
The strike at two branches of McDonaldās in Britain was ājust the startā, Labourās shadow chancellor John McDonnell said on September 4. Speaking at a rally outside Parliament the day before, the shadow chancellor hailed the striking workers as an āabsolute inspirationā.
Workers at the burger giantās restaurants in Cambridge and Crayford, south-east London, downed aprons in protest at the harassment of workers and the victimisation of union members.
But striking workers told the Morning Star they hoped workers at many more branches to join a āsecond waveā of action.
The Bakers, Food and Allied Workers Union (BFAWU), which represents the McDonaldās workers, has sought to emulate the tactics of campaigns for better pay and conditions for fast-food workers in the US and New Zealand. The union wants a Ā£10 an hour minimum wage ā now adopted as Labour Party policy ā and an end to zero-hour contracts.
McDonnell offered Labourās firm support for the strikers. He said the strike would be ācompletely avoidable if bosses would agree to pay workers a living wageā and ātreated staff with respectā.
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