Tag: Speeches

  • Shaun Bailey – 2022 Speech on the Protection from Redundancy (Pregnancy and Family Leave) Bill

    Shaun Bailey – 2022 Speech on the Protection from Redundancy (Pregnancy and Family Leave) Bill

    The speech made by Shaun Bailey, the Conservative MP for West Bromwich West, in the House of Commons on 21 October 2022.

    It is a pleasure to follow the powerful speech by the hon. Member for Hampstead and Kilburn (Tulip Siddiq), who gave examples of lived experiences. The experience she highlighted of her children’s godmother is horrendous. These experiences are brushed under the carpet, and that is disgraceful. I hope that, through the Bill, we will ensure that that does not happen again, because it cannot. I commend the hon. and gallant Member for Barnsley Central (Dan Jarvis) for bringing in the Bill. It should not be necessary to do so, but clearly it is. We have to do this, and it is the right thing to do. What has struck me today is the way in which we have come together as a House to support the Bill and its aims.

    The background to this area astonishes me, and we have heard about it in contributions from Members across the House. In 2022, it should not be an impediment to someone to want to have a family, so that they cannot at the same time pursue a career—that is crazy. The hon. and gallant Member for Barnsley Central touched on the report of the Equality and Human Rights Commission, and some of the figures in that were horrendous. When scaled up, the figures show that something like 54,000 women could experience discrimination as a result of either being pregnant or having had children. That astounds me.

    Jane Hunt

    I absolutely agree with what my hon. Friend is saying. We see headlines these days about the lack of labour in the market and needing people to fill jobs, yet 54,000 people are either being made redundant or feeling the need to leave their jobs. That is a disgrace, is it not?

    Shaun Bailey

    My hon. Friend is absolutely right: it is a disgrace. I think about my own experiences. Before I entered this place, I was a lawyer; that is what I trained to do. I was fortunate to work in some great firms and meet some fantastic, intelligent people. I know that people sometimes typecast lawyers as all sorts and do not trust us, but the people I worked with were fantastic, intelligent, hard-working and inspirational. However, let us look at the figures in the sector, and I am thinking in particular about the gender pay gap and how the issues we are debating contribute to that.

    A London School of Economics study found that even though today 62% of new entrants into law firms are women, by the time we get to partner level only 28% of women are partners. That is absolutely crazy, given the proportion of women at entry level. What we are seeing is that women want to go and have a family and a personal life, which we are all entitled to, but they are being impeded. That might not all be down to the discrimination we have been talking about, but what I hope the Bill achieves is a cultural change. That is what we have to drive forward. It amazes me that we actually have to say this today, but a woman can have a career and a family at the same time, and an employer that enables that to happen.

    Thinking of my own office, 80% of my staff are women. I have no problem if they need to take time out because they have to go and look after their family or collect their kids. To me, that is just basic decency as an employer. Surely it is a two-way street as an employer: what we do is get the talent and ability of the people we employ, and in turn we give something back.

    Jane Hunt

    Does my hon. Friend agree that this Bill is very helpful because it also includes shared parental leave? Those partners, both male and female, who are impacted by shared parental leave will also be able to take advantage of the redundancy scheme.

    Shaun Bailey

    My hon. Friend articulates it so well. She is absolutely right; shared parental leave is now such a key part of the broader landscape of family and employment rights—I do not want to just say maternity rights. We now know that the idea that mum goes off for a year and looks after the baby while dad works is ridiculous—it is rubbish. Both parents need to be playing an active role. We say that both parents need to be playing an active role in the life of their child, but if we have an employment structure that does not allow us to do that, then it is all good words but absolutely no action. My hon. Friend is right to draw out with her intervention the point about shared parental leave. What I am encouraged by is the recognition that shared parental leave needs to become the norm. From what I have seen at the moment, we are seeing that transition; we are seeing that more organisations are getting that. But there is still more to do.

    The other point I will touch on is the societal impact. I talk about this from my personal experience. What we do not want to do is frame this in the context of mum, dad and 2.4 children, because actually families do not operate like that; there are many shades of grey. If someone is a single mother, or a single woman who is pregnant, and runs the risk of redundancy as a result of that, where does that leave them?

    Lee Anderson

    Does my hon. Friend agree with me that the threat of redundancy, or actual redundancy, for a pregnant woman can have a serious impact on her health and the health of the baby?

    Shaun Bailey

    My hon. Friend is absolutely right, and the academic studies have shown that. We have the data showing the mental health impact on women who are having to worry about the risk of redundancy in their job. Of course it is not right—I am framing this in the context of a mother who is giving care to a child—that they should have to worry about their employment and everything that interconnects with that, and at the same time have to raise a child.

    I have not had children, but for those who have—I am probably going to get interventions from hon. Friends across the House now—that initial period of time, and I will not say how long it is because I am sure it might vary, is probably one of the most stressful points in a mother’s life. They are getting to grips with realising that there is no handbook, and that everything they were told was going to go this way or that way actually does not—children do not work like that and there is no button to push. They are balancing that—a new person they have brought into the world and have to care for—and at the same time having to worry about how they are going to put food on the table, and go back into a career that they love, are passionate about and have maybe trained for years to do but now are at risk of losing because their organisation has potentially decided, “No, goodbye, see you later.” It seriously blows my mind that we even have to be here having this conversation.

    Jane Hunt

    Does my hon. Friend agree that the six-month window at the end of this part of the Bill is also very important? I hate to use this phrase, but it is almost an “out of sight, out of mind” situation. When a woman is on maternity leave or a person is on shared parental leave, they are no longer in the workplace. They need that window of opportunity to get back into the workplace and into the swing of things, so they can show their value to the business.

    Shaun Bailey

    My hon. Friend raises a good point, and I was hoping to touch on the transitional period later. We know how important it is to have the opportunity to transition back into the workplace and get back into the flow of things. Going through a life-changing event such as having a child changes the whole dynamic in someone’s life. I think that window is a really important opportunity for them. I hope I have not misunderstood my hon. Friend, but I agree that having that period of time means the individual is able to contribute in the way they know they can.

    It all comes back to realising people’s potential. That is another part of this issue. It is not about saying to someone, “Okay, you’ve had a child; you’re done.” It is not like that at all. I have been very fortunate in the organisations I have worked in, out in what we call the real world—certainly more real at times than this place has been, particularly over the last week. I have seen organisations that get this issue, already have processes in place and are developing a culture that understands that it is not just about, for instance, the amount someone bills every month, but the contribution they make as a person.

    As my hon. Friend the Member for Loughborough (Jane Hunt) just described, the provision for that period of time is a crucial part of this legislation. We are on Second Reading today, but the Bill represents part of a broader landscape, and what my hon. Friend is saying on its provisions is vital. It comes back to a point that right hon. and hon. Members across the House have raised—including the hon. and gallant Member for Barnsley Central, my hon. Friend the Member for Loughborough, and a few hon. Members from a sedentary position—which is that we are currently losing skillsets from the workforce as a result of this issue. How daunting must it be for someone who has taken an extended period of time to go and have a child to come back and worry about not having the protections they should be afforded?

    Lee Anderson

    My hon. Friend is making some brilliant points. When employers sack pregnant women or women on maternity leave, as well as losing these skilled workers are they not also losing other women who might want to come into the workplace but have been put off by the treatment of their friends?

    Shaun Bailey

    My hon. Friend is absolutely right. Why would someone want to join such an organisation, having seen how it operates and what its practices are? Talented individuals who know they have something to bring to the table, and know their worth, particularly in the climate we are in, are going to vote with their feet, are they not? And they should. They will be empowered to know that they can now go to organisations that will treat them as individuals who deserve respect. These organisations will understand that people are allowed to have a family life and balance. People should be able to have an employer who contributes toward that balance and is part of a partnership with them.

    As I understand it, the whole point of the employer-employee relationship is that it is a contract and partnership—an understanding between two people in an organisation. The balance of power has at times gone completely off.

    Jane Hunt

    My hon. Friend is being generous with his time; I promise that this is my last intervention. Just to balance it out, he is absolutely right in what he just said, but this Bill is absolutely brilliant in bringing up one segment of the business sector. Many businesses already meet these and further requirements, but we need everybody to do the same, because that 54,000 figure should not exist.

    Shaun Bailey

    My hon. Friend is absolutely right. To reiterate her point, I certainly do not want to give the impression that I am typecasting every business in that regard. As I have said, many businesses are getting this right and are going above and beyond—but that should not be above and beyond; it should be the standard.

