Zero-hours contracts: Tories have broken their pledge on job security
The best of Voices delivered to your inbox every week - from controversial columns to expert analysis Sign up for our free weekly Voices newsletter for expert opinion and columns Sign up to our free weekly Voices newsletter SIGN UP I would like to be emailed about offers, events and updates from The Independent. The 2015 Conservative manifesto promised “we will back you at work” and “we know that a decent job is the best weapon against poverty and the best way to provide security for families”. Yesterday, the Office for National Statistics released its latest figures on zero-hours contracts: 801,000 people – enough to fill Old Trafford stadium 10 times over – were employed on them at the end of last year, a 15 per cent increase on the same period the previous year. A government serious about building a fairer society would not stand for this; it would act by implementing policies to outlaw exploitative zero-hours contracts.


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