Tag: 2021

  • Priti Patel – 2021 Statement on the Government’s Plan for Immigration

    Priti Patel – 2021 Statement on the Government’s Plan for Immigration

    The statement made by Priti Patel, the Home Secretary, in the House of Commons on 24 March 2021.

    I wish to make a statement on our new plan for immigration. The Government have taken back control of legal immigration by ending free movement and introducing a points-based immigration system. We are now addressing the challenge of illegal migration head-on.

    I am introducing the most significant overhaul of our asylum system in decades—a new, comprehensive, fair but firm long-term plan—because while people are dying we have a responsibility to act. People are dying at sea, in lorries and in shipping containers, having put their lives into the hands of criminal gangs that facilitate illegal journeys to the UK. To stop the deaths, we must stop the trade in people that causes them.

    Our society is enriched by legal immigration. We celebrate those who have come to the UK lawfully and have helped to build Britain. We always will. Since 2015, we have resettled almost 25,000 men, women and children seeking refuge from persecution across the world—more than any other EU country. We have welcomed more than 29,000 close relatives through refugee family reunion and created a pathway to citizenship to enable over 5 million people in Hong Kong to come to the UK. Nobody can say that the British public are not fair or generous when it comes to helping those in need, but the British public also recognise that for too long parts of the immigration system have been open to abuse.

    At the heart of our new plan for immigration is a simple principle: fairness. Access to the UK’s asylum system should be based on need, not the ability to pay people smugglers. If someone enters the UK illegally from a safe country such as France, where they should and could have claimed asylum, they are not seeking refuge from persecution, as is the intended purpose of the asylum system; instead, they are choosing the UK as their preferred destination and they are doing so at the expense of those with nowhere else to go.

    Our system is collapsing under the pressures of parallel illegal routes to asylum, facilitated by criminal smugglers. The existence of parallel routes is deeply unfair, advantaging those with the means to pay smugglers over those in desperate need. The capacity of our asylum system is not unlimited, so the presence of economic migrants, which these illegal routes introduce, limit our ability to properly support others in genuine need of protection. This is manifestly unfair to those desperately waiting to be resettled in the UK. It is not fair to the British people either, whose taxes pay for vital public services and for an asylum system that has skyrocketed in cost—it is costing over £1 billion this year.

    There were more than 32,000 attempts to enter the UK illegally in 2019, with 8,500 people arriving by small boat in 2020. Of those, 87% were men and 74% were aged between 18 and 39. We should ask ourselves: where are the vulnerable women and children that this system should exist to protect? The system is becoming overwhelmed: 109,000 claims are sitting in the asylum queue. Some 52,000 are awaiting an initial asylum decision, with almost three quarters of those waiting a year or more. Some 42,000 failed asylum seekers have not left the country, despite having had their claim refused.

    The persistent failure to enforce our laws and immigration rules, with a system that is open to gaming by economic migrants and exploitation by criminals, is eroding public trust and disadvantaging vulnerable people who need our help. That is why our new plan for immigration is driven by three fair but firm objectives: first, to increase the fairness of our system, so we can protect and support those in genuine need of asylum; secondly, to deter illegal entry into the UK, breaking the business model of people smugglers and protecting the lives of those they endanger; and, thirdly, to remove more easily from the UK those with no right to be here. Let me take each in turn.

    First, we will continue to provide safe refuge to those in need, strengthening support for those arriving through safe and legal routes. People coming to the UK through resettlement routes will be granted indefinite leave to remain. They will receive more support to learn English, find work and integrate. I will also act to help those who have suffered injustices by amending British nationality law, so that members of the Windrush generation will be able to obtain British citizenship more easily.

    Secondly, this plan marks a step change in our approach as we toughen our stance to deter illegal entry and the criminals who endanger life by enabling it. To get to the UK, many illegal arrivals have travelled through a safe country such as France, where they could and should have claimed asylum. We must act to reduce the pull factors of our system and disincentivise illegal entry. For the first time, whether people enter the UK legally or illegally will have an impact on how their asylum claim progresses and on their status in the UK if that claim is successful. We will deem their claim as inadmissible and make every effort to remove those who enter the UK illegally having travelled through a safe country first in which they could and should have claimed asylum. Only where removal is not possible will those who have successful claims, having entered illegally, receive a new temporary protection status. This is not an automatic right to settle—they will be regularly reassessed for removal—and will include limited access to benefits and limited family reunion rights. Our tough new stance will also include: new maximum life sentences for people smugglers and facilitators; new rules to stop unscrupulous people posing as children; and strengthening enforcement powers for Border Force.

