the TUC General Council – 9am Wednesday 22nd October at TUC Congress House, Great Russell Street, London WC1B 3LS

The NSSN is calling a lobby of the next meeting of the TUC General Council on Wednesday 22nd October to demand that the policy passed at TUC Congress earlier this month is implemented to call a national demo against Starmer’s cuts.

TUC Congress voted for motions from the TUC Disabled Workers Conference and Trades Councils Conference that set out a strategy to take on Starmer’s austerity offensive, specifically: “for the TUC to organise a weekend demonstration against Labour austerity as a launchpad for sustained trade union action in defence of workers and young people.”

The NSSN welcome that these motions were passed unanimously by Congress, and it is now official TUC policy to call a national Saturday demonstration. But the NSSN is now calling on union reps and members now to demand that the TUC name the date for this demonstration. The lobby of the TUC General Council is part of this campaign.

As NSSN Chair Rob Williams said in the NSSN Rally: The TUC should name the date. He called for it to be on Saturday 22nd November – just before the Budget on 26th November. Rob said that the bosses are lobbying Starmer’s Labour Government in their interests, the trade union movement must mobilise to put our demands forward – no to austerity, make the rich pay!

Consider taking this brief model motion to your next union meeting:-

  • This union NEC/branch/union branch committee/trades council welcomes the unanimous vote at this year’s TUC Congress for the motions from the TUC Disabled Workers Conference and Trades Councils Conference.
  • We fully support the demand in the motions: “for the TUC to organise a weekend demonstration against Labour austerity as a launchpad for sustained trade union action in defence of workers and young people.”
  • We welcome that this is now official TUC policy and call on our union NEC to demand that the TUC name the date for such a demonstration.
  • We believe that Saturday 22nd November – just before the Budget on 26th November – would be an ideal day for this demonstration to demand no to austerity, make the rich pay!

Watch the videos of the NSSN rally speakers: Steve Gillan POA General Secretary, Sarah Woolley BFAWU General Secretary, Mick Whelan ASLEF General Secretary, Ian Lawrence NAPO General Secretary, Steve Wright FBU General Secretary, Danny Taylor Unite striking binworker from Birmingham & Joel Mayfield Unite striking binworker from Sheffield, Paula Peters DPAC, Matt Webb Brighton & Hove Trades Union Council and Rob Williams NSSN Chair.

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Support the striking Birmingham binworkers!

The workers have been on indefinite strike since March after being threatened with pay cuts of up to £8,000 a year, and are facing brutal strike-breaking measures by the Labour council, backed by Starmer’s Labour government. Solidarity is even more essential as the council effectively threatens to fire and rehire the workers. In her speech, Sharon exposed Starmer’s government for not just maintaining Tory ‘fire and rehire’ but actually making changes to its original proposals to open the door to all councils to use this brutal method of cutting the wages of local authority workers.

Saturday’s demo, on the back of the recent massive vote to extend action, shows that there is huge support for the binworkers, both in Birmingham and throughout the trade union movement.

Birmingham bin workers vote to extend strike past Christmas and into spring (2 Sept) – Dispute escalates as government commissioners block deal and government allows fire and rehire. Birmingham residents paying millions in extra costs for agency workers and injunctions. Long running strikes by Birmingham bin workers over effective fire and rehire pay cuts of up to £8,000 could be extended past Christmas and into spring, Unite, the UK’s leading union, said today. The workers have overwhelmingly voted to extend their industrial action mandate to March 2026 over the brutal cuts, which would leave some at risk of losing their homes. Strikes have continued after the government appointed commissioners in Birmingham scuppered a deal that would have ended the dispute. Talks brokered by the conciliation service Acas in May and led by the council’s chief executive Joanne Roney agreed a “ball park” deal which would have ended the dispute. However, Ms Roney latterly advised that she could not get the deal past the commissioners. It is clear therefore that there is no point at this stage having further negotiations with the council. The ball is in the government’s court. It has also been revealed that the cash strapped council is paying millions extra to operate its refuse service during the strikes. In July, Birmingham Live published a freedom of information response that revealed that Birmingham council had already spent £6.5 million on agency workers supplied by the Job and Talent employment agency. In addition, £1.3 million had been spent with the contractor Tom White Waste (wholly owned by Coventry council) to try to undermine the strike. The council has also spent hundreds of thousands on legal injunctions against the striking workers, which again would have been unnecessary if the dispute had been resolved. Costs to council taxpayers will continue to climb the longer the dispute continues. In July, the government amended the Employment Rights act so that councils like Birmingham could legally fire and rehire their workers… The council’s threats to make workers redundant unless they accept the cut in pay is a clear case of fire and rehire. The Labour government had promised to ban fire and rehire but has now effectively reneged on that commitment. Birmingham’s bin workers voted 99.5 per cent in favour of strike action with a turnout of 72 per cent. The workers began intermittent strike action in January and indefinite strike action in Marchread more

Support the Unite Sheffield Bin Strike

Unite intensifies strike action at Veolia in battle for members pay and conditions (18 Sept) – New ballot approves continuation of indefinite strike action at Sheffield waste company. The fight for workers’ rights, pay and conditions is continuing in Sheffield as workers employed by Veolia on the city council’s refuse contract have overwhelmingly voted to continue their year-long strike in their fight for recognition, pay and conditions. Unite members at the Lumley Street waste depot have voted by 90 per cent to continue their strike action which began in August 2024. Workers are furious that Veolia has continued to deny their basic democratic right to have their union recognised. Additionally, workers are demanding improved pay and conditions – something that has been neglected in recent years. This includes harmonisation of contractual conditions, so that workers doing the same job are not on inferior contracts to workmates, improvements to sick pay and ensuring that pay for 2026 takes inflation fully into account…Unite has submitted a pay claim but Veolia has refused to negotiate read more

Donate to the strike fund – Unite NEYH, 60-83-01 20173962

Sign the Statement of Solidarity

Support the Unison Gloucestershire phlebotomists strike

Read the latest about the strike.

The results of the NHS phlebotomists in Gloucestershire Hospitals industrial action ballot returned a 100% YES vote, with a turnout of 100%.

Picketing and plan of action for week 29:

  • Monday 29th: Joint picket at Gloucester Royal Hospital from 07:30 to 12:00.
  • Tuesday 30th: Joint picket at Cheltenham General Hospital from 07:30 to 12:00.
  • Wednesday 1st: Joint picket at Gloucester Royal Hospital from 07:30 to 12:00 with potentially picket visitors from Unison members in Plymouth and followed by meeting with Management at 12.00.
  • Thursday 2nd November: Joint picket at Cheltenham General Hospital from 07:30 to 12:00.
  • Friday 3rd: Relaxed picket at both sites.

Donate to the strike fund

Please show phlebotomists your support and solidarity by donating to their strike hardship fund: 

Make a donation via SumUp 

UNISON Gloucestershire DHC Branch 21311 

Sort code: 60-83-01 

Account number: 20301750 

Reference: strikefund 

Workers unity against the far-right The far-right are again trying to whip up racist division by scapegoating refugees and migrants. The NSSN calls for the unions to play a leading role in opposing this offensive, which will only weaken our movement in the interests of the employees. We call on the TUC to implement the policy passed at its 2018 Congress, to launch a campaign of ‘Jobs and homes NOT racism.’

See info on counter-protests on the Stand Up to Racism website.

Unison: Statement on recent rallies and demonstrations

Prospect: Statement on intolerance and the Far Right

NIPSA Calls for Support for Anti-Racist Protests

France – CGT union federation: More than a million people demonstrated on Thursday, September 18, 2025With more than a million demonstrators in more than 250 demonstrations, and hundreds of thousands of strikers in the private and public sectors, the united mobilization of Thursday, September 18 is a great success. It sends a clear warning to the government: social anger is growing read more

Italy – USB union: 22 September: millions on strike for Palestine, hundreds of thousands in the squares across Italy Great success for the strike called by USB to stop the genocide in Palestine: millions of workers are striking across the country, from ports like Genoa and Livorno to schools that have closed up to 70% in some cities, including logistics warehouses, factories, and public administrations. Tens of thousands have taken to the streets, with 100,000 alone in Piazza dei 500 in Rome, with demonstrations still ongoing and set to continue throughout the day read more

The next national central London demo against the assault on Gaza is on Saturday 11th October – 12noon details   

Union News     

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RMT     

RMT National Dispute Fund      

Improved pay offer for tube workers (29 Sept) – TUBE union RMT received an improved offer from London Underground today following successful strike action earlier this month. RMT general secretary Eddie Dempsey congratulated members for their steadfast support for strike action. “This offer will now be discussed by the national executive committee and in consultation with the membership. As a result, the union remains in dispute with London Underground subject to the will of the membership under our democratic structures,” he said. The new offer is a three-year deal comprising of a 3.4 per cent uplift in year one and a straight RPI increase in year two and three read more

London Underground dispute update – we demand more time away from work (19 Sept)

RMT demands Summit with the Mayor to end tube dispute (10 Sept)

RMT explains tube strike to BBC News (6 Sept) – RMT Regional Organiser Jared Wood has appeared on BBC London News to discuss our dispute read more

RMT to ballot Wightlink workers for strike action over jobs and safety (26 Sept) – Maritime union RMT, is balloting members at cross-Solent ferry operator Wightlink after the company tabled “efficiency” plans that threaten 160 jobs and undermine safety on board. The company wants to cut Deck Officer and Port Operator grades, close overnight onboard retail, and reduce crewing levels across vessels. RMT says these plans will strip out safety-critical roles, downgrade services, and pile pressure on loyal staff who have kept ferries running. Although management has now offered limited reassurances, the union says the scattergun nature of the changes still represents a serious attack on jobs and conditions. Ballot papers will be issued from Wednesday 1 October, with the vote closing on Tuesday 14 October. Members will be asked to back strike action and action short of strike read more

Strike ballot at First South West after poor pay offer (20 Sept) – Bus workers at First South West in Somerset and Cornwall will be balloted for strike action after the company refused to improve a penny-pinching pay offer. The company has made an offer which would see bus workers hourly pay rise by just 58p an hour. The offer includes no improvements to working conditions and has already been rejected by union members in a previous round of talks. RMT wants to see bus workers move closer to their modest goal of £15 an hour, in line with what other bus companies are paying across the South West. But First South West has so far refused to improve its offer. First South West is part of FirstGroup, whose bus division made £96 million in profit last year, with the group overall reporting profits of £223 million and increasing dividends to shareholders read more

Northern rail contractor staff to stage 48-hour strike over bullying and unfair treatment (18 Sept) – Rail union, RMT has called a 48-hour strike by members working for Carlisle Support Services on the Northern trains’ revenue and gateline contract. The action follows reports of bullying and harassment by managers, including pressuring staff to break the strike, denying extra hours to union members, and forcing redeployments at short notice to remote locations. With no serious offers from the company, RMT members will strike on Tuesday 7 and Wednesday 8 October read more

Tube cleaners threaten strike action over wages and sick pay (4 Sept) – RMT has declared a formal dispute with outsourcing giant ABM after the company failed to improve on its derisory offer to cleaners working on the London Underground cleaning contract. Despite repeated calls for a fair pay settlement, ABM management have refused to go beyond the statutory London Living Wage uplift and have made no offer whatsoever on sick pay, leaving cleaners with no protection when they fall ill. Unless the company comes back to the table with a serious offer, RMT will move to ballot its members across the Underground cleaning contract for strike action. The potential strike comes against the backdrop of Mayor Sadiq Khan previously calling on TfL to assess its ability to bring cleaning services back in-house, improve sick pay and urging the government to fully implement Labour’s “New Deal for Working People,” which pledges the biggest wave of insourcing in a generation read more

Breakdown in industrial relations – Cross Country – Firstly, I would like to congratulate you and your colleagues again for returning a splendid result in the ballot for industrial action. The union’s National Executive Committee has considered the matter and has taken the decision to call on all our Cross Country members to take the following strike action:

  • Members are instructed not to book on for any shifts that commence between:

00.01 hours until 23.59 hours on Saturday 23rd August 2025

00.01 hours until 23.59 hours on Monday 25th August 2025

  • Additionally, the union’s National Executive Committee has called the following industrial action short of a strike: No electronic scanning of tickets from 00.01 hours on Sunday 24th August 2025 until further notice.

To comply with legal advice the above industrial action short of a strike will be suspended for the duration of the strikes but will commence again immediately after the strike action has concluded. This dispute is about protecting the future of your jobs, the protection of negotiated agreements and the right of your Union to represent you effectively read more

Orkney Ferries seafarers to take industrial action (16 Aug) – Maritime union RMT, will begin industrial action on Orkney Ferries later this month, in a dispute over pay and conditions. From Thursday 28 August, RMT members will take action short of a strike by refusing to work any overtime until further notice. The move comes after the company failed to enter into meaningful negotiations with the union over the 2025 pay settlement. RMT is the largest trade union representing workers at Orkney Ferries and has consistently raised concerns about pay, working conditions and management’s lack of engagement read more

ASLEF   

Train drivers strike in protest at witch hunt as company marks 25 years (25 Sept) – Train drivers who are members of ASLEF will strike on Friday 26th September in protest as the company celebrates 25 years in business. The open access operator, which is owned by FirstGroup – the rail and bus giant which also owns Avanti West Coast, Great Western, Lumo and London Tramlink – has unfairly sacked a driver with a completely clean safety record, who has done nothing wrong, in what has been described as a ‘witch hunt by management’. The action will force the company to slash services on the East Coast main line between London and the north read more

Train drivers to strike on CrossCountry (9 Sept) – Train drivers at CrossCountry will walk out on strike on Friday 3rd October and refuse to work non-contractual overtime from Sunday 21st September over the company’s persistent refusal to adhere to negotiated agreements read more

Rally for striking Hull Trains drivers (29 Aug) – from ASLEF Facebook page: Our solidarity rally started this morning with ASLEF Hull Trains Lead Officer Nigel Roebuck addressing those gathered to show solidarity. we also heard from David Pike, TUC North East, Yorkshire & Humber Regional Secretary, GMB officer Charlotte Brumpton-Childs, BFAWU General Secretary Sarah Wooley, FBU President Ian Murray who also informed us that the FBU have donated £2,000 to the strike fund and NEU Executive Member Hannah Scott.

ASLEF General Secretary Mick Whelan closed the rally

“‘Thank you for coming today to show your support for a driver who has been sacked for doing nothing wrong. He is the victim of a witch hunt. He has a completely clean safety of the line record. The company are liars and have lied throughout this dispute. They think we will go away. Today shows that we are right and they are wrong”.