    I return to the idea that not every family is black and white, with 2.4 children and a mum and dad—I apologise to hon. Members for segueing away from that point. I speak as someone who was brought up in a single-parent family with a sole breadwinner who at times was working three jobs in order to put food on the table, and doing a part-time university degree. My mum went back to work six weeks after she had me, because she needed to, and it was similar with my sister. If someone is a sole parent on their own income and is pregnant with another child, or if there has been a family breakdown, the last thing they need is to have that threat of, “If I have a child, or if there’s anything connected to that child, I’m going to lose my job.” It does not bear thinking about—it blows my mind.

    The societal impact of what we are talking about goes much further than the scope of the Bill’s provisions, and that is why it is so important. When we pass legislation in this House, particularly legislation such as this, it is not just about the Bill or the laws that we implement; it is about the message we send about society. We have seen that throughout history, particularly with legislation that has passed as a result of private Members’ Bills, such as women’s rights legislation. Lord Steel was a big advocate of women’s rights and the work of those organisations when he was on the Liberal Benches. We are sending a broader message that we need a society that understands that balancing work and family life is key.

    Bob Stewart

    My hon. Friend may not have had children yet; I have had six. One point that has not been talked about today is that when a woman is pregnant, it is often traumatic and frightening for her. It is often not an easy time. Some people may find it joyous—it is joyous, of course—but it is difficult for some women. If we put that on top of the fact that they might lose their jobs, it is just another pressure. I make that point because it is valid.

    Shaun Bailey

    I thank my right hon. and gallant Friend for that powerful intervention, to which I cannot add any more. He is right that it can be a traumatic experience. The Bill also seeks to address when someone has a miscarriage or loses a baby, which is a horrific time in the lives of both parents. It is important to consider how we support someone who has gone through that, particularly a woman, who feels that loss acutely and painfully. Unless someone has gone through that experience, I do not think that they can truly understand the pain that is felt as a result.

    Again, talking about what this Bill does, its broader messages and what it seeks to achieve in supporting people at the most vulnerable points in their lives is absolutely key. Surely it is incumbent on all of us in this House to support people when they most need it and at the times in their lives when they are most vulnerable, particularly during pregnancy. That is the point in their life when a person is most exposed to both physical and mental challenges, as well as in other ways.

    I am conscious that I should conclude my comments, but I really want to say that I am so proud to be able to support this Bill. I really do commend the hon. and gallant Member for Barnsley Central for the work he has done on it. What this Bill seeks to do, as was articulated so brilliantly by my hon. Friend the Member for Loughborough, is to set what is currently seen as the exceptional standard as the norm, and that is right because it is what we should be doing.

    The Bill will ensure that we do not lose brilliant people from our workforce. We should enable everyone who has the passion and drive and who wants to contribute to do so. We should back up the mantra we have been churning out from this House for decades about how we want to encourage the family base and encourage people to have families. Families are the core of society, and we should follow that up with tangible action. This place is very good at talking, but we need to follow through with tangible legislation. We must have the tangible means by which we can follow up on our good sentiments, and that is one thing this Bill does.

    The Bill also ensures that in situations a bit like my mum’s and other people’s, when single mums are trying to get on with life and secure a life for their kids, whether or not they have been born, they can do so without worrying about how they are going to do it. They, too, can contribute, because this is surely about lifting people up, is it not? If they fear that they are going to lose their job or that they cannot progress up the ladder because they have had a child, that just should not be happening.

    Finally, the Bill will ensure that, at what for many is the most exciting time of their lives, but also a time when they are at their most vulnerable and most exposed, people get the support that we should rightly be giving them. I fully endorse the aims of the Bill, and if the hon. Member for Barnsley Central is looking for someone to serve on his Bill Committee, I would be honoured to do so, because this is absolutely one of the reasons why I came into this place. [Interruption.] I can see he is already putting my name down—brilliant—so I expect the email in due course.

    I just think back to the reason why I came into the place. I always say, whenever I am asked, that it is for people like my mum. With this Bill today, I think of her and what she went through as a single mum bringing me up and enabling me to get here. I will always owe her for that, because I would not be here had she not made the sacrifices that she had to make to get me—a lad from a council house who was told he probably would not amount to anything—to be a Member of Parliament. If we can ensure we get a few more young people like me from such backgrounds into this place by agreeing to the provisions of this Bill today, as far as I am concerned that is exactly why we are all here.

  • Dan Jarvis – 2022 Speech on the Protection from Redundancy (Pregnancy and Family Leave) Bill

    Dan Jarvis – 2022 Speech on the Protection from Redundancy (Pregnancy and Family Leave) Bill

    The speech made by Dan Jarvis, the Labour MP for Barnsley Central, in the House of Commons on 21 October 2022.

    I beg to move, That the Bill be now read a Second time.

    I begin by acknowledging that the House was originally due consider the Bill on Friday 9 September. I was looking over my speech the day before when I learned, with the greatest sadness, that Her late Majesty Queen Elizabeth II had passed away. I am grateful that we can proceed with Second Reading today.

    I welcome the new Minister to his post. I also thank the previous Ministers—the hon. Member for Loughborough (Jane Hunt), who is in her place, and the hon. Member for Sutton and Cheam (Paul Scully)—for their support for the Bill at an early stage. They were both incredibly helpful and supportive and I am grateful to them.

    I pay tribute to the officials at the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy for their excellent work in supporting the Bill. I also say a big “thank you” to the Clerks of the House, who have done excellent work, as they always do, to ensure that we can proceed with Second Reading today. I put on record my sincere gratitude to the Equality and Human Rights Commission, the TUC, the Royal College of Midwives, my union Unison, Maternity Action, Pregnant Then Screwed, The Fawcett Society and the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development, all of which have offered invaluable support to the process over the last few months.

    There is no more important or gratifying experience than raising a family. Children provide hope for the future and bring joy to our lives, although I can say as a parent, as I am sure other hon. Members will, that on occasion that has been tested to the full in my household—but that is teenagers. Despite its importance, however, raising a family has never been more challenging. The scarcity of affordable housing, sky-high childcare costs and now soaring inflation make the decision to start or grow a family simply unaffordable for many. This Bill seeks to alleviate some of that hardship by increasing security in the workplace for pregnant women and new parents by extending redundancy protections. I am proud to be bringing forward the Bill in the House today.

    The current safeguards afforded under the Equality Act 2010 and the Maternity and Parental Leave etc. Regulations 1999—the MAPLE regulations—are not being applied correctly, and are sometimes not being observed at all. As it stands under the law, a woman on maternity leave is entitled to be offered a suitable alternative vacancy if her role is at risk, but a lack of clarity coupled with poor compliance means that new mums are often first rather than last to be shown the door. The sheer scale of the problem makes the case for reform irrefutable.

    Each year, there are somewhere in the region of half a million pregnant women in the workplace. A Human Rights Commission survey, commissioned by the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy and published in 2016, found that a majority—three in four—experience pregnancy and maternity discrimination, while some 54,000 women a year lose their job just for getting pregnant. A few months on from that survey, the Women and Equalities Committee, then chaired by the right hon. Member for Basingstoke (Dame Maria Miller), advocated for a comprehensive ban on redundancies. In response to her inquiry’s report, the Government stated that the situation was “clearly unacceptable”.

    Two years on, the Government launched a consultation, and in reply they pledged to extend existing protections to pregnancy and a period of six months following a return to work. The 2019 Queen’s Speech was set to deliver these commitments through an employment Bill, but that was not brought forward, and then the pandemic hit. As with everything, covid exposed and amplified every pre-existing inequality and prejudice, and expectant and new parents in the workplace were not an exception.

    Analysis by the Institute for Fiscal Studies found that mothers were more likely than fathers to have lost their job or to have quit during lockdown. The Office for National Statistics reported that parents were twice as likely to have been furloughed compared with workers without children. A TUC survey revealed a significant number of pregnant women and new mums had experienced unfair treatment or discrimination at work—findings backed up by two damning reports published by the Petitions Committee.

    Behind those numbers are scores of soon-to-be mums and new parents fighting to keep their jobs, struggling to support a young family and now doing so against the backdrop of a cost of living crisis. This debate is therefore not over the level of injustice—we know what that is—but about how we can correct it.

    Let me explain to the House what the Bill will do. Clause 1 provides a new power to enable provision to be made by regulations about protection from redundancy during and after pregnancy. Clause 2 amends existing powers to make regulations to enable protection from redundancy on return to work from maternity, adoption or shared parental leave.

    Jane Hunt (Loughborough) (Con)

    The hon. Member is making an excellent speech on his excellent Bill. Yes, this is about pregnant women, but it is also about family leave, which is superb news. Could he elaborate a little more on that, please?

