Skip to main content
Unite: Grangemouth lockout won't break our union
Refinery workers hold vigil against 'opportunist' Ineos bullying

Determined Grangemouth refinery workers staged a vigil outside the shut down plant last night to remind owners Ineos they are standing firm against attacks on jobs, their union and a "vital national asset."

Members of the Unite union began to assemble as light faded yesterday evening and will keep it up until Monday, with a protest planned outside the huge plant on Sunday afternoon.

Unite convener Stephen Deans told the Morning Star: "This has turned from an opportunistic attack on me to an attack on our pay, pensions and jobs and an attempt to break the Unite union here at Grangemouth.

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
Similar stories
Waspi (Women Against State Pension Inequality) campaigners stage a protest on College Green in Westminster, London, as Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves delivers her Budget in the Houses of Parliament, October 30, 2024
Editorial / 16 July 2025
16 July 2025
General view of the Alexander Dennis site at Camelon, near Falkirk
Scotland / 10 July 2025
10 July 2025
A view of the Little Cheyne Court Wind Farm amongst existing electricity pylons on the Romney Marsh in Kent
BFAWU Conference 2025 / 16 June 2025
16 June 2025
A bus under construction at the Alexander Dennis bus manufacturers in Falkirk
Voices of Scotland / 17 June 2025
17 June 2025

As bus builder Alexander Dennis threatens Falkirk closure and Grangemouth faces ruthless shutdown by tax exile Jim Ratcliffe, RICHARD LEONARD MSP warns that global corporations must be resisted by a bold industrial strategy based on public ownership