Conservatives attack Labour over public sector pay settlements – UK politics live

Conservatives attack Labour over public sector pay settlements – UK politics live

GB News, she said:

During the pandemic our borders were effectively closed. There was no travel. What about all those international students they came in after the pandemic? Are we saying that they should not have come into the country?

What did the government choose to do? I think this is the right thing to do. We absolutely made sure we gave the NHS the support that it needed through health and social care visas.

Are we going to say that was the wrong thing to do? I mean, knock on doors and ask your listeners, your viewers. Would they say we should not have had more doctors and nurses? I think they would not. A lot of these people are also high-rate taxpayers. So that context matters.

If you don’t want so many people to come in to work in our country, then there’s a wider discussion to be had there about having a labour market strategy

Labour was not seeking productivity improvements or reform of the railways, saying “We are absolutely looking to deliver a better service for passengers and, frankly, it’s a low bar given the state the railways have been in recent years.”Labour government, saying they are “settling disputes, the continuation of which is costing the economy hundreds of millions of pounds”.

Responding on the BBC Radio 4 programme to criticism that the chancellor could not square the party’s willingness to meet pay demands square with “the difficult economic inheritance the new government keep telling us about”, Nick Thomas-Symonds said:

It squares because we are settling disputes, the continuation of which is costing the economy hundreds of millions of pounds.

He said he hoped Aslef would accept a proposed pay deal for train drivers, saying:

The dispute isn’t settled, by the way. An offer has been made that is over the three year period from 2022 to 2025 that will now be put by Aslef to its membership. I sincerely hope that it is approved and that that is accepted,

We want to move forward with a better passenger experience on the railways and better value, frankly, for taxpayers, because we’ve seen the estimates the disruption since 2022 of up to £850m of lost revenue on our railways. We can’t continue like that.

The last government’s rail minister didn’t even meet the trade union leaders from January of 2023. We always said we would engage, and we have.

Attempting to highlight a different tone from the last administration, he continued:

I came on programmess like this when I was an opposition spokesperson, and often said that Labour in government would sit down, get around the table, do that hard work of finding in each individual area where the common ground was to find a solution. And that’s exactly what the government has done, whether its junior doctors [or] Aslef.

Allowing these disputes to continue is damaging the economy. That’s what the Conservatives did. This government takes a different approach. We engage. We work hard. We find that common ground. And doing that means the disruption doesn’t continue.

Labour government over public sector pay settlements.

Chris Philp, shadow leader of the House of Commons, has claimed “it has taken Labour barely a month to lose control of state sector pay.”

He posted to social media to say “they will all now demand double digit rises. None of the increases come with commitments to reform or improve. All the public gets is a much bigger tax bill – or cut winter fuel allowances for 10 million pensioners”.

Kevin Hollinrake, the shadow business secretary, while conceding “of course it’s true that there is a ‘direct cost to the economy’ if workers go on strike” said “there’s a much bigger cost of capitulating to the unions. 40 years after Thatcher sorted them out, the unions are now back in charge and the country will pay the price”.

About 6.25 million people in the UK out of a workforce of about 33 million are members of a trade union.

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  • It is Martin Belam with you today. Do email me if you spot typos, errors or omissions – [email protected].

    Source: theguardian.com