Tag: 2021

  • Angela Rayner – 2021 Letter to Cabinet Secretary Over Prime Minister’s Political Attack

    Angela Rayner – 2021 Letter to Cabinet Secretary Over Prime Minister’s Political Attack

    The letter sent by Angela Rayner to Simon Case, the Cabinet Secretary, on 7 April 2021.

    Dear Mr Case

    I am writing to express my concern about public resources being deliberately used during a pre-election period to influence the outcome of an election.

    During the Downing Street press conference on Monday evening (5 April 2021) – which was supposed to be an update on Covid-19 – the Prime Minister chose to launch a political attack on Sadiq Khan, the Mayor of London and Labour’s candidate in the upcoming London Mayoral election. The attack was political in nature, unprompted, and entirely unrelated to either the topic of the press conference or the question the Prime Minister was asked.

    The Prime Minister also made false statements regarding Transport for London‘s (TfL) finances in his answer. Sadiq Khan spent the first four years of his mayoralty fixing the mess left by the previous Mayor, Boris Johnson, who bargained away TfL’s £700m per year direct operating grant. As Mayor, Sadiq had successfully reduced TfL’s deficit by £1 billion and increased cash reserves by 13 per cent before the pandemic hit. For the Prime Minister to suggest that TfL’s finances are in trouble for any reason other than a 90 per cent drop in passengers during lockdown due to the pandemic is an insult to Londoners and highly misleading.

    The Ministerial Code, by which government ministers are bound, clearly states that official facilities and resources may not be used for the dissemination of party political material. This includes the Prime Minister’s new media briefing room, which cost the British taxpayer £2.6 million. The Prime Minister has a lot of experience with the Ministerial Code – his Home Secretary was found to have breached it after bullying staff, prompting his independent advisor on ethics and ministerial standards to resign. The British people would rightly not expect a Prime Minister who has spent so much first-hand experience of dealing with matters relating to the Code to be so blatant in flouting it during a pre-election period.

    Just last week the Prime Minister’s Press Secretary said that he ‘acts with integrity and honesty and he follows the Nolan principles when conducting himself in public life’, but his actions on Monday evening clearly directly contradict those principles. As I am sure that will agree, accountability to the Code is crucial in maintaining integrity and public trust in public life and our politics. I would urge you to investigate whether the Prime Minister did indeed breach the Ministerial Code and, if so, what steps you will take to censure the Prime Minister and ensure that he does not repeat this behaviour including him issuing a public apology for misusing public resources for party political gain and misleading the public.

    I look forward to your early reply setting out how you intend to respond to this incident.

    Angela Rayner.

  • Louise Haigh – 2021 Comments on Disturbances in Northern Ireland

    Louise Haigh – 2021 Comments on Disturbances in Northern Ireland

    The comments made by Louise Haigh, the Shadow Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, on 6 April 2021.

    This reprehensible violence is unjustified and unjustifiable. It serves no purpose and is risking the lives of frontline workers.

    As a former Special Constable, it is sickening to see frontline officers subject to violent attacks simply for doing their job.

    The concerns and frustrations communities are feeling must be addressed through dialogue and political leadership alone.

    A clear message must be sent that there is simply no excuse for violence.

  • Anneliese Dodds – 2021 Comments on Greensill

    Anneliese Dodds – 2021 Comments on Greensill

    The comments made by Anneliese Dodds, the Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer, on 6 April 2021.

    The Treasury knew the rules that protect public money used to back bank-run lending schemes didn’t apply to Greensill.

    Despite this, the Chancellor granted it the right to lend millions of pounds in government-backed Covid loans.

    The public will be appalled to hear how much of their money may have been put at risk by the Conservatives’ cosy connections to Greensill Capital.

    That’s why we need a full, transparent and thorough investigation into this affair.

  • Matt Hancock – 2021 Rapid Testing at Home

    Matt Hancock – 2021 Rapid Testing at Home

    The comments made by Matt Hancock, the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 5 April 2021.

    Around 1 in 3 people who have COVID-19 show no symptoms, and as we reopen society and resume parts of life we have all dearly missed, regular rapid testing is going to be fundamental in helping us quickly spot positive cases and squash any outbreaks.

    The vaccine programme has been a shot in the arm for the whole country, but reclaiming our lost freedoms and getting back to normal hinges on us all getting tested regularly.