    Dan Jarvis

    I am very grateful to the hon. Member for her question. As I said earlier, she was incredibly helpful at the early stages of the Bill, and she is absolutely right to make that point. The benefit of the Bill will be felt across hundreds of thousands of households and families right across the country. Although the focus of my remarks to date has been on the impact it will have on women who are pregnant and new mums, the reality is that the benefits of the Bill extend right across the family unit. We know the official numbers are that 54,000 women lose their jobs every single year just because they are pregnant. As we can all imagine, that has a devastating impact on them, but also of course on the wider family unit. The hon. Member raises a very important question, and I completely agree with what she said.

    I know there are some right hon. and hon. Members here today, and certainly a number of people and campaigners watching the debate, who would like—and this policy was previously advocated by the right hon. Member for Basingstoke—an outright ban on redundancies, as we have seen implemented in Germany. Not everybody will necessarily be familiar with the German model, so let me briefly explain it.

    There are five pillars of the Maternity Protection Act that underwrite the ban in Germany. First, protection from redundancy begins the moment the employer knows that the employee is pregnant. Secondly, if an employer makes a pregnant worker redundant not knowing they are pregnant but then this information is disclosed, they must be reinstated and the protections apply. Thirdly, the local health authority must review each request from an employer to make a pregnant worker or a new mother redundant. This usually takes about three weeks in practice, and while this review takes place the pregnant woman will remain in employment. Fourthly, an employer cannot dismiss a pregnant worker or a new mother without permission from the health authority. Lastly, protections for mothers on maternity and parental leave extend to four months after it has been taken. That also extends to women who, very sadly, have experienced a miscarriage.

    Although it may not be wholly translatable to the British system, there is little doubt over confusion and compliance under those rules. The Government have decided that, for the moment, they do not want to apply similar regulations here.

    Theresa Villiers (Chipping Barnet) (Con)

    I want to express enthusiastic support for the Bill. It will plug an important gap in protection. Looking back at the proposals from my right hon. Friend the Member for Basingstoke (Dame Maria Miller), we want to avoid a situation where, if there was a complete ban on all redundancies under any circumstances, that could mean that employers were having to retain employees when there was no longer work for them to do. The Bill is a reasonable compromise, as it is perhaps more difficult to take forward the previous proposals of my right hon. Friend.

    Dan Jarvis

    I am grateful to the right hon. Lady. She makes a helpful contribution. As she and other right hon. and hon. Members will understand, including the right hon. Member for Basingstoke, there are different views about this matter. In the end we have arrived at a reasonable and sensible compromise. The debate on that particular issue will continue, and if the Bill is successful there will be a further opportunity to debate such matters in Committee.

    Bob Stewart (Beckenham) (Con)

    I thank the hon. and gallant Gentleman for giving way. I have never heard of the German proposals before, and I really like them. I think they are flipping good, if I can say that, and it makes sense that we go some of the way down that road.

    Dan Jarvis

    I am grateful to the right hon. and gallant Gentleman for his intervention. I had not expected us to get into a debate today about what is going on in Germany, but he raises a valuable point. It is always important to look at how things work in different countries. The German model has been looked at closely, and a number of campaign organisations are strongly supportive of it. I have had those conversations with Ministers and a range of organisations, and there is merit in the German model, which, for the record, is my preference. I understand, however, the concerns that have been raised, and I think the Bill has currently got to the right place. I am grateful for the right hon. Gentleman’s support today.

    We are now six years on from the shocking findings by the Equality and Human Rights Commission about the industrial scale discrimination that expectant and new mums face at work. This is a timely opportunity to make progress. I confess that I was taken aback by the level of discrimination faced by pregnant women in the workplace. Perhaps I had made an assumption that such practices had been consigned to history, but that is not the case, and as I said, 54,000 women are directly affected as a consequence, with the wider impact that will have on their families.

    Lee Anderson (Ashfield) (Con)

    This is an excellent debate, and I thank the hon. Gentleman for introducing the Bill. He suggested that more than 50,000 women in this country lose their jobs as a result of being pregnant, which has a terrific impact on family and social welfare. Are employers also missing a trick? They are losing their most valuable resource—those women—who can provide fantastic work in the workplace.

    Dan Jarvis

    The hon. Member makes an excellent point. He is absolutely right that some employers are missing a trick here. As I said, I did not expect to get into a debate about Germany, but he makes an interesting point. There are so many amazing examples of extraordinary women who can excel at what they do—of course there are—so it seems incredibly strange that employers would want to discriminate against women in such a way.

    I am sure the hon. Member will agree that that says something about the nature of our society. All of us recognise the importance of children and families—they are the bedrock and foundation of our society—so it cannot be right that women are treated in such a way and on this scale. That must be consigned to the past. We must move forward, and the Bill provides a really good opportunity to do that. I would be the first to admit that the Bill is not a panacea, but it is a good step in the right direction and I am grateful for the support offered for it.

    Having made some remarks about the example that I referenced and the enforcement mechanism used in Germany, I am sure the Minister agrees that there is merit in us continuing to work closely together through the Bill’s passage to look at how, on a cross-party basis, we can seek to address some of the current safeguards’ shortcomings, namely around the confusion and compliance that I referred to.

    On the former, now is the time to end the inconsistency of when and how regulation 10 of the MAPLE regulations is applied. For instance, when a firm is reducing its number of roles, many employers see their obligations to women on maternity leave as a two-stage process, initially by forcing them to compete for their job against colleagues and only then seeking to find them suitable alternative vacancies if they are unsuccessful in retaining their role. That is deeply unfair. Women on maternity leave are at a massive disadvantage, as they might have been out of the workplace for months—obviously, they have been focused on caring for their newborn child. It is also highly irrational. If a new mum has been selected for redundancy, there is little or no chance of their being offered a suitable alternative vacancy, because they will have been filled. As it stands, many workers do not know their rights under the existing regulations, businesses apply them in different ways, and even case law is conflicting.

    Wendy Chamberlain (North East Fife) (LD)

    I have been reflecting on what the hon. Member has been saying about his very good Bill, which may fill some of the gaps that we have been talking about. I also heard what he said about the evolution of society, and hopefully that—as well as his Bill—will go some way towards helping. My employer before I was elected introduced parental leave allowing both parents to take six months of paid leave. I accept that not every employer can do that, but when we get to the place where, regardless of a person’s gender and their parenting role, they are entitled to rights, employers may stop looking at women as the first place to go when making people redundant. It would no longer be an easy choice for them.

    Dan Jarvis

    The hon. Lady raises a really helpful point, following the one made by the hon. Member for Ashfield (Lee Anderson). The nature of the Bill, and what we seek to achieve through its passage, speaks to the decency that I think we all want to see in our society. In the Bill, we have something in front of the House that is good for pregnant mums, good for new mums and good for families. It is also good for business, as it is in businesses’ own interest to be responsible employers and to make the most of their employees.

    I very much hope that the Bill will get support from across the House. I sense that it will, and I am encouraged by that. I have spent a lot of time thinking about what the critique of the Bill would be and whether any right hon. or hon. Members would have issues or problems with it. I have tried as much as I possibly can to get around as many hon. Members as possible and have those conversations, but nobody has been able to say that they think there is anything wrong with the Bill. The only debate is around the extent of its ambition and whether the protections could be greater and longer. That is potentially a point of debate, but I hope that we now have the basis of a Bill that all decent right hon. and hon. Members will be able to support—fingers crossed.

    Theresa Villiers

    An important potential positive consequence of the hon. Gentleman’s Bill and further protection for women in the workplace is helping us to tackle our productivity problem in this country. If we can monopolise the vast resource of women in the workplace, including pregnant women and new mums, it will make us a more competitive nation, help us to plug skills gaps and make us more productive, which ultimately will raise living standards.

    Dan Jarvis

    The right hon. Lady’s point is spot on and she has made it very eloquently. I can see there is consensus. She is right that for a very long time we have grappled with the productivity challenge, and we are still grappling with it. This is part of how we can seek to address the complicated and difficult productivity challenge that we all know we face as a country. I am grateful to her for that useful intervention.

    It would be helpful at this point to inject some real-life experiences into the debate so that the House can better understand what this Bill, if successful, might mean for women in the workplace. I am in receipt of a number of real-life cases of women who have suffered injustice simply because they were pregnant. There are many, and I must say some of them are genuinely shocking.

    Emily got in touch with me a few weeks ago. She was made redundant from her job more than halfway through her pregnancy and just days before she would have qualified for statutory maternity pay. She is now attempting to appeal the decision on the grounds of pregnancy discrimination and is feeling targeted not only for being pregnant, but for working part time. Her company told Emily it would be making several people redundant, but instead it laid only her off. It did not follow a fair process and she was not offered any alternative employment. Stories such as Emily’s form part of the wider issues surrounding the inconsistent implementation of regulation 10.

