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Delivery firm DPD accused of ‘revenge’ sacking drivers who criticised pay cuts

about 15 hours ago
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The delivery firm DPD has been accused of “revenge” sackings after workers spoke out against a plan to cut thousands of pounds from their earnings, including their Christmas bonus.The company, which reported pre-tax profits of nearly £200m last year and plays a significant role in the festive rush to have gifts and parcels delivered, has even threatened to withhold money from some staff to pay for the cost of replacing them, the Guardian has learned.DPD confirmed it had dismissed workers after an estimated 1,500 self-employed drivers chose not to take on any work for a three-day period in protest at the plans.It emerged earlier this month that the company had told workers it planned to cut 65p from the rate it pays for most of its deliveries on 29 September.Drivers said the cut, which came to as much as £25 a day, and the loss of a £500 Christmas bonus, was likely to add up to more than £6,000 a year for each worker – and as much as £8,000 for those who take on a lot more deliveries over Christmas.

Many drivers indicated they were choosing not to work for the company for three days.After a meeting with workers’ representatives, the firm agreed to defer the rate-cut until after Christmas, but insisted it would still be implemented.Within weeks of the meeting, drivers have said, management have started to move against people they deemed “ringleaders”.“Now that we have shown them up publicly they’re just trying to assert dominance and trying to control the free will of drivers they don’t want to employ,” said one of those let go, Dean Hawkins.He was involved in organising the action and was told by a DPD manager he had been fired for allegedly breaching a gagging clause in his contract.

“It’s a revenge act to assert dominance for us humiliating them,” he said.A DPD spokesperson said: “We can confirm that we have terminated our relationship with eight supplier companies following a breach of contract.”DPD Group UK’s highest-earning director was paid nearly £1.5m, including bonuses, last year, representing a pay rise of more than £90,000 from 2023.The eight cases will probably affect many more individual workers because DPD’s pool of self-employed drivers includes individual contractors and those who run fleets of vans for the company.

One of the latter group was Jose Alves, whose contracts were terminated when management said he had breached a clause prohibiting involvement in “any newsworthy event or story or anything which would or in [DPD’s] opinion could damage [the firm’s] interests or reputation or any part of [its] business”.Alves has asked the firm to provide evidence, but thus far has received none.He was also told that DPD reserved the right to keep some or all of the £16,000 in deposits he had handed over when his contracts started.DPD said it would have “incurred costs by spending time sharing with you the benefit of our knowledge, skill and experience”, and that it would “also spend time and money finding a replacement for you”.“If that happens, we may keep your deposit to cover these costs,” it said.

DPD said: “With any case of supplier breach of contract, it is our normal procedure to hold on to the deposit for up to 30 days to allow for vehicles to be returned and assessed for damage.Unless there is damage, we would expect to return the deposit in full and within the agreed timescale.”Hawkins was also dismissed over claims he had breached a gagging clause.He was shown a Facebook post from around the time the rate cuts emerged, in which he wrote: “Any threats of a strike or legal action, you’re terminated, DPD don’t allow you to stand up for yourself or have a voice … This is why so many drivers across the UK are looking into striking, because God forbid we ask for a fair wage to support our families.”He said his dismissal was unfair because it was DPD – not he – who created the “newsworthy event” and that if DPD’s interests or reputation had been damaged it was the firm’s own actions that were responsible.

Asked if this was a reasonable view to take, the leading employment law barrister and Labour peer John Hendy KC said: “Absolutely.It’s their action which has damaged their reputation, not the action of those who’ve reports of it.”Hendy called for a change in the law to protect drivers such as those fired by DPD.“The protection against dismissal or detriment for trade union activities only applies to the activities of an independent trade union,” he said, adding that the drivers may not enjoy such a status.“This reveals a deficiency in the existing legislation which the government should consider fulfilling.

