A spokesperson for Prime Minister Boris Johnson pointed out that "the way these workers were informed was completely unacceptable". The spokesperson added that "clearly the way that this was communicated to staff was not right and we have made that clear", referring to P&O's owners announcing the sacking via a Zoom video call.
"Reports of workers being given zero notice and being escorted off their ships while being told that cheaper alternatives will take up their roles shows the insensitive way P&O have approached this issue", Courts added.
Shadow Transport Secretary Louise Haigh, for her part, likened P&O Ferries' dismissals, including the use of "handcuffed-trained security, some wearing balaclavas, marching British crew off their ships" to "the actions of thugs".
The maritime union Nautilus International described P&O Ferries' move as "a betrayal of British workers", while Livia Spera, the head of the European seafarers' union ETF, claimed it was "astonishing that this can happen in a major developed country like the UK".