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Title: Government U-Turns on Day-One Employment Rights

by Emma Walker – News Editor

Labor Backs Down on Day-One Unfair Dismissal Rights ‌in ⁤Employment Bill U-Turn

In a notable ‍shift,Labour has ‌abandoned it’s pledge to provide workers with unfair dismissal protection from their frist ⁢day of employment. the move⁣ follows repeated votes‍ in the House of Lords favouring a six-month qualifying period ⁤and pressure from employer groups.

Business Secretary Kemi Badenoch announced the government will​ now implement ​unfair dismissal protection after six months,scrapping the ⁤proposed new legal‌ probation period. Badenoch⁢ stated the compromise was reached by “unions and ⁤the employers”​ and that it was “not my job to ⁣stand⁣ in the way of that compromise.”

The House of Lords ⁤had twice voted‍ in favour of the six-month​ period, ⁢delaying the legislation’s progress. A new Fair Work Agency, responsible for overseeing the ⁤new rights, is still planned for establishment in 2026.

The decision ⁤has sparked a mixed reaction. The⁢ Trades Union Congress (TUC) welcomed⁤ the news, stating the “absolute ⁣priority now is ⁣to get these rights – like⁤ day one sick pay – on the statute book so that working people ⁢can ‍start benefitting​ from them from next April.” TUC General Secretary ⁢Paul Nowak urged the ‍Lords to ‍”respect Labour’s manifesto mandate” and expedite the bill’s ⁤passage.

Though, the change has drawn ‍criticism from within Labour’s ranks.⁢ Labour ‍MP Andy McDonald labelled the move a “complete betrayal,” referencing his​ work‍ developing‌ the ⁤”New Deal for Working People” at Keir Starmer‘s request. Unite the Union, a major ⁤Labour donor, ⁤described‌ the bill as a “shell of its former ⁢self,” warning the U-turn would “damage workers’ confidence.” Unite ​general secretary Sharon Graham ⁣added:⁣ “Labour needs to keep​ its promises.”

Employer groups have largely ​praised the ​decision. Kate Nicholls, chair ​of UK‌ Hospitality, said the six-month waiting period would “give businesses⁣ much-needed ‌breathing room and avoid‍ further‌ damage to employment opportunities.”

the Conservatives have branded the U-turn “humiliating,” with shadow business ‍secretary⁢ Andrew⁣ Griffith calling on Keir Starmer to​ “grow​ a backbone” and abandon ​other “job-destroying anti-growth measure[s]” in the bill.

Concerns had ​been raised that day-one⁢ rights⁤ could overwhelm employment tribunals already facing significant backlogs. A union source⁣ indicated ⁢that the “vast majority of unions”​ were agreeable with the six-month implementation⁣ timeframe.

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