Category: Parliament

  • Ian Blackford – 2021 Speech on the Personal Conduct of Boris Johnson

    Ian Blackford – 2021 Speech on the Personal Conduct of Boris Johnson

    The speech made by Ian Blackford, the SNP MP for Ross, Skye and Lochaber, in the House of Commons on 30 November 2021.

    I beg to move,

    That this House censures the Prime Minister, the Right Honourable Member for Uxbridge and South Ruislip, for frequently violating the sixth Principle of Public Life, for seeking to undermine the recommendations of the Standards Committee on Owen Paterson, for regularly ignoring independent advice on matters such as international treaties and breaches of the Ministerial Code by his ministers, for putting forward proposals to diminish the powers of the Electoral Commission, for ignoring independent advice concerning the granting of peerages to Conservative party donors and nominations to public bodies such as Ofcom; and further calls for his ministerial salary to be reduced by £41,567 per year.

    Thank you, Madam Deputy Speaker, for your guidance to the House on conduct in this debate. I am sure you will want to join me in wishing everyone a happy St Andrew’s Day.

    Madam Deputy Speaker

    For the avoidance of doubt, happy St Andrew’s Day.

    Ian Blackford

    Happy St Andrew’s Day to you, Madam Deputy Speaker, and to all hon. and right hon. Members.

    The Scottish National party tabled this motion of censure against the Prime Minister because we believe in a very basic principle, and we believe the public do, too: those in power deserve to face consequences for their disastrous actions, and they need to be held to account.

    The charge sheet against the Prime Minister is, indeed, damning. In the past few weeks alone, he ripped up anti-lobbying rules when one of his own was found guilty, he is attempting to restrict the right to judicial review and he is seeking to undermine the independence of the Electoral Commission. But it did not start there, and it definitely does not end there.

    Since coming into office a little over two years ago, the Prime Minister has been up to his neck in scandals involving cash for honours, cash for contracts, texts for tax breaks and even cash for curtains. As the motion states, he is constantly breaking the sixth principle of public life, the duty to be truthful.

    Month after month, scandal after scandal, the charge sheet gets longer and longer, but not a single person is held to account. If the public are to have confidence in this place, that needs to change, and it needs to change today. Because unless the Prime Minister faces consequences—unless he is censured—he will not just think he has gotten away with the mess he has made over the last few months; he will think he will be able to do it over and over again. Let us be very clear: if the Prime Minister is not properly censured today, it will also be final proof that the Tories really do believe that its one rule for them and one rule for everybody else.

    I remind Conservative Members that we have all been witness to events over the past number of weeks. They might want to forget what has happened, but the public definitely have not. The Tories marched through the Lobby—

    Mr Robert Goodwill (Scarborough and Whitby) (Con) rose—

    Ian Blackford

    I will give way in due course. The Tories marched through the Lobby to undermine our parliamentary standards process, to tear up the rule books, all in order to protect a friend of the Prime Minister who was found to have broken the rules. This whole sorry episode showed this Parliament at its very worst—and, trust me, that is saying something. The Government Chief Whip and the Leader of the House are easy scapegoats, but we all know that this was orchestrated by a Prime Minister who thinks he is untouchable, who thinks he can do as he pleases. This is a Prime Minister who thinks he can change the rules at will and who believes that if the rules become inconvenient, they can simply be changed. So the question stands today: how much does it really take for Tory MPs to say enough is enough?

    How far standards have fallen is shown by the fact that the charges I have made against the Prime Minister are not even in dispute—they are all matters of public record. The Prime Minister has even admitted that in managing these scandals he personally “crashed the car into the ditch”.

    It tells us all we need to know, though, that he did not even have the decency to admit that in the House of Commons. He only felt the need to admit his mistakes and apologise to his Back Benchers in the Tory 1922 committee, and it was only because they were muttering about mutiny. I am not sure that apology counts if he only did it to try to save his own skin.

    But no matter how much the Prime Minister tries to publicly wash his hands of responsibility for his actions, the public have already cast their verdict. The Tories may be sliding in the polls, but it is as nothing compared to the hammering the Prime Minister is taking in the court of public opinion. In the last week, his approval ratings have hit an all-time low, and there is one only simple reason behind it: the public know that that the Prime Minister is at the rotten core of all these scandals.

    A natural comparison has been drawn with the Major Government in the early 1990s, but even that comparison fails to properly get to the scale of corruption that has occurred, much of it in plain sight. The difference between this Prime Minister and John Major was that Major took action to address the sleaze and corruption. This Prime Minister is at the centre of the sleaze and corruption—he is orchestrating much of it. I am afraid corruption is the only proper word—the only honest word—for what has been going on. As I said at the weekend, the Leader of the Opposition—I do wonder where Opposition Members are—is now very fond of repeating the line that when it comes to the Prime Minister

    “the joke isn’t funny anymore”.

    But in truth it was never funny, and we are all now living with the consequences of having a man like this in Downing Street.

