About 1,500 Tata Steel workers at two south Wales steelworks are to begin strike action next month in protest at the company’s plans to cut 2,800 jobs and close its blast furnaces.
The situation has become a general election issue, with Labour calling for Tata to halt its plans and wait until after the 4 July vote to engage in talks with the government, saying there is a “better deal to do”.
The workers based in Port Talbot and Llanwern who are members of the Unite union will begin all-out indefinite strike action on 8 July, the union announced on Friday. It is the first strike action by steelworkers in the UK for more than 40 years, it said, adding that Tata UK’s operations would be severely affected.
Unite said previously it decided to strike after Tata threatened to cut redundancy pay as a response to members voting for an overtime ban. On Tuesday the workers then began the overtime ban and started working to rule, where staff do no more than the minimum required by the rules of their job.
Labour has pledged “a bright future” for UK steel, backed by £3bn funding if it is elected next month. The party has also promised to prioritise emergency talks with Tata.
Tata rejected a trade union plan this year designed to keep Port Talbot’s blast furnaces running, with their closure putting 2,800 jobs at risk and leaving the UK on course to become the only major economy unable to make steel from scratch, Unite said.
The company told workers’ representatives in January that it could no longer afford to continue production at the loss-making Port Talbot plant while it completed a four-year transition plan towards greener production. Tata said operating the old furnaces meant it was losing £1m a day.
Sharon Graham, Unite’s general secretary, said on Friday: “Tata’s workers are not just fighting for their jobs – they are fighting for the future of their communities and the future of steel in Wales.