The government is considering legal changes to allow agency workers to fill in for striking staff, to reduce disruption to services.
It is understood the transport secretary, Grant Shapps, has not ruled out the option, with travellers facing chaos on the railways and London tube due to widespread industrial action.
The move would involve reversing a restriction preventing employers from hiring agency workers to cover for striking staff, and would apply to all sectors, according to the Sunday Telegraph.
This was promised in the Tory manifesto in 2015, which stated: “We will… repeal nonsensical restrictions banning employers from hiring agency staff to provide essential cover during strikes.”
Shapps told the newspaper any legal intervention would not affect “this particular set of strikes” in June, but should the action continue, then “further measures certainly would come in during this particular dispute, if it can’t be resolved”.
“I’ll be saying more about this. But we will be looking at the full suite of modernisation that’s required,” he said.
“The country must not continue to be held to ransom. These strikes are incredibly premature and we will use every possible lever to ensure that the public is protected in the future in particular.
“I can’t over-stress our determination to get the right outcome for the travelling public in the end on this, even if the unions insist on putting the country through considerable pain in the meantime.”
Writing in the Sun on Sunday, Shapps said workers could also be banned from working overtime to make back pay lost during industrial action.
He told the Sunday Telegraph in May that ministers were looking at drawing up laws which would make industrial action illegal unless a certain number of
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