I can think of no more appropriate use of the phrase ‘cutting off your nose to spite your face’ than the decision by union leaders this week to announce that they will campaign for a British exit from the European Union if David Cameron negotiates a British opt-out from any element of the social chapter.

The first obvious outcome if they get their desired result is that all of those protections will disappear. That means the higher standards of health and safety in the workplace, guaranteed four weeks’ annual leave, maternity rights and many other rights and protections we all enjoy as a result of Tony Blair’s decision to opt Britain in to the social chapter would be at the mercy of a Tory government free to set its own standards. Hands up if you think they’ll be higher?

The second outcome makes the first irrelevant to many of the workers union leaders are supposed to represent – the risk to the 3.5 million jobs in Britain which rely directly or indirectly on our EU membership. Do the workers at the Nissan plant in the north east agree with their union leader when car manufacturers have made it very clear they will be seriously considering their future in the UK if access to the single market is closed to their British operations? What about the 10,000 workers at Lancashire’s biggest employer, BAE Systems?

The reality is that Cameron stands a very slim chance of negotiating any weakening of the social chapter or another opt out for Britain. Many member states are dead against it and his lack of solidarity with other EU nations during the current refugee crisis has earned him even fewer friends. He knows this, which is why he appears to have quietly dropped plans to weaken rights for British workers from his shopping list.

Union leaders want to appeal to their activists, many of whom on the far left have been eager to drag Britain out of the EU for some time. But they need to listen to their wider membership and think about the bigger picture. The benefits of EU membership to working people in this country extend well beyond workplace rights and protections – and are too numerous to list in this article. Should Cameron be successful, a firm commitment from the Labour party that opting back in to the social chapter would be a top priority on day one of the next Labour government – as Blair did before the 1997 election – should reassure the unions that we will not countenance any slipping of standards.

Instead of threatening to join the same side as United Kingdom independence party – something that should always make anyone on the left stop and think – union leaders should spend their time investing in a campaign to properly communicate the benefits of continued membership to their members, recruiting new members in the industries which rely on our membership to continue creating jobs and building a mass movement of working people to demand that the government respect the rights of working people – and indeed go further.

Labour mobility is a huge issue across the EU and we urgently need reform to make it easier for jobseekers to access opportunities in other countries. We also need urgent changes to the Posted Workers Directive to ensure that workers posted in other countries have fundamental rights like the right to strike. Unions should be at the forefront of these efforts, not harping on about quitting the club.

This could be an opportunity to revitalise the union movement with millions of new members and a renewed sense of purpose. It should not be wasted on an endeavour which will ultimately lead to suffering for the very working people unions are there to represent.

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Kevin Peel is a Labour and Co-operative councillor on Manchester city council and represents the north west on the EU committee of the regions. He tweets @kevpeel

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Photo: Rock Cohen