It was a year a lot of recruiters were happy to see the back of, with fresh hopes for 2026. The Government finished with the Employment Rights Act, but much of the hard graft is yet to come, as set out in summer’s roadmap. The consultation timetable has slipped, but recruitment companies should assume that go live dates continue to apply.
Before the New Year kicks off in earnest here’s a quick round up of what we achieved in public policy over the year:
Maintaining a consistent and effective cadence of stakeholder meetings is key to raising APSCo and the sector’s profiles and securing political influence.
Our series of briefing papers for parliamentarians on the Employment Rights Bill across the year caught the attention of MPs and peers cross party, leading to meetings with the Conservative and Liberal Democrat peers so influential in the amendments including on day one dismissal rights.
Face to face engagement with Labour ministers Conservative shadow ministers and Reform on the economy, IR35, umbrella reform and Employment rights.
We held a series of successful parliamentary dinners with roundtable discussions on AI, skills and the employment rights bill leading to subsequent activity.
We also engaged with the regional mayoral offices, DWP, DfE and Skills England on skills initiatives and apprenticeships.
As a permanent member of HMRC and HMT’s Intermediaries Committee, we were involved in policy discussions on umbrella reform and IR35.
Dealing with member challenges
Ensuring the professional sector is heard and represented
Keeping our Members Informed and Providing Clarity
Being Impactful
Concessions were made on the Employment Rights Act, particularly the 6-month probationary period and changes to fire and rehire. We remain hopeful that the government has listened to us on zero-hours contracts and that draft regulations will be limited in scope to protect the genuine low paid, at-risk workers it is intended to protect and not adopt a broad-brush approach. The government has published a much more detailed impact assessment on the ERA, but much more is needed in respect of cost and behavioural impact of the zero hour contract changes.
Rules on apprenticeships have been simplified with shorter apprenticeships and reduced administration. The first tranche of short modular training, covered by the levy, will be launched by Skills England in April 2026.
Coming in 2026....