Thank you for your show of solidarity today don’t forget you can Support our members by telling Hull Trains to stop their attacks on union members via the following link https://actionnetwork.org/letters/write-to-hull-trains  

 #HullTrainsStrike

TSSA

TSSA demands urgent action over bus driver assaults (24 Sept) – Transport and travel union TSSA is calling for urgent action to protect bus drivers, following a worrying rise in assault across the Transport for London (Tfl) network. The union represents workers in TfL, including bus operations, and is currently running a national campaign to end violence against transport workers. TSSA has described as ‘shocking’ new figures which show there had been over 800 physical assaults and hate crimes on bus drivers in 2024 – a rise of 21 per cent on the previous year. The data, obtained by the Local Democracy Reporting Service (LDRS) showed some of the worst boroughs included Westminster and Croydon read more

TfL pay talks update (29 July) –

  • TfL declines to improve its offer
  • All unions present state the offer is unacceptable in its current form

TSSA are representing you as TfL Head Office’s largest trade union in TfL Pay Talks for Pay Bands 1-3. At today’s round of pay talks, TfL’s negotiating team declined to improve their offer of 3.4% for this year. All trade unions present stated that this offer is not acceptable in its current form. TfL asked that all unions provide a written response to the offer by Thursday 31 July – and said that if all unions put the offer to their members and the offer was accepted by 28 August, they would be in a position to implement the deal in the November payroll. TSSA reps do not believe that this offer is yet in a fit state to present to you, our members, based on the results of our consultation with you in preparing our pay claim. There are no further meetings scheduled at this stage read more

TSSA members to commence action short of strike in Translink 30th July read more

Unite     

Lindsey oil refinery jobs go due to lack of government support (30 Sept)

– Insolvency firm FTI making redundancies despite bids to take over full refinery. The insolvency firm running Lindsey oil refinery has announced redundancies even though there are at least two bids to buy and operate the site as a going concern keeping a full workforce. Unite said the government is responsible for the redundancies going ahead as it could provide support to ensure the refinery is kept intact and operational. Lindsey supports 420 directly employed workers plus a further 500 contract jobs and potentially thousands in the supply chain. The union believes that the insolvency firm FTI’s preferred bidder wishes to mothball the site and use it as a storage terminal for oil tankers. See https://www.unitetheunion.org/news-events/news/2025/september/lindsey-oil-refinery-jobs-go-due-to-lack-of-government-support

Bournemouth Airport strikes called off as workers are balloted on pay (29 Sept) – A series of strikes that would have caused major disruption to Bournemouth Airport from tomorrow (30 September) have been suspended after the employer came back with an improved offer. Around 80 Unite members including baggage handlers, check-in staff and flight dispatchers were set to walk out tomorrow, then 1, 16 and 17 October in a dispute around pay. However following negotiations between the Airport and Unite, a new offer has been brought to the table with members set to be balloted on it read more

Inflation-proofing PPF pensions would return thousands to pensioners at no taxpayer cost (29 Sept) – 400,000 pensioners lose out as pension contributions before 1997 are not inflation-proofed despite pension funds having a £14.1 billion surplus. Unite has called on the government to use surplus reserves in the Pension Protection Fund (PPF) and Financial Assistance Scheme (FAS) to inflation-proof pensions. The two funds were set up by government to cover defined-benefit (final salary) pensions at companies which went bust read more

Manchester Bee Network Metroline bus strike to go ahead (29 Sept) – Strike action by around 1,000 Unite members working at Metroline Manchester will go ahead from tomorrow, after talks broke down. Workers at the following depots: Sharston, Hyde Road, Ashton and Wythenshawe will still walk out from tomorrow (30 September) to 2 October, causing major disruption to services in the area. The dispute is around pay, with workers believing pay offers do not go far enough at the profitable firm to address years of low pay read more

Further bus disruption as more strikes announced at Manchester’s Bee Network (26 Sept) – Over 2,000 workers across the integrated Bee Network including bus drivers will walk out on 10, 11, 13, 18, 23 and 24 October after talks between Unite and the employer failed to reach a deal. These strike dates are additional to the ones planned from 30 September to 2 October. The dispute is regarding pay, with Unite members at the companies saying offers do not reflect the difficult jobs they do and also fail to address years of low pay. Meanwhile, Stagecoach, Metroline and First Bus Rochdale (part of First Group PLC), are all highly-profitable firms read more

Facilities staff at London mental health centre escalate strike action over pay (29 Sept) – Workers in Newham take to picket line again over pay as workplace relations breakdown. Dozens of staff that keep a London mental health facility in a fit and proper state are striking again this month over a failure by their employer to pay decent wages. Unite members at the Newham Centre for Mental Health are striking from today (29 September) until 12 October 2025 due to their anger over pay and conditions. Workers are employed by a private sector outsourcing company, Grosvenor Facilities Management (GFM) despite working in an NHS hospital. They are not paid on NHS pay-scales and earn less than colleagues directly employed by the NHS doing the same facilities roles such as chefs, domestic assistants, porters and maintenance. They have already taken industrial action earlier this autumn and GFM is refusing to negotiate over a reasonable pay deal. The central demand is that staff are paid the same as their NHS equivalent, a proper sick pay policy is introduced and that the company recognises Unite for collective bargaining. These issues were first raised with GFM in December 2024. After two initial meetings, GFM ceased responding to Unite in March 2025. Due to this silence, Unite members determined to improve their pay and conditions and voted unanimously for strike action read more

How You Can Support the Newham strike:-

  • Donate to the strike fund: https://gofund.me/5a1a59672
  • Model Motion: Solidarity with outsourced NHS workers at Newham Centre for Mental Health – Outsourced workers at Newham Centre for Mental Health are on strike demanding NHS equivalent pay, terms and conditions and union recognition. The domestics, chefs, porters, reception and maintenance workers are some of the lowest paid in London’s NHS. Their employer GFM provides “facilities management” services as part of a 30 year Private Finance Initiative contract worth over £213 million. While GFM and their PFI associates extract multi million pound profits from the NHS, the workers who actually run and maintain the hospital are paid poverty wages and denied basic rights like occupational sick pay and unsocial hours payments. GFM’s denial of occupational sick pay not only disadvantages individual workers but undermines hospital safety by driving sick and infectious workers into work. We resolve to support the GFM workers by making a donation of £___ to their strike fund. We demand the NHS is returned to full public ownership with outsourced workers brought back in-house on NHS pay, terms and conditions.We will send a solidarity message to the striking workers and publicise the GFM workers campaign to our members.
  • Donations to strike fund can be made by bank transfer to the ELFT Unite branch LE7113/L. Contact [email protected] for details

Workers to strike for five further days at Collins Aerospace, Kilkeel (29 Sept) – Unite has notified management at Collins Aerospace in Kilkeel of a further five days of strikes. The fresh strikes dates mark an escalation of the pay dispute and follow an initial one-day strike on Friday. Workers at the aircraft seat manufacturer are demanding a cost of living pay increase and respect from their employer. The five-day strike will commence at 00:01 Thursday 2 October and continue until 08:00 Tuesday 7 October. The union has called on management to re-engage in talks and bring forward a pay offer that meets workers’ expectations read more

First strike at Collins Aerospace, Kilkeel to proceed (25 Sept) – Unite members at Collins Aerospace in Kilkeel, County Down are to commence a first, one-day strike in a pay dispute tomorrow [Friday 26 September]. Workers at the site are seeking a cost-of-living pay increase. The strike action will commence at 00.01 on Friday 26 September with pickets forming from 5 am in the morning read more

AW Crewing strike off in Falmouth as workers accept improved pay deal (29 Sept) – A fortnight of strike action at AW Crewing has been called off after workers accepted an improved pay offer. Almost 30 Unite members who make up the crew of the Cefas Endeavour – a government surveying ship based out of the Port of Lowestoft, Suffolk – were set to strike at Falmouth Docks from 28 September to 12 October in a dispute over pay and conditions. They had already walked out from 9 to 12 September, docking the ship at the Port of Lowestoft with no crew. However, the upcoming industrial action has now been called off after workers were balloted on a new deal, which they have since accepted. They will receive a £3,200 consolidated lump sum backdated to 1 April this year, which works out as a 4.3 to 9.6 per cent pay increase for crew read more

Government support for JLR, “an important first step”, Unite (27 Sept) – Unite, the UK’s leading union, which represents many thousands of works employed at JLR and throughout its supply chain has described the government’s newly announced financial support of the company as an “important first step”. The government’s will provide up to £1.5 billion of loan guarantees that JLR will be able to use to protect its supply chain read more

Bristol bus chaos paused as drivers are balloted on new deal (26 Sept) – Highly disruptive bus strikes by over 600 Unite members at First West of England’s City Line have been paused after the company returned to negotiations with an improved pay offer. The bus drivers were set to walk out from Tuesday 1 October until 14 October – but the first few days of strikes from 1 October to 5 October have been called off to allow workers to vote on a new deal. The dispute around pay involves workers at Lawrence Hill and Hengrove, which serve the inner city areas of Bristol. They were on strike last week from 16 to 19 September, which caused major travel delays and cancellations in the city read more

Strike by PX Limited at Sellafield off as workers accept new pay deal (26 Sept) – Industrial action by Unite members working for PX Limited at Sellafield has been averted after they accepted an enhanced pay deal. Almost 40 workers based at the Cumbria site had planned to walk out last month, but this was stopped after negotiations between Unite and the employer led to a new pay offer which was balloted on. Staff have now accepted a pay offer of four per cent across all salaries and roles, along with an additional one-off one per cent payment for this year, bringing it to an inflation-busting five per cent. This is backdated to 1 May this year read more

Birkenhead, Chorley and Preston Stagecoach strikes suspended after improved pay offer (26 Sept) – Strikes by 500 Stagecoach drivers in Birkenhead, Chorley and Preston have been suspended due to an improved pay offer. Unite, the UK’s leading union, will be balloting the workers on the new offer over the coming days. Strike action scheduled from 29 September to 5 October and from 13 October to 19 October will not take place read more

Housing crisis: Unite says wages are solution not problem (26 Sept) – Good jobs key to attracting and retaining labour. Trade union Unite, which represents construction workers throughout Ireland, today said that sustained wage rises in the construction sector are critical to prevent a loss of vital construction skills as Ireland grapples with an ongoing housing crisis. Unite was commenting on this week’s Economic and Social Research Institute (ESRI) report highlighting recent wage increases and capacity constraints in the sector read more

No justification for lay-offs at Linamar given prospect of UK government support (25 Sept) – Urgent need for confirmation of financial support package for JLR supply-chain companies. Unite has challenged management at Linamar, Dunmurry on their proposals to lay-off 40 temporary, agency workers. The site is a supplier to Jaguar-Land Rover (JLR) and the lay-offs are a response to the protracted cyberattack-related shutdown of production at JLR plants across the UK. The union is engaged with government on a support package for JLR supply chain companies which will avoid job-losses, closures and the loss of vital manufacturing capacity during the shutdown read more

Unite refuses to nominate any candidate in Labour deputy leadership election (25 Sept) – Unite, will not nominate either candidate in Labour’s deputy leadership election. Neither represents the change required within the Labour party. Different economic choices are required now. Workers and communities have had enough. Unite will not support the status quo or someone who has openly attacked Unite members during the Birmingham bin dispute read more

West London bus strikes to escalate as workers walk out (25 Sept) – Drivers, engineers and storemen to walk out over below inflation offer. Over 350 workers employed by London Transit bus company in West London are to take further strike action after rejecting the company’s latest pay offer. Workers have already walked out for two days earlier this autumn and are now heading to the picket line on Friday 26 September and Monday 29 September. Drivers, engineers and storemen based at the Westbourne Park depot are furious at the below inflation pay offer they have received from their employer, First Bus read more

BAE Systems professional staff in Lancashire balloted over strike action (24 Sept) – Unite members furious over real-terms pay cut. Worse deal than offered to shop floor workers. Thousands of aerospace engineers at the world-leading defence company BAE Systems could take strike action this autumn over pay. Over 5000 members of the Unite union based at Warton and Samlesbury in Lancashire are in dispute, and specific groups will be balloted after rejecting the latest pay offer from the company. They were offered just 3.6 per cent, which is below the rate of inflation and represents a real terms pay cut. It is also below a pay offer made and accepted by BAE Systems shop floor colleagues, who received 4.5 per cent and an additional day of annual leave…Highly skilled workers are furious at this and will now be balloted on strike action. The ballot will open on 1 October and close on 22 October. If workers vote for industrial action strikes could begin later this autumn read more

Strikes to hit Birmingham textiles company (24 Sept) – Workers at Johnson Workwear to walk out over real-terms pay cut. Over 50 Birmingham workers at leading workwear supplier, Johnsons, are taking strike action over the company’s latest pay offer. Members of the Unite union, Britain’s leading trade union, are furious at being offered just 2.8 per cent and overwhelmingly rejected this real terms pay cut. With inflation currently at 4.6 per cent, this offer would worsen the cost-of-living crisis where housing, food and utility prices are rising faster than wages. Johnson are the leading supplier of work wear and protective wear in the UK and provide luxury linen services to hotels, restaurants and the hospitality industry, are a hugely profitable company. Its latest accounts show profits of over £63 million. Strikes are taking place on 26 September, 3 October, 10 October and 17 October 2025. There is also a ban on all overtime that came into place on 18 September. Staff on the factory floor currently earn just £12.38 per hour, just 17 per cent an hour above the national minimum wage read more

Unite signs Dying to Work Charter backing employment protection for terminally ill workers (22 Sept) – Today (Monday 22 September) Unite the union formally signed the Trade Union Congress (TUC) Dying to Work Charter that ensures employment protection for terminally ill workers. The charter was signed by Unite general secretary Sharon Graham and TUC general secretary Paul Nowak at Unite’s London central office read more

Brighton and Crawley bus bedlam as workers strike over pay (19 Sept) – Workforce furious over derisory pay offer. Over a thousand bus workers are set to bring transport bedlam to Brighton, Hove, Crawley and Gatwick Airport as they strike over a poor pay offer. Unite members at Brighton Bus Company and the Metrobus Crawley company rejected a pay offer of just 3.5 per cent – a real terms pay cut with inflation running at 4.5 per cent in July 2025. Following an overwhelming ballot result where 1300 workers were asked about taking strike action, workers are now due to take strike action on 6 and 15 October read more

A9 set for travel disruption as road maintenance workers back industrial action (19 Sept) – Union highlights Inverness based Bear Scotland low pay levels. Unite the union can confirm that major roads including the A9 trunk road from Perth to Inverness are set for travel disruption after maintenance workers overwhelmingly backed industrial action. The dispute centres on low pay for dozens of Bear Scotland workers based in Inverness who are key to the maintenance and safety of major roads in central Scotland and the highlands including the A9, particularly during the imminent bad weather during autumn and winter. Bear Scotland employees have rejected a pay offer which takes the lowest hourly pay band up from £12 an hour to £12.75. The pay offer to other key grades rises by only one pound per hour including the highest grade from £13.25 to £14.25. Unite says that similar maintenance workers at other local companies are paying up to £16.00 per hour read more

Strike ballot at ABP meats in Craigavon (18 Sept) – Workers to be balloted after management fails to agree meat packers cost of living pay claim. Unite has notified Anglo Beef Processors UK (ABP) of a forthcoming strike ballot at the company’s Craigavon plant. The ballot will open on Thursday 25 September and closes on Tuesday 13 October. Unite represents more than 150 meat packers, trimmers, distribution, kill line and boning workers on the site. Unite is seeking a cost-of-living pay increase for its members who are paid a piece rate. Management have offered 3.2 per cent to the workforce with a one-off cash payment of £100 – a real-terms pay cut. This offer was overwhelmingly rejected by workers read more

Strike threat at leading defence and aerospace company Leonardo (18 Sept) – housands of workers at sites across the UK (Yeovil, Edinburgh, Newcastle, Luton and Basildon) balloted over poor pay offer. Nearly three thousand workers at leading defence and aerospace company Leonardo could walk out in a dispute over pay, the Unite union announced today. Workers at sites in Yeovil, Edinburgh, Newcastle, Luton and Basildon are being balloted for industrial action after rejecting a pay offer of 3.2 per cent (a real terms pay cut) from the employer. A successful ballot will see workers head to the picket line and factories shutdown. Leonardo is a world-leading manufacturer of defence industry equipment including helicopters, aircraft, aerospace parts, electronics and cybersecurity. Headquartered in Italy it is one of the largest defence companies in the world read more

Incident at Sellafield picket line (17 Sept) – Unite can confirm an incident occurred at the Calder Gate of the Sellafield nuclear site during a lawful and peaceful picket. A vehicle was driven into a group of workers, with one worker requiring hospital treatment. Police have arrested those responsible in connection with the incident. Unite general secretary Sharon Graham said: “Unite utterly condemns the unprovoked attack on our members. The police must use the full force of the law to prosecute those responsible. This incident will not deter our members in continuing with their lawful industrial action and the strikes will go ahead as planned.”

