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Workers Bill ‘is a wrecking ball for the UK economy’, Tories warn

British businesses have been urged to rise up and fight Angela Rayner’s crippling new labour laws, amid dire warnings of the devastating effects they will wreak on the economy.

Conservatives have sent an open letter to company bosses this weekend urging them to speak out against the Deputy Prime Minister’s radical plans – or be ‘sleepwalked into disaster’. 

Ms Rayner has been accused of taking a ‘wrecking ball to the economy’ with her Employment Rights Bill – which has also been dubbed ‘the Unemployment Bill’ over fears it will deter firms from taking on staff.

The proposals, currently being debated in the Lords and due to take effect later this year, will make it more burdensome to employ workers and will leave businesses vulnerable to ruinous strikes.

Central to the plans are the repeal of Tory trade union laws which will reduce the threshold for strike action and make union funding of the Labour Party automatic.

But it also contains a raft of other measures, including the end of zero-hours contracts, strengthened redundancy rights, more flexible working and the power for ministers to take companies to employment tribunals on behalf of employees even if they do not want to sue.

The Bill has led to tensions in the Cabinet, with Chancellor Rachel Reeves trying to dilute the measures as she battles to revive a moribund economy. 

Asked by The Mail on Sunday this weekend if she was working to limit the economic damage which Ms Rayner’s measures are expected to cause, the Chancellor did not deny she was trying to mitigate the effects, saying: ‘We talk all the time to businesses.’

Angela Rayner has been accused of taking a ¿wrecking ball to the economy¿ with her Employment Rights Bill

Shadow Business Secretary Andrew Griffith (pictured) says he is 'genuinely concerned that British businesses are being sleepwalked into disaster'

He was echoed by a chorus of leading business figures, including Lord Karan Bilimoria (pictured), founder of Cobra beer and UK chairman of the International Chamber of Commerce

In the open letter, Shadow Business Secretary Andrew Griffith says he has been moved to act because he is ‘genuinely concerned that British businesses are being sleepwalked into disaster’ and the Tories cannot oppose it alone.

He writes: ‘We need more voices to persuade the Government to listen. The Government’s own calculations – which many consider to be an underestimate – say this will cost British businesses £5 billion a year and the economy 50,000 jobs…

‘This is not good for the economy. I know it and every business I speak to around the country knows it. 

‘I urge you to please share this letter with others, seek advice on the impact of the Bill from your professional advisor and encourage business groups to speak up clearly on your behalf.’

Speaking to this newspaper, Mr Griffith said: ‘The economy badly needs the growth that only business can create. Yet Labour’s Bill for Unemployment is a trade union charter that will increase strikes, slash jobs and raise prices. 

‘Going back to 1970s-style domination by the unions is the very last thing Britain needs right now and shows just how little this socialist government understands business. Angela Rayner is taking a wrecking ball to the UK economy.’

He was echoed by a chorus of leading business figures, including Lord Karan Bilimoria, founder of Cobra beer and UK chairman of the International Chamber of Commerce. 

He said: ‘Making it easier for workers to strike will inevitably increase their number and frequency. This is like the 1970s, and look where that got us. We were called the sick man of Europe.

Rachel Reeves delivers her spending review to MPs in the House of Commons on June 11

‘We don’t want to go back in time. Of course, you want fair employee rights, but there’s got to be a balance. If you create the environment this bill is putting us on the path towards, it’s going to be very damaging to business and our economy.’

He called on the Government to ‘think twice’ before pushing ahead with the reforms.

Luke Johnson, entrepreneur and former chairman of Pizza Express, said: ‘At a time when unemployment is rising, the economy is weak and the number of failing businesses is on the increase, introducing a new swathe of burdensome regulations is, to me, little short of madness. 

‘In the 1970s our country was going broke and we had to go to the International Monetary Fund for a bailout.

‘It feels as if we are headed back towards that period. I lived through that time. But a lot of the MPs writing and supporting this bill are too young to remember what it was like.

