
No more silence: UK to ban controversial NDAs silencing abuse at work
On Tuesday morning, the UK government posted an update on their website confirming the change to the bill, expected to become law later this year.
This comes as part of the government's Plan for Change in a bid to address workplace rights and equality, which it describes as 'the biggest upgrade to workers' rights in a generation".
NDAs, legal contracts that prevent certain pieces of information from being shared, were historically created to protect intellectual property or other sensitive details. However, they are increasingly being used to stop workers from speaking out about bad experiences in the workplace.
Employers will no longer be able to use NDAs, even those signed before the amendment, to silence staff who have been victims of harassment or discrimination. It will also allow witnesses of inappropriate behaviour to report incidents and support victims without the threat of being sued.
The original purpose of non-disclosure agreements to protect intellectual property and commercially sensitive information will still be allowed.
In response to the developments, Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner posted on X: 'Victims and witnesses of harassment and discrimination have been silenced for too long. This Labour government will stamp it out.'
Campaign group Can't Buy My Silence, led by Harvey Weinstein's former PA Zelda Perkins, has led the charge alongside lawmakers Louise Haigh and Sarah Russell to bring this change to the table.
'This is a huge milestone, for years, we've heard empty promises from governments whilst victims have continued to be silenced. To see this Government accept the need for nationwide legal change shows that they have listened and understood the abuse of power taking place,' Perkins said in a statement.
'Above all though, this victory belongs to the people who broke their NDAs, who risked everything to speak the truth when they were told they couldn't. Without their courage, none of this would be happening.
'This is not over yet and we will continue to focus closely on this to ensure the regulations are watertight and no one can be forced into silence again. If what is promised at this stage becomes reality, then the UK will be leading the world in protecting not only workers but the integrity of the law.'
It is unclear exactly when the changes will be implemented as the bill still needs to go back to the House of Lords before it can pass into law. Parliament's summer recess begins on 22 July.
The legal change would bring the UK in line with countries like Ireland and the United States, who have already banned the use of NDAs to silence victims of sexual harassment and discrimination.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Euronews
3 days ago
- Euronews
Ex-UK Labour leader Corbyn says he's starting a new left-wing party
The former leader of the UK Labour Party Jeremy Corbyn said on Thursday that he is forming a new left-leaning political party to advocate for "mass redistribution of wealth and power" and take on his former colleagues at the ballot box. The new political entity has a website — — but does not yet have a name. "It's your party," Corbyn said. "We're going to decide (a name) when we've had all the responses, and so far the response rate has been massive." Corbyn said he hoped the new party would have its inaugural conference in the autumn. Corbyn, 76, led Labour to election defeats in 2017 and 2019, but the veteran socialist campaigner remains popular with many grassroots supporters and the new party has the potential to further fragment British politics. The long-dominant Labour and Conservative parties now have challengers on both left and right, including the environmentalist Green Party and the hard-right Reform UK. Plans for a new party emerged earlier this month when lawmaker Zarah Sultana, who has been suspended from Labour for voting against the government, said she would 'co-lead the founding of a new party' with Corbyn. At the time, Corbyn did not confirm the news. On Thursday he denied the party launch had been messy, saying the process was "democratic, it's grassroots and it's open." A long-time supporter of Palestine and critic of Israel, Corbyn was suspended from Labour in 2020 after Britain's equalities watchdog found anti-Jewish prejudice had been allowed to spread within Labour while he was leader. He was suspended after failing to fully accept the findings, claiming opponents had exaggerated the scale of antisemitism in Labour for "political reasons." Corbyn was re-elected to Parliament last year as an independent. Prime Minister Keir Starmer succeeded Corbyn as Labour leader in 2020 and dragged the party back toward the political centre ground. He dropped Corbyn's opposition to Britain's nuclear weapons, strongly backed sending weapons to Ukraine and stressed the party's commitment to balancing the books. Starmer won a landslide election victory a year ago, but has struggled to maintain unity among Labour lawmakers as the government struggles to get a sluggish economy growing and invest in overstretched public services. He has been forced into a series of U-turns by his own lawmakers, including one on welfare reform that left his authority severely dented.