Unite North West regional secretary Ritchie James said: “The incident is both shocking and horrifying to all those who witnessed it. Unite is aware that four individuals have been arrested. Strike action will continue for the rest of the week as planned.” Read more

Unite: Strikes at Sellafield over pay (16 Sept)

Strikes at NEU escalate over ‘botched’ restructure plans (16 Sept) – Lack of meaningful consultation and management intransigence forces strike action by Unite members. Over 400 staff at the National Education Union (NEU) are to strike for three further days this week over a proposed restructure that will have a catastrophic impact on staff workloads read more

Ambulance outsourcing dispute: Unite to ballot for industrial action (14 Sept) – Unite, which represents members working for the National Ambulance Service (NAS), today (Sunday) announced that it will be balloting members nationwide for industrial action following the unilateral decision to outsource inter-hospital ambulance transfers in the Greater Dublin area to a private operator. Earlier this week it emerged that NAS management had initiated a tendering process without consulting the relevant unions. This follows recent proposals, rejected by unions, to reduce minimum paramedic crewing levels in emergency ambulances read more

London International Transport Workers’ Federation staff announce new strike dates to protect jobs (12 Sept) – Additional strike action announced due to lack of movement by management in redundancy negotiations. More than 100 workers at the London-based International Transport Workers’ Federation (ITF) have announced new strike dates in response to planned redundancies and attacks on collective bargaining. The workers, members of Unite, are striking after the ITF’s management initiated an organisation-wide restructuring that includes cutting a quarter of the workforce this year. In July, the workers voted by 89 per cent for strike action and by 90 per cent for action short of strike action on a turn out of 89 per cent read more

Tarmac strike in Derbyshire suspended as workers vote on new pay offer (11 Sept) – A strike next week at Tarmac’s Alfreton Blocks Plant in Derbyshire has been suspended after the company put forward an improved pay offer. Over 30 Unite members at the plant, who include maintenance workers, quality technicians and fitters who make aerated concrete blocks for construction projects and pack them on the production line, were set to walk out on Monday 15 and Tuesday 16 September then Monday 22 and Tuesday 23 September. They had overwhelmingly voted to reject a pay offer of four per cent, which workers do not believe goes far enough to address years of low pay. However, next week’s strike action has been suspended to allow workers to vote on the new deal…Depending on the outcome of this ballot, the following week’s industrial action could still go ahead read more

Gatwick immigration services workers ballot for strike action over poverty pay (10 Sept) – OCS workers face abuse, physically gruelling shifts assisting UK Border Force staff. Gatwick immigration services workers are being balloted for strike action over poverty pay, Unite, the UK’s leading union, said today. The OCS workers, who earn little more than the minimum wage, are demanding a pay rise that reflects the demanding nature of the job and the rising cost of living. The workers provide support to the UK Border Force at the airport’s immigration gates. During gruelling 12-hour shifts, they are not allowed to sit down, face regular abuse from arriving passengers and only receive a half hour paid break…The ballot for industrial action will run until 22 September. Strikes would cause disruption to immigration services at Gatwick read more

James Walker workers in Cockermouth to strike over pay (9 Sept) – Production lines at James Walker and Co will grind to a halt later this month as 250 Unite members at the Cockermouth-based firm will walk out in a dispute about pay. James Walker and Co is a privately owned global industrial business, which supplies high-performance fluid sealing products to virtually every industry sector. Workers have overwhelmingly rejected a below-inflation pay offer of three per cent. James Walker and Co is profitable company with a turnover of £44.9m and a profit of £1.4m after tax. Unite general secretary Sharon Graham said: “James Walker is putting profits before people and Unite will not allow it. A 24-hour walkout at the Cumbrian site will take place from 06:00 on September 22 after 91 per cent of Unite members voted to strike. Workers will also undertake a continuous overtime ban from 19 September read more

Home counties bus chaos as Arriva workers walk out (5 Sept) – Staff at garages in Beds, Bucks and Herts to strike over pay. Over 800 bus drivers, engineers, cleaners and shunters across the South-East of England are taking strike action over derisory pay offers. Members of the Unite union, Britain’s leading transport union, are walking out after their employer, Arriva, failed to make a decent pay offer. They are now set to strike for 16 days across September and October. The dispute covers workers across Arriva the Shires and Arriva Kent Thameside across five depots. These are Luton, Milton Keynes, (both the Arriva The Shires) and Stevenage, Ware and Hemel Hempstead (Arriva Kent Thameside). At the Shires, around 50 routes a day operate out of Milton Keynes and Luton while Kent Thameside operates approximately 30 routes a day out of Hemel Hempstead, Ware and Stevenage…Strikes are to take place on the following dates: Tuesday 23 September – Friday 26 September, Wednesday 1 October – Saturday 4 October, Thursday 9 October  – Sunday 12 October, Tuesday 14 October – Friday 17 October read more

Birkenhead, Chorley and Preston bus chaos as Stagecoach drivers strike (5 Sept) – 500 Stagecoach workers walk out over pay disparities. Birkenhead, Chorley and Preston Stagecoach bus services will be severely disrupted during strikes by 500 drivers, Unite, the UK’s leading union, said today. The workers are demanding a pay rise that reflects huge disparities between their pay and drivers in the same areas. For example, Arriva drivers in Birkenhead earn £2.69 an hour more than Birkenhead Stagecoach drivers and £2.13 an hour more than Stagecoach drivers in Chorley and Preston…The workers will take strike action from 29 September to 5 October and from 13 October to 19 October. Industrial action will intensify if the dispute is not resolved read more

Unite announces SQA industrial action ballot as pay dispute escalates (5 Sept) – Pay increase five months overdue to hundreds of workers. Unite can confirm today (Friday 5 September) that around 400 members at the Scottish Qualifications Authority (SQA) are being balloted on industrial action in an escalating dispute over pay. The pay dispute centres on the SQA’s pay offer of three per cent for 2025 just as the broader cost of inflation hit 4.8 per cent in July. Unite is highlighting that any pay increase for the workforce is now five months overdue as it was expected to take effect on 1 April. The union held a consultative ballot of its membership on the pay offer which indicated 97 per cent wanted to be balloted on industrial action if no movement was made by the SQA on the pay offer…The ballot on industrial action opens on Friday 5 September and closes on Thursday 25 September read more

Altrad offshore contractors to be balloted on strike action (2 Sept) – Oil platforms Magnus and Thistle Alpha owned by EnQuest. Unite the union can confirm an industrial action ballot for Altrad offshore contractors working on the Magnus and Thistle Alpha platforms operated by EnQuest opens today (3 September). The pay dispute is based on Altrad Employment Services Limited reneging on a four per cent wage increase which is due to around 50 workers on the platforms effective from 1 January under the offshore Energy Services Agreement (ESA) read more

Unite accuses the SSPCA of worker ‘neglect’ over real terms pay cut (2 Sept) – Trade union cites years of ‘low pay’ while new executive earns bumper wage

Unite the union can confirm that around 140 members employed by the Scottish Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (SSPCA) are being balloted over strike action in a dispute over pay. SSPCA workers have emphatically rejected a two year pay offer which amounts to a significant real terms pay cut. In 2025, the offer on average amounts to around 1.6 per cent with some members having their pay frozen. A one-off payment has been tabled worth around two per cent. In 2026, only a two per cent offer has been tabled. The broader cost of inflation has just hit 4.8 per cent in July… The SSPCA has two main workplaces those being its headquarters in Dunfermline and at Cardonald, Glasgow. The ballot opens today (Wednesday 3 September) and closes on 17 September read more

National Grid and Scottish Power shortages of critical transformer oil due to strikes (27 Aug) – Ellesmere Port Electrical Oil Services workers striking over pay. Energy companies including the National Grid and Scottish Power have shortages of critical transformer oil due to pay strikes by Electrical Oil Services workers in Ellesmere Port. Electrical Oil Services, which supplies oil to lubricate, cool and insulate power company transformers, has informed its clients that stock is very low due to ongoing industrial action. Due to the crucial role the striking plant operators perform, stocks began to run out after just a few days of strike action that began last week and which is still underway… The workers took strike action from 18 August to the morning of 25 August, due to an inadequate pay offer. Further strikes began yesterday (26 August) and will last until 1 September. Industrial action will intensify if the dispute is not resolved read more

Pathology staff across London to strike over pay and grading (26 Aug) – Major disruption at multiple hospitals as blood tests to cease. A&E services severely impacted. Pathology staff at laboratories across London are to take strike action over pay and grading it was announced today, severely impacting operations at seven London hospitals. Over 800 Unite members employed by Health Services Laboratory (and sister company The Doctors’ Laboratory) are taking three days of strike action on 3, 4 and 5 September. Staff at the HSL laboratories who conduct blood, skin, and tissue tests for two London healthcare trusts are furious over the lack of transparency in their grading. This means staff are often doing the work of more senior colleagues without being properly paid or doing the same job as other colleagues and being paid different rates. The privatised service, despite being a supplier to the NHS, does not adhere to NHS pay scales and staff earn less money than if they were directly employed by the NHS read more

Turners tanker drivers balloted on strike action in pay dispute (25 Aug) – Grangemouth based drivers deliver fuel for major aviation companies. Unite can confirm that Grangemouth based logistic drivers working for Turners (Soham) Limited are being balloted on strike action in an escalating pay dispute. The logistic drivers work on two contracts which provide fuel services for a number of major aviation companies. Turners has offered a miserly one per cent just as the broader cost of inflation hit 4.8 per cent in July. In its latest after tax profits, Turners recorded £51m for the year ending 2023. The union believes fuel supplies to major aviation companies including Jet 2, easyJet and Emirates operating at Edinburgh, Glasgow and Newcastle airports will be directly impacted if the drivers take industrial action following a successful ballot result read more

Back-to-school chaos as bus strikes hit West London (19 Aug) – Drivers, engineers and controllers to walk out over backdated pay. Parents and pupils heading back-to-school are set to be hit by bus strike chaos as nearly 2,000 workers at London United and London Transit taking strike action on Friday 29 August and Monday 1 September. Members of the Unite, Britain’s leading union, are furious that not all elements of the new pay offer they have received from their employer are being backdated to the pay anniversary date n December. This would mean drivers losing out on hundreds of pounds of back pay after First Bus bought the company earlier this year from RATP. One of the subsidiaries involved, London United, is also attempting to change the pay anniversary of some workers and is refusing to reinstate shift work premiums for others read more

Jones Engineering: OECD finds Unite complaint merits further consideration (19 Aug) – Complaint related to treatment of workers following 2023 dispute. Unite welcomes OECD offer of mediation. August 19th: Unite today welcomed the decision by the Ireland National Contact Point for the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises that a complaint submitted by Unite and the global federation Building and Woodworkers International in respect of Jones Engineering and its American parent company Cathexis merits further consideration. The decision is available here. The complaint centres largely on the treatment of union members by Jones following a 2023 trade dispute surrounding the union’s claim for restoration of the first hour of ‘travel time’ read more

PX Limited strike suspended as workers are balloted on new pay offer (18 Aug) – A 24-hour strike tomorrow (19 August) by Unite members at PX Limited which would have caused disruption to the Sellafield nuclear site in Cumbria has been suspended to allow workers to vote on a new pay offer. Almost 40 workers were set to walk out after previously turning down two unsatisfactory pay offers from PX Limited, citing the fact they are an intrinsic part of processes at Sellafield. However the company has come back to the table with an improved proposal which employees are being balloted on. The affected staff at PX Limited provide critical process steam and electricity to Sellafield. Strike action would have caused disruption to any facilities that rely on this read more

Fawley refinery poverty pay canteen strikes escalate (18 Aug) – Strikes by Fawley oil refinery canteen workers over poverty pay have escalated, Unite, the UK’s leading union, said today. The predominantly female workers, employed by catering outsourcer Compass, are paid only slightly more than the minimum wage. They are demanding a pay rise that reflects the rising cost of living and ensures the gap between their wages and the absolute legal minimum does not shrink. London-based Compass Group is the world’s largest catering provider and raked in nearly £1.2 billion in operating profits in the six months to March 2025 – an increase of 11.6 per cent. The workers began strike action in July. The latest round of strike action began today (18 August) and will last until 22 August. Further strikes will take place from 26 to 28 August and from 1 to 5 September. Industrial action will intensify if the dispute is not resolved. The Fawley refinery is operated by multinational Esso read more

Stoke residents face repair delays unless leave problems resolved (14 Aug) – Stoke on Trent council housing residents will face repair and maintenance delays due to industrial action if a dispute over annual leave is not swiftly resolved. Currently, Stoke council office workers receive two days annual leave more than craftworkers at the local authority. In a consultative ballot of over 225 craftworkers, who include joiners, plumbers and electricians, 99 per cent voted in favour of taking industrial action over the disparity…Unite will begin formal industrial action proceedings if the council does not provide annual leave parity in a timely manner read more

Imperial College freshers braced for strike disruption as workers ballot over pay (14 Aug) – Teaching and support staff offered insulting pay offer from UK’s top university with total income of £1.3 billion. Imperial College freshers are facing disruption at the start of the academic year as teaching and non-teaching staff ballot for industrial action over pay. Members of Unite, along with members of other recognised unions, are angry at Imperial’s two per cent imposed pay increase. It is a real terms pay cut given that the latest RPI inflation stands at 4.4 per cent…Unite members are being balloted until 15 September. The staff involved in the industrial action ballots perform a variety of roles from teaching, research and library services to maintenance, administration and student welfare. Industrial action would have a severe impact on services across the university read more

Liverpool University staff halt strike action after hybrid working win (13 Aug) – Unite members at the University of Liverpool have voted to halt planned strike action tomorrow (14 August) and in September after accepting new terms to protect home working. Over 300 workers – professional services staff – took action including striking and holding a rally in June followed by working to contractual hours only (no overtime, no evenings, no weekends) after senior management tried to force through changes to their hybrid working practices without proper consultation with staff or Unite read more

Orkney Ferries workers overtime ban in pay dispute (13 Aug) – Unite claims ferry services will be reduced by industrial action. Unite the union confirmed today that Orkney Ferries workers will take part in industrial action in an escalating dispute over pay. Over 20 outer north and inner isles Orkney Ferries workers represented by Unite will take part in a continuous ban on overtime starting from 00:01 on 28 August. The union claims that due to the ferries relying on the goodwill of workers to take shifts beyond their contracted hours and at short notice that services could be reduced by the industrial action. The latest development in the pay dispute follows Unite’s membership overwhelmingly rejecting a two-year pay offer. Unite members have also reacted angrily to an enhanced ‘recall’ rate given for extra hours worked now being removed by Orkney Ferries read more

Unions lodge notice of first 24-hour strike by workers at Belfast council leisure services (7 Aug) – Joint UNITE-NIPSA press release: Belfast leisure workers are lowest paid in Northern Ireland and are seeking a one pound an hour increase to the current pay offer. Talks ended without management company Greenwich Leisure Limited making any improved pay offer. Unite and NIPSA trade unions have announced a 24-hour strike by leisure staff at facilities operated by Green Leisure Limited in Belfast. 14 leisure centres and two gyms owned by Belfast City Council are operated by the arms-length management company. The strike will commence at 00.01 on Tuesday August 12 and continue until midnight. The industrial action is likely to shut down entirely the operation of several leisure centres, given that more than 200 leisure workers are members of two trade unions. Pay at Belfast leisure centres has fallen behind that of other council leisure facilities in Northern Ireland following the decision to outsource them to Greenwich Leisure Limited. Belfast leisure worker pay is now the lowest in Northern Ireland…The strike follows an overwhelming ballot for industrial action by workers in both unions and represents an escalation from a work-to-rule which came into force on Tuesday 15 July. Labour Relations Agency-mediated negotiations between the trade unions and the employer ended on Wednesday 30 July, after management failed to provide any improved offer read more

