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VisitLabour's 'fire and rehire' stance by next General Election?
Remain unchanged • 33%
Strengthened to ban without caveats • 33%
Weakened further • 33%
Labour Party official communications or reliable news sources
Unite Refuses to Endorse Labour's General Election Manifesto at Clause V Meeting
Jun 7, 2024, 04:49 PM
Unite, one of the UK's largest trade unions and Labour's biggest donor, has refused to endorse the Labour Party's general election manifesto. The decision was made during the Clause V meeting, where the union raised two key concerns. Firstly, they believe the manifesto's wording on banning 'fire and rehire' practices provides a caveat for bad employers. Secondly, they are apprehensive about the proposed ban on new gas and oil licenses, citing a lack of clarity on replacement jobs. Despite the union's refusal, the Labour manifesto has been confirmed but not unanimously. Union leaders are staying silent for now.
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Policy against negative briefings • 33%
No policy change • 33%
Increased negative briefings • 33%
Aggressive campaigning • 25%
Policy overhaul • 25%
Leadership restructuring • 25%
No change in strategy • 25%
Leads to policy changes within the Labour Party • 33%
No significant changes within the Labour Party • 33%
Escalates into a larger political scandal • 34%
Reinstated with conditions • 33%
Reinstated without conditions • 33%
Not reinstated • 34%
No further action • 33%
Internal disciplinary actions • 33%
Public apology or retraction • 34%
Labour wins majority • 33%
Labour forms a coalition government • 33%
Labour stays in opposition • 33%
Restored to full membership • 33%
Remains suspended • 33%
Expelled from the party • 34%
Elected as Prime Minister • 33%
Remains Labour Leader without PM position • 33%
Steps down or is replaced as Labour Leader • 33%
Yes • 50%
No • 50%
Stricter Vetting • 50%
No Change • 25%
More Lenient Vetting • 25%
Negative impact on Labour's vote share • 33%
No significant impact • 33%
Positive impact on Labour's vote share • 33%