Skip to main contentSkip to navigationSkip to navigation
Worker in front of conveyer belt of biscuits.
The Pladis-owned factory is the primary facility for Jacob’s products in the UK. Photograph: Peter Nicholls/Reuters
The Pladis-owned factory is the primary facility for Jacob’s products in the UK. Photograph: Peter Nicholls/Reuters

Staff at Jacob’s Cream Crackers Aintree factory go on ‘permanent strike’

This article is more than 1 year old

Workers at Pladis site near Liverpool have been in dispute over ‘real-terms pay cut’ since September

UK production of the snack favourites Jacob’s Cream Crackers and Twiglets is at risk after hundreds of workers went on strike at owner Pladis’s factory in Aintree, near Liverpool.

More than 750 of about 800 workers at the plant, who help make 4,000 tons of crackers every year, say they will strike until bosses agree to negotiate on pay.

The site, which has been operating for more than 100 years, was the first Jacob’s factory to be built in England and remains the primary facility for its products in the UK.

Workers say they were offered a pay rise of 4.25%, falling far short of their initial demand for a 10% pay rise – in line with inflation.

The GMB union, which is backing the strike, said workers had eased their demand to a rise of £1,750 each, amounting to an increase of about 9% for those on the lowest pay grade and less than 7% for more senior staff.

Pladis said it had offered an 8.9% pay increase over two years plus a one-off £500 cost of living payment.

The company said it was temporarily shifting some production to Portugal to ensure supplies in the run-up to Christmas after more than a month of dispute over pay at the UK factory. Workers in Aintree first took strike action in September but have now moved to a “permanent strike” over what they say is a “real-terms pay cut”.

Eamon O’Hearn, the GMB national officer, said: “These workers are rightly angry – they put themselves on the line to keep the company going during the pandemic.

“Now they need some help to get them through the cost of living crisis. But it’s falling on deaf ears. In fact, more than that, bosses are shifting an iconic British brand to Portugal to undermine their own workers.

“This kind of naked corporate greed in the run-up to Christmas is disgraceful.”

A spokesperson for Pladis said: “We regret that the GMB has decided to take this course of action, despite all of the efforts we have made to reach an agreement with the union. However, we want to reiterate that our door remains open to the GMB for further discussions with their representatives.”

skip past newsletter promotion

The biscuit workers are the latest to take strike action amid an autumn of discontent as employers struggle to keep wages in line with soaring inflation.

Workers from rival biscuit maker Fox’s recently secured a 13.5% pay rise over two years after threatening strike action backed by the Unite union while those at Heinz’s condiment factory in Telford won an 11% pay rise this week.

Nurses, rail workers, university staff and postal workers have also been on strike in recent weeks or are expected to strike before Christmas in disputes over pay.

More on this story

More on this story

  • ‘We’re by no means out of the woods yet’: workers face uncertainty over Alstom train plant

  • Mental health of people in Wales worst affected by cost of living crisis, poll finds

  • Students at University of Manchester join rent strike over cost of living crisis

  • Siemens to invest £100m in Chippenham rail factory site in Wiltshire

  • UK credit card borrowing soars to highest monthly level since 2004

  • UK manufacturers hit by Red Sea disruption and rising shipping costs

  • Two-thirds of UK consumers plan to cut non-essentials in 2023

  • UK factories cut production for 11th month in a row amid tensions in Red Sea

  • UK workers face return to 2006 real-term wages in ‘highly challenging’ 2023

  • Nearly 700 Safestyle staff lose jobs as window firm enters administration

Most viewed

Most viewed