    Nickie Aiken (Cities of London and Westminster) (Con)

    I welcome this Bill. Does the hon. Gentleman agree that it is so important because many women are putting off having babies until later in life? When I had my first child at 35, the average age in the Chelsea and Westminster hospital was 39. That means women are further on in their careers, and a Bill of this type will support women who are further into their careers as well as those who may be at the beginning.

    Dan Jarvis

    That is an excellent point that has attracted support from right across the Chamber. The hon. Lady is absolutely right. We must make sure that women are making decisions about their professional careers without having to weigh up all sorts of factors of unfairness. There must be a level playing field and we must make sure that women are not disadvantaged in the workplace, so I completely agree with her and very much hope this Bill will go some way to achieving that ambition.

    I was referring to Emily, whose story highlights the need for consistency and the devastating consequences of what can happen when regulation 10 is not applied correctly. Confusion should never be an excuse for discrimination in the workplace. I have been working closely with the TUC and Unison on the Bill, along with the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development, which has been incredibly helpful. It has offered to inform all its 160,000 members of the changes that the Bill will introduce, if it is successful. Will the Minister say how, if the Bill is successful, he plans to communicate the changes to workers and how he will clarify to employers their what their legal obligations will be?

    On compliance, some firms simply do not offer an alternative role by falsely claiming that one does not exist. Others engineer situations to force new mums out the door. When a business flouts the rules, the onus is on the woman—who, remember, is on maternity leave—to take the matter to an employment tribunal. That highly stressful and costly decision must be made within three months. However, the 2016 findings showed that less than 1% of women lodged a complaint with an employment tribunal.

    When we look into that worryingly low statistic, it is painfully obvious why the figure is so small. The scale of the challenge that such women face is almost insurmountable. Sarah, for example, was made redundant by e-mail six months into her pregnancy. Not wanting to be saddled with a gruelling legal battle during the final months of her pregnancy, she decided against taking legal action at that point. After her baby was born, she sought legal advice, only to be told that she no longer had a case because she had not raised her unfair dismissal within the three-month window. She told me that she never realised how vulnerable pregnant women are until it happened to her.

    There is also Natasha: after telling her employer that she was pregnant during the pandemic, she was made redundant while other members of her team stayed on. Shortly after, Natasha suffered the heartbreak of a miscarriage. She lost her baby and she lost her job. I know that many across the House have experienced the pain and trauma of a miscarriage and know only too well its profound and devastating impact.

    Lee Anderson

    Those are shocking stories; I cannot believe that is happening in this day and age. Does the hon. Member think that some women are perhaps living in fear when they fall pregnant, and that some ladies’ fear of losing their job may lead to them doing the unthinkable, which is to have an abortion?

    Dan Jarvis

    I think all of us can completely agree that that is not the kind of society in which we want to live. We should value people who do the right thing and step forward to enter the workplace. Collectively, we all have a responsibility to put in place legislation that will provide protections to ensure that people are not treated in that way.

    To go back to the hon. Member’s previous point, there is a big responsibility on business. In my experience, the overwhelming majority of the business community are sensible, decent employers. They want to do the right thing. As he said, it is in their interest to do the right thing, value their staff and invest in their workforce—not least a cohort of the workforce that, in every respect, are effective and efficient, to go back to the point about productivity. We have an opportunity to take a step forward today. As I said, this is not a panacea. There is a debate about whether we should go further and be more ambitious, but this is a good step in the right direction and I very much hope that we take it.

    Bob Stewart

    I thank the hon. Gentleman—my friend—for giving way. It seems to me that in the Bill Committee, we could put in a clause that makes it incumbent on employers to give a sheet of paper to women who are packing up their job because they are pregnant stating what their rights are. That might already be in the Bill—I do not know—but it seems to make sense and that would make it clear to women leaving their jobs exactly what their rights are.

    Dan Jarvis

    That is an excellent suggestion. The right hon. Member mentioned the Bill Committee. If the Bill is successful in its passage today, we will look for Members to sit on the Committee. I have a form here that I can perhaps give to him—I would be incredibly grateful.

    He will remember the expression, “Never volunteer for anything,” even better than I do, but in good faith he may have just volunteered to serve on the Bill Committee. Fingers crossed and touch wood, if we get to that point I will be knocking on his door with the form.

    I was making the point about employment tribunals and about Natasha. When she finally felt able to take her employer to a tribunal, she was told—[Interruption.] That is the office of the right hon. Member for Beckenham (Bob Stewart) calling to make sure they have the date of the Bill Committee in his diary—[Laughter.] Natasha was told that it was too late and that she should have applied within the three-month window. Extending the time limit to bring forward a claim to six months was supported by every single stakeholder I engaged with. That is an important point.

    Nickie Aiken

    The hon. Gentleman is making an excellent point. What has shocked me in the work I have been doing on my own private Member’s Bill on employment rights for those undertaking fertility treatment is that it is not just small and medium businesses that can have questionable policies on pregnant women or women who are trying to get pregnant, but even the larger ones, including some of the biggest businesses in the country and even major banks. I have been appalled by some of the stories that I have heard from women who have had to take their employer to a tribunal. Does he agree that, through his Bill and my Bill—which will come to the Chamber soon—it is important to give women confidence that their job is secure when they are pregnant or trying to get pregnant?

    Dan Jarvis

    I agree with the hon. Lady’s excellent point, to the extent that I wonder whether she might also be available to sit on the Bill Committee. If we are successful today, I may be knocking on her door. There is an absolute responsibility on business to look at their practices and ensure that they are doing the right thing. My overwhelming experience of the business community is that that is what they want to do, but it is clearly not happening everywhere. For all businesses and companies, particularly the larger ones that she referenced, I hope that their minds will be focused on the issue as part of this process.

    Legislation and direction from national Government is an important element, but some of it is cultural. It is about leadership in the business community and senior management looking at their own organisations and satisfying themselves that they are doing the right thing. As parliamentarians, we interact regularly with the business community, and I hope that we will have the conversations with senior business leaders in the weeks and months to come. I hope that those conversations will be well received by business. I am grateful for her intervention and hope to see her in Committee.

    I was just making the point about the support that I have encountered for expanding the time limit. It is widely supported by stakeholders and that reform has also been advocated by the Equality and Human Rights Commission, the Women and Equalities Committee, the Petitions Committee and the Law Commission. The Government have acknowledged the problem and I have had good conversations about it, but so far they have not made a commitment. I hope that will be a further point of debate, because advising women to make an out-of-time application will not cut it.

    I asked the Ministry of Justice how many exceptions had been granted, and in a written answer it said that it did not have that information—I suspect it is very few. Indeed, I have had anecdotal accounts of law firms refusing to represent women if their claim has not been lodged within the current limit, as judges often do not use their discretion. Improving access to justice is an important part of this issue.

    Bad employers must know that there will be consequences to their discriminatory treatment. I would be grateful if the Minister would look at when the Government are planning to implement the Law Commission’s April 2020 recommendations and extend the time limit for all employment tribunal claims to six months.

    I said earlier that there is no more important job than raising a family. It seems only fair that no one should be penalised for doing so by losing their job. I also said that three in four pregnant women in the workplace experience pregnancy and maternity discrimination, and that 54,000 women a year lose their job just for getting pregnant. We have had a good debate about this. By any metric, ensuring that women are treated decently and fairly should be a foundation of a civilised society, rather than just an aspiration. If we are serious about tackling discrimination in the workplace, providing parity and equality and ensuring that employers fulfil their obligation, we need laws to support that ambition that are fit for the 21st century and the modern workplace. The Bill will not fix everything, but if it is passed, it will be an important step towards providing working families with more security and dignity in the workplace, which they both need and deserve.

    Let me say, once again, how grateful I am to all those who have offered support and to all right hon. and hon. Members present. I very much hope that the Bill will have support from the Government and all parties, and I commend it to the House.

  • Gregory Campbell – 2022 Statement on Threats to Jimmy Nesbitt

    Gregory Campbell – 2022 Statement on Threats to Jimmy Nesbitt

    The statement made by Gregory Campbell, the DUP MP for East Londonderry, on 20 October 2022.

    Jimmy Nesbitt is a local lad who has invested in his own community. Those painting threatening graffiti such as this should stop. Their actions are wrong and to be condemned.

