Teaching union members back further strike action over pay in indicative ballot

29 March 2024, 16:45

More than half of NEU members voted in the indicative ballot.
More than half of NEU members voted in the indicative ballot. Picture: Getty

By Jenny Medlicott

Teachers represented by the National Education Union have overwhelmingly voted in favour of strike action in an indicative ballot over pay and funding.

Listen to this article

Loading audio...

An overwhelming majority of National Education Union (NEU) teacher members in England and Wales who voted in the preliminary ballot were in favour of a strike to secure an above-inflation pay rise and additional funding for staffing.

Over 150,000 NEU teacher members in state schools and sixth forms took part in the electronic ballot.

The union consulted 300,000 of its teacher members working in maintained schools and sixth forms across England and Wales as part of the ballot.

The ballot, which launched on March 2 and closed on Thursday March 28, asked members if they would vote yes to strike action for a fully funded, above-inflation pay rise and further funding to provide improved levels of staffing provision.

The NEU, the largest education union in the UK, has said it will consider next steps at a special executive meeting on Tuesday.

In England, which saw 50.3% of members turn out to vote, more than nine in 10 (90.3%) of participants said they would vote yes to strike action.

In Wales, where 54.1% of teacher members turned out to vote, 87.2% said they would vote yes to strike action over pay and funding.

Nearly two-in-three (65.3%) members in Wales who took part in the indicative ballot also said they would support strike action if the Welsh Government reduced the summer break to four weeks.

Read more: Hundreds of Border Force officers at Heathrow Airport to stage four-day strike

Read more: Photography firm apologises for 'upset caused' after children with complex needs omitted from school photo

The NEU held an indicative ballot over pay and funding.
The NEU held an indicative ballot over pay and funding. Picture: Alamy

Daniel Kebede, general secretary of the NEU, said: "This is an indicative, and not a formal ballot.

"But the facts speak for themselves; over half of our members voted in the ballot and overwhelmingly supported a move to a formal ballot to secure a fully funded, above-inflation pay rise which constitutes a meaningful step towards pay restoration.

"The result demonstrates the mass discontent within our profession to which the Government should take notice.

"Urgent steps are required to tackle the crisis in education and our members know this.

"Our annual conference gathers in Bournemouth next week and delegates will determine the next steps in our pay and funding campaign."

The NASUWT union has also been consulting members to measure in a ballot whether its members would be interested in industrial action over pay, workload, working hours and well-being.

The results of the consultative ballot are expected to be announced at their annual conference in Harrogate, Yorkshire over the Easter weekend.

The ballot results come after the Department for Education (DfE) said in evidence to the School Teachers' Review Body (STRB) that teachers' pay awards should "return to a more sustainable level" after "two unprecedented years".

Four education unions called off strike action last summer after the Government agreed to implement the STRB's recommendation of a 6.5% increase for teachers in England.

A DfE spokesperson said: "The independent STRB is currently considering evidence for this year's pay award, unions should engage with this process instead of striking before they even know what the pay recommendations are.

"It is therefore extremely disappointing that the NEU has voted to proceed with a formal ballot for industrial action.

"Further strike action would cause more disruption to pupils who have already lost over 25 million school days due to last year's industrial action.

"Overall school funding is rising to over £60 billion in 2024/25, its highest ever level in real terms per pupil - and teachers have already benefited from two historic pay awards totalling over 12% in just two years."

More Latest News

See more More Latest News

Eden Golan is Israel's contestant at this year's Eurovision

Israeli Eurovision singer ordered to stay in hotel by national security agency as thousands call for her to be excluded

Barron Trump

Trump’s 18-year-old son Barron to make political debut at Republican convention

Hunter Biden

Court rejects Hunter Biden’s appeal in gun case

Jeremy Vine is suing Joey Barton for libel and harassment.

Jeremy Vine sues Joey Barton over ‘nonce’ claims as part of ‘sustained attack’ by ex-footballer

Xi Jinping shakes hands with Viktor Orban

Hungary and China sign strategic co-operation agreement during Xi Jinping visit

Exclusive
Jill Stein has said Jeremy Corbyn should join the Green Party

US Green Party's Jill Stein says Jeremy Corbyn should join British Greens

Benjamin Netanyahu

Netanyahu says Israel ‘will stand alone’ if it has to after US threat over arms

HMP Wandsworth in London

Scandal-hit Wandsworth prison should be put into emergency measures amid security concerns, watchdog warns

Police at the scene in north London

Man, 22, arrested for murder after woman in her 60s stabbed to death in broad daylight on busy north London street

Exclusive
It would be ‘counter-productive’ to remove pro-Palestine encampments that have sprung up on campuses across the UK, the Chief Executive of Universities UK has told LBC

Universities chief says it would be ‘counter-productive’ to break up encampments but vows to protect Jewish students

A crane loads food aid for Gaza onto a container ship docked in Cyprus

Ship loaded with aid heads for US-built Gaza pier

Sarah Olney discussed the impact of the interest rates.

Tories criticised for ‘appalling mismanagement of economy’ as mortgage rates set to rise after interest rates held

Trump Hush Money

Stormy Daniels spars with Trump defence lawyer over cash-for-silence transaction

Resurfacing work will take place along Old Military Road in the Glenshee area

Drivers face 142-mile diversion for nearly a month as one mile of road to be resurfaced

Sexual Misconduct Harvey Weinstein

Weinstein will not be sent back to California while he awaits New York retrial

Exclusive
Rishi Sunak has urged campuses to keep Jewish safe

Fears hard-left activists are infiltrating universities as PM urges bosses to protect Jewish students