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Last-ditch bid to avoid fresh wave of strikes as ministers hold talks


Ministers are mounting a last-ditch bid to avert a fresh wave of strikes today after Rishi Sunak suggested pay can be on the table.

Separate meetings are happening with NHS, education and rail unions as they threaten to ramp up industrial action.

Health Secretary Steve Barclay will meet leaders including from the Royal College of Nursing (RCN).

Teaching unions will attend talks with Education Secretary Gillian Keegan ahead of announcements this week over whether their members will go on strike.

Rail minister Huw Merriman is also holding talks with train workers after sustained action crippled services last week.

The government is battling to quell a wave of strike action including on the railways

The government is battling to quell a wave of strike action including on the railways 

Ministers are mounting a last-ditch bid to avert a fresh wave of strikes today after Rishi Sunak  (right) suggested pay can be on the table. Health Secretary Steve Barclay (left) will meet with leaders including from the Royal College of Nursing

Mr Sunak raised hopes yesterday saying he was willing to discuss pay with health workers – though he indicated it would only be for the 2023-24 settlement, while the current unrest largely relates to 2022-23 deals.

Writing on the ConservativeHome website today, the PM said: ‘Ministers from across government will be meeting with the unions to set out how we can resolve these disputes in a responsible and reasonable way.

‘I accept the freedom of individuals to strike, but this must be balanced with the rights of everyone else to safely go about their lives.

‘That’s why we introduced new laws – in common with countries such as France, Italy and Spain – to ensure we have minimum levels of safety in critical areas like our ambulance and fire services.’

Downing Street has declined to deny suggestions Mr Sunak is open to a one-off payment to support health workers with the cost of living this winter.

Mr Barclay is understood to have advocated for the move but the proposal had faced opposition from elsewhere in Government.

Royal College of Nursing (RCN) general secretary Pat Cullen said she felt a ‘chink of optimism’ after noticing a ‘little shift’ in the PM’s stance.

But she warned the planned action will still go ahead without compromise on this year’s pay settlements, as the Unite union accused Mr Sunak of ‘misleading’ the public about the negotiations.

Labour accused him of ‘taking our nurses and ambulance workers for fools’, with Monday’s talks with health unions set to centre on 2023/24’s deal.

Mr Sunak had told BBC’s Sunday With Laura Kuenssberg programme: ‘When it comes to pay we’ve always said we want to talk about things that are reasonable, that are affordable and responsible for the country.

‘We are about to start a new pay settlement round for this year, we’re about to start that independent process, and before that process starts the Government is keen to sit down with the unions and talk about pay and make sure they understand where we’re coming from.’

Ms Cullen said the talks are ‘not going to avert the strike action’ in England on January 18 and 19 without compromise on 2022/23 pay.

But she told Kuenssberg: ‘The Prime Minister talked about coming to the table, now that’s a move for me because I have said, let’s meet half way.’

She added: ‘When I listened to that there was a chink of optimism and there was a little shift in what the Prime Minister was saying.’

Mr Barclay said in The Sunday Telegraph he will take a ‘constructive approach’ to negotiations on April’s pay review, suggesting increases are on the table if unions agree to efficiency savings to make higher salaries more ‘affordable’.

Sharon Graham, the general secretary of the Unite union whose ambulance workers will again walk out on January 23, warned strikes will continue this year without the current dispute being resolved.

‘At best, Rishi Sunak is misleading the British public about these so called ‘NHS pay talks’,’ she said.

‘I repeat that unless and until he accepts the need to make real progress on the current pay claim, there will still be strikes across the NHS this winter.’

Unison will also attend the talks, as will the GMB, which described the talks set to last ‘just 45 minutes’ as ‘an insult’.

The National Education Union (NEU), school leaders union NAHT and the NASUWT will all be announcing ballot results in the coming week.

Ms Keegan is holding talks on Monday, but NEU joint general secretary Mary Bousted warned they will not resolve a dispute over pay talks deal only with the coming year’s settlement.

A Department for Education spokeswoman said: ‘After two years of disrupted education for young people, strike action is simply not a reasonable solution.

‘Union leaders have been invited to meet with ministers on Monday to have honest conversations about what is responsible and what is affordable for our country when it comes to pay.’

Rail minister Huw Merriman is also holding talks with train workers after sustained action crippled services last week

Scottish Government officials and teaching unions will also hold last-ditch talks on Monday before parents could be forced to keep their children at home later this week.

In the rail dispute, union leaders will meet Mr Merriman as they continue to insist the Government is blocking a deal to end the long-running row over pay, jobs and conditions.

Transport Secretary Mark Harper denies the allegation, saying he is facilitating talks between unions and employers.

Rail, Maritime and Transport (RMT) general secretary Mick Lynch said: ‘Today I want to see the Government stop play-acting because the truth, written in black and white in their rail contracts, is that they’ve been in complete control of this dispute from day one.

‘The train operators cannot move without Government say-so.

‘The minister cannot hide behind this fairy story that he is just a facilitator.

‘His Government can end this dispute today by taking out the conditions they put in to torpedo a resolution and let the companies make a deal.’



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