Tag: 2021

  • Nick Thomas-Symonds – 2021 Comments on Police Pay Settlement

    Nick Thomas-Symonds – 2021 Comments on Police Pay Settlement

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

    The pressure is now overwhelming for the Home Secretary to listen and change course on the disastrous and insulting decision to award our police with a zero percent pay award.

    If the Home Secretary would show even a fraction of the bravery we see from so many police officers, she would stand up for them around the Cabinet table and secure a fair pay deal. Yet instead we see a Conservative Government that has let down our police and lost their confidence.

  • Nadhim Zahawi – 2021 Statement on Covid-19

    Nadhim Zahawi – 2021 Statement on Covid-19

    The statement made by Nadhim Zahawi, the Vaccine Deployment Minister, in the House of Commons on 22 July 2021.

    With permission, Mr Speaker, I would like to make a statement on the covid-19 pandemic. This week, we have taken a decisive step forward, taking step 4 on our road map and carefully easing more of the restrictions that have governed our daily lives. Although we are moving forward, we must remember that we are doing so with caution, because the pandemic is not yet over. The average number of daily cases in England is around 41,000 and hospitalisations and deaths are rising too, although at a much lower level than when we had that number of cases during previous waves. So even as we take step 4, we urge everyone to think about what they can do to make a real difference.

    Today, we are launching a new campaign to encourage everyone to keep taking the little steps that have got us this far, such as wearing face coverings in crowded public areas, making sure that rooms are well ventilated and getting regular rapid tests. We are also supporting businesses and organisations, helping them to manage the risk of transmission within their venues, including through the use of the NHS covid pass for domestic use. I know that this has been of great interest to Members and want to use this opportunity to reiterate the policy and offer the House the chance to have its say.

    This week, after a successful trial, we have rolled out the NHS covid pass, which allows people safely and securely to demonstrate their covid status, whether that is proof of vaccination status, test results or natural immunity. Anyone can access a pass via the NHS app, the NHS website or by calling 119 and asking for a letter to demonstrate vaccine status. People will also be able to demonstrate proof of a negative test result.

    Although we do not encourage its use in essential settings such as supermarkets, other businesses and organisations in England can adopt the pass as a means of entry, where it is suitable for their venue or premises and when they can see its potential to keep their clients or customers safe. For proprietors of venues and events where large numbers are likely to gather and mix with people from outside their household for prolonged periods, deploying the pass is the right thing to do. The pass has an important role to play in slowing the spread of the virus, so we reserve the right to mandate its use in future.

    Next, I wish to update the House on vaccination as a condition of entry. We all know the benefits that both doses of a vaccine can bring. Data from Public Health England estimates that two doses of a covid vaccine offers protection of around 96% against hospitalisation. Today, we have new data from Public Health England that estimates that the vaccination programme in England alone has prevented 52,600 hospitalisations. That is up 6,300 from two weeks ago and is a fitting example of the protective wall that our vaccination programme has given us—a wall that is getting stronger every day. That protection has allowed us carefully to ease restrictions over the past few months, but we must do so in a way that is mindful of the benefits that both doses of the vaccine can bring. This strategy—this philosophy—will underpin our approach over the critical next few months.

    This week, as part of our step 4 measures, we allowed fully vaccinated adults and all children to return from amber-list countries without quarantine—with the exception of those returning from France, because of the persistent presence of cases of the beta variant. From 16 August, children, under-18s and people who are fully vaccinated will no longer need to self-isolate as contacts, given their reduced risk of catching and passing on the disease.

    As I said when I updated the House on Monday, at the end of September we plan to make full vaccination a condition of entry to those high-risk settings where large crowds gather and interact. By that point everyone aged 18 and over will have had the chance to be fully vaccinated, so everyone will have had the opportunity to gain the maximum possible protection.

    As a condition of entry to such venues, people will have to show that they are fully vaccinated, and proof of a negative test will no longer be sufficient. This is not a step that we take lightly, but throughout the pandemic, like Governments across the world—in Singapore, Australia, Germany and France—we have had to adapt our approach to meet the threats of this deadly virus. This step is no different. We will always keep all our measures under review, with the goal of returning to the freedoms we love and cherish.

    We should all be proud of the enthusiasm for and uptake of our vaccination programme. Now, 88% of all adults have had a first dose and 69% have had both. That uptake means that the latest Office for National Statistics data shows that nine in 10 adults now have covid-19 antibodies. However, there are still many people who are unprotected, including 34% of people aged 18 to 29 who have not had either dose. Ahead of the summer recess, I would like once again to urge everyone to come forward and get both doses, to protect themselves and to protect their loved ones and their community.

