Overview
- On Thursday morning, the Underground and DLR were shut, with Elizabeth line trains skipping central stations during peak hours and London Overground services heavily crowded.
- By mid-morning TfL had limited sections of the Piccadilly, District and Metropolitan lines running, after brief partial reopenings on Wednesday and an unexpected full Northern line service on Tuesday.
- RMT general secretary Eddie Dempsey called for a mayor-led summit and warned further action is possible, saying industrial relations on London Underground have collapsed.
- TfL maintains it has offered a 3.4% pay rise and says a cut from a 35-hour to a 32-hour week is unaffordable, with a phased return to a full Tube service expected by late Friday morning.
- Data showed central London footfall down about 16% at Tuesday lunchtime and up to 31% in Canary Wharf, while cycle hires and e-bike trips surged and economists estimate a direct economic hit of roughly £230m.