Government calls on union to accept deal and end Birmingham bin strike – UK politics live


Government calls on union to accept deal and end Birmingham bin strike

The government has reiterated its call for the Unite union to accept a deal being offered by Birmingham city council to end the strike which has left the city with masses of uncollected refuse. The union has accused the council of repeatedly “shifting the goalposts”.

Business and trade minister Sarah Jones said “Fundamentally what needs to happen now is the strike needs to be called off. Unite need to accept the offer that’s on the table. It’s a good offer and that is what we are asking them to do.”

Speaking on the BBC Radio 4 Today programme, national lead officer at Unite Onay Kasab said “The fact is that the council have shifted the goalposts on several occasions. I think different political decisions need to be made. Why should working people be forced to pay the price for austerity? Why should our members pay the price for cuts to local authorities?”

He accused the council of attempting to harmonise pay downwards, and in an interview on Times Radio said “The offer from the council would still lead to a sharp, cliff edge drop in pay, up to £8,000 a year, for our members. They have told us in negotiations that they’re looking to cut the pay of drivers from around £40,000 to £32,000 a year.”

Speaking to the Birmingham Live website, one local resident who wished to remain anonymous said the union “keep rejecting stuff but nobody knows what they are rejecting”, adding “It’s not like they’re doing it on purpose, they probably live around here themselves. They can see it themselves. Their streets aren’t getting cleaned either.”

Another resident, Adam Yasin, said “It has been really bad, especially where I live, there are a lot of restaurants there. Today they collected the rubbish that was on the floor, so the bags that were on the floor, but the bins are still left. It’s more to do with hygiene on the streets. It’s annoying, and when the kids are there they like to touch things as well.”

Key events

Nigel Farage has finished his speech in Durham and is taking questions from journalists. He has answered the first by saying: “I’ll make one thing very, very clear, if we win the 2029 general election, we will go to war with the National Education union and all the left wing teaching unions. People should be taught objectively, fairly, and should be taught critical thinking, where kids can make their own minds up what they believe and not be indoctrinated.”

He has called for a British equivalent of Doge – the “agency” run by Elon Musk in Donald Trump’s administration – in every county council. That was in response to a question about the Daily Express on what a Reform UK-led council would look like.

Before the Q&A began he finished his speech by taking aim at what he said was “DEI and that madness” and concluded by saying:

It’s not about left or right. It’s about values, and it’s about believing that our country is going down the tubes. It’s about understanding that Britain is broken, and that without the right leadership, without the right change of mentality, and I think most of us feel, within a decade, it frankly, won’t be a place worth living in.

And we are damn determined to turn this round. We fully intend to turn this round, and we’re actually the most optimistic political party out there, because we believe we can and we will turn this around, get that pendulum to come back in a different direction, get the attitudes of people towards work, towards success, towards life, towards their community. We believe all of that can be turned around. And that is our historic mission.

Nigel Farage poses with the Sun’s front page in Durham. Photograph: Victoria Jones/REX/Shutterstock
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