    I fundamentally disagree with Mr Nesbitt’s position on Northern Ireland’s future but he has every right to express his political views in whatever forum he wishes. He should be able to do so free from fear. That’s a democracy and it’s why I have opposed Sinn Fein all my life as they believed you could justify violence at the same time as doing politics.

    We must be consistent in always opposing violence as well as any threat of violence and attempted intimidation.

  • Anne-Marie Trevelyan – 2022 Statement on the Transport Strikes Bill

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan – 2022 Statement on the Transport Strikes Bill

    The statement made by Anne-Marie Trevelyan, the Secretary of State for Transport, in the House of Commons on 20 October 2022.

    The Government are today introducing the Transport Strikes (Minimum Service Levels) Bill. This meets the Prime Minister’s commitment to introduce this Bill within her first 30 days of Parliament sitting and delivers on a commitment in the 2019 Conservative party manifesto.

    The Bill paves the way for the introduction of minimum levels of service on transport services, like those already seen in other countries, including France and Spain. The Bill will ensure that specified transport services—which could include, for example, rail, tubes and buses—will not completely shut down when unions impose strikes. This Bill will balance the right to strike with ensuring commuters can get to their place of work and people can continue to make vital journeys to access education and healthcare during strikes.

    The Bill sets out the legal framework for establishing minimum service levels. It will allow relevant employers and trade unions to negotiate and reach agreement between themselves on minimum service levels referred to as minimum service agreements (MSAs), provide for circumstances in which the MSA can be changed and include enforcement arrangements to ensure parties follow due process in their negotiations.

    The Bill also provides for an independent determination process should employers and unions fail to reach agreement on an appropriate minimum service level after three months, whereby if an agreement has not been reached the Central Arbitration Committee will determine the minimum service level.

    The Bill also includes a power for the Secretary of State to set interim minimum service levels by regulations which will apply where neither an MSA has been agreed nor an independent determination reached. These regulations will also be consulted upon and will need to be agreed by both Houses of Parliament before they are made. Under the Bill there will also have to be a minimum three-month gap between these regulations being made and their coming into force.

    The specific details of how minimum service levels would apply to transport services will be set out in secondary legislation following appropriate consultation. A minimum service level would only be applied to an individual transport service once that secondary legislation has been agreed by Parliament.

    The provisions of the Bill extend and apply to England, Wales and Scotland. The Bill’s provisions relate to the reserved matter of employment rights and duties and industrial relations, and the subject matter of the Trade Union and Labour Relations (Consolidation) Act 1992, and do not engage the legislative consent process.

  • Chris Heaton-Harris – 2022 Statement on Progress in Northern Ireland

    Chris Heaton-Harris – 2022 Statement on Progress in Northern Ireland

    The statement made by Chris Heaton-Harris, the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, in the House of Commons on 20 October 2022.

    During the passage of the Northern Ireland (Ministers, Elections and Petitions of Concern) Act in the House of Lords, the Government committed to laying a written ministerial statement every six months setting out which of our commitments in New Decade, New Approach (NDNA) we have delivered on to date. The first of these statements was published on 23 March 2022. This is the second statement.

    The NDNA agreement facilitated the restoration of the devolved institutions in January 2020 after three years of hiatus. The Government remain deeply disappointed at the continued lack of a fully functioning Executive following the resignation of the First Minister in February and the Assembly election in May, and urges the parties to come together and form a Government in the interests of the people of Northern Ireland.

    The Government have taken action to support the people of Northern Ireland, for instance through the energy price guarantee and the £400 energy bill support scheme payment which will help consumers with their energy costs, as well as the energy bill relief scheme for businesses, the public sector and charity organisations.

    However, the people of Northern Ireland deserve a stable and accountable Government that can act directly on their behalf through the challenging times ahead. The Government’s priority is to facilitate the restoration of the Executive as soon as possible, but if an Executive is not formed by 28 October, Ministers in Northern Ireland will lose office and I will come under a legal duty to call fresh elections to the Northern Ireland Assembly. In law, this must take place within 12 weeks. This action will not be taken lightly, but time is running out for the parties to come together, form an Executive and avoid this outcome.

    In the meantime, the Government will continue to implement its commitments and deliver for people in Northern Ireland. To that end, since January 2020 the Government have:

    published four reports on the use of the Petition of Concern mechanism, with the most recent report published on 20 January 2022;

    passed the Northern Ireland (Ministers, Elections and Petitions of Concern) Act to implement the institutional reforms agreed in NDNA;

    passed the Internal Market Act 2020;

    held a meeting of the Board of Trade in Northern Ireland;

    ensured that Northern Ireland can access the trade deals the UK is striking across the world;

    invited representatives of the Northern Ireland Executive to all meetings of the UK-EU Joint and Specialised Committees;

    changed the rules governing how the people of Northern Ireland bring their family members to the UK, enabling them to apply for immigration status on broadly the same terms as family members of Irish citizens;

    appointed Danny Kinahan as the first Northern Ireland veterans commissioner in September 2020;

    passed the Armed Forces Act, which further enshrines the armed forces covenant in law;

    conducted a thorough review of the aftercare service, the purpose of which was to consider whether the remit of the service should be widened to cover all HM Forces veterans living in Northern Ireland with service-related injuries and conditions;

    marked Northern Ireland’s centenary in 2021 with a £3 million programme of cultural and historical events, including the delivery of the shared history fund and schools planting project;

    brought forward regulations that continue to ensure designated Union flag flying days remain in line with those observed in the rest of the UK;

    recognised Ulster Scots as a national minority under the Council of Europe Framework Convention for the Protection of National Minorities;

    announced £2 million in funding for NI Screen’s Irish language and Ulster Scots broadcast funds, which support a range of film, television and radio programming;

    established a new hub—Erskine House—in the heart of Belfast, increasing the visibility and accessibility of UK Government Departments in Northern Ireland;

    reviewed the findings of the renewable heat incentive inquiry report to consider its implications for the use of public money in Northern Ireland; and

    continued to foster closer ties and better collaborative working across sectors such as tourism, sport and culture, including through the potential joint UK and Ireland bid to host the 2028 European championships.

    The Government have provided a total financial package of £2 billion for New Decade, New Approach. This financial package includes a £1 billion Barnett-based investment guarantee for infrastructure investment and £1 billion in funding across key priorities as set out in the deal. Of the £1 billion in funding, over £750 million has been allocated towards such outcomes as:

    bringing an end to the nurses’ pay dispute in January 2020;

    putting the Northern Ireland Executive’s finances on a sustainable footing by securing additional funding for the Executive in the 2020-21 financial year;

    the creation of a new Northern Ireland graduate entry medical school in Londonderry;

    supporting the transformation of public services;

    supporting low carbon transport in Northern Ireland, enabling the Department for Infrastructure to commit to ordering 100 low-carbon buses to be deployed in Belfast and Londonderry; and

    addressing Northern Ireland’s unique circumstances through projects and programmes that tackle paramilitarism, promote greater integration in education, support economic prosperity, and support the Irish language and Ulster-Scots.

    In addition, in the absence of Executive progress on the matter, the Government have continued to progress the New Decade, New Approach commitments relating to identity and language through the Identity and Language (NI) Bill. This will encourage and promote respect and tolerance for all of Northern Ireland’s diverse identities, cultures and traditions. The Identity and Language Bill, as amended, provides for:

    the creation of a series of national and cultural identity principles, and an office of identity and cultural expression to oversee them;

    the creation of an Irish language commissioner;

    the creation of a commissioner for the Ulster Scots and the Ulster British tradition;

    a duty on the Northern Ireland Department of Education to encourage and facilitate the use and understanding of Ulster Scots;

    the repeal of the Administration of Justice (Ireland) Act 1737; and

    the establishment of a Castlereagh Foundation.

    All provisions in the Bill will be a matter for the Northern Ireland Executive to administer, support and fund.

  • Grant Shapps – 2022 Statement on an Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse

    Grant Shapps – 2022 Statement on an Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse

    The statement made by Grant Shapps, the Home Secretary, in the House of Commons on 20 October 2022.

    At midday today, the report of the independent inquiry into child sexual abuse was published. This concludes seven years of investigation into areas of institutional failings, across England and Wales, to properly protect and safeguard children in their care from child sexual abuse.

    I would like to thank the chair of the inquiry, Professor Alexis Jay, and her whole team, for their dedicated service in carrying out this inquiry.

    Above all, I want to extend my sincere thanks to the thousands of victims and survivors who have shown exceptional courage in coming forward to share their testimonies and experiences with the inquiry.

    The report provides truly shocking insight on the unimaginable abuse suffered by children, and draws out stark failings by institutions, leaders, and professionals to protect them from harm.

