UK rail staff disrupted the New Year return to work yesterday in the latest strike action by workers in a range of sectors over the worst cost-of-living crisis in a generation.
Britain is in the grip of its worst run of worker unrest since Margaret Thatcher was in power in the 1980s, as surging inflation follows more than 10 years of stagnant wage growth, leaving many workers unable to make ends meet.
Repeated rail strikes have crippled the network in recent months while nurses, airport staff, paramedics and postal workers have also joined the fray, demanding higher pay to keep pace with inflation that is hovering around 40-year highs, reaching 10.7% in November.
Normally bustling London train stations were quiet yesterday – the first normal working day of 2023 after the New Year break.
Network Rail, which operates the UK’s rail infrastructure, warned travellers of “significantly reduced” train services or no services at all in some areas until Sunday.
Five days of strike action beginning yesterday were to include two 48-hour strikes by around 40,000 members of the RMT union.
The Aslef union will also strike tomorrow.
Writer Richard Roques told AFP that the stoppage was “really inconvenient” but that he recognised that the rail workers were defending their livelihoods.
Another, retiree Mike Farrelly, however, said he understood the government’s position “in as much as that there’s only so much money to go around”.
“I consider that a lot of the strikers are reasonably well paid,” he said, adding that health workers who should be regarded as a special case.
Transport Secretary Mark Harper urged the rail unions to return to the negotiating table.
“The trade unions decided they wanted to go on strike this week, which is deeply unhelpful, damages the rail industry, damages the interests of the people that work in it,” he told Sky News. “I want to see them back around the table and we can try and hammer out a deal between the employers and the trade unions.”
The RMT union, however, accused the government of intervening in negotiations in December to stop a deal.
Harper denies the claim.
RMT general secretary Mick Lynch said the minister had scuppered a potential settlement by insisting on the removal of guards from trains, in favour of driver-only operated trains.
The issue is a key one for unions.
“So that prevented any move forward on the issue and so that is the direct responsibility of the Secretary of State (Harper),” Lynch said from a picket line at London Euston railway station.
Despite escalating pay demands, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has pledged to fight calls for inflation-busting rises, insisting the government must stick to more modest increases for public sector workers.
“The best way to help them and help everyone else in the country is for us to get a grip and reduce inflation as quickly as possible,” Sunak told a watchdog panel of MPs late last year.
Lynch told AFP that the union was “really sorry that we have had to take this action, that it does impact them (the public) and we understand their frustration, indeed their anger. “But we believe some of that should be directed at the government.”
Those striking in 2022 included rail, port, border force and postal workers along with lawyers, nurses and ambulance staff.
More stoppages are planned in the coming weeks.