Tube strike continues tomorrow
  • Strike action goes ahead on tube tomorrow as planned as RMT accuses Mayor of trying to blame workers for TFL financial crisis.

RMT accused Mayor Sadiq Khan of playing to the gallery, instead of pressuring ministers to deliver a long-term funding deal for TfL, ahead of another 24-hour stoppage on the tube network tomorrow which goes ahead as planned.

Speaking to the media yesterday (Tuesday), Mayor Khan told striking workers to "wake up and smell the coffee" and that industrial action would not make securing a deal with the government any easier.

Implying the RMT didn't care about the interests of its own members or the wider city, Mayor Khan said: "I for some time have been lobbying for a long-term deal.

"It is really important for anyone who cares as passionately about tube workers, transport workers, our city as RMT claims to, to realise we have got to be together on this."

RMT general secretary Mick Lynch said:

"If Sadiq Khan spent as much time putting pressure on ministers for a long-term TfL funding deal, instead of accepting their cuts agenda and attacking our members, there would be no need for a strike.

"However, as it stands, tube staff face a raid on their pensions and at least 600 job cuts, if the government get their way. It is tube workers being told to take the hit for the political failures of City Hall and the DfT which is the issue at the heart of the dispute.

"No self-respecting trade unionist would accept that, particularly given the sterling work done by tube staff keeping Londoners safe throughout the Covid-19 pandemic.

"The Mayor keeps telling us to get round the table and we remain open to talks but it has to be face to face with those able to give us the assurances we need without being bound up by political game playing. We will not be de-railed in our determination to reach a just settlement that protects jobs and pensions of tube workers."

> RMT National News

Monday, 24th November
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Friday, 21st November
RMT members on Docks, Ports and Waterways have revealed deep concerns about their pay, safety, and overall working conditions in a new survey.
Friday, 21st November
RMT will take strike action on CrossCountry next month after the company failed to resolve long-running issues on pay, staffing and previously agreed commitments.
Wednesday, 19th November
RMT today exposed widespread failures in welfare provision for transport workers, with new survey evidence and frontline testimony showing that women in particular are being denied safe, clean and accessible toilet facilities, leaving employers in breach of basic dignity and clear legal duties.
Wednesday, 19th November
Tube union RMT, will demonstrate outside City Hall tomorrow calling on the Mayor and Transport for London to stop the re-tendering of the London Underground cleaning contract and bring the workforce back in-house.