Two 24-hour Tube strikes next week across the entire network as 10,000 workers walk out in row

Two 24-hour Tube strikes will go ahead next week across the entire network as 10,000 workers walk out in row over jobs, pensions and conditions

Thousands of commuters will have their journeys in the capital disrupted next Tuesday and Thursday (March 1 and 3)10,000 workers from the Rail, Maritime and Transport (RMT) union will walk out, plunging the system into chaos The union claims London Underground has dragged its heels during the talks over jobs, pensions and conditions



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Strikes by London Underground (LU) workers are to go ahead next week after talks failed to resolve a dispute over jobs, pensions and conditions.

Members of the Rail, Maritime and Transport (RMT) union will walk out next Tuesday and Thursday (March 1 and 3), threatening disruption to Tube services across the capital.

The RMT said during talks at conciliation service Acas that it set out a framework which could have enabled the union’s executive to consider a suspension of the action.

The union claimed LU “dragged their heels” and blocked a route to progress.

During the talks, the RMT said LU confirmed its worst fears that “nothing is off the table” in terms of the threat to jobs, pensions, conditions and safety.

Commuters outside Oxford Circus Underground Station during a tube strike in 2015. A new strike next week could cause similar scenes as people attempt to get to and from work amid disruption caused by the latest strike

The entire underground network is set to face disruption on March 1 and 3 when 10,000 workers go on strike. Pictured here is Turnpike Lane tube station, on the Piccadilly Line, which was completely closed during a strike in December last year.

RMT general secretary Mick Lynch said: “Our members will be taking strike action next week because a financial crisis at LU has been deliberately engineered by the Government to drive a cuts agenda which would savage jobs, services, safety and threaten working conditions and pensions.

“The sheer scale of that threat was confirmed in talks.

“These are the very same transport staff praised as heroes for carrying London through Covid for nearly two years, often at serious personal risk, who now have no option but to strike to defend their livelihoods.

“The politicians need to wake up to the fact that transport staff will not pay the price for this cynically engineered crisis.

“In addition to the strike action RMT is co-ordinating a campaign of resistance with colleagues from other unions impacted by this threat.”

Acas said it remained in contact with the parties.

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