Tuesday 16 May 2017

British PM to make workers' rights her priority if elected

Mrs May to protect workers' rights

British Prime Minister Theresa May set to work out a "new deal for workers" as she is determined to propose safeguards for "gig economy" workers and new rights to be off work to care for relatives who may be in need.

The PM is making every effort to sell herself to the voting public that she is a leader who support all working people in the UK, as she also intend to raise the National Living Wage - currently £7.50 an hour - in line with average earnings until 2022.

The PM has once again reaffirmed that she is fully committed to protect the rights of all workers as enshrined in EU law, even after Brexit, as was outlined in her Article 50 triggering document.

According to the Conservatives the party’s manifesto promises - to be unveiled in full this week - would represent the "greatest expansion of workers' rights by any Conservative government".

Also included in the PM’s package is a commitment to protect workers' pensions in the wake of the BHS scandal; a new right to request leave for training purposes; a right to leave for workers who suffer the tragedy of losing a child; and the introduction of returnships for people coming back into work after a period of time off.

However, the PM’s effort to tone herself as the supporter of "ordinary working people" appears to have negated what is current on ground, as analysis suggests that low income working families face significant reductions in income as a result of planned cuts to benefits, according to the Institute of Fiscal Studies.


The analysis found one million households with children and no one in work would be £3,000 worse off, while three million working households with children currently entitled to tax credits would be on average £2,500 worse off. A further four million households with children not entitled to tax credits would be £100 a year worse off.

Nevertheless, Andrew Gwynne, Labour's campaigns and elections chair, states that Mrs May was "taking working people for fools".

"Theresa May and her Tory government have failed to stand up for workers, with hundreds of thousands not being paid the money owed to them, thousands unable to get their case against their employer heard and hundreds of complaints of employment agency malpractice going un-investigated.

"The Tories have spent the last seven years prioritising the few, opposing Labour's proposals to give workers more rights and overseeing wage stagnation which has left people worse off."

Also speaking on the issue, Vince Cable, the Liberal Democrat shadow chancellor, was equally contemptuous.

"The Conservatives tried to ban workers from striking and were blocked by the Liberal Democrats in government," said the former business secretary, who clashed with No.10 over workers' rights in the coalition years.

"It's clear they aren't the party of workers' rights and that you can't trust them to care about you and your family."

Furthermore, Tim Roache, general secretary of the GMB union, was equally sceptical, saying "the greatest extensions of workers' rights by a Tory government frankly wouldn't be that hard to achieve given recent history".

He said the Tories should "end the public sector pay pinch" if they really want to prove the lot of working Britain, as he urged the Conservatives to "commit to a real living wage that people can live on without claiming benefits - all of which Labour has pledged to do".

Mr Roace also said: "And let's not forget, a lot of the problems working people face day in day out were caused by Tory austerity policies in the first place".

Pay rises in the public sector are capped at 1% a year until 2020, which could see 5.4 million public sector workers see a real-terms cut in their wages as a decade of pay restraint and high inflation eats into their living standards.

But Mrs May's proposals were given a cautious welcome by the Trade Union Congress, which described the measures as a "promising set of commitments", but said workers needed to see the details before they cast their votes.

Mrs May, on tour in southern England, will say on Monday: "There is only one leader that will put rights and opportunities for working families first.


"The choice is clear: economic stability and a better deal for workers under my Conservative team, or chaos under Jeremy Corbyn."

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