The Observer

Zero hour: the TUC wants Labour to know that it’s time to deliver workers’ new deal

There will be joy at the trades union congress this week – but also a determinat­ion to see that promises are kept, writes Heather Stewart

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Twelve months ago, when the TUC met for its annual bash in Liverpool as Labour stood on the brink of power, Keir Starmer’s message to union leaders was “eyes on the prize”.

Fresh from thrashing out the details of Labour’s workers’ rights package – the new deal for working people – in late-night talks, union leaders were upbeat.

As this year’s TUC congress opens in Brighton tomorrow, the backdrop is a transforme­d political landscape – and the unions will be reminding the government they expect it to deliver.

Deputy prime minister Angela Rayner has promised an employment bill, implementi­ng key aspects of the new deal for working people, within 100 days of coming to power: a deadline that will expire in mid-October.

As the days tick down, business has been sounding the alarm about the plans, which include banning “exploitati­ve” zero-hours contracts, outlawing fire and rehire, and getting rid of the three-day wait before workers are entitled to sick pay.

The Institute of Directors (IoD) suggested last week that the workers’ rights plans, alongside the chancellor’s warnings of tax increases, were partly responsibl­e for a drop-off in confidence among its members.

“The news flow in recent weeks on employment rights and autumn tax rises has dented confidence in the environmen­t for business in the UK,” the IoD’s chief economist, Anna Leach, claimed. “As we head into a busy autumn, we are calling on the government to take time to get policy design right for the long term and deliver the stable tax and policy framework needed to drive business confidence and investment.”

These noises off make unions nervous: they trust Rayner, and have no doubt the government will implement its plans – but they are also aware that the details will be key. On zero-hours contracts, for example, the promise in the workers’ rights document published alongside Labour’s manifesto was to ensure that “everyone has the right to have a contract that reflects the number of hours they regularly work, based on a 12-week reference period.”

As Nye Cominetti of the Resolution Foundation pointed out last week, the government has not yet made clear whether that means workers would in effect have a right to a minimum number of hours every week (or every fortnight or month), and whether it would apply to all workers or only those who already work regular hours – who would then see that formalised.

“Decisions about eligibilit­y for this new right, and on whether a worker’s hours are guaranteed every week, affect not just how much additional security workers would gain, but also how much flexibilit­y employers would lose,” he said in an analysis. He argued that could be problemati­c for businesses facing fluctuatin­g demand – such as in hospitalit­y.

Here and on many details of the new deal for workers, ministers will have to make crucial decisions about trade-offs. On some aspects of the agenda, including collective bargaining for the social care sector and a consultati­on on abolishing the “worker” status that applies to many gig economy staff, there is also union concern about bolder policies being kicked into the long grass.

Starmer, Rachel Reeves and other senior frontbench­ers held fraught talks with union leaders in May, not long before the election was called, after a hamfisted attempt was made to water down the plans by ditching the policy forum document and tabling a new draft. The assembled general secretarie­s made clear they were not willing to start afresh after negotiatin­g the text of the deal line by line. Peace broke out after Labour agreed to implement the original package in full, but union insiders say they remain alert for backslidin­g. Starmer’s keynote speech on Tuesday will be closely watched.

Jubilation at the arrival of the first Labour government in more than a decade is also likely be tempered by anxiety about Reeves’s tough stance on the public finances.

Unite’s Sharon Graham is likely to renew her calls for more investment to fix crumbling public services. Most other union leaders are expected to remain publicly loyal. But some union figures share the nagging disquiet across the left about whether the caution that helped Labour sweep to power will restrain it from delivering the change it promised.

But with Reeves’s first budget yet to come, and the employment bill due within weeks, this week’s shindig in Brighton is likely to be a celebratio­n of a new era, in which unions are back at the top table.

 ?? Peter Byrne/PA ?? On the brink of power: Angela Rayner at last year’s TUC congress in Liverpool.
Peter Byrne/PA On the brink of power: Angela Rayner at last year’s TUC congress in Liverpool.

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