    It is also important to reflect on just how damaging recent weeks and months have been to the public’s faith in politics. Because each and every one of these scandals erodes standards, erodes trust and ultimately erodes democracy itself.

    In the middle of the Owen Paterson scandal, the Prime Minister said:

    “I genuinely believe that the UK is not remotely a corrupt country and I genuinely think that our institutions are not corrupt.”

    The problem for the Prime Minister is that the public disagree with him: a recent Savanta ComRes poll found that 54% of those asked thought that the UK Government were corrupt. If the Prime Minister wants to know why, he has only to look in the mirror.

    In the eyes of the public this is a UK Government who have normalised sleaze and are now trying to normalise corruption. This is the Tory Government’s attempt at a new normal in which no one is held responsible, no one is held to account and no one ever—not ever—resigns. That is exactly why consequences are so important and why this censure motion matters: it can only ever become a new normal if we all put up with it. [Interruption.] This is a debate that matters to people in the United Kingdom. We can hear the behaviour and the catcalling of Government Members and it sums up the attempt to shut down democracy and our right to raise these important matters in this House.

    A new normal becomes possible only if we do not hold the Government to account and do not make them answer for their actions. I genuinely ask Government Members, if they have any interest in maintaining some dignity and decency in public life, finally to hold the Prime Minister to account and censure him for his abuse of power.

    Let me take one example of that abuse of power: the cash-for-honours scandal. Fifteen of the Tory party’s main treasurers who happened to hand over £3 million to the party were somehow given life peerages in the House of Lords, as if by magic. Twenty-two of the Tory party’s top financial backers all happen to have been given peerages since 2010. In total, this group has stuffed Tory party coffers with £54 million— [Interruption.] “Hear, hear!” That sums it up. The Conservatives see it as a virtue that if someone gives multimillion pounds to the Conservative party, they end up in the House of Lords. My goodness! What price democracy?

    Let us take Lord Cruddas, a leading donor to the Vote Leave campaign who, let us not forget, bankrolled the Prime Minister’s Conservative leadership bid. He personally gave up to £4 million in donations to the Tory party and affiliates. His reward? An ermine robe and a seat in the House of Lords. What is worse is that the Prime Minister personally overruled the House of Lords Appointments Commission that advised against his appointment. That was the very first time that the watchdog’s recommendation has ever been ignored. Three days after Lord Cruddas was introduced to the House of Lords, what happened? He handed £500,000 to Conservative central office. I will gladly give way to anyone on the Tory Benches who wants to stand up and justify that level of sleaze.

    Madam Deputy Speaker (Dame Eleanor Laing)

    Order. I hesitate to interrupt the right hon. Gentleman, but I hope he will be very careful about precisely what he says about any Member of the House of Lords because, of course, any Member of the House of Lords is also a parliamentarian. It is of course in order for the right hon. Gentleman to examine the conduct of the Member who is the subject of the motion, but that does not extend to other Members of Parliament, including those in the Lords.

    Ian Blackford

    What I am reflecting on is the behaviour of the Prime Minister that puts Members in the House of Lords, when the House of Lords Appointments Commission has ruled against their appointment. I have given the opportunity to anyone on the Tory Benches who wishes to rise to defend the actions of putting Tory donors in the Lords. It is £3 million for a peerage in the House of Lords. What a price to be able to undermine our democracy!

    Tommy Sheppard (Edinburgh East) (SNP)

    Will my right hon. Friend give way?

    Ian Blackford

    I will happily give way.

    Hon. Members

    Oh!

    Tommy Sheppard

    I thank my right hon. Friend for giving way. As no Government Member wishes to intervene on him, I wonder whether he might agree with me on this: is it not somewhat ironic that SNP Members demonstrate more probity and more respect for the rule of democracy than does the current Prime Minister, and is this not yet another compelling reason why Scotland should be an independent country, so that we can have a system of governance that is fair, democratic and transparent?

    Ian Blackford

    I thank my hon. Friend for that intervention. Of course, he is absolutely correct. We are speaking about the House of Lords. The House of Lords is the second largest parliamentary Chamber in the world. The only Chamber that is bigger is the Communist Congress. My goodness, what an advert for democracy! The fact is that these unelected Lords have a say over our democracy. The juxtaposition—the point that is made by my hon. Friend—is an important one. Today, we are discussing the behaviour of the Prime Minister and why he should be sanctioned. Yet in Scotland, just seven months ago, the people of our country were given the right to have a say in their Government. Crucially, they were given a right to have a say on the future of our country as an independent country, because the SNP made it very clear in that election that it was about a mandate for an independence referendum. Indeed, the Conservatives made it clear that a vote for the Conservatives was a vote to stop Scottish independence, and what happened?

    We are talking about democracy and respecting democracy, so let us tell the Conservatives a few harsh truths. In the four elections that we have fought in the Scottish Parliament that we have won, we have increased our vote at every election. We received just short of 48% of the popular vote at that last election. That is a higher share of the vote than any party has had in any election in the United Kingdom for the past 50 years. On the topic of respecting democracy, of respecting the people’s sovereignty, then Boris Johnson must recognise that the Scottish Parliament, where there is a majority for Scottish independence, has the right to call that referendum.