    The report makes recommendations that focus on greater accountability, increasing reporting of this crime, redress for victims, increased focus on bringing the perpetrators of these abhorrent acts to justice, and creating a stronger voice from Government on this issue.

    We recognise that this is a watershed moment, and that it will take time to fully review the inquiry’s findings and recommendations. We will provide a comprehensive response in line with the inquiry’s deadline.

    We are committed to working across Government, and closely with partners in law enforcement, local authorities, the care sector, the third sector, and industry, to continue supporting victims and survivors. We will work together to pursue and bring perpetrators to justice, and to safeguard children and vulnerable people.

    I have today laid a copy of the inquiry’s report in Parliament and will provide a further statement to the House on this landmark report at the earliest opportunity.

  • Jacob Rees-Mogg – 2022 Statement on the Subsidy Control Regime

    Jacob Rees-Mogg – 2022 Statement on the Subsidy Control Regime

    The statement made by Jacob Rees-Mogg, the Secretary of State for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy, in the House of Commons on 20 October 2022.

    I am announcing today, 20 October 2022, that the Government intend to bring the Subsidy Control Act fully into force on 4 January 2023.

    The Act provides the framework for a new, United Kingdom-wide subsidy control regime. This regime will enable public authorities, including devolved Administrations and local authorities, to deliver subsidies that are tailored to local needs. This Government are determined to seize the opportunities arising from Brexit. We are no longer bound by the EU’s bureaucratic and prescriptive state aid regime.

    The Subsidy Control (Subsidies and Schemes of Interest or Particular Interest) Regulations 2022, which I have laid in draft before both Houses today, will define which kinds of subsidies and schemes should be referred to the new subsidy advice unit, or SAU, within the Competition and Markets Authority. Additional scrutiny of the public authority’s assessment is sensible, given that these will typically be the types of subsidies that have the greater potential to lead to negative effects on domestic competition and investment and/or international trade and investment.

    The Government have consulted, earlier this year, on their proposed approach to subsidies and schemes of interest and of particular interest, and on the terms of the draft statutory guidance. The draft regulations that have been laid today, and the forthcoming guidance, are the fruit of careful reflection on consultation responses, the large majority of which were offered in an open and constructive spirit. I thank all respondents to both consultations.

    Further regulations will also be laid during the autumn. These will concern the Competition and Markets Authority’s information-gathering powers in support of its subsidy control functions; the information requirements that public authorities must publish on our publicly available subsidy transparency database; and the gross cash equivalent rules for valuing subsidies in a consistent and comparable way, no matter in which form they are given.

    The Government also intend that all four statutory instruments will be brought into force ready for the new regime to operate from 4 January.

    More broadly, I wish to highlight some of the other positive features of the subsidy control regime that the Act establishes, and the work my officials are doing to implement it.

    During the passage of the Act, Ministers were clear that improvements would be made to the functionality of the transparency database. Improvements have already been made, and a further programme of enhancements will be completed before the Act comes into force, to make the database even more transparent and easier for public authorities to use.

    The Government are drawing up clear statutory guidance to expand upon and explain the intention behind the provisions included in the Act, among other supplementary guides and educational aides. This will help public authorities to understand the obligations placed on them by the new legislation and design better and less distortive subsidies.

    The Government will also hold a series of in-person and online events in November to inform public authorities of the requirements under the new regime.

    The Government will make three streamlined routes for when the Subsidy Control Act fully enters into force. These are subsidy schemes that will be open to all public authorities, who can use them to give certain categories of subsidies even more quickly and easily, and without the need to assess them against the subsidy control regime’s principles.

    Next year, 2023, will mark the beginning of a new era for subsidy control in the United Kingdom. The Subsidy Control Act strikes a sensible balance between allowing public authorities greater freedom to grant subsidies for useful social and economic purposes, while protecting the interests of taxpayers by means of proportionate rules and reviews.

  • Sue Ferns – 2022 Speech to TUC Conference

    Sue Ferns – 2022 Speech to TUC Conference

    The speech made by Sue Ferns, the President of TUC, to the TUC Conference on 18 October 2022.

    Vice-President, Frances, Paul, delegates:

    It’s wonderful to address you as TUC President.
    To be at our first in-person Congress for three years.
    And I want to begin by thanking my two predecessors.
    Two good friends of mine.
    Gail Cartmail and Ged Nichols.
    As Ged said, there had been 152 TUC Congresses.
    And it was just his luck to preside over the first ever virtual one.
    But Ged and Gail both did us proud.
    We may have been apart – but they kept us together.
    I also want to thank Mike – boss and friend – and everyone at Prospect for their support throughout the year.
    I’m incredibly proud to be part of such a unique union.
    Private and public, we represent professionals and specialists on whom we all depend:
    The air traffic controllers keeping our skies safe.
    Our members keeping the BBC on air in the face of threats to the future of public service broadcasting.
    Scientists tackling our climate emergency.
    Energy workers supplying our homes, schools and hospitals despite the extreme weather events across the seasons.
    And I want to say a few words about our members in the civil service.
    Committed public servants who helped get us through the pandemic and Brexit.
    The scientists whose advice we all depended on, now openly derided by ministers.
    Civil servants who found out in the Daily Mail about the proposals to cut 91,000 of their jobs.
    Shortly followed by Liz Truss’s ill-conceived plans to introduce regional pay.
    To the government, to the new Prime Minister, we say this:
    Together we are strong. Together we are united. And together we will fight for our members every step of the way.
    Friends, my year as President has been dominated by Putin’s war in Ukraine and of course by the cost-of-living crisis.

    I’ve heard the Prime Minister is looking for the anti-growth coalition.

    Yes, the Prime Minister whose budget crashed the economy.

    After less than a fortnight in charge.

    So, I say this to the Prime Minister, if you want to find the anti-growth coalition, then take a look in the mirror.

    Because working people will be taking no lessons on growth from you.