    Thirdly, we will seek to rapidly remove those with no right to be here in the UK, establishing a fast-track appeals process, streamlining the appeals system and making quicker removal decisions for failed asylum seekers and dangerous foreign criminals. We will tackle the practice of meritless claims that clog up the courts with last-minute claims and appeals—a fundamental unfairness that lawyers tell me frustrates them, too—because for too long, our justice system has been gamed. Almost three quarters of migrants in detention raised last-minute, new claims, or challenges or other issues, with over eight in 10 of these eventually being denied as valid reasons to stay in the UK. Enough is enough. Our new plan sets out a one-stop process to require all claims to be made upfront—no more endless, meritless claims to frustrate removal; no more stalling justice. Our new system will be faster and fairer and will help us better support the most vulnerable.

    Our new plan builds on the work already done to take back control of our borders, building a system that upholds our reputation as a country where criminality is not rewarded, but which is a haven for those in need. There are no quick fixes or shortcuts to success, but this long-term plan, pursued doggedly, will fix our broken system.

    We know that Members of the Opposition would prefer a different plan—one that embraces the idea of open borders. Many of them were reluctant to end free movement, with Members opposite on record as having said that all immigration controls are racist or sexist. And to those who say we lack compassion, I simply say that while people are dying, we must act to deter these journeys, and if they do not like our plan, where is theirs?

    This Government promised to take a common-sense approach to controlling immigration, legal and illegal, and we will deliver on that promise. The UK is playing its part to tackle the inhumanity of illegal migration and, today, I will press for global action at the G6. I commend this statement to the House.

  • Nick Thomas-Symonds – 2021 Comments on Asylum Reform

    Nick Thomas-Symonds – 2021 Comments on Asylum Reform

    The comments made by Nick Thomas-Symonds, the Shadow Home Secretary, on 23 March 2021.

    The Conservative Party have run our immigration system for 11 years. Conservative failures have led to a processing system that’s appallingly slow, the Windrush scandal, the closing of safe and legal routes, no promised deal with France on boat crossings and a rise in the horrific crime of human trafficking. The Conservative approach has lacked both competence and compassion.

    Measures are clearly needed to speed up processes and stop criminal gangs profiting from dangerous crossings. However, we fear these plans will do next to nothing to stop people making dangerous crossings, and risk withdrawing support from desperate people, such as victims of human trafficking. Some of the ideas briefed from the Government have been downright ridiculous – like wave machines in the English Channel and processing people in the Ascension Islands, over 4000 miles away.

    These plans also have nothing to say about protecting our borders from dangerous Covid variants or ensuring our NHS has the staff it needs as it recovers.

    Labour will study the detail of whatever the Government puts forward and argue for a fair immigration system.

  • Justin Madders – 2021 Comments on Potential NHS Staff Exodus

    Justin Madders – 2021 Comments on Potential NHS Staff Exodus

    The comments made by Justin Madders, the Shadow Health Minister, on 24 March 2021.

    These figures should be ringing alarm bells loud and clear that Ministers need to change course and start listening to and valuing the NHS workforce.

    Years of pay freezes, record vacancies and relentless pressure are having their effect with hard pressed staff voting with their feet.

    The last year has seen NHS workers perform heroically but for many the offer of a real terms pay cut will be the last straw so Government need to urgently reconsider their approach otherwise the exodus we have seen in recent years will become a flood.

  • David Lammy – 2021 Comments on the Public Accounts Committee Report

    David Lammy – 2021 Comments on the Public Accounts Committee Report

    The comments made by David Lammy, the Shadow Secretary of State for Justice, on 24 March 2021.

    A decade of Conservative cuts to our justice system has left victims waiting years to get justice if they get it at all, while serious criminals are being let off the hook.

    Delays have reached an all-time high as prosecutions for serious crimes like rape have hit an all-time low.

    As this report highlights, ministers need to take urgent action to restore victims’ faith in the justice system, which has been left teetering on the brink of collapse.

  • Lucy Powell – 2021 Comments on Steel

    Lucy Powell – 2021 Comments on Steel

    The comments made by Lucy Powell, the Shadow Business and Consumers Minister, on 24 March 2021.

    Not for the first time the Prime Minister is playing fast and loose with reality. His own government can’t back up his claims on whether the steel used in UK infrastructure projects including Hinkley Point, and new wind farms is made in Britain.

    UK steelmakers and workers need guarantees not guff. That’s why Labour is calling for the government to introduce stronger Buy British guarantees in procurement notices, to maximise the benefits of infrastructure spending, save and create jobs, and boost prosperity in steel communities across the country.

  • Grant Shapps – 2021 Statement on TFL Funding Deal

    Grant Shapps – 2021 Statement on TFL Funding Deal

    The statement made by Grant Shapps, the Secretary of State for Transport, on 22 March 2021.