    Madam Deputy Speaker (Dame Eleanor Laing)

    Order. Will the right hon. Gentleman please refer to the Prime Minister as the Prime Minister and not by his name? If he could just re-say that last sentence, I would be so pleased.

    Ian Blackford

    The point is that the Prime Minister must respect democracy. He denies democracy when he stuffs the Lords with his Tory donor friends, but he must respect democracy when people in Scotland have voted for a Parliament that has a right to call a referendum to take us out of this toxic Union and find a way back for us as an independent country in the European Union.

    Mr Goodwill rose—

    Ian Blackford

    I will give way.

    Hon. Members

    Hooray!

    Mr Goodwill

    I thank the right hon. Gentleman for giving way. He understands, I think, that a debate tends to be a two-way thing and not just a diatribe delivered to the House.

    May I politely suggest that, if he wishes to restore confidence in this House, he could have chosen a subject for debate today that was of relevance to the people of Scotland—global warming, education, health—and not this rather lame subject, which, I suspect, is something of no consequence whatsoever to most people working very hard in Scotland.

    Ian Blackford

    Really, really. We are talking about corruption and sleaze—about a Prime Minister who forces Conservative MPs to go through the Lobby to get one of their own off a charge against parliamentary standards, and who rewards those who give money to the Tory party. That is exactly a subject of importance to the people of Scotland.

    Dawn Butler (Brent Central) (Lab)

    Not only is it an important subject; how the Prime Minister behaves is fundamental to our democracy and to how Parliament works. [Interruption.] We have a Prime Minister who comes to the House and fails to tell the truth. That is fundamental to how our democracy works, so it is more than important—it is fundamental.

    Ian Blackford

    I agree. I will come to the subject of truth and honesty later in my speech. It is noticeable that when the hon. Lady, who speaks with some authority on these matters, is trying to speak, once again the Conservatives try to shout us down. What a look that is to the people watching this debate.

    Mark Jenkinson (Workington) (Con)

    The right hon. Gentleman is being incredibly kind in giving way, particularly on this subject. I just wondered if he might take the opportunity to update us on the missing donations and the fraud investigation into the First Minister’s husband—your party’s chief executive.

    Ian Blackford rose—[Interruption.]

    Madam Deputy Speaker (Dame Eleanor Laing)

    Order. Do not shout at the right hon. Gentleman. We all have to hear his answer. While I am on my feet, I would be grateful if the hon. Member for Workington (Mark Jenkinson) would in future use the word “he” and not “you” when referring to the right hon. Gentleman.

    Ian Blackford

    Let me respectfully say to Government Members that I will give a guarantee, a promise and a commitment right here and now that all moneys raised by the Scottish National party for the purposes of fighting an independence campaign—every penny—will be spent on independence campaigning, because that is what we are about. There is a big difference in those who fund the SNP and the independence campaign, because—I will make another promise—not one single member of the SNP who gives to us willingly will end up in the House of Lords; they will be funding the SNP and the independence movement to ensure that we deliver on our promise to take Scotland out of this Union.

    There is another important point about how deeply damaging all these scandals are. Every day that the Prime Minster spends concentrating on how he will somehow avoid scrutiny is a day not doing the basics of what his job demands. It is also becoming clearer just how damaging and dangerous it is that chaotic governance now defines Downing Street. That would be bad enough in normal times, but it is totally unforgivable in the middle of a pandemic.

    In the real world, away from the shambles in No. 10, people are suffering not only from the pandemic, but from a Tory cost-of-living crisis. Inflation is running at 5%. Rising day-to-day costs and rising household bills are the main focus for families. While all the political stories on sleaze have been going on and taking up time at Downing Street, the political decision to cut universal credit has been hitting homes hardest. The shameful cut to universal credit was not just the wrong policy; it came at the worst possible time for families this winter. We are left with a UK Government who are not only up to their necks in sleaze, but hitting families at the same time. In Scotland, I am proud that we have a First Minister who understands the pressures that family finances are under, and a Government who listen and respond. I am proud that at the very same time that the Westminster Government are cutting universal credit by £20 a week, the SNP Scottish Government are raising the Scottish child payment by £20 a week.

    One of the public’s real angers about these scandals is the deep dishonesty that has been so openly on display.

    The truth and the Prime Minister have always been strangers. I say that in sadness and not in any anger. Let me just take a few examples. On 4 March 2020, the Prime Minister said:

    “We have restored the nurses’ bursary”.—[Official Report, 4 March 2020; Vol. 672, c. 829.]

    That was completely and factually untrue. On 17 June 2020, the Prime Minister said that there were

    “400,000…fewer families living in poverty now than there were in 2010.”—[Official Report, 17 June 2020; Vol. 677, c. 796.]