    The British public have shown over the last year that they quickly adapt and always do what it is right in the interest of public health, and I know they will do their bit by getting tested regularly in the months ahead.

  • Boris Johnson – 2021 Rapid Testing at Home

    Boris Johnson – 2021 Rapid Testing at Home

    The comments made by Boris Johnson, the Prime Minister, on 5 April 2021.

    Massive efforts have been made by the British public to stop the spread of the virus.

    As we continue to make good progress on our vaccine programme and with our roadmap to cautiously easing restrictions underway, regular rapid testing is even more important to make sure those efforts are not wasted.

    That’s why we’re now rolling out free rapid tests to everyone across England – helping us to stop outbreaks in their tracks, so we can get back to seeing the people we love and doing the things we enjoy.

  • Kwasi Kwarteng – 2021 Comments on Pilot Events with Large Audiences

    Kwasi Kwarteng – 2021 Comments on Pilot Events with Large Audiences

    The comments made by Kwasi Kwarteng, the Business Secretary, on 5 April 2021.

    It has been enormously tough for the events sector over the past year, but these pilots are a real beacon of hope as we cautiously emerge from the pandemic. This programme will not only provide valuable scientific evidence, but also offer confidence to the industry so we can make the most of the Great British summer and host large-scale events in a way that’s safe for everybody.

  • Matt Hancock – 2021 Comments on Pilot Events with Large Audiences

    Matt Hancock – 2021 Comments on Pilot Events with Large Audiences

    The comments made by Matt Hancock, the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 5 April 2021.

    We are all longing to see stadiums full of sporting fans and gigs packed with music lovers, but as we continue the roll out of our vaccination programme, we must find a way to do so safely.

    By piloting a range of measures to reduce transmission, we can gather vital scientific evidence to inform our plans for allowing events in the future.

    Thanks to the input of our clinicians and the best science available, we can prepare for the moment where we will be able to gather again in some of our best-loved cultural venues.

  • Oliver Dowden – 2021 Comments on Pilot Events with Large Audiences

    Oliver Dowden – 2021 Comments on Pilot Events with Large Audiences

    The comments made by Oliver Dowden, the Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, on 5 April 2021.

    Our sports stars and great performers need us to find ways to get bums back on seats safely. This science-led pilot programme will be the springboard in getting the buzz back of live performance. We’ve supported the sports and arts with unprecedented sums, but it’s now time to make that Great British Summer of live events a reality.

  • Boris Johnson – 2021 Statement on Covid-19

    Boris Johnson – 2021 Statement on Covid-19

    The statement made by Boris Johnson, the Prime Minister, on 5 April 2021.

    Good afternoon, I hope you’re all continuing to enjoy the Easter break, and I know that over this weekend millions of people have been able to see loved ones for the first time in months.

    And I want to thank you all again for your patience, because it is really clear now that this is paying off.

    And it your collective efforts, our collective efforts, that has given us that crucial time and space to vaccinate more than 31 million people.

    And I’m pleased that we’ve also been able to support our overseas territories so that Gibraltar has become one of the first places in the world to offer a vaccination to its entire adult population.

    And the net result of your efforts and the vaccine roll-out is that I can today confirm that from Monday 12th April, we will move to Step Two of our roadmap – re-opening shops, gyms, zoos, holiday campsites, personal care services like hairdressers and, of course, beer gardens and outdoor hospitality of all kinds.

    And on Monday the 12th I will be going to the pub myself – and cautiously but irreversibly raising a pint of beer to my lips.

    We’re also increasing the number of visitors to care homes from one to two – to allow residents to see more of their loved ones.

    We think that these changes are fully justified by the data which show we are meeting our four tests for easing the lockdown as Chris will shortly explain.

    But – and you know I’m going to say this – we can’t be complacent.

    We can see the waves of sickness afflicting other countries and we’ve seen how this story goes.

    We still don’t know how strong the vaccine shield will be when cases begin to rise, as I’m afraid that they will – and that’s why we’re saying:

    Please get your vaccine or your second dose when your turn comes.

    And please use the free NHS tests – even if you don’t feel ill, because remember 1 in 3 people with this virus doesn’t have any symptoms – and you can get these tests from pharmacies or your local test site, you can even order them on gov.uk and get home deliveries.

    As part of our roadmap we’re also publishing today on gov.uk the early thinking on our four reviews, on the safe return of major events, on social distancing, the potential role of Covid status certification, and on the resumption of international travel.

