Skip to main content
Employment Rights Act does not go far enough, Miners’ Gala hears
Marches at the Durham Miners' Gala, July 11, 2026 [Pic: Neril Terry]

THE Employment Rights Act doesn’t go far enough and a mass campaign to abolish all anti-union laws should be a labour movement priority, Miners’ Gala marras heard on Friday night.

General Federation of Trade Unions general secretary Gawain Little called for action to force “a repeal of all the anti-trade union laws, to return to us the right to secondary picketing, solidarity action — the right to strikes over what are deemed political issues.”

He paid tribute to Strike Map, praising the mega-pickets it organised to support the year-long strike by Birmingham bin workers — with thousands of people from across the country joining in.

“You can’t legislate solidarity out of action,” he noted, saying the mega-pickets were an original way to organise around existing anti-union laws.

Public & Commercial Services union general secretary Fran Heathcote said the wins in the Employment Rights Act should not be underestimated, noting that 50 per cent turnout thresholds for strike ballots will be removed this year and electronic balloting legalised from as soon as next month, making it easier and cheaper for unions to engage with members.

“Why are we asking for more?” she asked the joint Institute of Employment Rights-Campaign for Trade Union Freedom fringe meeting. “Because over the past 40 years workers’ share [of national income] has shrunk and money has been diverted upwards to bosses.”

The only way to address this, she argued, was through sectoral collective bargaining — which the Act only introduces for two sectors: social care and teaching assistants.

“In the Civil Service we have over 200 sets of pay negotiations every year for the same pot of money,” she pointed out, calling on the government to show which side it is on by restoring collective bargaining in its “own back yard.”

Lord John Hendy KC said he hoped a new Labour leader would be readier to stand by the party’s New Deal for Workers policy than the outgoing Keir Starmer regime.

“How can it possibly be that a government with a majority of 174 … allowed [its own policy] to be watered down and for major parts of it to be excluded altogether?” he asked.

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
Similar stories
Miners' Gala
Durham Miners' Gala 2026 / 12 July 2026
12 July 2026
durham 2019
Durham Miners’ Gala / 9 July 2026
9 July 2026

The Durham Miners’ Gala is a celebration of working-class culture, but also a call to action — to rebuild workers’ collective strength, says KIM JOHNSON MP

Junior doctors on the picket line outside St Thomas' Hospital, London, during their continuing dispute over pay. Picture date: Thursday June 27, 2024
Workers' Rights / 18 July 2025
18 July 2025

It is only trade union power at work that will materially improve the lot of working people as a class but without sector-wide collective bargaining and a right to take sympathetic strike action, we are hamstrung in the fight to tilt back the balance of power, argues ADRIAN WEIR