    Both the Office for National Statistics and the Children’s Commissioner have confirmed that that is false. On 7 November 2019, the Prime Minister told Northern Ireland businesses, in person, that the protocol would mean

    “no forms, no checks, no barriers of any kind”—

    once again, completely untrue. It is right to be careful in terms of the language that we use in this House, but when it comes to language it is also right to be accurate and honest. On the basis of all the evidence, I can only conclude that the Prime Minister has repeatedly broken the sixth principle of public life. I can only conclude that the Prime Minister has demonstrated himself to be a liar.

    I think there is a misguided sense among those on the Tory Benches that they have gotten past the scandals of the past few weeks. The Prime Minister thinks that, if he blunders on, people might not forgive, but they will forget. Not for the first time, the Tories are badly wrong and badly out of touch, because they just do not get that the depth of anger among the public is very real and is not going away. I know that people in Scotland are looking on at a broken Westminster system that has never felt more remote, more arrogant and more corrupt.

    Liz Saville Roberts (Dwyfor Meirionnydd) (PC)

    Does the right hon. Gentleman appreciate, and do Conservative Members appreciate, the damage that has been done when to be able to use the word “liar” in this place is now passed as fair comment and accepted, and the damage that that is doing to our democracy?

    Madam Deputy Speaker (Dame Eleanor Laing)

    Order. Let us just be clear about that. It is preferable that such words should not be used in this place but, as I said before the right hon. Gentleman rose to his feet, this is a very specific and particular motion and the right hon. Gentleman is examining the conduct of a Member of this House—indeed, the Prime Minister. Therefore, I cannot stop him from using the word that he has just used. I would prefer it if he put things in different terms, but I do not think that he has strayed past the rules. I think he is perfectly in order. However, it would be better if other Members did not make comments such as those just made by the right hon. Lady because what she said is not actually quite correct. Please, let us just keep it as moderate as possible.

    Ian Blackford

    I was dealing with the sixth principle of public life. I have laid out for the House three examples—I could have given many more—of where the Prime Minister has not told the truth. I regret, in the context of where we are, that I had to make that point, which is important, because if we undermine honesty and truth in this place, what are we left with? That is why we have brought this motion today and that is what I am asking hon. Members right across this House to reflect on, because there is overwhelming evidence that the Prime Minister has broken that principle of public life. I am asking each and every Member in this House, particularly on the Government Benches, to examine their conscience on the basis of the evidence and think very carefully before they go through the Lobby tonight. The public are angry at what has happened in this place. The public are angry about the Member I mentioned earlier who had been sanctioned by the Standards Commission and who the Prime Minister sought to get off. There will come a time when the public will judge this House and this House should reflect very carefully on that tonight.

    Sarah Owen (Luton North) (Lab)

    I wholeheartedly agree that this is an issue of conduct, but it is also a question of leadership. We have a Prime Minister in the middle of a pandemic who has failed to learn. At the beginning of this crisis, he boasted about shaking hands with covid patients; now he is mask-less in a hospital and too weak to tell Members of his own party to put on a mask. We desperately need not just an improvement in conduct, but an improvement in clear communication and leadership from this Prime Minister.

    Ian Blackford

    I agree with the hon. Member. [Interruption.] Perhaps we should just calm down; there will be opportunities for people to participate in the debate. This issue of leadership and conduct is important. This saddens me, but when we are facing a new variant, and we do not know what the scale of that challenge will be, the obvious thing for everyone to do is to seek to protect themselves, but more importantly to protect others and to lead by example and show leadership. I commend colleagues across the House who are sitting here wearing masks today, but my goodness, there are far too many who still do not get it and do not accept the responsibility they have for each other, and they are even laughing about it as I say that. It comes from the Prime Minister.

    Drew Hendry (Inverness, Nairn, Badenoch and Strathspey) (SNP)

    Will my right hon. Friend give way?

    Ian Blackford

    Let me just carry on for a second, because this is important. The way we conduct ourselves and interact with others is important. I commend the previous Prime Minister, the right hon. Member for Maidenhead (Mrs May), for the courtesies she always showed to Opposition parties, for how the protocols were followed and for the way we had a relationship with No. 10. It grieves me that I can tell the House that we as the third party and, I believe, the Leader of the Opposition have no relationship with No. 10. We are disrespected and disregarded by a Prime Minister who does not understand his obligations to public life, and that is yet another example.

    Drew Hendry

    Is it not telling about how complicit those on the Government Benches are that, when my right hon. Friend was reading out the list of untruths peddled by the Prime Minister, there was deathly silence? The only time they were animated was when my right hon. Friend called it for what it was.

    Ian Blackford

    I ask Government Members to reflect. Most people in this House are decent people. People come here to provide a public service, and I say to hon. and right hon. Members on the Government Benches that they are being let down, we are being let down and these islands are being let down by a Prime Minister who simply does not know how to behave. On that note, it will be interesting to see how the Scottish Tories vote tonight, and we will be watching. They are a group who never fail to see conspiracy at Holyrood, but somehow always fall deathly silent when it comes to sleaze and corruption overseen by their own Prime Minister.

