A union boss has warned rail strikes will continue until a settlement is reached as the latest walkout by workers caused widespread disruption for train passengers.
Speaking to Sky News, RMT chief Mick Lynch said his members were “completely committed to the cause” and would “keep going” in their long-running dispute over pay, jobs and conditions.
He also believed industrial unrest would spread with “generalised and synchronised action” in the face of the deepening cost of living crisis after inflation soared to a new 40-year high of 10.1%.
Four days of disruption across UK – live travel updates
It came as fresh strike action by a number of unions hit the rail network, with only around a fifth of services running, and half of lines closed, with a further walkout planned for Saturday.
London Underground and buses in the capital will also be hit by industrial action on Friday.
The knock-on effect of the rail stoppages will impact services into Sunday.
People who are not able to travel on Thursday or Saturday are able to use their ticket either the day before or up until the 23 August, or claim a refund.
Who is going on strike this month and when
Mr Lynch said: “Nobody can afford to go on strike. They don’t want to be on strike, they want a settlement.
“They are completely tied into this dispute.
“I addressed a meeting of thousands of our members last night online and they are totally committed to the campaign that we have got.
“They understood the issues when they voted for it and they are showing on the picket lines that they are completely committed to the cause.
“We will keep going until we get a negotiated settlement and our members will decide whether it’s acceptable or not.”
Predicting that strikes would extend to other areas amid employee discontent, Mr Lynch said: “There’s a wave of reaction amongst working people to the way they are being treated. People are getting poorer every day of the week. People can’t pay their bills.
“They are getting treated despicably in the workplace. I think there will, be generalised and synchronised action – it may not be in the traditional form.
“I think there is a massive response coming from working people because they are fed up with the way they are being treated.”
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Who is going on strike this month and when
Meanwhile, Transport Secretary Grant Shapps condemned the industrial action as an example of unions being “hell-bent on causing as much misery as possible” to taxpayers, who “stumped up £600 per household to ensure not a single rail worker lost their job during the pandemic”.
He tweeted: “It cannot be right for the country to be held to ransom by union bosses seeking to protect outdated work practices that have no place in the 21st century.”