    But there have been many highlights too.
    And none better than meeting trade unionists the length and breadth of the country.
    During the COP26 in Glasgow, I joined the GMB picket line during the refuse collectors’ dispute.
    Men and women who didn’t just care about the jobs they do and the communities they serve.
    But just one example of workers helping to care for our environment, yet so often taken for granted.
    Because it’s clear that it’s not just governments or businesses that will tackle climate change.
    A fair transition simply will not happen unless workers and their unions have a real say in decision-making and are properly supported through a process of fair change.
    And earlier this year, I travelled to Plymouth to unveil a plaque commemorating the return of the Tolpuddle Martyrs.
    That was on the same day as P&O workers learned that they were sacked on Zoom.
    A reminder that almost two centuries after Tolpuddle, workers still face many of the same challenges:
    Bad bosses. Insecure work. A government that serves wealth, but attacks labour.
    It’s worth remembering that during the pandemic, the government lauded key workers and worked with unions to deliver furlough.
    Two years on, and it attacks those same workers for asking for a decent pay rise – waging a right-wing assault on our movement.
    Well, I say this to the government: you’ve completely misjudged the public mood. But you don’t need to take my word for it – just look at the latest opinion polls.
    The British people have rather more faith in trade unionists than they do in Tory politicians. And we will fight any attempt to restrict our employment and trade union rights.
    When we marched on 18 June, we said there was more to follow.
    And Congress, today we are clear:
    Workers across the country have had enough and are fighting back.
    Rail workers, bus drivers, posties, NHS staff, teachers and many others across the economy are joining together to send a clear message.
    We know it’s not wages that are driving up inflation.
    But where’s the scrutiny of profits and bonuses?
    No more real term cuts – we demand fair pay now.
    It’s about time the real wealth creators got a look in.
    Despite promising to get wages rising, the government is once again treating us as the enemy within.
    What do politicians expect? We’re an industrial movement doing our job. Fighting for decent pay for working people.
    But Congress, we’re not perfect.
    At the start of my year as President, I made tackling sexual harassment a priority.
    We’ve done lots of good work. But there’s a lot still to do.
    As we know, sexual harassment takes many forms – from physical harassment to verbal abuse and downloading obscene images at work.
    But I want to make one thing clear: it doesn’t matter whether it’s Parliament or any other workplace, sexual harassment is never acceptable.
    And that includes our movement too.
    Most women in this hall will have experienced harassment at some point in our working lives.
    It’s upsetting, shocking, humiliating.
    It takes a toll on your self-confidence and wellbeing.
    And it makes doing a tough job even tougher.
    And delegates, it makes it harder for women to do our union job too.
    That’s another reason why it has to stop.
    It’s corrosive and ultimately it weakens us all.
    So let’s be clear: all decent trade unionists share an interest in preventing harassment of any kind.
    No woman, or man, should suffer in silence.
    And when harassment happens, let’s commit to take action to call it out, stop it, once and for all.
    Congress, the battle for women’s equality has reached a defining moment.
    Women still earn less than men.
    Our pensions lag behind.
    And our rights are under attack.
    The US Supreme Court’s decision on Roe v Wade rolls back 50 years of progress.
    An assault not just on women in America, but women worldwide.
    And today we are clear:
    It’s not for the radical and religious right to decide what women can, and can’t, do.
    It’s for women. And women alone.
    I’m proud that too we’re making a difference globally.
    Most importantly, by leading the fight against the far right.
    Let’s hope Lula gives Bolsonaro the thumping defeat he so richly deserves in the final round of the Brazilian elections at the end of the month.
    Congress, whether it’s fighting the imprisonment of trade unionists in Turkey.
    Or supporting the struggle for justice in Palestine.
    Let’s put our values of internationalism and solidarity into action.
    As a trustee of TUC Aid, I’ve seen what we can achieve.
    Supporting Iraqi women. Tackling sexual harassment in Brazil. And helping our Kenyan brothers and sisters win fair trade deals.
    Congress, in this country and overseas, equality really must be at the heart of everything we do.
    As the TUC’s Anti Racism Task Force has shown, we are at our best when we are boldest.
    So let’s secure good jobs for all.
    Address our epidemic of low-paid, low-skilled, low-productivity work.
    And deliver genuine flexibility for everyone.
    It’s great that flexible working is now so prominent on the agenda.
    But the debate shouldn’t just be about middle-class professionals working from home.
    That excludes the majority of the working population – including keyworkers.
    It should be about delivering flexibility for all.
    And that includes those in occupations traditionally denied the choices others take for granted.
    And Congress, it doesn’t matter whether it’s flexible working, or equality, or higher pay, we know the best way to win for working people:
    Stronger unions. Collective bargaining. And organisation.
    And that really puts the onus on all of us to rebuild our movement.
    Meeting the demands of a world which is changing fast.
    Automation, technological change, the climate emergency – all demand stronger, not weaker, trade unions.
    And so we must focus relentlessly on growing our membership.
    Reaching out to today’s workers, in all our magnificent diversity.
    And nowhere is that more important than where most people work, in the private sector.
    Times may change, jobs may change, but workers still need a union to fight their corner.
    Public or private, only strong, growing, representative unions can give working people hope.
    The confidence to demand better.
    And that to me is the essence of trades unionism.
    Workers joining together to win fairness, justice and equality. To secure good work, good jobs.
    Never did I imagine I would have the privilege of addressing this Congress as President.
    Nor that, within my working life, women would assume their rightful place as leaders of our movement.
    Frances, I imagine you’re going to hear a fair few tributes over the next two days.

    You have been a brilliant general secretary.

    Thank you for everything that you have achieved for working people.

    You may have been our first woman general secretary, but mark my words, you will not be the last.

    Finally I must say thank you to you, the trade union team.

    The officers, reps and activists who make our movement what it is.

    A unique democratic movement of, and for, working people.

    So thank you delegates for everything you do.

    Keep up the good work.

    Be proud of our trade union values.

    And let’s build for the future.

  • Paul Nowak – 2022 Speech to TUC Conference

    Paul Nowak – 2022 Speech to TUC Conference

    The speech made by Paul Nowak, the Deputy General Secretary of the TUC, to the TUC Conference on 18 October 2022.

    President, Congress.

    When I joined the GMB over 30 years ago, working part-time in ASDA, I never thought for one minute that I would have the honour and the privilege to be elected general secretary of the TUC.

    So, I want to thank Congress for your support, and because trade unionism is always a collective endeavour, I want to thank every member, every rep, every full-time officer, every TUC staff member who has supported and helped me over the last 3 decades.

    I promise to do what I can to justify that support, and to extend it to the next generation of reps and activists coming through, the people who are the lifeblood of our movement.

    Now, last thing on a Wednesday afternoon is not the time for long speeches – and no doubt you will get to hear plenty of those from me in the months and years to come…so I just want to say three things.

    First of all I want to sincerely thank Frances for everything she has done for the TUC.

    Frances has been my good friend and colleague for over twenty years, so I am not an impartial observer, but I think it is absolutely right to acknowledge that she has been an outstanding leader of the TUC.

    The first ever woman to lead our movement – and she won’t be the last – she has seen us through some incredibly difficult times.

    · Ten years of hostile government, and austerity

    · A vicious and vindictive anti-Trade Union Act

    · Brexit

    · And, of course, the pandemic and the cost of living crisis

    Now, I could list all of her achievements in the face of those challenges, but let me just pick out one.

    I have no doubt in my mind that if it wasn’t for Frances O’Grady, there would have been no furlough scheme.

    It is thanks to her, that 12 million people saw their jobs and incomes supported during the dark days of the pandemic; 12 million people kept their livelihoods; 12 million people and their families were able to pay the bills.

    Frances, thank for you for that and for EVERYTHING you have done over the last decade.

    The second thing I want to say is this. I want my time leading the TUC to focus on one thing above all else.

    Growing, diversifying and strengthening our movement.

    More union members.

    More union reps.

    A genuinely active, confident, inclusive, vibrant and diverse movement – one that is as relevant to a young black woman working in digital or in a care home, as it is to this middle aged white bloke from Merseyside.

    Think of everything we have debated so far this week.

    · A £15 per hour minimum wage

    · Rebuilding our public services, a proper industrial strategy

    · A new deal for working people

    · Decent employment rights and an end to fire and rehire

    · Genuine equality and tackling racism and sexual harassment in our workplaces.

    Our ability to deliver on all those things and so much more, depends on our ability to grow our movement.

    · Only a stronger trade union movement can win disputes

    · Only a stronger trade union movement can influence government & beat back hostile legislation

    · And only a stronger trade union movement – indeed trade union and labour movement – can bring about the political change our members desperately need

    We’ve grown the last four years out of five. That’s a start.

    But let’s make sure that each and every year from now, we grow our membership, we expand our reps base, we extend collective bargaining – not waiting for political change, making that change happen here and now, workplace by workplace, dispute by dispute, campaign by campaign.

    My last point is simply this.

    Growing our movement will require a collective effort.

    The TUC has and always be more than the general secretary, or the staff who work in Congress House, the regions and nations.

    The TUC is its unions. You are the TUC.

    48 unions. 5 and a half million members.

    And if we are serious about growing our movement, we have to be serious about working together.

    Not talking about working together, not passing resultions about working togther, actually working together.

    · Supporting each other’s organising efforts

    · Joint bargaining agendas that raise the bar for our members

    · Sectoral co-ordination to stop employers playing one union off against another

    · A shared political vision that inspires working people

    · And in each and every dispute, standing by workers who take that difficult decision to strike, because their fight is our fight, and no worker should ever, will ever, stand alone.

    That’s what will allow us to deliver on the things that matter to our members.

    That’s what will enable us to win.

    Not glorious defeats.

    Not fighting the good fight but falling short.

    Winning for working people.

    That’s our job Congress.

    Let’s work together,

    Let’s fight together

    Let’s win together.

  • Frances O’Grady – 2022 Speech to TUC Conference

    Frances O’Grady – 2022 Speech to TUC Conference

    The speech made by Frances O’Grady, the General Secretary of the TUC, on 18 October 2022.

    Welcome to the TUC, our parliament for working people.

    Represented, here in the Hall today, are millions of workers who keep the wheels of this country turning.

    All they ask in return is respect, and fair pay.
    And if it takes strike action so be it: we stand with you

    So let’s hear it for:

    Our incredible care assistants and NHS staff, rail and bus workers, dedicated posties, prison officers, call centre staff, dock workers, teachers, firefighters, university lecturers, civil servants and more…

    Decent people who are honest and hardworking.

    But, according to Liz Truss, British workers are layabouts, lacking graft, skill and application.

    The Prime Minister believes that Britain’s poor productivity is down to the poor performance of workers.

    That’s a bit rich from a PM whose own performance crashed the country
    She didn’t even turn up for work yesterday!
    And since her disastrous debut, we’ve had more U-turns than a malfunctioning Sat Nav.

    And all this, after 12 long years of Conservative governments that have slashed, burned, and ripped off this country, something rotten.
    While the sun was shining, the Tories didn’t mend the roof. They nicked the lead off it.

    Let’s have a reminder of what’s happened under the Tories:

    Which country has the worst investment in the G7?
    The UK.

    Which country has the worst wages growth in the G7?
    Don’t need to tell workers this – the UK.