    In truth, this debate is not about the Scottish Tories—I will leave them to explain their own hypocrisy—but what the public expect when standards and rules are so clearly broken by their political representatives. They expect consequences, and they expect censure. Let us also be clear about this: if we fail to censure this Prime Minister today, we will have failed that public duty for accountability. Not only that, but it will reveal something very telling; it will show a Westminster system that is broken beyond repair and a Prime Minister who believes himself to be above the law of the land.

    The only comfort I take is that fewer and fewer people in Scotland can possibly look at the broken, corrupt, self-serving Westminster system and conclude that it produces a secure basis for the future of Scotland. We all know that Scotland can do much better than this; we can do better than this broken Westminster system and we can do better than this Prime Minister. We will do so much better when our country chooses independence. I commend the motion in the name of myself and my hon. and right hon. colleagues.

  • Angela Rayner – 2021 Speech on Cleaning Up Politics

    Angela Rayner – 2021 Speech on Cleaning Up Politics

    The speech made by Angela Rayner, the Deputy Leader of the Labour Party, to the Speech to the Institute for Government on 29 November 2021.

    Thank you all for being here today and a particular thanks to the Institute for Government for hosting us today. Never has your role as an independent think tank, working in the public interest, been more vital.

    The IfG stands for impartiality and speaking truth to power, ideas that underpin much of what I have to say today.

    Twenty four years ago a Labour opposition exposed the sleaze engulfing the Conservative Party, and Labour governments legislated to clean it up.

    The Political Parties, Elections, and Referendums Act.

    The Electoral Commission.

    A Ministerial Code.

    Public registers of donations to political parties.

    The Freedom of Information Act.

    Transparency was the key and sunlight the best disinfectant.

    The last Labour government did not hesitate to act decisively to clean up British public life.

    And the next Labour government will act to stamp out the corruption that Boris Johnson and his government have polluted our democracy with.

    The truth is nobody could have predicted the corruption and shamelessness of Boris Johnson.

    The current system only works when there is respect for the rules and there are consequences for breaking them.

    Today – because of this Prime Minister – there is no respect for the rules and no consequences for breaking them.

    As on so many issues, his actions in office stand in stark and sad contrast to his words on taking office.

    In his own foreword to the Ministerial Code, the Prime Minister wrote that to win back the trust of the British people:

    “We must uphold the very highest standards of propriety.”

    “There must be no bullying and no harassment”.

    Yet when his first independent adviser on ministerial interests found his Home Secretary broke that code by bullying officials, it was the adviser who left government. And when an independent panel found one of his own MPs guilty of harassment, that government imposed a three line whip to keep him in Parliament.

    The Prime Minister promised:

    “No misuse of taxpayers’ money and no actual or perceived conflicts of interest”.

    He went on to give us the VIP lane for PPE contracts, the Randox lobbying scandal and the £3.5bn of taxpayers’ money lining the pockets of party donors and Ministers’ mates.

    The Prime Minister said that:

    “The precious principles of public life… Integrity, objectivity, accountability, transparency, honesty and leadership in the public interest – must be honoured at all times”.

    You’ll all be glad to hear I won’t list every example of his breaking those principles, or none of you would get out of her before dinner time.

    The current regime is no longer working precisely because we have a Prime Minister who is shameless in breaking the rules, and won’t enforce consequences on others who break them.  Corruption – that is the word – is happening in plain sight and it is rife right through this Conservative government.

    That is why we must now urgently rebuild public trust in politics and government. It is why we must go further than the last Labour government and stamp out the corruption that has engulfed Boris Johnson’s government and his party thanks to his own actions and inaction.

    No more Members of Parliament paid to lobby their own government.

    No more Ministers breaking the rules and getting away with it.

    No more revolving door between ministerial office and lobbying jobs.

    No more corruption and waste of taxpayers’ money.

    And that goes to the heart of why standards matter.

    Because the people who are picking up the bill are the taxpayers whose money Ministers are wasting and abusing.

    Families in my constituency and across the country have had £1,000 taken out of their pockets by this government. Care workers, nurses, delivery drivers, supermarket workers. The heroes who got us through the pandemic.

    And what thanks do they get in return? Conservative MPs lining their pockets with £1,000 an hour and Conservative Ministers giving billions to their mates.

    When there is so obviously one rule for the Prime Minister and his Ministers and another for everyone else, that corrodes trust in our democracy.

    People lose faith in government as a force for good in their lives.

    Because if anybody else breaks the rules at work or breaks the law then they will face the consequences.

    The veteran who loses their Universal Credit because the bus was late. The sole trader who falls foul of HRMC for losing a receipt. It’s one rule for the Prime Minister and another for everyone else.

    Our democracy cannot hinge on gentlemen’s agreements, it needs independent and robust protection.

    So today I am setting out how a Labour government will clean up our politics and restore that trust.

    We will start by setting tougher rules.