    The government and Mayor of London have agreed to extend the current Transport for London (TfL) funding deal.

    The deal was due to run out on 31 March 2021; however, things have changed since we set the end of March for the next review of support to TfL. The extended deal will continue to support the capital and the transport network until 18 May 2021, when a new funding deal will be put in place.

    The roadmap set out by the Prime Minister to cautiously and safely reopen society and our economy means we can better understand the potential recovery in passenger demand, ensuring we deliver a sensible and appropriate deal in the future. As a result, and given the Mayoral election timetable, we have therefore agreed to roll over the existing funding deal until 18 May on the same terms as now, providing certainty over the pre-election period.

    Together, the government and the newly elected Mayor will agree a new funding deal after the elections in May 2021. By this point, non-essential retail and other parts of the economy should be open and transport demand on the network will be considered when formulating a future settlement.

    The extension comprises 2 additional funding payments totalling £260 million with a top-up grant available based on actual passenger revenues. This will take total government support for TfL to more than £3 billion since March 2020.

    Support to TfL has always been under the condition that the network must make efficiency savings so it can reach financial sustainability as soon as possible. Those conditions will also form a part of the additional funding payments announced today.

    The government is committed to supporting London and the transport network on which it depends, and will commence discussions for a further funding deal as soon as the Mayoral elections are concluded. Support for London needs to be balanced with the national recovery and supporting the national transport network as a whole.

    Since March 2020, the government has spent £11 billion supporting the running of the national transport network apart from that directly provided to TfL, while continuing to spend money on vital infrastructure projects to level up the national transport network outside of London.

  • John Howell – 2021 Comments on Violent Protest in Bristol

    John Howell – 2021 Comments on Violent Protest in Bristol

    The comments made by John Howell, the Conservative MP for Henley, on 22 March 2021.

    The thuggery and disorder, committed in Bristol by a small minority of the protesters, was completely unacceptable. Our police officers deserve our respect and admiration – not the violence they suffered last night.

  • Anneliese Dodds – 2021 Speech on Reversing Decline of the High Streets

    Anneliese Dodds – 2021 Speech on Reversing Decline of the High Streets

    The speech made by Anneliese Dodds, the Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer, in Birmingham on 22 March 2021.

    It’s such a pleasure to be in Birmingham today.

    It’s a city that’s very close to my heart.

    For four years I worked at Aston University.

    I had the privilege of enjoying the civic splendour of the city centre.

    The hustle and bustle of the old and then the new Bullrings.

    And, of course, the vibrancy, character and grit of the people of Britain’s great second city.

    But that memory is bittersweet today.

    Liam [Byrne] and I have seen this morning what’s happening to Birmingham’s city centre.

    The loss of the flagship John Lewis store at Grand Central is heart breaking.

    I think of all those who will have lost their jobs as a result.

    But I also think of the whole community of Birmingham who have lost a cornerstone of the flagship Grand Central development.

    One that I saw myself rising out of the Palisades and surrounding area.

    Sadly, we know developments here are not isolated or one-off.

    In the 10 years before the pandemic hit the West Midlands lost over a thousand shops.

    And during the same time period, across the UK as a whole we lost over 7,000 shops from our high streets.

    And the pandemic has hit Birmingham hard, with footfall in the city centre taking longer to recover here than anywhere other than London and Glasgow.

    For our country’s second city, this loss of custom and shops is devastating.

    For some of our smaller towns, it’s existential.

    Where a high street has fewer than a hundred shops, the loss of just a handful can be a tipping point from which a small town can’t recover.

    The threat here is not just to “retail units”.

    It’s to communities, and the places that bring those communities together.

    After a year like the one we’ve just had, that sense of community is more important than ever.

    Not only have the Conservatives overseen the continued decline of our high streets, this summer they’re set to make it even worse.

    From August, they’re going to rip up the rules that give local people a say in what happens to their high streets.

    They’ll allow our shops, restaurants and cafes to be sold off to the highest bidder, converted into flats that only have to meet the bare minimum of standards.

    Developers won’t be required to make any contribution to the local community: nothing on outside space, nothing on affordable housing.

    This is the act of a Government that is washing its hands of our high streets when it should be acting to save them.

    On 6 May, people here in Birmingham and in every part of the country can send a message loud and clear.

    That they’ve had enough of this Government wringing its hands and then failing to act.

    They can vote for change.

    For hope.

    For a Labour Party that will put communities first, and promises a bright future for our high streets.

    In the West Midlands, they can vote for Liam Byrne, a candidate for mayor with a long-term plan who will always, always speak up for the people of the West Midlands.

    Labour would support Britain’s proud high streets.

    As a start, we’d scrap those Conservative plans to sell them off.

    And we’d go further.