LeMonde
4 days ago
- LeMonde
British ex-Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn announces a new political party
Former leftist Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn announced, on Thursday, July 24, that he was forming a new political party alongside another ex-member of Britain's ruling party, as UK politics continues to splinter. Corbyn, who lost two elections as Labour leader in 2017 and 2019, and fellow independent MP Zarah Sultana said the new left-wing outfit would be called Your Party. Sultana, an MP since 2019, was suspended by Labour last year after she and several other members of parliament voted to scrap a controversial cap on child benefits. "It's time for a new kind of political party. One that is rooted in our communities, trade unions and social movements," they said in a joint statement. In their announcement, they called for a "mass redistribution of wealth and power" and said they would "keep demanding an end to all arms sales to Israel." They also committed to a "free and independent Palestine." Prime Minister Keir Starmer, who has pulled Labour to the centre since succeeding Corbyn as leader, faces growing calls within his party to recognise a Palestinian state. Corbyn re-elected after being expelled from Labour Corbyn, 76, stepped down as Labour leader after overseeing its worst result in decades, when it was trounced in the 2019 general election by the Conservatives, then led by Boris Johnson. Labour under Starmer suspended him in 2020 after he refused to fully accept the findings of a rights watchdog's probe into claims that anti-Semitism had become rampant within Labour's ranks under his leadership. The Equality and Human Rights Commission ruled the party had broken equality law when Corbyn was in charge. Corbyn said the anti-Semitism had been "dramatically overstated for political reasons." Last year, Corbyn announced he would stand as an independent in the July 2024 general election after Labour failed to put him forward as a candidate. He was expelled from the party, but still went on to comfortably win his Islington North seat in London, which he has represented for more than 40 years. Challenging two-party dominance While it remains to be seen whether the new movement will take off, its formation appears to confirm a trend in British politics towards a multi-party system. British politics has long been dominated by Labour and the Conservatives, but three other parties are challenging that order. The centre-left Liberal Democrats won 72 seats in the 650-seat parliament last July, while Nigel Farage's anti-immigrant Reform UK party won about 14% of the vote. It picked up five seats, an unprecedented breakthrough for a hard-right party in Britain. The Eurosceptic Reform Party swept dozens of council and mayoral seats in local elections in May and is leading in national opinion polls, although the next general election is not expected until 2029. While Reform are picking up support on the right, Labour is also losing votes to the Greens on the left. Starmer, a former chief state prosecutor who is seen as too right-wing for some left-wingers in his party, recently suspended four lawmakers who rebelled over his attempts at reforming welfare. They currently sit as independents, and Westminster watchers will be keeping a close eye on whether they are tempted to join Corbyn's new party.