    We will ensure tougher enforcement of those rules, independently of political control.

    And we will protect taxpayers’ money against the abuses we have seen from this government.

    Two weeks ago we laid out our five point plan to clean up our politics and stamp our Conservative corruption.

    Today I will go further, setting out how our Independent Integrity and Ethics Commission will stamp out corruption in government, strengthen the rules and ensure they are enforced.

    The current system is broken.

    The Committee on Standards in Public Life found that they are too easily ignored or disregarded and the systems that “are supposed to uphold the rules are not working well”.

    That regulation of the Ministerial Code and of Ministers after they leave office “falls below what is necessary to ensure effective regulation and maintain public credibility”.

    Standards are currently governed by an alphabet soup of different committees, advisers, rules and codes of conducts.

    Ministers and former ministers can hide behind the loopholes, the disjointed processes and the lack of enforcement.

    And why is this the case? Because the rot starts at the top.

    Boris Johnson has lived his entire life bending and breaking rules.

    He has been investigated for breaking the rules in every office he has ever been elected to.

    He broke the parliamentary rules on his outside financial interests twice… So he tried to replace the independent Commissioner for Standards.

    The Electoral Commission investigated the dodgy deals that paid for his flat… So he is trying to give Ministers control of the Electoral Commission.

    His Ministers, MPs and advisers know that if they break the rules they will get away with it… Because they are just following his example.

    Boris Johnson has proved that rules are only as good as the mechanisms that are there to enforce them.

    Under this Prime Minister rules are broken but there is no punishment or sanction, or he just changes the rules after the fact.

    The Prime Minister has shown that he will only ever act in his own self-interest. Never in the public interest. He’s not just incapable but unwilling to do what is needed to tackle corruption and improve standards.

    The country now faces a choice

    Boris Johnson a Labour government that will stamp out Conservative corruption and restore trust in public office.

    The rules are only as robust as the processes that uphold them.

    We need to strengthen the rules – but we need to strengthen those processes too.

    Take the Independent Adviser on Ministers’ Interests.

    A vital role. Tasked with upholding standards in government, enforcing the Ministerial Code and investigating cases where Ministers break the rules.

    But the role of the Independent Adviser is toothless if the Prime Minister won’t act. And that suits Boris Johnson.

    The role of Independent Adviser is not independent. They are not allowed to be independent – investigations can only happen when the Prime Minister says so.

    And the Independent Advisor’s advice to Boris Johnson is not worth the paper it’s written on because he can simply ignore it, and does – as when the Home Secretary broke the Ministerial Code.

    Look at the example of the Prime Minister’s flat.

    In no other walk of life would the person under investigation be judge, jury and in charge of the person investigating. And surprise surprise the report concluded that the Prime Minister didn’t even know that the refurbishment was happening… In his own flat.

    When a Minister breaks the Ministerial Code, it is the Prime Minister who decides whether to investigate them and what sanctions they should face.

    Complaints are answered with explanations that the Prime Minister decided that there shouldn’t be an investigation… Case closed.

    Or that where there has been wrongdoing, no sanction is needed. Case closed again.

    Labour’s independent Integrity and Ethics Commission will replace this broken system.

    The Independent Integrity and Ethics Commission will have the power to open investigations into Ministers’ conduct… Without the approval of the Prime Minister.

    The Commission will have the power to access any evidence they need, and there will be clear sanctions for breaches of the Code so the Prime Minister is no longer judge and jury over the conduct of Ministers.

    And the Ministerial Code itself requires reform.

    Since I became Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster myself and Lord Geidt have become firm pen pals.

    It feels like barely a day goes by without me asking him to investigate a Minister’s misconduct.

    I know the Ministerial Code like the back of my hand… And I know that it needs updating and strengthening.

    Take the case of the former Health Secretary. When Matt Hancock broke the Ministerial Code a new phrase of “technical breach” was created out of thin air to get him off the hook.

    The grey areas give Ministers leeway to break the rules and make it harder to enforce the rules.

    So one of the first things the Integrity and Ethics Commission will do is consult on the changes that are required to update the Ministerial Code so it is fit for purpose.

    We also need to overhaul the rules that apply to former Ministers after they leave office.

    There can be no stronger evidence that the rules are broken than the case of David Cameron.

    If the former Prime Minister can text everyone in his phonebook to help his dodgy mate Lex Greensill get access to taxpayers’ money, try to help himself to a $200 million bonus and then rely on a defence that everything he did was within the rules…

    Then it is clear that the rules themselves are broken, and so is the system that is supposed to uphold the rules.

    The Committee on Business Appointments – ACOBA – was already a toothless watchdog but under this government it’s been muzzled and neutered.

    Forget the revolving door… We have a system where the door is held wide open for former Ministers who want to line their pockets as soon as they leave office.

    The system is pointless because the rules are too weak and there is no enforcement of them.

    The regulator says that former Ministers cannot make use of any information or contacts they made when they were in office… But what else are companies paying them for?