Unite hits out at union busting firm supplying coffee chain Starbucks (30 July) – Unite has hit out at the unfair treatment of two shop stewards working at Food Service Logistics, who have been suspended on trumped-up charges. The reps are a senior shop steward and their deputy, who have been falsely accused of being involved in an altercation after being singled out to do work not in their job description and now face disciplinary hearings next week. It comes after these Unite stewards had previously brought numerous grievances against Food Service Logistics including discrimination for trade union activity and behaviour of management towards them and other Unite members. Hemel Hempstead-based Food Service Logistics is a primary supplier to the Starbucks retail network in the south of England, including franchised stores. Starbucks itself has come under fire in recent years after facing accusations of unfair dismissals and union busting in the US read more

Unite ballot shows NHS staff overwhelmingly reject pay deal (29 July) – Unite’s ballot of members in health has demonstrated the strength of feeling among the NHS workforce with 89 per cent of members believe that the pay award (3.6%) is unacceptable and are prepared to take action up to including strike action. The strength of feeling around government cuts was even greater with 95 per cent of members expressing their willingness to take action in order to oppose cuts to the NHS. We are calling on the UK government to meet with us and in order to avoid a strike that is likely to affect a number of Trusts (including Ambulance Trusts) and a number of national organisations such as NHS England and NHS Blood and Transplant. The pay award offered to Agenda for Change NHS staff (i.e. most staff other than doctors) was below RPI and CPIH.  It is less than the award for doctors and it is less than that offered through negotiations in Scotland…Unite is committed to resolving this issue and will work with the government to do so, but given the lack of willingness from ministers to date, Unite will progress towards the next formal ballot we are required to carry out in order that we can take action. Our members have witnessed the NHS deteriorate for years and feel duty bound to take a stand to defend it read more

East Coast bus drivers strike ballot over pay (10 July) – 130 drivers reject two-year offer at publicly owned subsidiary of Lothian Buses. Unite has confirmed around 130 drivers employed by East Coast Buses are involved in an industrial action ballot after rejecting a two-year pay offer. The ballot will open today (10 July) and close on 24 July. If workers vote for industrial action then strike action could start in early August potentially impacting on the Edinburgh Festival and the Oasis concert (9 August) at Murrayfield. The East Coast Buses drivers provide services from the city of Edinburgh and the East Lothian coast and mainland. East Coast Buses and Lothian County are both owned by the publicly run Lothian Buses. A separate pay deal has been successfully negotiated by Unite for Lothian County bus drivers which run services across west Edinburgh and West Lothian read more

Unite reject pay award from Welsh NHS and prepare for strikes (2 July) – NHS staff across Wales have voted to take strike action following a poor pay award. Members of Unite, one of the country’s leading health sector unions, have voted in heavy numbers to reject the pay award and indicated they are prepared to take industrial action demanding that the Welsh government make improvements to their pay. Unite members in Wales have voted in large numbers that the pay award is unacceptable. 87 per cent rejected the pay award and said they were prepared to take strike action to try to achieve a better and fairer pay increase. Unite is now calling on the Welsh government to open up pay negotiations with unions. If negotiations on pay do not happen Unite will have no choice but to start the formal industrial action ballot process. Any industrial action will affect a number of services including ambulance services where Unite has particularly high membership read more

Tata Steel: Strike set to escalate tonight as management cancels scheduled talks (26 June)

London Hedin Mercedes mechanics to strike (17 June)  

Wigan Alpla UK plastic packaging strikes over fire and rehire disgrace (9 June)    

   

CWU   

Support the Tik Tok workers – CWU UTAW branch (UTAW_uk on X/Twitter)

✊ Join us to demand fair redundancy packages for over 300 workers✊

Last week TikTok announced a mass redundancy putting over 300 of its London employees at risk. TikTok employees have known these cuts were coming and were a week away from voting on union recognition. TikTok has timed this to hurt our movement and avoid scrutiny and transparency on a sham redundancy.

? WE’RE DEMANDING A FAIR REDUNDANCY PACKAGE OR REDPLOYMENT FOR ALL

? WE’RE STANDING AGAINST TIKTOK’S UNION BUSTING

? WE’RE CALLING TIKTOK OUT FOR ITS RECKLESS ATTITUDE TO ONLINE SAFETY

Read more about TikTok’s union busting redundancies here

VM02 Capita workers condemn “heartless and destructive” offshoring redundancies (2 Sept) – The Communication Workers Union (CWU) has said that the strength of feeling among VM02 Capita workers is “unprecedented”, after the firm has announced “heartless and destructive” redundancies. Workers in Payment Management on the Capita contract on VM02 were told of new redundancies on 18th August, with management’s justification being operational changes and consistent financial losses. It is expected that the 150 jobs will be offshored to South Africa, which has already seen a steady stream of VM02 jobs over the years. The union has attacked the timing of the redundancies as unacceptable, with the redundancies being announced just 12 days after a separate redundancy consultation, affecting more than 200 workers, was completed. This means that the same workers who had been told they had retained their roles are immediately facing a fresh bout of uncertainty read more

CWU members in Santander need your support. They have faced outsourcing, offshoring and technology is being used to negatively impact our members futures. They are now fighting back with a joint campaign with Advance Union. All CWU members, family members, friends and the wider public can help us by signing and sharing this petition.

Every signature counts – https://cwu.eaction.org.uk/cwuadvancepetition

PCS     

You can show your support to the strikes by PCS members by:     

  • Making donations to the PCS Fighting Fund Levy account, sort code: 60-83-01, account no. 20331490    
  • Sending solidarity messages to [email protected]    

DWP Consultative Ballot – Expect a Call From PCS on Super Saturday (29 Sept) – With the DWP online consultative ballot on pay running until 10 October it is crucial everyone votes and our activists are working hard to deliver a big yes vote, including joining a Super Saturday event this weekend read more

Consultative ballot to be extended in DWP (26 Sept) – The DWP group has taken the decision to extend the period of the consultative ballot that is underway to 10 October. This is an indicative ballot to help PCS gauge the mood of members following the latest, imposed DWP pay award read more

PCS joins call for home secretary to end harmful immigration and asylum policies (29 Sept) – PCS has joined calls for Shabana Mahmood to focus on bringing communities together and stop the “scapegoating of migrants” in an open letter to the home secretary signed by more than 100 organisations read more

Huge support for MyCSP Megapicket (29 Sept) – The MyCSP strikers in Liverpool marked the start of their 13th week of action with a Megapicket, supported by general secretaries and MPs. Supporters from across the union movement came along to support the picketers outside the MyCSP office in Liverpool today read more

Ofgem staff strike over pay inequality – take action now (29 Sept) – PCS members at the UK’s energy market regulator are taking strike action in response to a deepening crisis over pay inequality and they need your support. Despite the critical role they play in overseeing energy companies and protecting consumers, Ofgem workers are paid significantly less than their counterparts in government departments. In some cases, the gap is as wide as 20%. Even more concerning, the lowest-paid employees at Ofgem fall within the bottom 20% of earners nationally. This disparity is not just a matter of fairness it’s a threat to the integrity of energy regulation. Ofgem is struggling to retain experienced staff, and when skilled workers leave, the regulator loses the expertise it needs to hold powerful energy companies to account. That affects everyone. Without strong oversight, energy firms face less scrutiny, and ordinary people paying electricity and gas bills are left exposed to unfair practices and rising costs. PCS members at Ofgem have voted to strike, demanding a fair pay settlement that reflects the importance of their work. Their action is not just about wages it’s about ensuring that Ofgem can continue to function effectively in the public interest. The energy market is complex and volatile, and it requires regulators with deep knowledge and experience. Undervaluing these workers undermines the entire system. The union is calling on supporters to take part in our e-action campaign aimed at building political pressure. By emailing your MP, you can help urge the secretary of state for energy security and net zero to intervene and ensure Ofgem reaches a fair agreement with PCS. Every message sent adds weight to the campaign and helps amplify the voices of striking workers. Political pressure works. Government departments set the tone for public sector pay, and ministers have the power to influence decisions that affect workers across the civil service. By raising this issue with your MP, you’re not just supporting Ofgem staff you’re standing up for accountability, fairness, and the public good. The e-action takes just two minutes to complete, and it could make a real difference. PCS is encouraging all supporters, trade unionists, and concerned citizens to take part and share the campaign widely. Whether through social media, workplace conversations, or community networks, spreading the word helps build momentum and solidarity read more

  • show your support on social media with the hashtags #LightsOut #OfgemStrike #PriceCapStrike
  • donate to the strike fund:  https://www.pcs.org.uk/donate

IOPC members show faith in ongoing negotiations (26 Sept) – Recent ballot results show that confidence is high that PCS reps will negotiate a satisfactory settlement in the ongoing dispute. PCS members at the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) have sent a clear message of confidence in their reps by choosing not to extend the industrial action mandate in a ballot that closed on 22 September. This decision reflects growing trust in the ongoing negotiations, which have already delivered meaningful improvements to working conditions. However the high “yes” vote (89% on a 40% turnout) does mean members are watching carefully that management follow through on commitments made read more

Strike ballot starts for members impacted by DWP Lincoln office closure (25 Sept) – PCS has launched a ballot for strike action of members working in DWP Lincoln Service Centre based in Lincoln City Hall. These members do vital work delivering Universal Credit services assisting claimants with their claims and ensuring that benefits are paid on time. The postal ballot runs until 10 October. PCS is urging member to vote yes for strike action. The reason for the strike ballot is because the DWP notified staff on 17 June that their office was to close in May 2026. Due to the relative geographical isolation there are very few DWP jobs on offer for staff within a reasonable travel time. Up to 100 staff currently working in Lincoln Service Centre now face the very real prospect of redundancy read more

Join mass leafleting of New Scotland Yard (19 Sept) – As PCS members in the Met Police vote in the strike ballot over pay inequality our activists are going to be busy leafletting to urge civilian staff to fight back against the two-tier Met outside New Scotland Yard from 9-9.30am on Tuesday (23). Activists will be out encouraging members, who keep the Met running, to vote yes in the ballot and get their papers back by 9 October. Members are angry over a two-tier system where the London Allowance is only paid to police officers. PCS is balloting 6,500 members for strike action following the Met Police’s refusal to extend the £1,250 London Allowance to civilian police staff – despite previously agreeing to discuss it during 2024/25 pay talks read more

Strike Ballot over Pay in Met Police (17 Sept)

Ballot launched of Border Force Maritime members (19 Sept) – A ballot is underway of PCS members working on patrol boats in the English Channel in a dispute over terms, conditions and frozen allowances. More than 120 Border Force Maritime workers are angry at waiting more than six years for the result of a payment review into allowances for their specialist roles. The ballot on potential strike action runs until 17 October. Our members’ duties include searching for vessels at sea and identifying craft engaged in smuggling or small boats crossings. Although management has given assurances about backdating these allowances to 1 April 2025, it may be months before extra payments are received. Border Force management has failed to fully recognise the demands of our members, who are frustrated by the wait for a fresh formal offer read more

PCS Launches Strike Ballot at the British Library (15 Sept) – PCS is balloting members at the British Library (London branch) for strike action from today until noon on 13 October over the organisation’s failure to offer an above-inflation pay award for a second consecutive year. The trade dispute has arisen after repeated attempts by PCS to secure an above-inflation pay award. Indeed, the union pre-empted pay talks as early as 28 March to no avail read more

Support the MHCLG strikers taking action in London (12 Sept) – PCS members at the Ministry for Housing, Communities and Local Government continue their industrial campaign with targeted action at the department’s London office on Tuesday (16). Our members hope Steve Reed, the new secretary of state, swiftly enters into negotiations to end the dispute over office closures, attendance polices and recruitment strategy. Earlier this month, our MHCLG members supported strike action with busy picket lines in Birmingham, Darlington, Edinburgh, Hemel Hempstead, London, Leeds and Manchester. And workers in Hemel walked out again on Wednesday. The action has now switched to targeted action which sees over 170 staff walk out until 25 September. Support the picket line in London on Tuesday (16) outside MHCLG London’s office in 2 Marsham Street, SW1P 4DF from 8-10:30am. Send messages of support to [email protected]  read more

Second 24-hour strike for security staff in the Houses of Parliament (9 Sept) – The members will walk out on Wednesday 10 September for the second time in two weeks. Over 300 PCS members who work at the Palace of Westminster are taking their second 24 hours of strike action from 7am on 10 September to 7am on 11 September. The members are also taking part in an overtime ban and a work-to-rule. The members are angry about their employer’s removal of six days’ annual leave from contracts, pay stagnation, worsening conditions and a widening ethnicity pay gap. They are also disappointed that the employer wrongly claims that they agreed to reduce their annual leave entitlement and refuses to take this grave concern seriously read more

MPs show support for parliamentary security strikers (5 Sept)

Palestine Solidarity Campaign stands with PCS members in Westminster (4 Sept)

Revenue & Customs Pay 2025 (2 Sept) – PCS rejects the pay offer from Revenue and Customs as it falls way short of the union’s pay claim. Revenue & Customs have written to both PCS and ARC unions to confirm that the HMRC pay offer will be implemented in September salaries. PCS has already rejected the offer (equivalent to 3.25% of the pay bill with a further 0.5% for targeting specific issues including low pay), as way below the demands in our national pay claim. The offer also sees members on terms and conditions transferred on moves into R&C having their pay ranges frozen, except for where increases are required due to National Living Wage increases. Over 2,700 members attended branch meetings to discuss the offer with 58% of members either dissatisfied or very dissatisfied with the offer, compared to only 15% who were either satisfied or very satisfied. PCS will continue to campaign for the pay rises that members deserve following decades of pay restraint under successive governments. Branches across R&C will be holding members’ meetings with speakers from the union’s national executive committee to hear about discussions the union has held with the Cabinet Office on civil service pay and reward strategy as well as to discuss next steps in the campaign read more

PCS industrial action escalated at ONS (7 Aug) – PCS members at the Office For National Statistics have stepped up their long-running dispute over a forced return to workplaces by instigating a zero-office attendance policy and increasing their use of work to rule. More than 1200 members began the escalation with immediate effect on 25 July, while the branch considers next steps in the use of its mandate to use strike action. In a ballot which ended on 31 March, members voted for strike action with 68% of ONS members taking part voting to take strike action while 91% voted to take action short of a strike (ASOS), on a 71% turnout. PCS members have been in dispute with ONS since April 2024 over changes to the hybrid working policies and have since held three statutory ballots on a programme of continuous industrial action involving non-compliance with mandated office attendance targets and working to rule. The PCS ONS Branch has been placing pressure on the interim ONS senior management to engage with us after a growing number of ONS members have reported managers attempting to force attendance based on wafer-thin “business requirements” to undermine our action short of a strike (ASOS) that has restored working autonomy to members read more

Benton Park View strike rally attracts support from across the movement (9 June) – The strike rally at Benton Park View in Newcastle-Upon-Tyne drew support from across the labour and trade union movement. The rally on Friday marked over 5 months of strike action by employer services members on the site in defence of PCS reps Joel, Gordon and Rachel, dismissed by HMRC for trade union activity. Acting branch secretary Angie Foggett thanked members for their selfless support for the 3 reps. Joel and Gordon gave emotional accounts of the impact of the dismissals on their lives and those of their families… PCS HMRC Group will now meet to discuss the next steps in the campaign read more. Take action, show your support and send solidarity messages to the reps and branch, email HMRC group secretary Steve Swainston: [email protected] read more. Members can also support the campaign by donating to the fighting fund. Donations can be made to the PCS account with the reference ‘BPV Strikes’ –    

  • Account name: PCS Fighting Fund  
  • Levy account number: 20331490  
  • Sort code: 60-83-01  

