Labour's plans for minimum wage affecting hundreds of thousands of workers

Labour's Angela Rayner launched the New Deal for Working People in 2021
-Credit: (Image: Getty Images)


Ahead of the general election, Labour said it would make changes to the minimum wage and introduce new laws affecting workers.

The party is now in power after winning a landslide victory last week. Keir Starmer, the new Prime Minister, has promised to 'hit the ground running', telling his top team this weekend that there is a "huge amount of work to do" that they would start straight away.

In its manifesto, Labour said it would introduce new legislation as part of its 'new deal for working people' within its first 100 days in power. The party has promised that this plan to 'make work pay' will ban exploitative work conditions and give workers more rights.

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Labour has promised to make sure the minimum wage a 'genuine living wage'. This will involve changing the remit of the independent Low Pay Commission - which advises the government on the minimum wage - so it accounts for the cost of living for the first time.

The party also said it would remove age bands so that all adults are entitled to the same minimum wage. According to the manifesto, which describes the current age bands as 'discriminatory', this would give 'hundreds of thousands of workers across the UK ' a pay rise.

Labour's Plan to Make Work Pay commits to banning 'exploitative' zero hours contracts, ending fire and rehire by employers and introducing basic rights 'from day one' of a new job. This includes rights to parental leave, sick pay and protection from unfair dismissal.

The party has said it will implement its 'new deal for working people' in full within the first 100 days. However, the manifesto says that it will 'consult fully' with businesses, workers and civil society on how to put these plans into practice before legislation is passed.

The manifesto also commits to strengthening the 'collective voice of workers', including through their trade unions, and create a Single Enforcement Body to ensure employment rights are upheld. It says these changes will improve the lives of working people.

The party has also promised to end 'bogus self employment' arguing that some employers are exploiting a currently complex system to deny workers their legal rights. Labour says it will move towards a 'single status' of workers and create a simpler framework that differentiates between workers and the genuinely self-employed while making sure people can still benefit from flexible working.

The election manifesto says: "Greater in-work security, better pay, and more autonomy in the workplace improve the lives of working people and bring substantial economic benefits. Britain’s outdated employment laws are not fit for the modern economy, and recent Conservative legislation has fuelled hostility and confrontation leading to the worst period in industrial relations since the 1980s.

"For too many people a job does not offer the route out of poverty it should: either because work is insecure, inflexible, or low paid; or because people face barriers when trying to move into a better job. Responsible businesses face being undercut when rights are not enforced properly.

"Labour will stop the chaos and turn the page to create a partnership between business and trade unions."