    Let’s face it… why else is Chris Grayling worth £100,000 a year? Someone will employ Gavin Williamson next.

    The Committee can’t even enforce its own rulings or take action when the rules are broken.

    When the Committee said that the former Chancellor Philip Hammond broke lobbying rules the Chair wrote to the Minister who is responsible for enforcing the rules. But the government ignored the Committee for 3 months, until I asked a parliamentary question… And then they finally replied – to agree that the rules were broken… but they won’t be taking any action to enforce the rules.

    So Labour will ban former Ministers from lobbying for at least five years after they leave office.

    No ifs, no buts. No letters after a role has already been accepted and no exceptions. A total ban. And consequences – including financial sanctions – if the rules are broken.

    Whether it is Philip Hammond being paid by a banker who got a £7 million bonus in the Budget, Steve Brine working for a healthcare company that got Covid contracts or the former Attorney General providing legal advice for a tax haven in a corruption case against the government he used to be a Cabinet Minister in…

    We will stop former Ministers profiting from public office, and we will close this revolving door for good.

    Public servants should serve the public without an eye on a cushy lobbying gig as soon as they leave.

    So the Integrity and Ethics Commission will enforce the rules on Ministers after they leave office too.

    Earlier this month I welcomed the latest report from the Committee on Standards in Public Life.

    I submitted my views to the Committee on behalf of the Labour Party and we welcome every recommendation. If we were in government we would implement every single one and in many cases actually go further.

    The Committee’s report provides a framework to improve standards in our public life.

    The only problem with the Committee’s work is that the Prime Minister will ignore it…

    I’m still asking Ministers when they will implement recommendations from their 2018 report.

    So the remit of the Committee on Standards in Public Life will be strengthened and brought into the Integrity and Ethics Commission.

    The Commission will be able conduct inquiries and advise the Prime Minister on standards across public life, just as the Committee does today, but with the power to ensure action is taken.

    The changes that I have set out today will overhaul the broken system that has failed to stop the spread of corruption under this Prime Minister.

    And we will put the Independent Commission on a statutory footing enshrined in legislation.

    Never again will a Prime Minister and his Ministers be able to break the rules with impunity because the rules are too weak, they aren’t enforced and it is the Prime Minister himself in charge of them.

    Under a Labour government the rules will be strengthened, enforcement will be toughened up and power and control over the rules will be taken away from those the rules hold to account.

    Boris Johnson’s corruption means that we must now urgently rebuild trust in our politics, in public office and in government as a force for good.

    That means rebuilding the regime that is not working.

    The British people deserve so much better than Boris Johnson’s corruption and failure.

    It will be a Labour government that cleans up our politics.

    And it will be a Labour government that makes our politics a force for good again.

    Thank you.

  • Thangam Debbonaire – 2021 Comments on Code of Conduct Report

    Thangam Debbonaire – 2021 Comments on Code of Conduct Report

    The comments made by Thangam Debbonaire, the Shadow Leader of the House of Commons, on 29 November 2021.

    Over the last few weeks, it has become clear that when one of their mates is found guilty of breaking the rules, this Government’s first instinct is to rip them up, rather than accept the punishment.

    The Standards Committee proposals to strengthen the MP’s Code of Conduct published today, are a welcome step in recognising that the processes around lobbying need addressing and that conflicts of interest need nipping in the bud.

    Labour supports a ban on directorships and paid consultancy and will examine the detail of the Committee’s final report when it comes in the new year to ensure any moves to do so are comprehensive and watertight. When the report is published, the House of Commons must be given the chance to fully debate and approve measures to toughen up the system.

  • Angela Rayner – 2021 Comments on Government Breaking Lobbying Rules

    Angela Rayner – 2021 Comments on Government Breaking Lobbying Rules

    The comments made by Angela Rayner, the Deputy Leader of the Labour Party, on 26 November 2021.

    By letting Hammond off the hook, the Government has muzzled its own watchdog. Even when their own hand-picked anti-corruption tsar, a former Tory Cabinet Minister, asks them to take action over a flagrant breach of the rules they have outright refused.

    This is just the latest evidence that Boris Johnson will not tackle the corruption that has engulfed his Government and the Conservative Party. Instead of enforcing the rules he breaks the rules himself, tries to change the rules and defends senior Conservatives who break the rules.

    The system is completely broken and this Government will not close the revolving door between public office and cushy lobbying gigs.

  • Lindsay Hoyle – 2021 Statement on Babies in Parliament

    Lindsay Hoyle – 2021 Statement on Babies in Parliament

    The statement made by Lindsay Hoyle, the Speaker of the House of Commons, on 24 November 2021.

    Before we start today’s business, I want to say something about the presence of babies and very young children in this Chamber and the parallel Chamber, Westminster Hall.

    It is extremely important that parents of babies and young children are able to participate fully in the work of this House. That is why, to give one example, we have a nursery. The advice given yesterday to the hon. Member for Walthamstow (Stella Creasy) on the authority of the Chairman of Ways and Means, of which I was not aware until last night, correctly reflects the current rules. However, rules have to be seen in context and they change with the times.

