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Unions hail ‘significant’ victory after rules against the Government

Unions have won a “significant” victory after challenging law changes they said let agencies supply employers with workers to fill in for striking staff, a lawyer says.

More than 10 unions, including Aslef, Unite and Usdaw, took High Court action against the Conservative Government and claimed that the changes undermined the “right to strike”.

They argued that the 2022 Conduct of Employment Agencies and Employment Businesses (Amendment) Regulations were unlawful.

Ministers disputed the unions’ claims.

A judge on Thursday ruled against the Government and quashed the 2022 regulations.

A “significant victory”

Mr Justice Linden had considered arguments from lawyers representing the TUC, unions and the Government at a High Court hearing in May.

The decision to implement the regulations was taken when Kwasi Kwarteng was business secretary, lawyers said.

Lawyer Richard Arthur, who represented the TUC and unions, hailed a “significant victory for the entire trade union movement”.

TUC General Secretary Paul Nowak said the ruling was a “badge of shame for the Conservatives”.

“This is a significant victory for the entire trade union movement and preserves a vital safeguard in ensuring the right to participate in industrial action is effective,” said Mr Arthur, who is based at Thompsons Solicitors.

“The judgment makes clear that the then Secretary of State had a staggering disregard to his legal obligations when introducing legislation that enabled employers to engage agency workers to cover the duties of striking workers.  He was driven solely by a political ideology to meet a self-imposed deadline to implement the regulations in the face of mounting industrial action across the country.”

“Badge of shame for the Conservatives”

Mr Nowak said: “This defeat is a badge of shame for the Conservatives, who have been found guilty of breaching the law.

“Bringing in less-qualified agency staff to deliver important services risks endangering public safety, worsening disputes and poisoning industrial relations.

“The Government railroaded through this law change despite widespread opposition from agency employers and unions.”

Unite general secretary Sharon Graham said: “This is a total vindication for unions and workers. The Government’s decision to allow employers to recruit agency workers to undermine legal strike action was a cynical move to back their friends in business and weaken workers’ legal rights to withdraw their labour.

“It was entirely counterproductive as, rather than weaken industrial action, it has hardened attitudes and unnecessarily extended strikes. This ill-thought out, divisive legislation must be consigned to the dustbin of history.”

Barrister Daniel Stilitz KC, who led the Government’s legal , had told the judge that the law change was “modest”.

Kwarteng

Mr Justice Linden said, in a written ruling published online, that Mr Kwarteng had “precious little information” when he made the decision on the regulations.

The judge said he was “not sufficiently” interested “even” to ask to see an analysis by a civil servant.

He said the “decision was to proceed at exceptional speed” despite the civil servant’s concerns about the “effect on Parliamentary scrutiny” and “without any further consultation at all”.

“This was not an all or nothing decision: there could have been a shortened consultation, and/or one with a more limited group of consultees,” said the judge.

“There is no sign that this option was even considered.

“This was despite the lack of an impact assessment at the time of the decision, and despite the evidence available to Mr Kwarteng being that the measure would have negligible beneficial impact in the short term and, quite possibly, an adverse impact on the Government’s ability to settle ongoing industrial disputes.”

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Jack Peat

Jack is a business and economics journalist and the founder of The London Economic (TLE). He has contributed articles to VICE, Huffington Post and Independent and is a published author. Jack read History at the University of Wales, Bangor and has a Masters in Journalism from the University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne.

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Tags: Unite