Get the PCS Samba Band to your protests and demonstrations – go to their Facebook page and on X/Twitter @PCS_Samba_Band

   

Prospect

Prospect welcomes new defence procurement rules that will prioritise British ships and British steel (29 Sept) – The Chancellor’s announcement of new defence procurement rules that will prioritise British ships and British steel has been welcomed by Prospect read more

Prospect responds to new guidance on government exits and redundancies (25 Sept) – Prospect has welcomed new Cabinet Office guidance on civil service exits and redundancies, while urging departments to fully consider the impact on services and remaining staff. The report’s section on “Challenges for Government” highlights the need for careful planning and strong union consultation, with a recommended framework read more

Prospect condemns Arron Banks for violent civil service comments (25 Sept) – Prospect has condemned senior Reform figure Arron Banks after he used extremely violent language to describe the approach Reform should take to the civil service if it wins power read more    

GMB  

  • Justice for the Cammell Laird 37 Campaign – Public Meeting: ‘Jobs not Jail – More than 40 years since the Cammell Laird dispute’. 6pm Tuesday 30th September at The Casa Bar in Liverpool read more about the campaign

UK ceramics firms fork out £875 million a year (29 Sept) – UK ceramics firms fork out an estimated £875,000,000 a year in energy costs, Labour conference will hear today. The figure has shot up by more than £330,000,000 since 2020. Analysis by Nottingham Trent University suggests UK ceramics firms spend 70 per cent of turnover on energy costs, and 14 per cent on Government and regulatory levies. Turnover of UK ceramics firms is around £1.25 billion, suggesting energy costs could be an enormous £875,000,000, with levies up to £150,000,000. Analysis of historic energy prices suggest in 2020 energy costs made up just 55 per cent of turnover for UK ceramics firms – giving the figure of 544,509,381. Meanwhile the equivalent Chinese or US ceramics manufacturer, using the same amount of electricity, would be paying approximately the same as what UK businesses were paying five years ago, and around 50 per cent less than they do at the moment. GMB will today demand greater support for manufacturers and measures to lower energy prices at the Labour Party conference in Liverpool read more

Chancellor’s ‘buy British’ plan ‘incredible’ for UK shipyards (29 Sept) – Rachel Reeves will today announce plans to change the law so sectors such as steel and shipbuilding will be classed as critical national infrastructure and can favour British companies read more

UK shipbuilders ‘ready’ if Dutch betrayal can be undone (26 Sept) – UK shipbuilders have declared they are ready to step in and fulfil a £200 million deal to build 24 vessels that was shamefully handed to the Dutch firm Damen instead of UK yards read more

Health Secretary limits after NHS outsourcing (26 Sept) – The Health Secretary has limited health service outsourcing following a meeting with GMB members. The Government has today written to NHS bosses telling them he will ‘change the national guidance to confirm that new subsidiaries involving the transfer of NHS staff will now only be approved in a limited number of circumstances and only where there is clear union support and protection of NHS terms and conditions, including pension access.’ Subsidiaries are created by NHS Trusts who transfer existing staff under worse terms and conditions. More than 180 staff at Airedale Hospital, in Yorkshire, who have suffered under this arrangement have been on strike. Some of them met the Health Secretary, who promised to act on their behalf read more

Windsor and Maidenhead bin strike averted after GMB members accept 9 percent pay deal (25 Sept) – SERCO in Windsor and Maidenhead proposed a deal which was accepted by our members to avoid a strike, which would have left bins uncollected across Windsor and Maidenhead, says GMB Union 

A bin strike has been averted after SERCO the refuse provider in Windsor and Maidenhead upped their pay offer. GMB members who work as refuse and recycling operatives for SERCO had voted for industrial action and were ready to walk out. But the company made an improved offer that delivers 9 percent over two years (5 percent in year one and 4 percent in year two) significantly better than the previous offer of just 3.5% for one year. GMB members were balloted in their workplace over the last two days and accepted the improved offer read more

Airedale strike escalates with three new walkouts (18 Sept) – The Airedale Hospital strike is set to escalate as workers announce the dates of three new walkouts. More than 150 staff on site, including porters, domestics, catering and security staff will down tools on 1,2 and 3 October. The affected workers are employed by AGH Solutions (AGHS), a wholly owned subsidiary of Airedale NHS Foundation Trust. Unlike their NHS colleagues, AGHS staff are denied access to standard NHS terms and conditions, including the pension scheme, sick pay, annual leave entitlements and enhanced rates for Sunday working. GMB members at the site also walked from 12 – 16 September read more

North Tyneside council workers to pay for parking (17 Sept) – Thousands of North Tyneside Council workers could be forced to pay to park at work. GMB Union is urging the local authority to scrap the plans – which could see staff stumping up to park at council offices and leisure centres across the borough. Meanwhile councillors are set to trouser a £6,000 pay rise if the increase is nodded through at a vote of the full council meeting tomorrow [Thursday] read more

Newcastle wire rope workers stage further strike (17 Sept) – Almost 100 Newcastle rope workers are set to stage further strikes in a dispute over pay. Staff at Bridon International, in Wallsend, will stage three 24-hour strikes on 18 and 30 of September and 1 October. The dispute centres around a 2.5 per cent pay offer, a figure that represents a real-terms pay cut amid rising living costs and overwhelmingly rejected by staff. Workers are increasingly frustrated over the company’s refusal to return to the negotiating table read more

Europe’s largest quarry braced for strike action (9 Sept) – ‘Huge disruption’ as workers at Tarmac’s Mountsorrel Quarry down tools later this month. GMB Union has today announced that members at Mountsorrel Quarry in Leicestershire have voted to support strike action. The news comes after workers at the Tarmac operated site rejected a pay offer from company management. 90 per cent of votes supported industrial action, with one hundred workers at the quarry expected to join strike action later this month. Mountsorrel is Europe’s largest quarry, producing aggregate materials for construction, road and rail projects across the UK read more

Bacton Gas Terminal workers begin vote on strike action (4 Sept) – Altrad workers at the Shell Bacton Gas Terminal in Norfolk will today begin voting in an industrial action ballot. At the centre of the dispute is Altrad’s offer of a one-time 4 per cent pay uplift, which falls far short of the two-year deal of 11.3 per cent and 5.5 per cent proposed under the National Agreement for the Engineering Construction Industry. A recent indicative ballot saw members vote 100 per cent in favour of strike action and if a strike were to go ahead, it would bring work at the site to a halt. Altrad staff at an adjacent site saw their pay increase following another recent GMB dispute. Workers at the Bacton site – who do identical work, including scaffolding, painting, and thermal insulation – are now seeking the same resolution. The ballot closes on Thursday 18th September read more

Derbyshire manufacturer braced for strike action (28 Aug) – Workers refuse to accept a pay packet of pennies, says GMB. GMB Union has today announced that workers at Altrad Belle will begin a week of strike action from Monday 1 September 2025. The news comes after workers rejected a pay offer from company management and voted overwhelmingly to support industrial action. The company, one of the UK’s biggest manufacturers of light equipment for the construction sector, has been slammed for paying skilled workers little more than £12 an hour read more

Bromley parking wardens begin talks in fight against poverty pay (15 Aug) – On Tuesday [19 August] GMB Union will sit down with Apcoa Parking, the private contractor running parking services for Bromley Council. Workers there are currently paid the legal minimum wage of £12.21 per hour – well below the London Living Wage of £13.85 an hour. The talks come while Apcoa is embroiled in ongoing disputes with GMB members in neighbouring Richmond, Wandsworth, and Kingston. In Lambeth, Apcoa workers recently settled their dispute after securing a new rate of £15 per hour read more

Striking Sellafield workers left to urinate in public (14 Aug) – Striking Sellafield workers are being left to urinate in public after the company refused to provide facilities for them. Almost 200 workers have walked out of the Cumbria nuclear facility after overwhelmingly rejecting the 3.5 per cent deal offered by the company. GMB members working for Mitie, have begun their ninth day of strike action today [Thursday]. Not only has Sellafield refused to provide access toilet access to those on the picket line, as yet they haven’t provided GMB with a location to install a Portaloo. The nearest public toilet is several miles away. Mitie’s pay offer would leave these frontline workers, responsible for cleaning, security, landscaping, waste management, postal services, and laundry support the safety and functionality of one of Europe’s most hazardous nuclear facilities, earning little more than £13 per hour read more

Waltham Forest bin workers reject pay deal as strike threat looms (31 July) – Outsourced refuse workers in Waltham Forest have rejected a 2.8% pay offer, sparking the possibility of industrial action. The offer did not apply to those workers recently placed on the London Living Wage, despite them being among the council’s lowest paid employees. Over half the workforce employed by FCC Environment and working on behalf of Waltham Forest Council voted in a ballot, which saw 100% of GMB members reject the pay deal on 100% turnout. A 3.2% pay offer is now on the table – although it still excludes London Living Wage employees and sits below the rate of inflation. GMB will ballot members on the offer. Refuse workers’ frustration with FCC Environment and the council extends beyond pay. Concerns have also been raised over inadequate staff facilities at the waste depot and insufficient supplies of water for workers, particularly in hot weather read more

Hula-Hoops, Pom-Bears and Disco workers begin strike vote (22 July) – Hula-hoops, Pom-Bears and Disco crisps could be in short supply as workers begin voting on strike action, GMB Union has warned. KP Crisps workers at the company’s site in Billingham, County Durham, rejected a pay rise of just 77 pence per hour. The ballot closes on 12 August, with any industrial action likely to take place in September read more

   

Unison     

Donate to support striking workersAs UNISON members continue to take strike action, the union is asking for donations to its strike fund     

Stop the Council Cuts – Sign the petition: Save our Services – Nottingham City Unison    

Government shift on outsourcing is a positive step for NHS, says UNISON (26 Sept) – New guidance says ministers have listened to UNISON concerns about impact of outsourcing on staff. Government shift on outsourcing is a positive step for NHS, says UNISON. Government plans to halt the outsourcing of NHS workers to subsidiary companies are a positive step that will prevent staff pay and conditions being slashed and help ease the NHS recruitment crisis, says UNISON today (Friday). Proposals to move NHS staff into separate companies, known as SubCos, will be paused. And any future transfer of NHS workers will be approved only where there is clear union support, as well as protection of NHS terms and conditions. Guidance issued today by NHS England specifically highlights UNISON’s role in raising concerns about moving staff into separate companies*. The union says the practice undermines the principle of a single NHS workforce and creates unnecessary anxiety for staff. The union has long campaigned against hospital trusts farming out its support services. Efforts have redoubled as plans for a new wave of SubCos began to be drawn up. Outsourced staff often have lower pay and worse conditions than workers employed directly by the NHS, and are less likely to have the same access to career opportunities and pensions, says UNISON. Ahead of the election, Labour promised to “bring about the biggest wave of insourcing of public services in a generation.” Today’s announcement comes after health workers in Dorset voted to take strike action in a bid to halt plans that would have seen thousands of them transferred to a SubCo. The union warned of walkouts by NHS staff up and down the country if ministers didn’t act on outsourcing read more

NHS staff vote to strike in outsourcing row, says UNISON (25 Sept) – Government warned of widespread walkouts if ministers don’t clamp down on hospital trusts farming out support services. NHS staff vote to strike in outsourcing row, says UNISON. Health workers in Dorset have voted for strike action over plans that could see thousands of employees transferred out of the NHS, says UNISON today (Thursday). Just days ahead of the Labour Party Conference, the union warns there could be further walkouts by NHS staff up and down the country if the government doesn’t clamp down on hospital trusts farming out support services to subsidiary companies, known as SubCos. Low paid staff at three NHS trusts in Dorset have overwhelmingly backed industrial action. In the ballot that closed yesterday, 94% of workers, including porters, caterers and cleaners, backed strike action over their employers’ plans to move them from the NHS to a new company. The trusts – Dorset HealthCare University, Dorset County Hospital, and University Hospitals Dorset – want to move over 1,700 mainly low-paid support workers to a SubCoread more

Statement on recent rallies and demonstrations (18 Sept) – UNISON’s objectives include fighting for fairness and equality and challenging all forms of discrimination including any form of racism. We have always stood for the rights and equality of all people, regardless of ethnicity, religion, or background read more

County Durham and Darlington healthcare staff set to walk out in pay row, says UNISON (28 Aug) – Hundreds of healthcare assistants employed by County Durham and Darlington NHS Foundation Trust have voted to strike in a fair pay dispute, says UNISON today (Thursday). Staff will walk out in the coming weeks unless there’s an improvement in the amount of back pay the trust is prepared to give them, says the union. The NHS workers have been regraded to a higher band of the NHS Agenda for Change salary scale to reflect increasingly complex tasks. But UNISON says they deserve adequate back pay to reflect the extra work they’ve been doing above their pay rate for many years. The trust awarded just seven months’ money but the union says this should be far higher. Despite months of negotiations with the employer to settle the dispute, a fair offer the health workers find acceptable has still not been put forward. In a ballot that closed yesterday, 99.4% of staff said they will walk out unless the employer comes back with a better deal to compensate them for the extra work they’ve done. This is the fifth trust in the north east to be in dispute with staff over wage banding. The other successful campaigns have been at Teesside, South Tyneside and Sunderland, while a dispute in Northumberland is still ongoing read more

Barnsley hospital workers step up campaign for fair pay (28 Aug) – A group of rehabilitation support workers based at Kendray Hospital in Barnsley are demanding to be paid properly for the increasingly complex work they do. The staff, who provide care to patients in the community and are employed by South West Yorkshire Partnership NHS Trust, have held a series of protests outside Kendray Hospital, and launched a petition to gain support for their campaign. The union says the workers are carrying out duties – such as performing observations and clinical care tasks – that should be paid at a higher rate read more

Mining museum to spend almost £50k to prolong dispute over 20p pay rise (26 Aug) – An ongoing strike at the National Coal Mining Museum in Wakefield could be settled for a fraction of the cost managers are spending to block a fair pay rise, says UNISON today (Tuesday). The union estimates that by the end of a four-week walkout, bosses will have paid up to five times more than the modest increase low-paid workers want. More than 40 members of staff began their industrial action last week in a dispute over pay, with the strike scheduled to run until at least Sunday 14 September. They include guides who are veterans of the year-long miners’ strike four decades ago. But the museum is choosing to rack up tens of thousands of pounds to bring in private security and make alternative visitor arrangements, when it could resolve the dispute for far less, UNISON says read more

Pay up Mitie: Striking cleaners demand the pay that they are owed (16 July) – The striking workers, most of whom are women, are experiencing extreme distress as a result of Mitie’s failure to pay them what they’re owed. NHS cleaners employed by private contractor Mitie in East Lancashire are striking to demand the pay that they deserve. So far, the cleaners have taken six days of strike action. They are striking for the whole of this week. Today, the group met with UNISON general secretary Christina McAnea at UNISON Centre in London. The 40 cleaners, contracted by Mitie, are among the lowest-paid staff in the NHS. They have been routinely underpaid for months, due to payroll problems, on top of which they have yet to receive their COVID-19 recovery payments, which were agreed in 2023. The £1,655 COVID-19 recovery lump sum payment was part of the deal agreed by the government and health unions following strikes in the NHS. It was made in an effort to recognise the sustained pressure facing the health service. Tens of thousands of NHS staff have received the payment. However, the hard-working cleaners employed by Mitie, who are essential to maintaining hygiene standards in hospitals, have received nothing read more

Strike fund appeal for Nottingham healthcare workers (7 July) – Donations are being sought for healthcare support workers as their dispute at Nottingham University Hospitals Trust continues read more

NIPSA

Branch Consultation on 2026/29 Pay Claim (29 Sept) – The branch consultation on the pay claim for 2026/29 has now concluded and members have overwhelmingly endorsed the claim. The Central Trade Union Side claim will now be submitted to the NICS management on behalf of members in the NICS and those ALBs that mirror NICS pay read more

Northern Ireland Health Service: Strike Action Planned (24 Sept) – NIPSA has condemned the latest decision on health service pay, warning that health workers in Northern Ireland are once again being left behind their colleagues across the UK. From 1 August 2025, health service staff in England and Wales received a 3.6% pay increase, backdated to April. In Scotland, health workers are even further ahead. Yet in Northern Ireland, Health Minister Mike Nesbitt and Permanent Secretary Mike Farrar have stated that there is no money in this year’s budget for a pay rise… Next Steps:-

  • NIPSA met last week and unanimously agreed that urgent action is needed.
  • NIPSA will join sister unions in seeking a mandate for industrial action

through a ballot of members.