    And which country has the worst economic growth in the G7?
    Of course, the UK.

    That’s your record, Prime Minister
    That’s the country your party has been running for the past 12 years.

    To be fair, under the Conservatives, some things are growing:

    CEO pay – up.
    Corporate profits – up.
    Bankers’ bonuses – up.

    And look what else:

    The cost of mortgages.
    NHS waiting lists.
    Ambulance waiting times.
    Child poverty.
    Food banks.
    Up. Up. Up.

    That means more kids going to bed hungry.
    More families afraid to put the heating on.

    But there is a real plan for growth.
    Trade unions want a growing economy that works for working people.
    High investment, high skills, high wages.
    Decent work, so workers don’t need to go on strike to defend their pay.

    And we want a strong society that comes with growth, fairly-shared.
    A well-funded NHS – schools – public services.
    A safety net to help us all in a crisis.
    No-one growing up, or growing old, in poverty.
    A safe, secure, welcoming society.
    And more than that – a country of music, culture, football, books and brilliant TV.

    For over a decade, the TUC has made the case for investment, for R&D, for innovation, for skills.
    To make things here in Britain.
    To meet the challenge of net zero, with good green jobs.
    And to harness the big gains of new tech, for all of us

    We need an economy that rewards work – not wealth.
    But under the Conservatives, working people have got poorer, while shareholders have got richer.
    We’re in the longest squeeze on real wages since Napoleonic times.
    And if ministers and employers keep hammering pay packets at the same rate, UK workers are on course to suffer two decades – TWENTY YEARS – of lost living standards.
    Over the next three years alone:
    Real earnings are set to fall by ANOTHER £4,000
    We have got to stop the rot.
    Families can’t afford to tighten their belts anymore.
    They’re at breaking point.

    Just look at that disastrous mini-budget.
    Only a month ago.

    I say this to Liz Truss: Your budget wasn’t pro-growth. It was pro-greed.
    Tax cuts for the rich, with no plan for growth at all.
    That’s why the markets got spooked.
    That’s why the economy tanked.

    The PM may have dumped Kwasi Kwarteng.
    And is now hiding behind Jeremy Hunt
    Or maybe under a desk?

    But she can’t duck this:
    We don’t trust her government with our economy.
    Livelihoods are on the line.

    Some say Liz Truss must go.
    I think they’re wrong.
    This whole rotten Tory government must go.
    The Tories are toxic.
    It’s time for change.
    We need a general election now

    We know who creates real wealth in this country.
    It’s not hedge fund managers who made a mint by betting on the pound crashing.
    The real wealth creators are the people of this country.

    Jeremy Hunt may be the new face at No 11
    But it’s still the same old story
    Lift the cap on bankers’ bonuses
    Drive down public servants’ pay
    Handouts for the wealthy and big business
    Cuts to UC and benefits

    Give to the rich.
    Take from everyone else.
    Robin Hood in reverse.
    (Shurwood Forest fracked)

    Working people are not fooled by trickledown economics.
    It’s the old Tory money trick.
    Austerity means NHS waiting lists grow and businesses go bust.
    When workers get more money, they spend it.
    When the rich get more money, they offshore it.

    So, I have a message for Liz Truss:
    Working people are proud of the jobs we do;
    We work hard
    We work the longest hours in Europe.

    Yet, thanks to your party’s 12 years in government, millions are struggling to make ends meet.
    We don’t need lectures on working harder.
    This country needs a proper plan for fairer, greener growth.

    The prime minister must answer another question:
    if you really care about hard graft and performance, how come you gave Jacob Rees Mogg a job?

    A man best known for lying horizontal on the Commons’ benches.
    Who aims to make life even harder on the shop floor.

    He wants workers’ rights, that came from the EU, stripped from the statute book.

    Important rights like holiday pay.
    Time off for mums and dads.
    And safe limits on working time.

    But the minister for the nineteenth century needs to wake up.

    The TUC has just asked people who voted Conservative in the last election what THEY think the government should do.
    81 per cent of Tory voters say:
    Protect our rights at work.

    And more, we demand action to tackle corporate gangsters.

    Never forget P&O.
    A prime example of everything wrong with UK labour laws.

    Loyal crew sacked without a second thought.
    Shameless bosses admitting they’d broken the law.
    And ministers letting them get away with it

    Worse rights at work won’t rebuild Britain.
    Britain only does well, when working people do well.
    We demand a new deal for workers.

    From Tolpuddle onwards, the establishment has always seen workers organising as a threat.
    And, yes, we are.
    We’re a threat to casino capitalism.
    A threat to the notion that you can divide workers
    A threat to exploitation and low pay.

    So just when the citizens of this country are in despair;
    when key workers’ kids are going to school with holes in their shoes;
    And young families are worried sick about the mortgage;
    This government’s top priority is attacking the right to strike to make it harder to win fair pay.

    A cynical effort to distract from the chaos they have caused.

    But I say this: if ministers want to pick a fight with us, we are more than ready

    Today I give them notice:
    We’ve already taken legal counsel.
    We know you’re in breach of international law.
    And trade deals that enshrine labour standards.
    So, read my lips, we will see you in court.

    This winter looks set to be a tough one.
    We face an emergency made in Downing Street.
    The lights could go out all over Britain.

    Even with energy prices capped – average bills are set to double.
    Other costs have gone through the roof too: Childcare. Food. Filling up the car.
    No-one has cash to spare.

    With inflation at 10%, we don’t need wage restraint.
    It’s time for profit restraint.

    Taxpayers helped business with their bills.
    Now it’s time to make business play their part.
    No layoffs this winter.
    No boardroom bonanzas.
    And no shareholder sprees.

    Put the cap back on the bankers’ bonuses.
    Let’s have a bigger windfall tax on greedy energy giants.
    And don’t just bail out them out – bring them into public ownership.

    And more:
    Protect benefits against inflation.
    Invest in public services.
    And give us stronger workers’ rights

    Our nation of grafters have earned a fair day’s pay for a fair day’s work.
    That means a £15 minimum wage, as soon as possible.
    Fair pay agreements to get wages rising for everyone

    And it’s time to do right by the people who’ve done us all proud
    They got us through the pandemic – and we owe them
    Give public servants a real pay rise now

    And on November 2nd, from every corner of the UK, we will rally to Westminster
    And if this shower of a government is still clinging to power
    We will demand a general election

    We are trade unionists.
    Just as when the TUC proposed furlough at the start of the pandemic, we’ve got answers to the problems Britain faces.

    We’ve seen the difference our movement makes right around the world.
    From Amazon to Starbucks: growing membership, winning deals
    Proof that solidarity works.

    Backed up by new laws from progressive governments from Spain to New Zealand
    We hope soon, Brazil too.
    Governments who know that good jobs and rising wages are the route to a decent life.

    Change can come – we can build it.

    Remember the kids who save half their school dinner to take home for tea.

    Remember pensioners too poor to keep warm, and workers who can’t afford to get sick, while NHS waiting times soar.

    None of this is inevitable.
    These are political choices.
    Made by politicians.
    And we can vote them out.

    As unions, our job is to win now and every day.

    The bigger our movement, the stronger we are.
    So, in formally moving the General Council statement, let’s reach out and tell workers why they should join

    Trade unionism is the reasonable notion that your boss doesn’t have all the answers.
    That working people together have a voice and power. And how that changes everything.

    We are the people who brought you the weekend, the eight-hour day, equal pay.
    We’re proud of our diversity.
    Our wonderful President Sue Ferns.
    And leading our fight against racism, Dr Patrick Roach.

    We stand up for our class – a multiethnic, multiracial, working class of men and women.
    In cities, towns and the countryside too.

    We’re for all working people.
    Yes, we have members on railways, in shops and factories.
    But also in Uber, Deliveroo and Amazon

    Whatever our background, race or religion everyone deserves a decent job, a pension and respect.

    It wasn’t wages or workers that caused this crisis.
    And we refuse to let workers pay for it.

    People ask me: will the TUC coordinate strike action this winter?
    And I say: We already are.

    When workers are left with no choice but to vote for strike action for decent pay, I say:
    Bring it on.

    For the last ten years, I’ve been proud to lead the TUC.
    And I’m passing the torch to my comrade, the brilliant Paul Nowak.

    At heart, I believe that trade unionism is about friendship
    Friendship between workers transforms what is possible.

    Congress: we have hope.
    Hope in young workers joining unions.
    Workers backing workers.
    Black workers and White workers, standing together.

    Let’s take that message to workplaces and communities, in every corner of the country.
    We can build a better world.
    We will fight for our class.
    And, together, we all win.

    Solidarity.