    This House has to be able to function professionally and without disturbance. However, sometimes there may be occasions when the Chair can exercise discretion, assuming that the business is not being disturbed. I accept that there are differing views on this matter. Indeed, hon. Members who have babies have contacted me with a range of views.

    There are also likely to be some consequential matters. Therefore, I have asked the Chair of the Procedure Committee, the right hon. Member for Staffordshire Moorlands (Karen Bradley), if she and her Committee will look into this matter and bring forward recommendations, which will ultimately be for the House to take a view on.

    Thank you. I am taking no points of order on this.

  • Matt Kelly – 2021 Statement about the Conduct of Jack Doyle

    Matt Kelly – 2021 Statement about the Conduct of Jack Doyle

    The statement made by Matt Kelly, the Editor-in-Chief of the New European, on 19 November 2021.

    I was called last night (Thursday) at 10.30pm by a man who identified himself as being from Downing Street Communications office, but whose name I didn’t catch. His opening gambit was: Boris Johnson is going to sue The New European for defamation.

    I won’t go into the rest of the conversation in detail, but suffice to say I made it clear to him that this was not a threat that troubled me greatly and we stood by our story.

    After a few minutes, the caller eventually told me: ‘You just crack on then mate’ and put the phone down.

    I texted him, asking him to repeat his threat of legal action and to send across the Downing Street denial. I also asked him – twice – to identify himself, which he refused to do.

    For a public official to cold-call a newspaper and threaten them with a law suit from a sitting PM, and not to even identify himself, was, I thought, odd. I tried the Downing Street press office to verify the caller’s identity, but they didn’t come back to me. I went to bed.

    The next morning, I established that the phone number of the caller belonged to Jack Doyle, the Downing Street Director of Communications.

    I now understand Downing Street denies they threatened legal action, to which all I can say is I stand by our story, and our story about the story. If Boris Johnson changes his mind again and decides to sue, we’ll see him in court.

    Should the veracity of this account be challenged, I do, of course, have the texts.

  • Boris Johnson – 2021 Letter to Speaker of the House of Commons on Parliamentary Standards

    Boris Johnson – 2021 Letter to Speaker of the House of Commons on Parliamentary Standards

    The letter sent by Boris Johnson, the Prime Minister, to Lindsay Hoyle, the Speaker of the House of Commons, on 16 November 2021.

    Text of letter (in .pdf format)

  • Angela Rayner – 2021 Comments on the Personal Conduct of Michael Gove and David Meller

    Angela Rayner – 2021 Comments on the Personal Conduct of Michael Gove and David Meller

    The comments made by Angela Rayner, the Deputy Leader of the Labour Party, on 16 November 2021.

    It shows just how engulfed in corruption this government is that the Minister in charge of procurement and ensuring that contracts are awarded to the best bidder and represent value for money for the taxpayer was helping his own donor to get VIP fast-track access to contracts.

    Michael Gove stood up in Parliament and said that all contracts were awarded through the same process. He must have known that wasn’t true when he said it because he had already helped his mate gets tens of millions of pounds of taxpayers’ money.

    It is time this corrupt government published the full details of every PPE and testing contract awarded to companies with links to the Conservative Party, Conservative Ministers and Conservative MPs so we can get to the bottom of the lobbying, dodgy deals and special favours that have been done using taxpayers’ money like a get-rich-quick scheme for Conservative donors and mates.

  • Angela Rayner – 2021 Comments on the Personal Conduct of Iain Duncan Smith

    Angela Rayner – 2021 Comments on the Personal Conduct of Iain Duncan Smith

    The comments made by Angela Rayner, the Deputy Leader of the Labour Party, on 9 November 2021.

    The prime minister needs to explain why he think it is justified for one of his MPs to be paid by a company that stands to benefit from a recommendation of a taskforce chaired by that same MP. This is exactly the kind of brazen conflict of interest that proves that the Conservatives think it is one rule for them and another for the rest of us.

  • Chloe Smith – 2021 Apology Over Owen Paterson Vote

    Chloe Smith – 2021 Apology Over Owen Paterson Vote

    The comments made by Chloe Smith, the MP for Norwich North, on 9 November 2021.

    I am always prepared to justify my votes in Parliament and to be accountable to constituents for those. That is fundamental in this job. In this case, I recognise I got it wrong.

    I voted for the Leadsom amendment to the motion because I believe it contained some sensible points.

    It was designed to improve our standards system. I don’t think anyone thinks the current system is perfect, and there are some serious questions which need to be discussed.

    For example, under the present disciplinary system, the accused party has no right of appeal and few rights when it comes to presenting witnesses or other supporting evidence.

    However, reforms to the process should not be tied to a vote on a single case. Or, indeed, applied retrospectively. MPs should hold themselves to the highest standards in public life and must accept a rule book.

    The government recognises this too, and that they made a mistake.