    We set out our roadmap and we’re sticking to it.

    And I want to stress, that we see nothing in the present data that makes us think that we will have to deviate from that roadmap.

    But it is by being cautious, by monitoring the data at every stage and by following the rules: remembering hands, face, space and fresh air  – that we hope together to make this roadmap to freedom irreversible.

  • Nicola Sturgeon – 2021 Article on the Future for Scotland

    Nicola Sturgeon – 2021 Article on the Future for Scotland

    The article written by Nicola Sturgeon, the Scottish First Minister, on 30 March 2021.

    This is the most important election in Scotland’s history.

    So much hangs on its outcome, but at its heart it comes down to one very simple question – who should decide our country’s future?

    Should it be a Scottish Government at Holyrood, elected by the people of Scotland – or should it be Boris Johnson and the Tories at Westminster?

    The last few days have shown us just how important that question is and just how much it matters.

    That’s because the last few days have shown everyone the respective priorities of Holyrood and Westminster – and when it comes to how different those priorities are it is not so much a gulf as a vast and ever widening chasm.

    In Scotland, the SNP Government has made our priorities clear, with a four per cent pay offer to NHS staff – people who are deserving at the best of times but who, over the last 12 months, have truly gone above and beyond the call of duty as they have battled on the front line of the Covid pandemic to try to keep us all safe.

    At the same time, Boris Johnson’s Tory government has not only failed, so far at least, to come anywhere near matching that pay offer for health service staff – they have almost gone out of their way to show how different their priorities are.

    How else can anyone explain the bizarre and frankly grotesque decision to lift the cap on the UK’s stockpile of nuclear warheads.

    At a time when the world should be looking to solve common problems and challenges like climate chance and recovery from the pandemic, the Tories are intent on rolling the clock back 30 years or more to a Cold War mentality.

    So while they claim to be struggling to find the money to pay nurses, they have no qualms about spending billions of pounds on the obscenity of new nuclear weapons of mass destruction – weapons which will be stored right here in Scotland, barely 40 miles from our biggest city and centre of population.

    Boris Johnson’s priorities are clearly not Scotland’s priorities.

    But this election can be the one in which Scotland, overwhelmingly and decisively, shows that it is choosing a better path for all our futures.

    Over the coming weeks, the SNP will set out the most positive, upbeat and optimistic case ever made for the future of this country.

    It will be brimming over with policies, ideas and initiatives for how we rebuild from the pandemic and create a fairer, more prosperous nation.

    Policies like John Swinney’s plan to put a laptop or Chromebook in the hands of every pupil in Scotland’s schools. Just as teachers used to hand out jotters to all, in the years to come, every pupil will receive the device they need, putting the internet in the hands of every pupil, in class and at home.

    Over the last couple of days we have already started to outline some of that vision.

    On Friday, as I addressed local government leaders in COSLA, I confirmed that one of the first acts of a re-elected SNP Government will be to begin work on a National Care Service.

    I also made clear that we plan to scrap charges for non-residential care, to help ease the financial pressure on those accessing care. And we will bring in a National Wage for carers so that the value of the pay received by our social care workforce better reflects the huge value of the work they do.

    Meanwhile, we have announced that if re-elected we will deliver 100,000 new homes across Scotland in the next decade.

    We have already delivered nearly 100,000 homes since 2007, but our plan for the next 10 years seeks to double that, in a move that will support up to 14,000 jobs a year as we rebuild from the pandemic and generate investment of around £16 billion.

    That makes our plan the largest home building and investment programme since the start of devolution – and at least 70 per cent of the new homes will be for social rent.

    We’ll also introduce a new single standard for housing quality to help make sure homes are more energy efficient, more spacious and of better quality overall.

    These are just some of the policy ideas we are bringing to this campaign – but as I said, at its heart this election is about who gets to decide Scotland’s future.

    If re-elected, an SNP Government will take forward plans for an independence referendum, and if those plans have the backing of a majority of MSPs at Holyrood then we propose a referendum should be held once we are through the pandemic.

    The question of who is in charge of the rebuilding that is needed is a crucial one – and independence means we can focus on priorities like homes, health and education and not the wasteful priorities of Boris Johnson.

    To make that happen we need the strongest possible SNP vote – that means giving both votes to the SNP on May 6th.