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The 2022–2024 United Kingdom railway strikes were an industrial dispute between rail workers and companies, with the latter supported by the UK government. The rail workers are represented by several unions including the National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers (RMT) and the Associated Society of Locomotive Engineers and Firemen (ASLEF).
Backdating a pay rise for 2022-2023, with negotiations for 2023-2024 to start on 1 December 2023. ... said in response to the train drivers’ strike announcement: “Further strike action by the ...
Members of the RMT union working for 14 train operators are staging more walk-outs in the current round of strikes.. Since June 2022, national rail strikes in a tangle of disputes about pay, job ...
Tube Strike sign at Paddington. London Underground strikes are an intermittent part of life in the capital of the United Kingdom. Described as "one of Britain's most strike-prone industries", [1] the London Underground has been subject to travel disruption due to industrial action organised by the National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers (RMT), ASLEF and other unions, in response ...
On 5 December 2023, the BMA announced that junior doctors in England would stage further strike action after rejecting the latest pay offer, with a three day strike scheduled to begin on 20 December and a six day strike scheduled to begin on 3 January 2024. [159] The three-day strike commenced at 7am on 20 December. [160]
Announcing the train drivers’ strike, Mick Whelan, Aslef’s general secretary, ... Backdating a pay rise for 2022-2023, with negotiations for 2023-2024 to start on 1 December 2023.
2023 Cape Town taxi strike;; 2023 Irn-Bru strike; [29] [30]; 2023 Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital strike; [31] [32]; 2023 Sogo & Seibu strike - strike at the flagship Seibu Department Store in Tokyo in protest over the store's sale to the American Fortress Investment Group, representing the first strike at a major department store in Japan in over 60 years; [33]
The strikes on 18 and 30 March plus 1 April will have significantly less impact, as signallers should work normally. Train operators not involved in the dispute should be able to run services as ...