‘[Angela Rayner] doesn’t even speak the same language as people who work in the private sector. She has no clue what it’s like to build a business and have your house on the line if you go broke, or struggling to pay wage bills and bank loan repayments each month.

‘She just doesn’t care. She only ever talks to people in the public sector, civil servants and trade unionists. But eventually, their ideology is going to collide with reality and unfortunately, they are going to drag the economy into a serious recession.’

Alex Veitch, of the British Chambers of Commerce said: ‘There remains a high risk of unintended consequences that could limit employment opportunities and economic growth.’

Luke Johnson, entrepreneur and former chairman of Pizza Express, said 'introducing a new swathe of burdensome regulations is, to me, little short of madness'

And Luiza Gomes, from the British Retail Consortium, said: ‘Maintaining a 50 per cent threshold for strikes is important to ensure ballot results legitimately and accurately reflect the consensus amongst workers, rather than the minority view.’

A Labour spokesman said: ‘The public will see right through the sheer hypocrisy of a party that crashed the economy and family finances now opposing better rights for workers. 

‘Labour do not think it’s fair for workers to be sacked without any good reason or denied sick pay from the first day they are ill. The Tories and Reform need to explain why they do.

‘These measures are developed with business, and good for workers and the economy.’

Rayner’s nightmare charter to chill every boardroom in Britain 

1 Strikes triggered by as few as one in ten workers

Current laws that require at least half of all eligible trade union members to vote in a strike ballot for it to be valid will be scrapped. Instead, a complex new system means a strike could be triggered with the backing of just ten per cent of the workers.

2 An end to zero-hours contracts

Zero-hours contracts, where an employer does not guarantee an employee a minimum amount of hours or pay, will be abolished.

Labour argues they exploit workers, but firms say they provide flexibility at times such as Christmas. Bosses say they can’t afford to provide everyone with minimum hours all year round and may hire fewer people if the changes are brought in.

3 The right to claim unfair dismissal from day one

Workers will be able to launch a claim for unfair dismissal from their first day on the job. At present, they must have worked at a company for at least two years before bringing a claim.

Firms warn that this could result in higher costs in the form of compensation or settlements with disgruntled employees as well as creating bottlenecks in the employment tribunal system.

4 Extra leave entitlement – also from day one

Paternity leave and unpaid parental leave will become rights from the first day on the job. Currently, they can only be taken after 26 weeks or one year of service respectively.

Workers will also receive a new right to at least one week of bereavement leave following the death of a family member.

5 More redundancy rules – and possibly costs

Current rules saying a firm must start a consultation if it makes at least 20 staff redundant at a single workplace will be expanded to include at least 20 redundancies across the entire business.

Anyone made redundant without the firm following the correct process will be entitled to twice the money they were before – from 90 days’ pay to 180.

6 Sick pay from a worker’s first day off

The current three-day waiting period for Statutory Sick Pay (SSP) of £118.75 a week will be scrapped, allowing employees to receive it on the first day of illness. A limit stating only workers earning above £123 a week can receive SSP will also be removed. Those earning below the limit will be entitled to 80 per cent of their wages.

7 More flexible working, including WFH

Employers will only be able to refuse a request for flexible working such as working from home if they can explain why rejecting it is ‘reasonable.’

This will make it harder for businesses to refuse outright and will need to be more careful when explaining the reasons for declining.

8 Automatic funding of the Labour Party

The Bill will change the law to allow trade unions to automatically sign their members up to a political fund, unless they choose to opt out.

This would reverse the current rules which say union members must opt in to political funding.

9 Ministers to be able to take firms to tribunal

The bill will create a new agency to allow ministers to haul a company in front of an employment tribunal if they believe there is a case to answer even if employees don’t want to bring a claim. Labour argues this will stop firms from exploiting workers, but businesses have warned it risks penalising responsible employers while legal costs will squeeze budgets.

10 More red tape on ‘equality action plans’

Companies with 250 or more staff will be required to produce ‘equality action plans’ every year describing how they plan to fix gender pay gap issues and support employees going through the menopause. Employers who do not do so will be penalised.

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