Labour admits workers’ rights overhaul may take two years --[Reported by Umva mag]

The Employment Minister has backed Labour's big push on rights for workers.

Oct 10, 2024 - 15:26
Labour admits workers’ rights overhaul may take two years --[Reported by Umva mag]
Employment Minister Alison McGovern and young workers.
Alison McGovern said the new legislation will be a boost to young workers (Picture: Rex/Getty)

Labour’s Employment Minister has backed the government’s major new push for employment rights after the Bill came under fire from unions and businesses.

The Employment Rights Bill has been unveiled in Parliament today, forming the centrepiece of the party’s manifesto pledge to ‘make work pay’.

Among other commitments, the current version of the legislation would give workers protections from unfair dismissal from day one in their new job.

It would also remove age bands for the minimum wage, while also tying the figure to the cost of living so it rises as goods and services become more expensive.

But the Bill has been criticised by Unite the Union, with general secretary Sharon Graham describing it as having ‘more holes in it than Swiss cheese that hostile employers will use’.

Meanwhile, Tina McKenzie of the Federation of Small Businesses said the legislation was ‘clumsy, chaotic and poorly planned’, with the extent of the plans sending employers ‘scrambling to make sense of it all’.

In an exclusive interview with Metro, Employment Minister Alison McGovern said: ‘There are things in here that I and many other politicians, actually of different parties, have been trying to do for a long time.’

Responding to the criticism, she said the Bill will ‘have a long period in parliament to get through all of those legislative stages’ and that the government would work with bodies including the FSB during the process.

The general secretaries of the TUC and the Fire Brigades Union have praised the legislation, with both describing it as a positive step towards improving the lives of working people.

Wirral South MP, Alison McGovern
Alison McGovern has overseen aspects of the new Bill in her role as Employment Minister in the Department for Work and Pensions (Picture: Christopher Furlong/Getty Images)

Among the 28 ‘individual employment reforms’ that currently feature in the legislation is a guarantee that workers on zero-hour contracts would be offered a contract with set hours if they work regular shifts over a defined period.

McGovern said she ‘spent 14 years in opposition campaigning for zero-hour contracts to be banned’ – something the Bill does not do.

Speaking at an event encouraging young people into work, she said: ‘Some young people might want a zero-hours contract because they really want flexibility, but if you work regular hours, you should have a regular contract.

‘There is too much exploitation out there, and if you want regular hours you should get it.

‘Now, this Bill today, after 14 years of campaigning, is going to help put it in the law.’

Angela Raynor stepping out of a car holding a red file.
Deputy PM Angela Rayner and Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds are taking the lead on the legislation (Picture: Thomas Krych/ZUMA Press Wire/Shu)

Much of the substance of the legislation won’t come into effect straight away, and will rely on extensive consultations that could put off action until 2026.

Asked how she would reassure workers that the top-billed policies in the Employment Rights Bill would not be watered down over that time, McGovern said: ‘We made a manifesto commitment, and this Bill is part of delivering that.

‘Legislation does take time, and you’ve got to work with people to go through line-by-line to get it right.

‘But we made those manifesto commitments, we said we’d bring the Bill in within 100 days, we’re doing that today, and we will get there.’

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