Employment Edit: 6 November 2025
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The Employment Rights Bill continues to be the subject of debate in Parliament, with the Bill remaining in a period of ‘ping-pong’. This is the term used for the to and fro of amendments between the House of Commons and House of Lords as they try to resolve the final points of disagreement in a Bill.
Last week, the House of Lords voted in favour of various proposed changes to the Bill, including amendments that would:
Yesterday, the House of Commons disagreed with each of these amendments. It supported alternative amendments that would introduce a statutory requirement for the government to consult prior to issuing regulations on a range of key details relating to the unfair dismissal reform and would require the government to consider the impact of e-balloting before removing the industrial action ballot threshold requirement. The Bill will now return to the House of Lords for reconsideration. We will continue to keep you posted on all key Employment Rights Bill developments in the coming weeks, including any news on when the Bill might be passed.
Additional and necessary detail on many of the reforms in the Bill will be set out in separate regulations, which will be published following consultation. On 23 October 2025, the government launched four consultations seeking views on the underlying detail relating to four areas of reform – trade union rights of access, the duty to inform workers of their right to join a union, dismissal protection for pregnant employees & new mothers and bereavement leave. We explore those consultations below.
The first two consultations relate to trade union reforms – the right of trade unions to access workplaces and the duty to inform workers of right to join a union. Both of these consultations are set to close on 18 December 2025.
Key points from these consultations include:
In its Next Steps to Make Work Pay policy paper published last October, the government set out plans to make it unlawful to dismiss pregnant employees and new mothers within 6 months of their return to work, except for in specific circumstances. In another of the consultations launched on 23 October, the government is now consulting on the scope of these proposed new protections, which are set to take effect in 2027.
Key topics covered in the consultation, which closes on 15 January 2026, include:
The fourth consultation launched by the government on 23 October relates to the new ‘day one’ right to unpaid bereavement leave that is set to be introduced in 2027. This new right will be separate to the existing right to paid parental bereavement leave for employees who lose a child under the age of 18 or who experience a stillbirth after 24 weeks of pregnancy.
Key details about the new right to unpaid bereavement leave, including the length of the leave entitlement and the qualifying requirements, will need to be set out in regulations. The consultation, which closes on 15 January 2026, invites respondents to provide their views on various of these qualifying requirements including the required relationship that the bereaved employee must have had with the deceased – will the new right be restricted to immediate family members (such as spouses, partners, parents and children) or will it extend further to grandparents and grandchildren and other extended family (such as aunts, uncles and cousins)? The consultation also includes questions relating to the extension of the right to unpaid bereavement leave to those who experience pregnancy loss in the first 24 weeks of pregnancy.
Use of a new digital HR1 form will soon become compulsory for any employer notifying the Secretary of State of proposed collective redundancies.
Where an employer is proposing 20 or more redundancies ‘at one establishment’ within a period of 90 days, it must notify the Secretary of State of these proposed redundancies via an HR1 form. Until recently, the only way to satisfy this obligation was to complete the HR1 form (in Word or Open Document format, both of which are available on this gov.uk page) and then send the completed form and any attachments to [email protected]. A digital version of this form was recently launched on the gov.uk page. Some of the questions included in the digital version of the form are slightly different or contain limitations – for example, the employer is no longer required to provide a breakdown of the affected employees by occupational group and there is no option to provide a consultation date in the future. It is also important to note that the digital form will ‘time out’ and will not save information, meaning it must be completed in one sitting.
After 30 November 2025, the digital form will be the only available method to submit an HR1 notification. Affected employers should consider how to go about collating and signing off the information required before submitting the form digitally and ensuring that they save or print the summary page for their records. For example, it might be sensible to prepare an offline version of the form (including any attachments) which can be reviewed and authorised by appropriate personnel internally before then submitting that information and documentation via the digital form on the date of notification.