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Equity General Secretary calls for Prime Minister to resign and says union “opposes” Reform in speech to annual conference

In his speech to Equity’s annual conference today, General Secretary Paul W Fleming has called for Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer “to set out a timetable in which he resigns and is replaced”.

He also said that the union “opposes” Reform, “opposes giving them a platform, and opposes what they threaten to do to our movement and trade union.” 

But Fleming added that among Reform voters are “people who are actually frustrated about the economic and social situation in which we find ourselves… who are desperately grabbing around for a different answer” and said that for this, “there is one person who is disproportionately to blame: not Nigel Farage, but Keir Starmer.”

Equity’s annual conference is taking place this year in the Durham Miners’ Hall across Saturday 9 to Monday 11 May.

Elsewhere, the General Secretary said that there is currently a “real prospect of industrial action on the West End costing the bosses hundreds of thousands of pounds a day”, referring to the ongoing indicative ballot of performers and stage management working in London’s world-famous theatres who are threatening to take strike action for fairer pay, terms and conditions.

He also said that the union had “Never had as many [emails] as in response to our loss at Spotlight” of which people were “proud that this is a union that is standing up for them”. In September last year, the High Court ruled in favour of Spotlight, dismissing Equity’s case that the casting directory’s fees should be regulated. The union’s appeal is set to go ahead in November this year. 

The section of Equity General Secretary Paul W Fleming’s speech regarding Keir Starmer and Reform in full: 

“It would be remiss of me after the last week to not mention potentially the biggest threat to our union, to our industry, and to any union. And that is the rise of the far right. And I don't want to speak euphemistically. The rise of the far right includes Reform. Reform is the far right. Not every Reform voter. Not every Reform council candidate. But the leadership and direction and policies of that party are those of the far right. And I have no shame in saying so, and I have no shame in saying that this union opposes them, opposes giving them a platform, and opposes what they threaten to do to our movement and trade union. But as we find amongst Reform voters – and indeed some Reform councillors – converts to our way of thinking, people who are actually frustrated about the economic and social situation in which we find ourselves, which has seen wage stagnation across our economy, that has seen austerity in our communities, who are desperately grabbing around for a different answer, there is one person who is disproportionately to blame: not Nigel Farage, but Keir Starmer. And this union should have no hesitation in calling for the Prime Minister to set out a timetable in which he resigns and is replaced.”


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