Skip to main content
Advertise Buy the paper Contact us Shop Subscribe Support us
Finland's Industrial Union plans more strikes against the government’s attack on collective bargaining

FINLAND’S Industrial Union said today that it plans to organise more political strikes. 

The union, which represents 60,000 workers in automotive, engineering, chemicals and other industrial sectors, said it is planning three days of strikes from February 14 in protest against Prime Minister Petteri Oreo’s right-wing government.

The union said: “Attacks on unemployment security and job security, restrictions on the right to strike and other measures will harm employees’ everyday lives and rights.”

This follows strikes on February 1 & 2.

The union’s chairman Riku Aalto argued that more strikes were needed because the government is “still not showing any willingness to listen to workers.”

He said: “The Industrial Union will continue to tighten the screw through strikes. We do not accept the government demolishing the structures built to protect workers. The government’s measures have nothing to do with boosting employment. 

“This is purely an ideology that enterprises have dictated to the government parties,” Mr Aalto said in the release.

He said that the dismantling of collective bargaining will mean “workers will not be the only losers from this deal — it will also impact Finnish entrepreneurs who do not want to compete on poor working conditions. 

“Shady subcontractors and companies that employ lots of foreign workers will emerge victorious from this reform.”

Support theMorning Star
You have no more articles to read.
Subscribe to read more.
Become a subscriber
More from this author
World / 28 November 2024
28 November 2024
World / 28 November 2024
28 November 2024
Britain / 28 November 2024
28 November 2024
More than 60 signatories urge Foreign Minister to sanction Israel in line with ICC and ICJ
Features / 27 November 2024
27 November 2024
As the massive debt burden continues to bite and the climate emergency worsens, the world’s developing countries must escape the abusive relationship of debt enslavement that is holding them back, says ROGER McKENZIE
Similar stories
World / 12 February 2024
12 February 2024
World / 31 January 2024
31 January 2024
World / 28 January 2024
28 January 2024