It was interesting to watch members of the European Parliament debate EU legislation for improving conditions for platform workers on Monday. You can read our full report on the debate and vote here.
Despite the fact that the parliament in Strasbourg has minimal power in the EU, it was heartening to hear MEPs express a broad consensus in favour of change for platform workers: a legal presumption of employment; no 'third party status'; strong worker protections from AI and rights to access their data; collective bargaining rights; and the right to protective equipment and health & safety at work for on-location platform workers. Commissioner Nicolas Schmit, who does have serious legislative power and has been spending a lot of time indulging platform companies in meeting after meeting, certainly acted as if he was on board with the MEPs, describing a legal presumption of employment unless platform companies can prove otherwise as "a good solution". Time will tell if he honours that remark.
Even if Schmit's legislation proposes the majority of what MEPs have demanded, the experience of the 'Riders Law' in Spain, which came into force one month ago, shows that there are no guarantees that the platform giants will play ball. Strong action on the part of each member state to ensure compliance will also be required.
Far from putting an end to the court battles between unions and platforms, the Riders Law has set off an avalanche of new ones, while Spain's Labour Inspectorate is inundated with complaints that platforms, and the subcontractors they are outsourcing workers too, are continually disregarding their rights as employees. The campaign group RidersXDerechos say that this has been happening for five years because the platforms would rather pay the fines than abide by the laws, and the only way to get them to take the law seriously is to beef up the judicial system and the sanctions.
Does the Spanish state have the political will and the fiscal fire-power to police the platform giants? The same question could be asked of all 27 member-states if a version of Spain's Riders Law is rolled out across Europe.
Ben Wray, Gig Economy Project co-ordinator