Sefton UNISON Sefton UNISON
CALL US ON: 0151 928 9911
  • Sefton UNISON
  • Why UNISON
  • Need Help
    • Need Help
    • Redundancy Support Staff
  • Team
  • Our Local News
  • Contact Sefton UNISON
Sefton UNISON Sefton UNISON
  • Sefton UNISON
  • Why UNISON
  • Need Help
    • Need Help
    • Redundancy Support Staff
  • Team
  • Our Local News
  • Contact Sefton UNISON
Jun 16

‘We will defend our right to strike – and our right to vote’

  • 16 June 2023

National conference delegates this week voiced their determination to defend their rights as trade unionists and voters – against a wave of government suppression.

A debate on defending the right to strike focussed on the government’s Strikes (Minimum Service Levels) Bill, which the Lords sent back to the House of Commons last week, for the second time, with significant amendments that water down some of its anti-trade union aspects.

Speaking of the use of work notices, which would allow employers to name specific staff on strike days – who would then be required to attend work under threat of disciplinary action or even being fired – one delegate said: “You know it will be a boss’s charter – they will name the union reps as the people required to come in, as an attempt to break the strike.”

Delegates noted that UNISON must continue to lobby the Labour Party to ensure that, if it comes to power, it follows through on its commitments to repeal this and other anti-trade union laws.

Speakers on the the motion ‘taking effective action within the straitjacket of anti-union laws’ addressed the NJC strike ballot currently underway in local government, with local government and school workers deciding whether to take industrial action over the employer’s latest below-inflation pay offer.

Introducing the motion, Kath Owen of the NEC said: “We’re in the middle of a wave of industrial action. All of you in local government branches are working your socks off to get that ballot done.”

Reasons to vote yes in the NJC strike ballot 

A delegate from Leeds said: “We want local government to join in the wave of strikes that have electrified the public in the last year. Tories out – strikers in.”

Delegates passed the motion, which calls on the national executive council to:

devise and roll out training courses across all regions on how to organise industrial action ballots and win disputes, adjusting where appropriate for devolved public services, bargaining and employment law regulations;
examine and explore the organising methods used in both local and national trade union ballots that have surpassed the 50% ballot thresholds in Great Britain;
make recommendations on which methods of organising are key to holding successful industrial action ballots.

The motion ‘defend our right to vote – voter ID is voter suppression’ concerned the damaging consequences of the Elections Act, passed last year, which requires mandatory photo ID at all general and by-elections in the UK, and many other elections in England and Wales.

UNISON has already voiced its concern that the requirement will disenfranchise millions, particularly already disenfranchised and disadvantaged groups in society, who for various reasons, not least poverty, are unlikely to have acceptable ID such as passports and driving licences.

Proposing the motion, Becky Tye of Eastern region refuted the government assertion that the act was designed to suppress election fraud: in the 2018 general election, 58m votes were cast, with just 34 allegations of voter fraud.

Instead, she said, it was designed to “gerrymander, to manipulate the vote… to create a barrier to participation in our democracy for particularly Black people, LGBT+ people, young people, people with disabilities.”

Jacob Collier said that in the recent local council elections he encountered many people “eager and enthusiastic to vote, but unable to do so because they did not have the required photo ID.”

The government was creating “a regressive society where democratic rights have been curtailed,” he said.

“They know they can’t win [elections] with ideas, because they don’t have any. They know they can’t win on their record, because they don’t have one. So they have to sneak in by the back door.”

Passing the motion, delegates called on the NEC to:

work alongside the TUC, WTUC, STUC and affiliated civil liberty organisations to continue to lobby against these draconian measures;
work with Labour Link to influence the next Labour Party general election manifesto to commit to reversing this legislation;
while the law remains, to continue to campaign for other forms of ID to be acceptable such s student ID and non-photo-ID.

Read more reports from national delegate conference

The article ‘We will defend our right to strike – and our right to vote’ first appeared on the UNISON National site.

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Reddit
  • Pinterest
  • LinkedIn
  • E-Mail

Comments are closed.

Local & National News

  • National News from UNISON (1,186)
  • News (28)
  • Sefton Unison (38)

Archives

Recently…

  • Mandatory jabs were never the right solution to vaccine rollout problems, says UNISON 16 April 2026
  • ‘Racism is beginning to rear its head again’ 16 April 2026
  • Invest in NHS admin staff to keep patients safe, says UNISON 16 April 2026
  • ‘We’re worth a wee bit more than that’ 16 April 2026
  • ‘Migration does not weaken the NHS, migration is the reason it survives’ 15 April 2026
  • Overworked NHS staff report stress, sickness, and a reliance on antidepressants and counselling, says UNISON 15 April 2026
  • The climate emergency is a health emergency 15 April 2026
  • Opinion: The real problems with school food 14 April 2026
  • Health conference debates ‘the scourge of gender-based violence’ 14 April 2026
  • International NHS staff don’t feel safe or welcome and want to quit the UK, says UNISON 14 April 2026

Check out our past posts

June 2023
M T W T F S S
 1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
2627282930  
« May   Jul »

Get in Touch

Sefton UNISON, 38 Church Road, Waterloo, Liverpool. L22 5QL Phone: 0151 928 9911 E-Mail: info@seftonunison.co.uk
    • Join UNISON today
    • My UNISON
    • Contact UNISON
    • Jobs
    • Media centre
    • Slavery and Human Trafficking Statement 2021

We’re talking about…

  • Mandatory jabs were never the right solution to vaccine rollout problems, says UNISON
  • ‘Racism is beginning to rear its head again’
  • Invest in NHS admin staff to keep patients safe, says UNISON
  • ‘We’re worth a wee bit more than that’

Contact us:

Sefton UNISON, 38 Church Road Waterloo, Liverpool L22 5QL Phone: 0151 928 9911 E-Mail: info@seftonunison.co.uk Web: www.seftonunison.co.uk
Sefton UNISON : Collective Action : Collective Responsibility : Collective Representation - Supporting you throughout your career
Images supplied by Sefton UNISON, Pixabay & Unsplash : Website Maintenance