Industry leaders will be asked if the rest of the Employment Rights Bill, which even the Government's own calculations admit will cost firms £5 billion a year, should also be scrapped.
In a blow to Labour's deputy leader, the Office for Budget Responsibility said it did not have enough detail about her Employment Rights Bill to deliver a full verdict on its consequences.
Today, Labour has reminded us all why it will always be the anti-business party. The Employment Rights Bill is the closest thing Keir Starmer has to a time machine.
The Deputy Prime Minister insisted that the Employment Rights Bill would trigger a boom in spending because millions of people would have the security to 'get on in life'.
Under Labour's controversial Employment Rights Bill, workers on 'zero-hours contracts' will be entitled to payments if their shifts are cancelled or changed at short notice.