Uber signs driver bargaining agreement with major UK union
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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 26/05/2021 (1588 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.
LONDON (AP) — Uber said Wednesday it’s formally recognizing a major British trade union so it can represent drivers, a breakthrough for labor campaigners seeking fairer working conditions from the ride-hailing giant.
The San Francisco-based company said it signed a collective bargaining agreement with the GMB trade union, one of the U.K.’s biggest.
Under the agreement, the GMB will represent Uber’s 70,000 drivers across the U.K. The drivers will still be able to choose if, when and where they drive. Union membership won’t be automatic and drivers will have to sign up for it.

“History has been made,” GMB National Official Mick Rix said in a statement issued by Uber. “This agreement shows gig economy companies don’t have to be a wild west on the untamed frontier of employment rights.”
Uber and other app-based gig economy companies have been facing pressure across Europe to reform labor models that are often blamed for precarious jobs and low salaries.
The deal comes after the U.K.’s top court disrupted Uber’s business model by ruling earlier this year that the company’s drivers should be classed as workers and not self-employed. That entitled them to benefits such as minimum wage, pensions and holiday pay, which the company has started providing.
The GMB is more than 100 years old and represents 620,000 U.K. workers. Another group that led the legal challenge, the App Drivers & Couriers Union, greeted the announcement cautiously.
“Overall, this is a step in the right direction, but there are significant obstacles in the way of ADCU reaching a similar agreement,” including disagreement with the way Uber calculates minimum wage and holiday pay, it said.
The ADCU said it also has concerns about Uber’s motivations, and said it’s worried that the company is seeking to use the “appearance of blunt collective bargaining agreements” to weaken the power of workers rather than strengthen them.