International Trade Union News : One million strike in UK over pay and cuts
By: AAP, International News | Thursday July 10 2014 21:28
More than one
million public sector workers have gone on strike in Britain over pay
and spending cuts by the Government imposed as part of its austerity
program, trade unions say.
The strike on
Thursday, the biggest since Prime Minister David Cameron's coalition
government took power in 2010, involves a wide range of workers from
teachers and civil servants to street sweepers and park attendants.
A string of
protests is planned around Britain, including one in central London
which will conclude with a rally in Trafalgar Square.
As part of a
push to balance public finances, Cameron's centre right-led coalition
government froze public sector salaries in 2010 for two years and has
since limited pay rises to one per cent a year.
Unions say this means that salaries cannot keep up with rising living costs and that "enough is enough".
"This is why today's strikers deserve public support," said the general secretary of the Trades Union Congress, Frances O'Grady.
"They are
saying that ordinary workers should not be locked out of the recovery,
and that we should all get a fair share as the economy grows again."
Britain's
economy emerged from recession in 2009 following a fierce downturn
rooted in the global financial crisis and has since been gaining
strength.
Despite the
strikes, the government said it expected "the majority of hard-working
public servants to turn up for work across the country".
It insists the
strikes are not merited and says "pay restraint" was a necessary part of
austerity measures imposed after the recession which followed the 2008
financial crisis.
"We went
through a deep, deep recession, we had a huge budget deficit and we
needed pay restraint," Cabinet Office Minister Francis Maude told BBC
radio.
"Public sector
pay has increased by more than in the private sector since the
recession... if we had raised pay more, there would have been more jobs
lost.
Cameron has
attacked the low turnout in the union ballots which led to the strikes
and vowed to introduce legislation to ensure a minimum number of people
take part in a ballot for it to be legal.
"How can it
possibly be right for our children's education to be disrupted by trade
unions acting in that way? It is time to legislate and it will be in the
Conservative manifesto," he told the House of Commons on Wednesday.
Source : http://www.newstalkzb.co.nz/
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