Penalising workers for making representations against detrimental changes to their terms and conditions is, quite simply, outrageous.It should be unlawful.”
politicsSee all
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Bridget Phillipson ‘ready to take on unions’ over year 8 reading tests

Bridget Phillipson has said she is ready to take on the unions in a battle over compulsory reading tests for 13-year-olds and more extracurricular activities for all children to prevent them becoming “stuck in a doom loop of detachment” from school.The education secretary said that teaching unions, who have argued the tests were “unnecessary and distracting”, should “really think carefully” about whether they could justify standing in the way of tackling the “shocking outcomes” that exist for many working-class children.In an interview with the Guardian, in which she said her deputy leadership campaign was “just the beginning” of her efforts to help secure Labour a second term, Phillipson warned that one in four children overall, and one in three disadvantaged children, don’t meet required literacy standards.In response to the curriculum and assessment review published next week, there will be a new mandatory reading test for year 8 pupils in an attempt to tackle underachievement by working-class children. Schools will also be expected to informally assess writing and maths

about 23 hours ago
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UK politics: Worries about immigration are ‘manufactured panic’ says charity as poll shows issue not a local concern – as it happened

Concern about immigration is a “manufactured panic”, a campaign group has said after polling suggested only a quarter of people think it is an important issue locally.As PA Media reports, a YouGov poll found only 26% of people said immigration and asylum was one of the three most important issues facing their community. This was half the 52% who said it was one of the biggest issues facing the country as a whole.These figures have been set out in a report published by the Best of Britain campaign group. It also shows that, while immigration comes second in the list of issues that people say matter nationally, it is only seventh in the list when people are asked about what matters in the places where they live

1 day ago
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Keir Starmer keeps Trumps’ silver necklace gift – for a price

Keir Starmer has paid to keep a personalised silver necklace given to him by Donald and Melania Trump, transparency records show.The necklace was the only gift Starmer chose to keep after he hosted the US president for a historic second state visit in September.The Trumps also gave the prime minister a golf club and a set of silver cufflinks, both personalised, but these were retained by the Cabinet Office. A pair of cowboy boots, given to Starmer’s wife, Victoria, by the Trumps has also been held by the department.Under government rules, ministers cannot keep official gifts worth more than £140 unless they pay the difference between £140 and the gift’s value

1 day ago
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‘Young Tories are fed up’: the students switching to Reform in big numbers

Last year’s freshers’ fair was a dismal time for Newcastle University’s Conservative society, with just six new students showing any interest in joining at the start of the autumn term.But this year’s event brought dozens of students showing up with renewed enthusiasm – after the Tory students merged with the Reform UK students, shrugging off a rebuke from Conservative party headquarters to do so.“Interest increased tenfold. I think we Conservatives were just becoming a bit irrelevant,” said Henry Bateson, a one-time Conservative student who switched to Reform UK and is now president of Newcastle’s merged Conservative and Reform UK society.Recent opinion polls suggest nearly half of Tory members would support a merger with Reform into a single party

1 day ago
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Zarah Sultana sets sights on replacing Labour and gaining power

The MP Zarah Sultana has said she hopes her new political party will ultimately replace Labour as she revealed she was committed to winning power.Sultana left the Labour party in July to form the new group, operating under the temporary name Your Party.Asked by Nick Robinson on his BBC podcast Political Thinking if she aimed with her new party to replace Labour, she said: “That’s the vision. We are the party of the left, and we have to build. And we’re starting from very humble beginnings

2 days ago
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UK launches search for ‘town of culture’ among places ‘written out of national story’

Too many places have been “written out of the national story”, the culture secretary, Lisa Nandy, said as she launched a search for the UK’s first “town of culture”.The town of culture designation comes after the success of the cities of culture programme, which has put Derry, Hull, Coventry and, this year, Bradford in the limelight for a year, boosting the local economy, tourism, civic pride and access to the arts, according to its supporters.The government said the first winning town would get £3.5m to help it develop a cultural programme in the summer of 2028.The competition for the 2029 UK city of culture has also opened, with the winner being promised £10m, the first time the government has put an upfront figure on its contribution

2 days ago
foodSee all
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