  • The form of action, up to and including strike action, will be determined by NIPSA’s members read more

NHS Pay in Northern Ireland: Parity Broken Again (22 Sept) – Once again, parity has been broken in relation to Agenda for Change (AfC) pay in Northern Ireland. Despite repeated assurances last year from both the Minister of Health and the Stormont Executive, we now find ourselves falling further behind. From 1 August 2025, pay in England and Wales increased by 3.6% (backdated to 1 April). In Scotland, staff are even further ahead. Here in Northern Ireland, we have been told directly by Minister Mike Nesbitt and the Department’s Permanent Secretary, Mike Farrar, that there is no money in this year’s budget for a pay rise. This is totally unacceptable – and NIPSA has made that abundantly clear. Health workers in Northern Ireland are now among the worst paid across the entire public and private sector. Shockingly, the NHS here is the only public sector employer paying below the Real Living Wage for its lowest-paid staff. Major retailers across Ireland pay more than our health service. For NHS staff to be lagging behind supermarkets is nothing short of a national disgrace. NIPSA’s Health Executive Panel met last week. The view was unanimous – pressure must be put on Government. If there is no progress or response by the end of September, NIPSA will move in line with our sister unions and seek a mandate for action through a ballot of our members. The form of this action will be determined by the Executive Committee. Industrial action is not a decision we ever take lightly – but when Government refuses to value NHS staff, it becomes necessary read more

Unions lodge notice of first 24-hour strike by workers at Belfast council leisure services (7 Aug) – Joint UNITE-NIPSA press release: Belfast leisure workers are lowest paid in Northern Ireland and are seeking a one pound an hour increase to the current pay offer. Talks ended without management company Greenwich Leisure Limited making any improved pay offer. Unite and NIPSA trade unions have announced a 24-hour strike by leisure staff at facilities operated by Green Leisure Limited in Belfast. 14 leisure centres and two gyms owned by Belfast City Council are operated by the arms-length management company. The strike will commence at 00.01 on Tuesday August 12 and continue until midnight. The industrial action is likely to shut down entirely the operation of several leisure centres, given that more than 200 leisure workers are members of two trade unions. Pay at Belfast leisure centres has fallen behind that of other council leisure facilities in Northern Ireland following the decision to outsource them to Greenwich Leisure Limited. Belfast leisure worker pay is now the lowest in Northern Ireland…The strike follows an overwhelming ballot for industrial action by workers in both unions and represents an escalation from a work-to-rule which came into force on Tuesday 15 July. Labour Relations Agency-mediated negotiations between the trade unions and the employer ended on Wednesday 30 July, after management failed to provide any improved offer read more

   

Royal College of Nursing     

NHS pay in England: ‘We need formal negotiations now’ (19 Sept) – Pay reform talks were promised, now they need to happen, health unions say in a joint letter to the Westminster government. The RCN has joined 13 other health unions in calling on the Westminster government to urgently begin promised direct talks on NHS pay reform and future pay awards. In a joint letter to health secretary Wes Streeting MP, unions representing staff on Agenda for Change (AfC) contracts in the NHS in England urge the government to honour the commitment made last year to tackle the problems in the pay system that are harming staffing and morale. For the first time, the majority of unions have also confirmed they will not take part in the NHS Pay Review Body (PRB) process. We will again refuse to submit evidence and have been severely critical of the PRB over recent years read more

RCN Northern Ireland lodges formal dispute over failure to implement pay award (1 Aug) – Absence of a pay award in Northern Ireland will once again push nursing staff out of pay parity with colleagues across the UK read more

RCN opens donations to strike fund in response to public desire to support striking staff – We’ve launched a donation page for people to financially help nursing staff on strike read more

RCM

Historic move sees RCM pull out of NHS Pay Review Body process (19 Sept) – In a historic move after two decades the Royal College of Midwives (RCM) has announced that it is withdrawing from the NHS Pay Review Body (PRB) process for 2026/27. The decision the trade union says ‘it hasn’t taken lightly’ but one they feel is ‘absolutely necessary’ given lack of progress on NHS pay reform for over a decade which has impacted its hardworking members significantly. The RCM says it believes that direct meaningful negotiations are now the only way forward to truly tackle NHS pay structure reform and headline pay for its members read more

Urgent action needed to address inequalities in maternity outcomes for Black women says RCM (18 Sept) – “Shocking inequalities in outcomes for Black women in maternity care must be addressed urgently”, says the Royal College of Midwives (RCM) following an inquiry and publication of a report by The House of Commons Health and Social Care Committee on Black Maternal Health. The report found systemic failings in leadership, training and ethnicity data collection among some of the issues that are preventing real progress in tackling inequalities in England. Giving evidence to the inquiry in June the RCM also identified that commissioners and providers are not being made accountable for the failure to address deep-rooted racism and bias. These failures must be addressed if outcomes are to improve read more

‘Utterly unfair’ that RCM members in Northern Ireland are still without pay uplift (5 Sept) – The Royal College of Midwives (RCM) in Northern Ireland says it’s pressing the Northern Ireland Executive for progress on an overdue pay award for its members. The RCM has described the delay as ‘utterly unfair’ and ‘completely demoralising’ for hard working midwives and maternity support workers (MSWs). The Health and Social Care (HSC) Trade Unions in Northern Ireland of which the RCM is part of have issued a statement today also calling out the lack of progress and ‘broken commitments’ from the Northern Ireland Executive  read more    

CSP

CSP withdraws from 2026/27 NHS pay review process (19 Sept) – The CSP has joined other unions in withdrawing from this year’s NHS pay review body (PRB) process for England, Wales and Northern Ireland read more

BMA

GPs in England vote to re-enter dispute with Government (18 Sept) – Patient safety concerns over ‘unlimited’ online consultation requests. GPs in England have voted to re-enter dispute with Government over concerns that unlimited online consultation requests could become a ‘critical patient safety issue’. Members of the BMA GPs committee for England voted in favour of re-entering the dispute owing to ‘a lot of confusion and anger’ about the regulatory changes, which are due to come into effect from 1 October read more

Senior doctors prepared to strike (4 Sept) – Indicative ballot reveals consultants and SAS doctors are willing to take industrial action in struggle to achieve pay restoration read more

GPs discuss next steps in funding dispute (3 Sept) – Roadshow in Scotland sees doctors gather to tackle issues facing the profession read more

‘Greater mutual understanding’ achieved between government and resident doctor leaders (6 Aug) – Meeting between health secretary and RDC leads to further cooperation on bringing strike action to an end and addressing pay claim. Agreement on further negotiations on pay, jobs and working conditions for resident doctors in England has been reached following ‘constructive’ talks between the BMA resident doctors committee and Wes Streeting. A meeting held yesterday between the health secretary and RDC co-chairs Ross Nieuwoudt and Melissa Ryan has seen each side commit to further discussions aimed at meeting doctors’ demands and bringing strike action to an end. The meeting, which has been described by Dr Nieuwoudt and Dr Ryan as ‘constructive’ and ‘informative’, comes following a five-day full walkout by resident doctors in England last month. Following the walkout, the BMA had urged Mr Streeting to ‘reconsider his strategy’ on reaching a solution to the impasse on doctors’ pay and resume talks. Striking a cautious yet optimistic tone on their meeting with the health secretary, Dr Nieuwoudt and Dr Ryan said they felt they had ‘achieved a greater mutual understanding’, and that they were eager to work with the Department of Health in finding a way forward read more

NEU   

NEU responds to the government’s proposed Year 8 reading tests (26 Sept) – Commenting on a report in the Times today that the government plans to introduce a mandatory reading test for year 8 pupils in its upcoming schools white paper, Daniel Kebede, General Secretary of the National Education Union, said; “It is beyond belief that this government’s response to students disengaging in secondary isn’t to consider the impacts on curriculum caused by the tests that already exist in primary, but rather is to suggest an additional test in year 8…” read more

NEU Cymru members at Flint High School continue strike action over workplace bullying and failures to tackle pupil behaviour (24 Sept) – NEU members at Flint High School have today taken their second of three days of strike action this week. Members were on strike Tuesday 23 Wednesday 24 and will be on Thursday 25 September due to the employer’s continuing failure to deal with bullying behaviour from the Headteacher and the inability of the school’s leadership to tackle high levels of behavioural issues. NEU members offered to postpone the first day of action for this week, if the local authority agreed to a meeting with all members, so that they could hear directly the issues they are facing. The offer was rejected, with a counteroffer that they would meet with NEU officials and the workplace representative only. Members did not feel that this was a significant enough gesture to postpone action read more

Teacher and school leader pay (9 July) – Joint education union response to Secretary of State: “Responding to the Secretary of State’s consultation on the STRB report, ASCL, NAHT, NEU and Community have set out their united view on the need for the Government to provide the additional investment needed to fully fund September’s 4% teacher and school leader pay increase. Teachers and school leaders have seen huge real terms cuts to their pay since 2010.  Their pay cuts have been much greater than those of other professions and as confirmed by the STRB this has hit the competitiveness of teacher and school leader pay hard.  Excessive workload and poor wellbeing are driving teachers and leaders out of the profession, worsening the recruitment and retention crisis in education.  The unions are also calling for a fair national pay structure and the removal of performance-related pay read more

Sixth Form College indicative pay ballot results (4 July) – National Education Union members who teach in sixth form colleges have returned a strong result in their indicative ballot over their readiness to undertake a formal strike ballot in support of their 2025/26 pay claim. Over 4,500 members across 75 colleges were balloted, achieving a 68.2 per cent turnout overall and an 88.7 per cent vote in favour of action. Should the pay claim not be met satisfactorily by the Sixth Form College Association (SFCA), then a formal strike ballot will follow in the autumn term read more

OGAT strike action over increased working hours continues into July (30 June) – National Education Union members in fourteen Outwood Grange Academy (OGAT) secondary schools across the country will continue to take strike action throughout July read more

Support the strikes:-

Action Date Contact
Harefield Infant & Junior Schools / Hillingdon  (amalgamation/redundancies)  1 Oct  Carol Jumpp-Graham  [email protected] 
Haberdashers Hatcham College / Lewisham  (redundancies)  1-2 Oct   Eleanor Davies  [email protected] 
King’s Academy Ringmer / East Sussex  (Conditions of Service)   1 Oct  Jennifer Drapans  [email protected] 
St Joseph’s School / Nottingham  (TPS)   1-2 Oct   Caitlin Bradbury  [email protected]  

   

NASUWT   

More Dorset teachers strike as dispute widens over restructuring plans (15 July) – Members of NASUWT-The Teachers’ Union at Sturminster Newton High School in Dorset are taking strike action today (Tuesday) in protest at restructuring plans. The Sherborne Area Schools Trust (SAST), which runs Sturminster Newton and Shaftesbury schools, is pushing ahead with plans to cut teachers’ jobs and cut the pay of subject leads and head of year posts. The NASUWT believes this is unacceptable and will significantly impact the remaining teachers’ workloads, their pay and status and will be detrimental to pupils’ education. NASUWT members at Shaftsbury School have already taken strike action over the plans and now teachers at Sturminster Newton are striking, with further days of action planned in September read more

Shaftesbury teachers draw public support as dispute deepens over restructure (7 July) – Members of NASUWT – The Teachers’ Union will continue strike action at Shaftesbury School this week as Sherborne Area Schools Trust (SAST) refuses to come back to the negotiating table. SAST has made a number of teachers redundant in a cost-cutting exercise and now expects Heads of Department to be shared between Shaftesbury School and Sturminster Newton High School. Teachers at Shaftesbury School will hit the picket lines on Tuesday 8th and Thursday 10th July, and will enjoy renewed public support after a video from last week’s picket line went viral on TikTok over the weekend. In the video, Shaftesbury teacher Rachel Sammons explains the “traumatic” impact of losing her job as Head of English after working at the school for twenty five years. Thousands of people, including her ex-pupils, have commented to share their shock and dismay at the cuts read more

Teachers strike at £24k-a-year private school over ‘second class’ pay offer (26 June) – Members of NASUWT-The Teachers’ Union at Surbiton High School are taking the first of three days of strike action today (Thursday) over a pay award that is 45% lower than that given to state school teachers. The fee-paying school in the London borough of Kingston, Surrey, which charges as much as £24k a year per pupil, has only offered 3% to teachers for the 2024/25 academic year. In contrast teachers in the state-funded sector were awarded 5.5% for the 2024/25 academic year read more

Teachers strike at OGAT schools over planned increase to school day (2 June) – Members of NASUWT – The Teachers’ Union at five secondary schools run by the Outwood Grange Academies Trust (OGAT) are to take strike action over plans to increase the length of the school day and the resultant impact on teachers’ working hours, workload and the welfare of staff and pupils. Members at OGAT Hindley in Wigan, OGAT Foxhills in Scunthorpe and OGAT Easingwold in York will begin six days of strike action tomorrow (Tuesday). Members at OGAT Portland and OGAT Valley, both in Worksop, will begin five days of strike action on Tuesday 10th June. OGAT is planning to increase the length of the school day and teaching contact by 30 minutes per day from September 2025 onwards read more

   

EIS   

The SFC Report highlights the significant financial challenges facing HEI’s in Scotland (26 Sept) – The SFC report on the financial sustainability of the university sector serves as a warning, highlighting that there are significant financial challenges facing HEI’s over the coming years and which requires the Scottish Government to take action to address read more

Funding council’s judgement that the college sector is currently not sustainable is a bleak development that needs government action (26 Sept) – The report from the SFC on the sustainability of Scotland’s colleges is bleak. In fact, it states that most of Scotland’s colleges are unsustainable read more

UWS Lecturers continue third and fourth day of strike action, with no further movement on job security (22 Sept) – Lecturing staff at the University of the West of Scotland (UWS) are on strike today in their third day of strike action with a fourth day planned for tomorrow, demonstrating their determination to protect jobs and oppose any move by the university to seek compulsory redundancies. Members of the Educational Institute of Scotland University Lecturers Association (EIS ULA) are picketing again today and tomorrow, maintaining their presence at the university’s four campuses. The continuing strike action highlights the concerns among staff regarding the potential impact of the planned cuts on theirs and their colleagues’ jobs as well as the academic provision for students read more

EIS ULA Members at RGU and UWS set to strike tomorrow against job cuts (9 Sept) – Members of the EIS ULA at Robert Gordon University (RGU) and the University of the West of Scotland (UWS) will take co-ordinated strike action tomorrow, Thursday 11th September read more

Teachers Send Strong Message to Scottish Government and COSLA on Workload (29 Aug) – Scotland’s teachers have today sent a very strong and very clear message to the Scottish Government and local authority employers: deliver on your commitments to tackle teacher workload, or we will move to industrial action. A ballot organised by the EIS has today displayed strong support for both Action Short of Strike (92% in favour) and strike action (83% in favour), if a long-awaited promise to cut teachers’ class contact time is not delivered in the near future. The online consultative ballot opened at the EIS AGM in June, and ran throughout the summer holiday period before closing this week. The result makes clear that the patience of teachers is at an end, and they expect the promise made, prior to the 2021 Scottish Parliament election, to be delivered as a matter of urgency read more