    We’d give local councils the power to step in and breathe new life into our high streets, bringing vacant properties back into use.

    Helping to end the blight of empty shops.

    We’d establish a High Streets Fightback Fund for those businesses who have been especially hard hit in this last year to get back on their feet.

    Targeted support for those who need it most.

    And like Labour-run Wales, nationally we would work to ensure help gets to those businesses and families who really need it.

    Making sure that business rates relief was focused on struggling businesses, not the very biggest supermarkets.

    And that stamp duty relief didn’t go to those purchasing second homes.

    We know that the recovery of our high streets from the pandemic also relies on people having the confidence, and the money, to go back out once restrictions have lifted.

    But the Government is taking a hammer to family finances that risks dampening the recovery and making the plight of our high streets even worse.

    They’re giving our key workers a real-terms pay cut.

    A pay cut for our teaching assistants, our police officers, members of our armed forces – and, yes, our NHS Covid heroes.

    At the end of the month, they’re forcing through a massive council tax hike.

    And let’s be absolutely clear: that’s the decision of the Westminster Conservatives, not of local Labour councillors.

    In six months’ time they’re cutting £20 a week from social security, just as unemployment is set to peak.

    All of that takes money out of people’s pockets that they can’t then spend on our local high streets.

    Instead, Labour would protect family finances and consumer confidence.

    In the long run, we need a vision for the future of our high streets.

    That doesn’t mean harking back to an era that we know has long since passed.

    People are buying more and more online. There’s nothing wrong with that. In fact, quite the opposite.

    But deciding where to spend your money should be a genuine choice, between businesses competing on a level playing field.

    It shouldn’t be because an online firm, paying little to no tax, can completely undercut a bricks and mortar business doing the right thing and dutifully paying its rates.

    That’s not free and it’s not fair.

    It means our high street businesses are competing with one hand tied behind their backs, and it needs to be addressed urgently.

    We can’t continue with a situation where five US tech firms account for £1.3bn in lost corporation tax every year, while high street shops pay business rates under a system that hasn’t been reformed for years.

    Tomorrow the Government should set out what it plans to do about this.

    On so-called ‘Tax Day’ the Conservatives must level the playing field between high street businesses and giant online firms.

    If we don’t act now, then the loss of shops and high street businesses that I’ve seen here in Birmingham today will only accelerate.

    We need action today to secure that bright future for our high street.

    To help businesses hit hard by the pandemic get back on their feet.

    To ensure hardworking families have money in their pockets to go and spend in their town and city centres as restrictions lift.

    To stop the sell-off of our high streets and empower local communities to bring empty shops back to life.

    And to lay the foundations now for a fair tax system that allows the high streets of the future to flourish.

    That’s what a Labour Government would do.

    It’s why I urge everyone on 6 May to cast their vote for Labour.

    To secure our economy, protect our NHS and rebuild our country.

    Thank you.

  • Lisa Nandy – 2021 Comments on Government’s Plan to Sanction Chinese Officials

    Lisa Nandy – 2021 Comments on Government’s Plan to Sanction Chinese Officials

    The comments made by Lisa Nandy, the Shadow Foreign Secretary, on 22 March 2021.

    This long overdue action is a grubby, cynical, last-ditch attempt to buy votes ahead of a backbench rebellion later today. The Foreign Secretary has repeatedly refused to sanction Chinese officials for more than two years and only now, after the US and EU have done so and he is facing defeat in the Commons, is he reluctantly forced to take action.

    If anything sums up just how utterly inconsistent the Government’s approach to China is, today the Foreign Secretary will apply sanctions to officials responsible for human rights abuses and in the same breath insist on the right to sign trade deals with countries that commit genocide.

    Despite claiming the actions of Chinese officials are “barbaric”, the Foreign Secretary has spent recent weeks privately talking up the prospect of a trade deal with China. We urge Tory MPs to vote with their consciences today. After a decade of rolling out the red carpet to Beijing and turning a blind eye to human rights abuses, this is the moment to force a significant change in Britain’s foreign policy and begin to live up to our values in the world.

  • Nick Thomas-Symonds – 2021 Comments on Third Covid Wave in Europe

    Nick Thomas-Symonds – 2021 Comments on Third Covid Wave in Europe

    The comments made by Nick Thomas-Symonds, the Shadow Home Secretary, on 22 March 2021.

    The Prime Minister is being frankly complacent about the threat of a third wave of Covid from Europe on the UK. It would not be inevitable if the Government had listened to Labour and taken tougher action to protect our borders.

    It’s unacceptable that only one percent of international arrivals quarantine in a hotel. We need a comprehensive hotel quarantine system now, to help protect against a third wave and to safeguard the vaccine rollout. Ministers will only have themselves to blame if they do not act now.