Fashion Network
6 days ago
- Fashion Network
Tax-free tourist shopping return would help economy, create 73,000+ jobs in UK says AIR report
UK retailers and the organisations that represent them continue to campaign for the return of tax-free shopping for tourists in Britain despite a seeming lack of interest from the current Labour government after the previous government abolished it. On Tuesday, a submission to ministers from the Association of International Retail (AIR) claimed that a new tax-free shopping scheme would offer an almost-£3.7 billion ' Brexit benefit' at the bare minimum as it would take advantage of the unique opportunity for the UK to create a valuable new market of EU shoppers. And it also said that such a scheme would create 'at least' 73,000 new jobs serving EU shoppers alone. The Conservative government scrapped VAT rebates for international visitors when Brexit finally came into effect. That was despite the retail industry having been hoping that with Britain no longer in the EU the scheme would be expanded to include hundreds of millions of EU shoppers. It might have made the UK potentially the most attractive shopping major market globally with, as AIR says, the UK being 'the only destination in Europe offering VAT rebates to 450 million EU consumers as well as those from the rest of the world, creating a 'vast new market' and making the UK the global shopping capital'. AIR also said that reintroducing tax-free shopping, which had existed for decades, 'would benefit every region by firing up economic growth'. VAT refunds for visitors to the UK were previously seen as a major driver of tourism and the decision to axe them was controversial and led to it being branded a 'tourist tax' by critics. AIR said 'hundreds of business leaders are now calling for a rethink on the policy, arguing that as well as retailers the entire tourist economy has been affected, whether that be regional tourist centres or manufacturers down the supply chain, hotels and restaurants, taxis, galleries and museums and cafes'. It said those that have called for a new tax-free shopping scheme include: Primark, M&S, Paul Smith, Heathrow, John Lewis, Bicester Village, Mulberry, the Royal Opera House, Shakespeare's Globe, Historic Royal Palaces, Chapel Down, Charlotte Tilbury, Fortnum & Mason, Claridge's, Boodles, Pragnell, Fabergé, The Hippodrome Casino, Elizabeth Gage, Hanover Health Foods, N Peale, David Morris Jewels, The Langham Hotel, Anderson & Sheppard, Berry's Jewellers, Breitling, Clermont Hotel Group, Como Holding, Lumbers, Trotters, Essential Edinburgh Business Improvement District, British Retail Consortium, British Fashion Council, British Beauty Council, Walpole, Heart of London Business Alliance (HOLBA) and UKInbound. The new submission to the Department for Culture, Media and Sport comes as that department is preparing a new Visitor Economy Growth Plan expected to launch this autumn. UK losing out to European destinations AIR's document also 'warns that international visitors are increasingly being driven into the arms of the UK's rivals thanks to the absence of VAT rebates', using new figures showing that in the UK, the post-Covid tourism recovery has been weaker than elsewhere in Europe. How so? Visitor numbers to the UK had by last year recovered to only 96% of their 2019 levels compared with 101.9% in Spain and 100% in France. And the figures for actual tourist spend are even more worrying. In the UK, spending last year stood at 92% of 2019 levels compared to 106% in Spain and 110% in France. So, in the UK fewer visitors are arriving and those that do are spending less than they used to. In Spain and France, a larger or equal number of visitors are arriving and they're spending more. And some of those visitors to France, Spain (and other countries) are British, attracted by being able to shop VAT-free, which they couldn't do before Brexit, so that's even more spend being lost to UK stores. Back in the UK, Visit Britain estimates that shopping accounts for 25% of all international visitor spending, more than any other single item. And to counter government claims that the VAT-free scheme was costing the country money, it added that for every £1 spent in VAT-free shopping, around £4 was spent on goods and services on which VAT was charged and not refunded. As for the close-to-£3.7 billion figure quoted earlier, AIR said that if spending on VAT-free shopping by new EU shopping-led visitors to the UK was at the same level as British VAT-free spending in the EU in 2024, there would be a total additional spend of at least £3.65bn. This would be on top of an estimated £1.5bn of annual spending by non-EU visitors diverted to France, Spain, Italy and other tax-free destinations when VAT rebates were ended. Derrick Hardman, chair of AIR, said: 'With Britain no longer in the EU, we have the opportunity to become the best place in the world for shopping. While the 26 EU countries offer VAT-free shopping to non-EU visitors, including those from the UK, Britain is now in the unique position of being the only major European country where this attraction could also be offered to all 450m EU residents. 'This would give Britain an unchallengeable competitive advantage within Europe. In addition to levelling the playing field with our EU competitor destinations who all offer VAT refunds to non-EU visitors, Britain would have the unique opportunity to create a whole new, shopping-led, EU tourism market. 'These would be additional visitors, spending additional money in hotels, restaurants, and on travel, culture and entertainment, all of which generate additional VAT for the Exchequer.'