    Our battle against this virus is not the kind of battle where we can simply declare victory and move on with our lives. Instead, we must learn to live with the virus, doing whatever we can to slow its spread while we maintain the vital defences that will keep us safe. That is exactly what this Government will do and I commend the statement to the House.

  • Lindsay Hoyle – 2021 Statement on Government Not Announcing NHS Pay Rise in Commons

    Lindsay Hoyle – 2021 Statement on Government Not Announcing NHS Pay Rise in Commons

    The statement made by Lindsay Hoyle, the Speaker of the House of Commons, in the House on 22 July 2021.

    Before I call the Minister to make his statement, I have to say that I am far from happy that yesterday the House heard from a Health Minister giving an update with no mention at all of the NHS pay deal, which is a point of great political interest. I find it hard to believe that any negotiations were still going on beyond that time. I urge the Government again to ensure that the House is the first, not the last, to know. It is not my fault that the Secretary of State got pinged, and if he wants to make announcements from his garden, he can do so, but somebody could have been here and Ministers could have shared that information with us. Glorying in the sunshine should not detract from this House hearing an announcement when it is made. It matters to all of us—we all have hospitals in our constituencies, and we all have constituents who work for the NHS, so the clear message once again is that this House should be told. Now then, let us come to a man who has come to the House to make a statement. I call Minister Nadhim Zahawi to make a statement.

  • Dawn Butler – 2021 Speech in the House of Commons [Calling Boris Johnson a Liar]

    Dawn Butler – 2021 Speech in the House of Commons [Calling Boris Johnson a Liar]

    The speech made by Dawn Butler, the Labour MP for Brent Central, in the House of Commons on 22 July 2021.

    The last 18 months have been a tale of the good, the bad and the ugly.

    The good is that the people of Brent and elsewhere have joined together to form mutual aid groups, religions have come together to find common ground, and strangers are now firm friends. The bad is this Government’s catastrophic handling of the pandemic, the mixed messages, the corruption in plain sight, the authoritarian laws and the erosion of our democracy. And the ugly is that racism in society has reared its ugly head, spurred on by Government reports and the hyping up of the culture war and the war on woke.

    While the NHS was coping with 130,000 people dying from the pandemic, the Prime Minister was making his mates rich. Cronyism is rife and old chums are given jobs regardless of their skillset—some a little bit on the side. This has been one big experiment for this corrupt, authoritarian, racism-laden Government, and I am not scared of saying it like it is.

    The Government said we need to talk about class, so let us do it. Let us call out this toxic elitism once and for all. Byline Times, the Good Law Project, Novara Media, openDemocracy, Amnesty and Liberty have all exposed the Government, and the Government’s response is to spend public money defending the indefensible.

    It is funny how there is no money for NHS staff, yet £1 billion of covid contracts have been awarded to Conservative donors. We were told that Ministers were not involved, but then the Good Law Project exposed emails from the Prime Minister’s advisers and the Home Secretary lobbying for money. The corrupt, authoritarian approach of this Government would be condemned and investigated if it were happening anywhere else in the world.

    The 1% believe they owe nothing to society. They do not believe in the NHS, and they do not support it. This week I spoke to Orwell Foundation youth writer Manal Nadeem. She wrote:

    “Let anti-racism be both common logic and law. May we have more accountability than apologies. May performative, placeholder posts be followed by policy… When the future arrives, let the minimum wage be a liveable wage… Let survival be a birthright… When the poor cannot pay with anything else, let us not ask them to pay with their lives.”

    Poor people in our country have paid with their lives because the Prime Minister spent the last 18 months misleading this House and the country.

    Peter Stefanovic from the Communication Workers Union has a video with more than 27 million views online. In it he highlights that the Prime Minister says: that the economy has grown by 73%—it is just not true; that he has reinstated nursing bursaries—just not true; that there is not a covid app working anywhere in the world—just not true; and that the Tories invested £34 billion in the NHS—not true. The Prime Minister said

    “we have severed the link between infection and serious disease and death.”

    Not only is that not true but it is dangerous.

    It is dangerous to lie during a pandemic, and I am disappointed that the Prime Minister has not come to the House to correct the record and correct the fact that he has lied to this House and the country over and over again.

    Madam Deputy Speaker (Judith Cummins)

    Order. I am sure the hon. Lady will reflect on her words and perhaps correct the record.

    Dawn Butler

    What would you rather, Madam Deputy Speaker, a weakened leg or a severed leg? At the end of the day, the Prime Minister has lied to this House time and time again. It is funny that we get in trouble in this place for calling out the lie rather than for lying.

