Lammy rules out charging workers for tribunal claims


David Lammy has ruled out introducing a charge for workers bringing employment tribunal claims after a union backlash over the proposed move.

The Justice Secretary and Deputy Prime Minister said โ€œeveryone, no matter their incomeโ€ should be able to challenge โ€œunfair behaviourโ€.

It comes after TUC general secretary Paul Nowak warned that forcing claimants to pay would be a โ€œgift for bad bossesโ€ after it emerged the Government was considering plans to introduce a tribunal fee.

Proposals were put forward as part of efforts to find savings in the Ministry of Justice budget, in a bid to recover some of the costs of running the service, The Guardian reported last week.

But Mr Nowak said fees would cost โ€œmore to set up than they generatedโ€ and would price low-paid workers out of accessing justice.

In a statement on Wednesday, Mr Lammy confirmed it would โ€œremain free to bring a case to an employment tribunalโ€.

โ€œEveryone, no matter their income, should be able to get access to justice to challenge unfair behaviour at work,โ€ he said.

โ€œThis is fundamental to Labourโ€™s plan to make work pay.โ€

Tribunal claims were free until Lord David Cameronโ€™s coalition government introduced charges of up to ยฃ1,200 in some cases in 2013 as part of efforts to cut costs.

The fees were then scrapped in 2017 after the Supreme Court ruled they were unlawful.

The Justice Secretaryโ€™s statement was welcomed by trade unions, with Mr Nowak describing it as an โ€œimportant commitmentโ€.

Ross Holden, GMBโ€™s head of research and policy, said: โ€œForcing workers to do so would give bad bosses carte blanche to fly in the face of whatโ€™s right.

โ€œItโ€™s a relief to hear the Secretary of State promise this wonโ€™t happen on his watch.โ€

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