To Trade unions, union leaders, and all members of the labour movement,
We, the undersigned trade unionists, climate campaigners, and grassroots organisers, write with urgency and solidarity.
At a time when workers are facing the escalating impacts of climate breakdown, cost of living pressures, and political instability, we must confront a dangerous threat: the growing spread of climate misinformation and the re-emergence of the far right in our communities and workplaces.
Across the UK and beyond, far-right forces are seeking to exploit economic insecurity and weaponise confusion about climate action. They aim to divide workers, weaken solidarity, and halt the just transition we urgently need. Their narratives often pit environmental action against working-class interests—undermining both.
We reject this false divide.
The climate crisis is a working-class issue. It is already harming our jobs, health, homes, and communities. Delays in transitioning to a greener economy disproportionately hurt workers, especially the most precarious. The labour movement must respond with clarity and courage—by leading on solutions, not defending the status quo.
We call on unions at every level—national, regional, branch—to:
1. Confront Climate Misinformation Head-On
2. Invest in Political Education That Meets Workers Where They Are
In a changing world of work—where more people are in fragmented, precarious, or remote jobs and no longer share common spaces like factories or offices—unions must find new ways to engage and educate. We call for innovative approaches to political education that break beyond traditional structures and reach workers wherever they are. This means:
3. Build a Visible Alternative to the Far Right
That’s why we are supporting Workers Planet—an initiative taking place on Sunday 7 September 2025 in Brighton, alongside the TUC Congress. It brings together trade unionists, climate organisers, and grassroots activists to tackle climate misinformation, build shared political education, and put justice and democracy at the heart of union organising.
Workers Planet, and other initiatives like it, are beginning to bridge the gap—connecting climate justice with worker power, and offering the kind of political space our movement urgently needs.
We believe trade unions can—and must—be at the forefront of building a better world. But to do so, we must confront the threats before us with honesty, unity, and action.