Skip to main content
Gifts from The Morning Star
Unison must get strike ready, conference hears
School support staff members of Unison during a rally outside the Scottish parliament in Holyrood, Edinburgh, September 27, 2023

UNISON must get strike ready by adapting quickly to the opportunities provided by the new Employment Rights Bill, the union’s conference heard yesterday.

Staffs Community Health branch delegate Oliver Nicholls said: “Under the previous Tory government, organising and industrial action came under attack through restrictions and arbitrary ballot goals.

“The new Employment Rights Bill is set to change that but our work is not done.

“Under the Organising to Win campaign, the West Midlands has been able to secure high membership support at both ballot and strike stages.”

Scotland delegate Mark Ferguson said: “We have forced employers to make new offers” because of the union’s strength of organisation.

He said: “A successful regional plan has helped to win successful outcomes, including more members and more activists.”

Mike Moore from Birmingham called for modern organising tools to help get the job done.

He said: “The university sector has suffered a decade of stagnant pay, but anti-trade union legislation has made it difficult to build solid industrial action.

“We need industrial action to be much quicker and more agile.”

Knowsley delegate James Robinson said: “Participation is key and can radically change the outcome of disputes with employers.”

Mr Robinson explained that to achieve this, “we have to be honest about where the union did well and where we didn’t.”

“We have to recognise where our strengths lay and act accordingly.”

NEC speaker Dave Jones said: “Industrial action should not be seen as just a last resort and should be a tool to use when it’s appropriate.

“We need to be an organisation which is ballot ready.”

Ian Allinson, from Manchester, said: “We have to do the work to stand on our own two feet” rather than relying on legislation.

“We need to be much more systematic about our organising strategy,” he said.

Conroy Lawrence from Greater London said: “The thresholds are there to frustrate action. The system was rigged against us.

“The new legislation gives us a chance to reclaim our power.”

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
Sudan / 25 August 2025
25 August 2025
FORWARD TOGETHER: Lenin giving a speech to the delegates of the Second World Congress of the Communist International on July/August 1920 / Pic: Retake by George Shuklin/Museum of Political History of Russia/Public domain
Features / 21 August 2025
21 August 2025

ROGER McKENZIE looks at the gradual demise of US’s nefarious influence around the world and the complexity of impending freedom

Cargo
Features / 12 August 2025
12 August 2025

ROGER McKENZIE asks whether the US’s shift to targeting everyone at once will instil greater co-operation among rising powers

Similar stories
People join civil society groups led by Stand Up To Racism during a counter-protest against a rally endorsed by Tommy Robinson in central London, October 26, 2024
Unison Conference 2025 / 17 June 2025
17 June 2025
Unison conference 2025
Unison Conference 2025 / 17 June 2025
17 June 2025
Ambulance workers on the picket line outside London Ambulanc
TUC Congress 2024 / 10 September 2024
10 September 2024
Our new approach has driven membership growth and victories, including a £40m pay rise for NHS healthcare assistants by empowering members and forcing employers to negotiate through escalating pressure, writes KEVAN NELSON