UK train strike, crippled transport • TAG24

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Railway employees in England fold their arms in front of A Huge train strike across the UK. The workers quit their jobs, in agreement with a group of civil servants including nurses, border guards and ambulance drivers. The demand for employees is wage increases, which are necessary to meet the increases due to record inflation. For their part, even the possibility of this happening is almost foreseeable month of strikesWith inevitable ramifications for public service.

Trains and other means of transportation may be affected until January 9th: The authorities can only stop the strike in a short period during the Christmas holidays. The workers’ plan for the current week is clear: until Sunday December 18th, the railways will be idle today, Tuesday December 13th, tomorrow and then again on Friday and Saturday. Today, in particular, the trade unions have only made it clear 20% of services Will still run: There will be no trains in some parts of the UK.

A wave of strikes threatens to bring the UK to its knees in the days he was bad weatherAs the snow and ice continue to fall, it wreaks havoc on motorists across the country. In short, without private transportation and the absence of public transportation, it would be really difficult for people to get to the office these days. The government is even considering a hypothesis army mobilizationto staff vital public services during the winter.

Train strike in the United Kingdom, the first offer of increases to the dispatcher by the unions

Just yesterday, Network Rail, a British company that acts as manager of rail infrastructure, delivered workers a New display of increases. The offer was promptly returned to sender: The National Union of Rail, Maritime, and Transportation Workers (National Union of Railroad, Maritime, and Transportation Workers) described it as “poorTransport Secretary Mark Harper said he was disappointed the union had rejected such an offer, adding that there was “no significant amount of money”.

Speaking to the British station “ITV”, Mick Lynch, Secretary General of the Federation, said that he was “optimistic” about the possibility of reaching an agreement, and stressed that the government should help “facilitate” this agreement.

I’m not going to spoil people’s Christmas. The government doesBecause he provoked these strikes by preventing the companies from making suitable proposals.

UK, PM Sunak on worker wage increase: ‘Fair and reasonable government approach’

Speaking about the story, the BBC announcer re-launched the remarks British Prime Minister Rishi SunakWho acknowledges that the country is struggling to overcome a “difficult period” due to the expected difficulties in various sectors and the high cost of living.

However, he did say that the government was “fair and reasonable in its approach to agreeing to the recommendations of the independent wage review boards to increase public sector wages and in facilitating further discussions with unions and employers”. The prime minister has therefore repeated the hard line chosen by the conservative government: the unrest can only end if the unions call them off, but the latter do not seem willing to give in.

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