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UK: Unite secures acceptance of below-inflation pay deal at Go-Ahead London buses

A below-inflation 10.5 percent pay offer from Go-Ahead bus company, recommended by Unite officials, was accepted by London bus drivers in a ballot last Thursday, with 1,275 drivers voting yes, and 282 drivers voting no.

At Go-Ahead London General, covering Merton, Putney, Stockwell, Sutton, Waterloo and Waterside Way garages, 703 voted in favour and 105 against. At London Central’s Bexleyheath, Camberwell, New Cross, Peckham and Morden Wharf garages, 572 voted in favour, with 177 rejecting.

The highest no votes were recorded at Stockwell (162 yes; 61 no), Merton (202 yes; 61 no) and Peckham (57 yes; 41 no). In total, 1,565 drivers voted on the pay deal (8 ballot papers were spoilt). Go-Ahead employs 8,000 bus workers at its garages across London.

Go-Ahead London [Photo by KK70088 / CC BY-SA 2.0]

The overwhelming yes vote is the result of months-long efforts by Unite officials to wear down workers’ demands for London-wide action to win a genuine cost-of-living pay increase. With strikes on the London Underground and railways, bus drivers in London had called for unified action to take on the bus operators and Transport for London. Below-inflation pay offers have been repeatedly rejected.

Unite has worked to divide drivers company-by-company. At Go-Ahead, Unite officials colluded with the company to string out pay talks. On July 15, after the anniversary pay date had already expired, Unite’s Negotiating Committee announced it had agreed to postpone talks “due to the uncertainty of the takeover of the company, as well as current negotiations with TfL [Transport for London].”

The London Bus Rank-and-File Committee replied, “Unite’s reps are in so deep with the company that they unashamedly ask workers to delay their pay claim, amid the biggest cost-of-living squeeze in decades, to help with Go-Ahead’s friendly takeover by asset strippers!”

Drivers rejected an initial company offer of just 9 percent, which Unite agreed to ballot its members on after dumping its claim for an “RPI + pay raise”. The union responded to the rejection vote with further dirty tactics, refusing to trigger a strike ballot. Instead, reps on the Negotiating Committee agreed to delay pay talks yet again, this time because Go-Ahead Managing Director John Trayner was on holiday.


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