Google rejects UK union recognition but offers talks via conciliation body


FILE PHOTO: The Google logo is seen outside the company's offices in London, Britain, June 24, 2025. REUTERS/Carlos Jasso//File Photo

LONDON, May 20 (Reuters) - Google < ⁠GOOGL.O> said it had rejected a request from two British ⁠unions for voluntary recognition but would negotiate with them via ‌a state-backed conciliation service, delaying a potential statutory process that could force recognition.

Under UK rules, the move opens a 20-working-day window, extendable by agreement, for talks on recognition. ​If talks fail, unions can seek statutory ⁠recognition via the country's independent ⁠Central Arbitration Committee.

The Communication Workers Union (CWU) and Unite said earlier this month ⁠that ‌they had sent a formal letter to Google seeking voluntary recognition after an employee-organised vote showed support for unionisation at ⁠Google's AI unit DeepMind.

The company confirmed the receipt ​of that letter, which ‌gave it 10 days under UK rules to respond by ⁠agreeing to ​voluntary recognition, rejecting the request or entering negotiations.

"We've declined the unions' request for voluntary recognition to bargain collectively on pay, hours and holiday, but we ⁠have offered to meet via ACAS, which ​is a standard next step," a Google spokesperson said via email on Wednesday. "We continue to value the constructive and direct dialogue that we have with ⁠our employees about building a positive and successful workplace."

Britain's new employment rights legislation, which came into force last month, has simplified the union recognition process, lowering some of the thresholds and procedural hurdles for ​unions.

Google has about 7,000 employees in the UK, ⁠including those at DeepMind.

Globally, big technology companies have been accused by workers' ​rights groups of discouraging unionisation through "union-busting" tactics, ‌a characterisation the firms reject, saying ​they favour direct dialogue with workers over formal collective bargaining.

(Reporting by Muvija M; Editing by Paul Sandle and Mark Porter)

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