    Madam Deputy Speaker

    Order. Can you please reflect on your words and withdraw your remarks?

    Dawn Butler

    Madam Deputy Speaker, I have reflected on my words. Somebody needs to tell the truth in this House that the Prime Minister has lied.

    The Deputy Speaker ordered Dawn Butler, Member for Brent Central, to withdraw immediately from the House during the remainder of the day’s sitting (Standing Order No. 43), and the Member withdrew accordingly.

  • Adam Holloway – 2021 Personal Statement on Interference with Judicial Process

    Adam Holloway – 2021 Personal Statement on Interference with Judicial Process

    The statement made by Adam Holloway, the Conservative MP for Gravesham, in the House of Commons on 22 July 2021.

    I wish to apologise to the House. Yesterday, the Committee on Standards adjudged that I and four other MPs were wrong to write a joint letter to two senior judges, copied to the judge who was hearing a case, which was followed by further letters to the Lord Chief Justice and the case judge, to try to influence the way personal references in court cases were made public. I now know it was improper to do so. I regret that and repeat and emphasise my apology.

  • Nick Thomas-Symonds – 2021 Comments on Anti-Social Behaviour

    Nick Thomas-Symonds – 2021 Comments on Anti-Social Behaviour

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

    Anti-social behaviour can make people’s lives a misery so these staggering increases are completely unacceptable. Sadly it’s little wonder, given the damage Conservative government cuts have done to community policing, whilst also scrapping huge numbers of youth clubs.“Even in the face of these terrible figures, Ministers continue with the wrong priorities, wasting millions on a pointless yacht, when they should listen to Labour and plough that money into taking action against anti-social behaviour.

  • Jonathan Ashworth – 2021 Comments on NHS Pay Rise

    Jonathan Ashworth – 2021 Comments on NHS Pay Rise

    The comments made by Jonathan Ashworth, the Shadow Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 22 July 2021.

    In a sleight of hand Sajid Javid is refusing to back up the £2.2 billion pay settlement with the cash needed, instead expecting overstretched hospitals to find this extra money.

    The NHS is in a summer crisis with rising Covid admissions, cancer operations cancelled, emergency demand intensifying and ambulance trusts under pressure.

    The NHS needs a fully funded plan to provide quality care, and bring ballooning waiting lists down. Alongside this, Ministers must provide the NHS with the extra investment required to give staff a pay rise.

  • Seema Malhotra – 2021 Comments on Self-Isolation Exemptions

    Seema Malhotra – 2021 Comments on Self-Isolation Exemptions

    The comments made by Seema Malhotra, the Shadow Minister for Business and Consumers, on 22 July 2021.

    Businesses and the public have a right to be furious at the Government’s chaotic decision making which is causing confusion and uncertainty. Ministers have done so many U-turns this week they must be dizzy. The country needs leadership, not a government in a tailspin.

    It makes sense to exempt certain fully vaccinated professionals, such as those working in emergency services, from self-isolation rules through a targeted test to release scheme to keep our country running. But the Government has made a mess of its own policy and is undermining the effectiveness of the rule change.

    If Ministers don’t know or can’t decide what the plan is, how can employers possibly be expected to understand what’s required of them?

    The Government must today come forward with a clear, unambiguous list of critical workers and a workable plan for how exemptions will be applied.

    This chaotic decision-making and make it up as you go along approach starts right at the top with Boris Johnson. It’s bad for public health and it’s bad for our economy too.

  • Nick Thomas-Symonds – 2021 Comments on Police Federation Statement

    Nick Thomas-Symonds – 2021 Comments on Police Federation Statement

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

    This is a devastating blow for a hapless Home Secretary.

    The truth is, Priti Patel has badly let down police officers, who have served our country so bravely throughout this pandemic. A zero percent pay offer is completely unacceptable – it is a real terms pay cut, exposing the hypocrisy of a Conservative Government that gives warm words of praise to the police and refuses to back it up with action.

    This has driven the Police Federation to take the extraordinary step of declaring ‘no confidence’ in the Home Secretary – which is a view Labour fully supports.

  • Conor McGinn – 2021 Comments on ONS Crime Statistics

    Conor McGinn – 2021 Comments on ONS Crime Statistics

    The comments made by Conor McGinn, the Shadow Security Minister, on 22 July 2021.

    Yet more rises in fraud under the Conservatives prove beyond doubt that they have lost control over this appalling crime.

    Fraud can be devastating for victims. It shatters personal finances, it damages our economy, and it’s a real and present threat.

    More Tory delay cannot be an option. We need a comprehensive, joined-up strategy across the Government to finally deal with this growing crime wave, as Labour has long called for.