UCU     

UCU Stop the Cuts campaign  

Sign petition against the education cuts  

Maintenance grants ‘robbing Peter to pay Paul’ (29 Sept) – UCU has today slammed the Labour Party for confirming it will impose a levy on international students to pay for maintenance grants read more

UCU general secretary Jo Grady to visit INTO Manchester picket on Tuesday as part of low pay dispute (29 Sept) – The University and College Union (UCU) today announced that Jo Grady will visit the INTO Manchester College picket line tomorrow as part of the dispute over low pay. UCU members at the private college for international students downed tools on Thursday 25 September and will do so again on Tuesday 30 September. Jo Grady will visit the picket line at the entrance to the college’s main building on Whitworth Street from 8.30am to 9.15am tomorrow and discuss the campaign with members. Despite the disruption and calls from the union to talk, the college has refused to budge from its pay offer of just a 2% rise, a significant real term cut against inflation. The strike comes after an overwhelming 97% of UCU members voted to take strike action in a ballot that saw a turnout of 83% read more

UCU comment on financial sustainability of universities and over half of Scotland’s universities in deficit (26 Sept) – Commenting on the publication of the Scottish Funding Council’s report on the financial sustainability of universities, UCU Scotland official Mary Senior said: “It comes as no surprise to workers in Scotland’s universities that the sector is in financial crisis, given the number of jobs under threat or already disappearing, and the derisory pay offers being imposed.    To see over half  of Scotland’s universities in a deficit position for this academic year 2025/26, and the operating surpluses of the sector decline by over 90% between 2022/3 and 2023/4, simply confirms the enormous challenges universities are facing. UCU has been saying for years that Scotland’s universities must be properly funded, and that the year on year funding cuts are jeopardising jobs, courses and students’ education…” read more

Union warns Starmer of nationwide strike ballots if education crisis ignored (26 Sept) – Ahead of Labour Party Conference, UCU issued a stark warning to Keir Starmer: fix the crisis in education or face mass strike ballots across the country. With ballots set to open next month involving tens of thousands of university and college staff, the union said it is prepared to escalate unless urgent action is taken read more

UCU response to the Office for Students (OfS) sexual misconduct survey 2025 (25 Sept) – UCU has responded to the OfS sexual misconduct survey 2025 which reveals 24.5 per cent of students experienced sexual harassment and 14.1 per cent experienced sexual assault or violence read more

Edinburgh University facing more industrial action as union opens new strike ballot (24 Sept) – Members of the University and College Union (UCU) at Edinburgh university are being re-balloted from today (24 September) to take industrial action as a dispute over £140 million cuts and up to 1,800 job losses approaches its eighth month. The dispute follows the announcement of cuts by the university principal, Professor Sir Peter Mathieson, in February 2025 in an email to all staff.  He announced that the university was looking to make £140 million cuts, and that cuts of that magnitude meant that “nothing is off the table” leaving open the possibility of compulsory redundancies.  The ballot will run from today until Tuesday 28 October. UCU members at the university overwhelmingly backed industrial action in May this year with 84% of those voting backing strike action on a turnout of 60% and 93% backing action short of strike such as such as working to contract and refusing to cover for absent colleagues or undertaking voluntary duties.  Staff took a day’s strike action in June this year, and the start of term two weeks ago was disrupted by five days of strikes as students returned to university.  Trade union legislation, currently being reviewed by the UK government, requires trade unions to renew mandates for industrial action every six months read more

University of Bradford staff announce further strike dates job cuts row (18 Sept) – University of Bradford staff will down tools for 10 days in a fight to save jobs, UCU announced today. Staff will strike every weekday from Monday 22 September until Friday 3 October in their dispute over redundancies, disrupting the first two weeks of the new academic year read more

Imperial staff vote for strike action in pay and conditions row (16 Sept) – Staff at Imperial College London have voted to take industrial action in a dispute over pay and conditions, UCU announced today. The decision follows a ballot in which 77% of participating staff backed strike action, on a turnout of 59%. The dispute centres on management’s refusal to increase its below inflation 2% pay award. When consulted, members of all three recognised unions (UCU, Unison and Unite) voted to reject it. The latest Bank of England estimates are that CPI inflation will be approximately 4% by the end of 2025. Taken cumulatively with recent sub-inflation pay awards, management is imposing a real terms pay cut of nearly 9% compared to 2018. Imperial has argued that a higher pay offer is unaffordable. But UCU disputes this, pointing to the university’s healthy financial position, including unusually large reserves and a £81 million operating surplus. Unlike many other institutions facing financial pressures and job losses, Imperial is in a strong position and is even planning further expansion read more

2 days of strikes called at Manchester international student college over low pay (15 Sept) – Staff at INTO Manchester, a private college for international students will take two days of strike action in a fight for fair pay unless management makes an improved offer, announced the University and College Union (UCU) today. Workers will down tools on Thursday 25 September and Tuesday 30 September, and will be on picket lines outside the college on both strike days. UCU called on the college to immediately confirm dates to meet at ACAS and come back to the table with a fair pay offer so strike action can be avoided even at this late stage. The strike comes after an incredible 97% of UCU members voted to take strike action in a ballot that saw a turnout of 83%. So far, the college has refused to budge from its offer of just 2%, a significant real term cut against inflation. The college charges international students up to £38k per year, and last year made over £20m, paying out £15m in dividends read more

Strike ballot at the University of the Highlands and Islands in dispute over job cuts (10 Sept) – A ballot for industrial action opens today at the University of the University of the Highlands and Islands (UHI) in a dispute over job cuts and the use of compulsory redundancies. Members of UCU employed at UHI’s Executive Office are being asked if they are prepared to take part both in strike action and action short of strike. Action short of strike means that members would work strictly to contract and not cover for absent colleagues. The ballot will close on Tuesday 7 October. The ballot follows the announcement last month by university’s senior management that they plan to make 16 people redundant as part of an effort to save £2million read more

More strikes possible at Dundee University as union opens new strike ballot (5 Sept) – Members of the University and College Union (UCU) at Dundee university are being re-balloted from today (5 September) to take industrial action as the financial and management crisis at the university enters its eleventh month. The ballot will run from today until Monday 6 October read more

Strike ballot opens at University of Sheffield staff over job cuts (27 Aug) – Staff at the University of Sheffield are being asked to vote for strike action, announced the University and College Union (UCU) today. The ballot opened yesterday and will close on Tuesday 30 September. The dispute is over management’s plans to put staff in five academic areas at risk of redundancy, as well as continued risk of redundancy to professional services staff across the university read more

Staff at Liverpool Hope University announce strike action over job cuts (31 July) – UCU members at Liverpool Hope University have announced they will take 10 days of strike action across the first two weeks of teaching in response to the university’s plans to slash academic jobs. Staff will walk out from Monday 22 September to Friday 26 September, and again from Monday 29 September to Friday 3 October. The action comes after 69% of UCU members voted in the recent ballot, with 85% backing strike action. The dispute centres on proposed cuts to academic posts across multiple departments, including Education and Social Sciences, Creative Arts and Humanities, and Human and Digital Sciences. UCU says these plans pose a serious threat to the university’s academic mission and the quality of provision for students. Despite a partial retreat by university management, after union-negotiated alternative proposals reduced the number of roles at risk, 11 positions and over 30 staff remain under threat. Management has reopened its voluntary redundancy scheme yet refuses to rule out compulsory redundancies. UCU says there is no financial justification for these cuts, pointing to significant cash reserves and highlighting that the university’s recent deficits stem not from staff costs but from rocketing non-staff expenditure, including major capital projects. Meanwhile, senior leaders at the university have continued to enjoy generous pay packages, with the vice-chancellor receiving a total of £313,000 in 2024 read more

Strike ballot opens at University of Leicester over threat of compulsory redundancies (31 July) – UCU has this week opened a ballot for strike action at the University of Leicester. The dispute is over university leadership’s refusal to rule out a programme of compulsory redundancies in the upcoming academic year read more

Huge 94% strike vote at Warrington & Vale Royal College over frozen pay (14 July) – An overwhelming 94% of staff at Warrington and Vale Royal College backed strike action in a ballot with a turnout of 75%, UCU announced today. The huge vote reflects staff anger at having their pay frozen for almost a year (from Thursday 1 August 2024). Warrington is now the only college in the North West that has refused to make a pay offer this academic year read more

University and College Union strike ballot at University of the West of Scotland in dispute over threat of compulsory redundancies (7 July) – A ballot for industrial action opens today at the University of the West of Scotland (UWS) in a dispute over job cuts and university senior management’s refusal to rule out compulsory redundancies. The ballot could pave the way for strikes at the university. Members of the University and College Union (UCU) at UWS are being asked if they are prepared to take part in strike action and action short of strike.  Action short of strike could include working to contract and not covering for any absent colleagues.  The ballot will run until 14 August read more

Staff to lead rally against job cuts at Redbridge Institute of Adult Education (7 July) – The University and College Union today condemned plans by Redbridge Institute of Adult Education (RIAE) to cut at least 12 staff ahead of the new academic year this September, and confirmed staff will be protesting against the cuts later this week. On Friday (11 July) staff and students will demonstrate outside the college at 12.30pm to demand management halts the cuts. RIAE management is trying to slash jobs, cut student service provision and reduce teaching hours. Management claims the cuts are necessary due to funding pressures. However, UCU, supported by fellow unions Unison, GMB and NEU, said the proposals are unjustified, excessive, and deeply damaging to students and staff. The union also warned the loss of experienced teaching and support staff would harm students and place unsustainable pressure on remaining staff read more

UCU fighting fund:the link is here and donations to the fund are spent on supporting members involved in important disputes.     

     

FBU   

Tax the rich to deliver 5,000 more firefighters, says Labour conference (29 Sept) – Delegates at the Labour Party conference have today backed a motion calling for a wealth tax on the richest to raise money for public services. The motion, submitted by the FBU, CWU, TSSA and Unite the Union, calls on the government to reverse austerity, commit to progressive taxation, and increase public investment. This includes a demand to rebuild the fire and rescue service with an immediate increase of 5,000 firefighters, with a review to examine further expansion, and sustained improvements to firefighter pay read more

Hampshire and Isle of Wight fire service announces plans to force through cuts despite agreed delay (5 Sept) – Chief fire officer Neil Odin has today sent a video message to Hampshire and Isle of Wight firefighters announcing that cuts to the service will go ahead, despite the fire authority voting to delay the decision on 29 August. Firefighters, councillors, members of the public and the fire authority have raised serious concerns that £1.6 million cut to the frontline in the region will put public safety at greater risk. Hampshire and Isle of Wight Fire and Rescue Service (HIWFRS) has already lost one in four firefighters since 2010, and recent inspections reveal the service is struggling to meet its own emergency response standards. The latest HMICFRS report rated the service as inadequate in staffing and skills, requiring improvement in emergency response and resource management. In the video emailed to fire service staff, the chief also stated that a letter has been sent to government ministers today, calling for the government to commit to funding the service in the future – but not pushing to prevent this round of cuts. The FBU is urging the service to use the £23.9 million reserves it holds to plug the gap while it campaigns for more funding from central government read more

Sign this petition: To Hampshire and Isle of Wight Fire Authority and Chief Fire Officer – STOP, THINK & REASSESS Dangerous Cuts to Firefighter Numbers

POA     

NEC minutes September 2025 read more

General Secretary update read more

National Chair update August 2025 read here  

Employment rights Bill 2 (25 Sept) – As the Employment Rights Bill completes its parliamentary journey, all eyes are on the Tory and Liberal Democrat amendments made to the Bill in the House of Lords. Although these amendments have caused justifiable outrage amongst trade unionists, it is widely predicted that they will be rejected by the government wielding its majority in the House of Commons, and that the original terms of the Bill will be restored. Whilst we recognise the progress made in improving workers’ rights, the POA believes that a second Employment Bights Bill is needed, one that strengthens the rights of all workers… The Campaign for Trade Union Freedom and Strike Map have arranged a petition, supported by 12 Trade Unions (including the POA) to call for an ‘Employment Rights Bill 2. Please sign the petition by adding your name at https://bit.ly/DemandERB2  read more

Employment rights bill and prison officers right to strike – POA Circular 14/2025 explained to members that John McDonnell MP had submitted amendments to the Bill that would reinstate the basic human right of Prison Officers ability to withdraw their labour. The Executive invited members, their families, friends and others in the Trade Union movement to contact their MPS to support the amendments. As a result of the campaign 1572 people contacted their MP by email, along with many others who contacted their MP by other means. Despite this, MPs were denied a vote on John’s proposal and the Bill has now gone through the Report Stage without John’s amendments included and we will continue to have our basic rights denied. John McDonnell did speak in the House of Commons on his amendments and a link to his speech can be found here. In addition, the following MPs added their name to the amendment: John McDonnell, Mary Kelly Foy, Richard Burgon, Mike Amesbury, Dr Simon Opher, Jon Trickett, Brian Leishman, Neil Duncan-Jordan, Kim Johnson, Nadia Whittome, Steve Witherden, Kate Osborne, Imran Hussain, Jeremy Corbyn, Andy McDonald, Ian Byrne, and Zarah Sultana read more   

BFAWU    

Support the campaign to unionise Samworth Brothers – get organised, sign the petition read more     

Nautilus International

Nautilus secures pay deal at Orkney Ferries (24 Sept) – Nautilus International members working at Orkney Ferries have voted to accept a pay offer from the company after executives agreed an improved offer with the Union’s negotiating team read more

NUJ   

Birmingham & Coventry NUJ branch expresses solidarity with Reach journalists (29 Sept) – The Birmingham & Coventry NUJ Branch has passed a motion expressing support and solidarity with journalists at Reach amid plans by the publisher to make large-scale redundancies. This follows similar statements by the NUJ Financial Times and PA chapels and PR & Communications branch read more

NUJ PR & Communications branch stands in solidarity with Reach journalists (26 Sept) – The branch has condemned cuts and urged full support for the Reach group chapel’s call for full disclosure on the use of artificial intelligence at the company read more

Killers of Martin O’Hagan must be brought to justice (26 Sept) – Ahead of the 24th anniversary of the murder of Martin O’Hagan, the NUJ has repeated its call for an independent investigation to ensure the perpetrators of his killing are brought to justice read more

NUJ condemns large-scale job cuts at STV (25 Sept) – The NUJ has condemned plans announced today by STV to make 60 redundancies and significant changes to coverage following a disappointing financial statement to the City read more

McCullough Review highlights need for government to blow the whistle on illegal surveillance (24 Sept) – The National Union of Journalists has called on Hilary Benn, Secretary of State, to bring forward legislation aimed at ensuring strict compliance with the laws governing surveillance by police forces operating in Northern Ireland read more

PA chapel shows solidarity with Reach journalists (23 Sept) – The PA chapel has passed a motion to show public support for colleagues at Reach plc in light of mass redundancies at the publisher read more

Equity

“Support collective bargaining in the arts” Equity urges government (29 Sept) – Responding to the Secretary of State for Culture, Lisa Nandy MP’s keynote speech to Labour Party conference, Equity has called on the government to “be on the side of organised labour” and to support the workforce by backing collective bargaining in the arts read more

Musicians Union

The MU Welcomes Two New Stewards for BBC Singers and Freelancers (25 Sept) – These new appointments mark a significant step in strengthening support for both BBC Singers and freelance choral musicians, ensuring their voices are heard and their rights protected read more

UVW   

Migrant concierge & cleaners launch 10 day strike at luxury Paddington flats (22 Sept) – Concierge and cleaning staff at WEQ luxury apartments launch strike action today, running until 29th September, after management refused to award any pay rise in 2025 and following a serious breakdown in talks over inflation-proof pay, equal rights, and compassionate leave. The strike comes after eight hours of ACAS-mediated talks, where a pay deal had finally been secured. But in a last-minute move, management attempted to impose a sweeping contract, giving concierge and cleaners an ultimatum: keep their rights to collective bargaining or receive a 2025 pay rise — but not both… The full strike period will run from Friday 19th September to Monday 29th September, with action scheduled across multiple days and shifts read more

Historic strike vote pushes GESH board to consider NHS equality for facilities workers (9 Sept) – “The lowest paid staff have been ignored for many years, and only now that hundreds of us are all ready to strike, they are finally starting to listen. We deserve equal treatment just like any other NHS worker, and we will not stop until we get equal rights which the Trust Board has deliberately taken away from us. If we have to strike, we all are ready” – Farrokh Hormoz, a UVW member and porter at St Helier Hospital. A groundbreaking strike ballot by hospital cleaners, porters and caterers has forced St George’s, Epsom and St Helier Hospital Group (GESH) to take an unprecedented step: the Board has now committed to voting on whether to grant these workers full NHS Agenda for Change (AfC) contracts. More than 300 facilities workers, all members of United Voices of the World (UVW), voted overwhelmingly in favour of strike action last week. These staff are directly employed by the NHS but, for the past four years, have been denied the same pay, pensions and conditions as their NHS colleagues. The powerful mandate from workers has now pushed GESH to put AfC contracts – which set the national standard for NHS terms and conditions – on the agenda for the first time. Strike action, which was due to begin this September, has been temporarily postponed in light of the Board’s commitment. But workers have made clear: unless equal treatment is secured, they are prepared to take action read more

Solidarity Financial Appeal: UVW’s office was targeted in a break-in! – in January, laptops, essential equipment and other valuables worth several thousands of pounds were stolen, disrupting critical support for low-paid, migrant and precarious workers. This won’t stop our fight for justice. The theft comes as UVW leads critical campaigns with hundreds of workers taking strike action across London. Please support UVW during this critical time. Help replace stolen equipment and ensure campaigns for dignity and equality continue. Every donation makes a difference. Donate now: https://www.uvwunion.org.uk/donate. Read more on UVW Facebook page   

IWGB

UCL Cleaners – Stop the Cuts! – In August 2025, UCL and Sodexo announced plans to make dramatic cuts to cleaning services at UCL and across students’ halls of residence. UCL say that these redundancies are part of a modernisation and cost-cutting agenda. At the same time, the university is in a very strong financial position, with student numbers up from 38,000 in 2015/16 to 52,000 last year. These changes come after cleaners have reported long standing issues with overwork, unsafe conditions and precarious contracts read more. Strike protest Wednesday 1st October 12noon more info on IWGB Facebook page

IWW/TEFL

Malvern House teachers on why they’re striking (15 Sept) – Teachers at Malvern House London are set to strike at the end of the month (Sept 29-30). Below, they lay out their reasons for taking this step. The decision to strike hasn’t come easily. It follows years of dedication, compromise, and repeated efforts from teachers to improve conditions at Malvern House. But despite our commitment, our voices have gone largely unheard. Teachers at Malvern House London have long asked for fair treatment, recognition, and stability. Many began on zero-hour contracts, waiting months—or even years—for permanent positions. Now, even those so-called permanent contracts are starting to resemble the insecure, unpredictable terms we thought we’d left behind read more

Mandate (Ireland)   

Mandate represented at Oireachtas hearing on Respect At Work Campaign (24 Sept) – Mandate NEC member and former Shop Steward at TK Maxx, Cian Keogh addressed a full room at the Oireachtas today, attended by TDs and Senators from across the political spectrum to hear about the urgent need for collective bargaining legislation in Ireland. He was accompanied by speakers from the CWU, FSU and SIPTU trade unions, who collectively constitute the members of the Respect at Work campaign. Cian outlined the difficulties he faced as a Shop Steward in a company which does not recognise trade unions – and how workers would benefit from legislation which guarantees the ability for workers to collectively bargain with their employers read more

Mandate Backs Fórsa Strike for Equality in Schools (28 Aug) – Mandate stands in solidarity with the school secretaries and caretakers represented by Fórsa as they commence indefinite strike action today, Thursday, 28th August. This strike arises from the ongoing denial of access to the Single Public Service Pension Scheme for secretaries and caretakers—despite the fact that they work in the same schools, under the same management, and on the same payroll system as teachers and Special Needs Assistants. Their exclusion from this scheme, and from other basic employment entitlements, is unjust and indefensible read more

Sign NOW! #RespectAtWork

SIPTU (Ireland)   

Major pay increases secured for over 30,000 contract cleaners (23 Sept) – SIPTU has welcomed the approval of a new Employment Regulation Order (ERO) for the Contract Cleaning Industry, which the Union successfully negotiated to deliver significant pay rises and new allowances for more than 30,000 cleaners across the sector read more

SIPTU to ballot ambulance members for industrial action in outsourcing dispute (13 Sept) – SIPTU members in the National Ambulance Service (NAS) are to ballot for industrial action, up to and including strike action, in a dispute concerning attempts to outsource inter-hospital transfers in the Greater Dublin Area to the private sector read more

Dublin Fire Brigade to begin industrial action over safety concerns (1 Sept) – SIPTU members in Dublin Fire Brigade (DFB) have served notice of industrial action due to serious safety concerns over the introduction of a new call-out and dispatch system. The Department of Housing, Local Government and Heritage is attempting to impose this Computer Aided Dispatch (CAD) system onto DFB without consultation read more

Sign this petition: Take Action for Workers’ Rights!

  

Other news     

From SHAC – Social Housing Action Campaign: Conference to Discuss Forming a National Tenants and Residents Union – 11am – 4pm Saturday 11th October. SHAC is working towards a new, national, democratic tenants’ and residents’ union. Our conference brings together tenants, residents, and housing campaign groups to discuss the creation of a national tenants and residents union. The aim is to form a steering committee that can take the project to the next level. Register here

Join Disabled People Against Cuts to protest against the Labour policies killing disabled people outside the Labour Party conference in Liverpool 29/09/2025 at 12pm. We will assemble near the Wheel of Liverpool on Keel Wharf L3 4FN. We encourage those who can to a mask in order to protect immunocompromised members of our community and will have some masks available for those who do not have their own details

Trade union support for an independent PIP review

Dear Trade Union council, branch, organisation, or colleague,

I am writing about our campaign to tell the minister Stephen Timms that disabled people want an independent PIP review, with trade union involvement, and no more cuts. DIsabled People Against Cuts Cymru (DPAC Cymru) were thrilled to see motion 38, disabled workers oppose welfare reforms, and motion 39, oppose disability benefit cuts emergency, pass unanimously at TUC conference 2025 last week. Disabled people are still fighting this battle without respite. The disability minister Stephen Timms was forced to promise parliament that further changes to PIP would only come after a review co-produced with disabled people. Timms has not kept his promise in the slightest.

An open letter initiated by DPAC Cymru demanding an independent review into the PIP benefit, to be led by disabled people and our organisations, has now received signatures from more than 600 people including representatives of more than 25 organisations.

That letter also says that “any review of welfare reform must also, in a process led by disabled people, involve trade unions as democratic organisations representing 1.4 million disabled workers as well as representing the workers responsible for the day-to-day delivery of services that disabled people rely on.”

I hope that you might consider signing our open letter in support of that demand. Signatures are being collected until the end of September.

With the government acting this way, I have also enclosed for your consideration a PDF leaflet about an upcoming trades council conference in Wales that aims to discuss the crisis of working-class political representation, with the Labour Party invited to defend their record. (eventbrite link here)

DPAC Cymru’s coordinating team recently voted unanimously to support that conference and ask if we could send observers. That conference is endorsed by Cardiff Trades Union Council, Swansea Trades Union Council, Newport Trades Union Council, Caerphilly Trades Union Council, Bakers, Food and Allied Workers Union, Cardiff Council Unite branch, Cardiff Rail RMT branch, GMB Wales Ambulance Service branch, Cardiff General Unite branch, Unite Community Cardiff & Area, PCS ARMs branch, and Disabled People Against Cuts Cymru.

Thank you to trade union colleagues, in particular trades council delegates, for offering your support, solidarity, and advice through months of protests. You are always warmly invited to send representatives to talk to DPAC Cymru members about your campaigns, and we are always honoured by any opportunity to send a speaker to branches or conferences.

In solidarity, Kind regards, Ben Golightly – Co-coordinator, Disabled People Against Cuts Cymru (DPAC Cymru)

Email [email protected]

Phone 07410 303 652

Web dpac-cymru.carrd.co

Townsend Theatre Productions presents: WE ARE THE LIONS, MR MANAGER!

– the story of Jayaben Desai and the Grunwick Strike

Written by Neil Gore      Directed by Louise Townsend

We Are The Lions Mr Manager!” is the story of the Great Grunwick Film Processing Factory Strike of 1976-8, and the inspirational strike-leader Jayaben Desai, one of many newly arrived Gujarati women workers from East Africa.

Grunwick wasn’t a strike about wages – it was about something much more important than that: it was about dignity. Dignity at work. And, for the small band of Asian women strikers, who braved the sun, rain, and snow month-in and month-out on the picket lines, from August 1976 to July 1978, rights in the workplace and pride at work were far more important than any amount of money

  • Tour dates and tickets here. Tickets: £15 and £7.50 concessions

General Strike Centenary & The Cramlington Train Wreckers 2026 – As you know, next year is a hugely important year for working history (centenary of the General Strike) .Following the success of The Cramlington Train Wreckers last November (4,000 people attended 7 venues)  it is transferring to the 1200-seat Newcastle Theatre Royal next July. We are looking to touring it next year but would like feedback from unions re support. Can you circulate it among your affiliates, please? We also have an event at Glasshouse in May to mark the first full day of  the centenary of the General Strike.

We are using both events to encourage a new layer of (young) trade union activists. It is an opportunity to draw in people We had a tremendous intervention in at Durham Miners’ Gala over the weekend. Any support would be appreciated.

The Cramlington Train Wreckers is transferring to Newcastle Theatre Royal after a sell out tour at 7 North East venues (4,000 attended!) last November.

www.cramlingtontrainwreckers.co.uk

www.wisecrackproductions.co.uk

www.worbella.co.uk

Alan Hardman ‘Need not Greed’ – Alan Hardman’s razor-sharp political cartoons collected for the first time. Coinciding with the 40th anniversary of the Miners’ Strike, Need Not Greed is a career-spanning collection of visual art by one of Britain’s greatest unsung political cartoonists. Alongside Alan Hardman’s essential work, the book also includes a contribution from former President of the National Union of Mineworkers, Arthur Scargill, as well as a foreword by Jeremy Corbyn order a copy – £45 each   

Affiliate with STAMMA – at this year’s NSSN Conference, Gary Clark retired CWU Royal Mail rep and a member of the NSSN Steering Committee spoke about STAMMA. STAMMA’s Employment Support Service helps people who stammer as well as those who don’t around issues related to stammering in the workplace. Union branches and regions can affiliate with STAMMA to access a range of services and support at a reduced rate.    

  • £75 for branches and regions   
  • £125 for national unions with under 400,000 members   
  • £200 for national unions with 400,000+ members   

STAMMA website    

Sign this petition: To the Right Honourable Steve Barclay, Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs and The Right Honourable Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister – Make toxic landfills safe – Support ‘Zane’s Law’!  Find out more about this campaign here   

From Strike Map – Our final instalment of the ‘Industrial Unionism’ series with Manifesto Press is here. Building on this success of our other pamphlets- which has sold over 2,000 copies, our next pamphlet in our series is the infamous ‘A Manual of Industrial Unionism’ by William Z Foster. Click the button here to pre-order your copy for you and your organisation   

     

Stop the attack on Gaza    

Many NSSN supporters have joined marches and protests against the escalation of violence in the Middle East, particularly the invasion and bombardment of Gaza by the Israeli government.       

See Stop the War website for info on protests. The next national central London demo is on Saturday 11th October – 12noon details   

A number of unions have issued statements on the situation in the Middle East, including: the TUC, FBU, RMT, NEU, Unite, Unison, PCS, ASLEF, TSSA, UCU, EIS, USDAW, BFAWU, CWU, Equity, BMA, NUJ, MU, UVW, GMB, SOR, RCM, RCN, IWGB, Prospect, CSP, NAPO, INTO (Ireland), SIPTU (Ireland) and Mandate (Ireland)     

   

     

Fight blacklisting and victimisation of union reps     

‘SPYCOPS’ EXPOSED AND DEFEATED – Campaigners have successfully exposed the scandal of 50 years of secret undercover political policing. In fact activists are also celebrating 5 decades of struggles for a better world, despite police spying and repression    

Affiliate to the Campaign Opposing Police Surveillance (COPS) here    

Sign petition   

ITV documentary – https://policespiesoutoflives.org.uk/itv-spycops-documentary-coming-soon-spring-2025/    

www.campaignopposingpolicesurveillance.com   
https://policespiesoutoflives.org.uk/     
https://tmg-uk.org/    
https://www.facebook.com/groups/blacklistSG/?locale=en_GB     
https://powerbase.info/index.php/UndercoverResearch_Portal     

   

   

Builders Crack: The Movie     

In the current situation, this long lost film from the 1990s about rank and file union organising in the construction industry is intended to lift the spirits, but also to spark a debate in our movement. Hope the youngsters in this film put a smile on your face.     

Watch – Share – Discuss https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2VZ-QMA1FMg      

Blacklist Support Group     

Book: http://newint.org/books/politics/blacklisted-secret-war/      

Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eNcgrNs6pB8      

Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/groups/blacklist-SG/      

Blog: www.hazards.org/blacklistblog      

Blacklist Support Group financial appeal: the Blacklist support group is desperately short of funds, to continue the incredible work we need more finance, would you please consider making a donation, raise it at your branches and trade councils. Please make cheques payable to Joint sites committee and send to 70 Darnay Rise Chelmsford Essex CM1 4XA. Please forward onto your contacts many thanks Steve Kelly (JSC Treasurer)     

Blacklisted t-shirts available at: https://shop.hopenothate.org.uk/component/hikashop/product/78-blacklisted-t-shirt      

     

Keep an eye out for other Facebook and social media groups and pages that are being created. You can catch up on disputes at Strike Map UK. Also, check out Organise Now! – Support for new worker organising.      

     

International     

Please support – MassArt in USA: rescind the suspension and drop all punishment for the exercising of free speech and protest! Union educator Peggy Wang was successfully brought back to work by supporters after a 3-month-long campaign against MassArt administration’s attempts to fire her for participating in a peaceful pro-Palestinian protest. But now, MassArt administration is suspending her without pay for 2 weeks, punishing her through retaliatory measures. We demand that MassArt immediately rescind the suspension and drop all punishment against her. Those in the MassArt community should have the right to free speech, assembly, and protest; pro-Palestinian protests should not be an exception! Send letter of protest

Support Nigeria Solidarity

From Rob Williams NSSN Chair:-

At a recent international conference recently I had the privilege to meet Adaramoye Michael, National Coordinator of the Youth Rights Campaign in Nigeria. Michael is one of the Nigerian activists facing trial for treason, which can carry the death penalty, for the ‘crime’ of protesting against bad governance and poverty. The trial of Michael and other defendants has been delayed repeatedly but is now set for 9 October, 2025. Please show your support by asking your branch to pass the Nigeria Solidarity motion that can be found here: Union Motion – Nigeria Solidarity, sending protest letters to the Nigerian High Commission (template here: Letter to Embassy on #EndBadGovernance Protestors Repression – Google Docs), donating to the campaign if possible, and taking solidarity photos in the days before 9 October.

Further details on www.NigeriaSolidarity.com/Events.

Türkiye: No to union-busting at Digel read more

   

   

Diary      

2025   

October

22 NSSN lobby of the TUC General Council 9am TUC Congress House in London

  


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