Tag: 2022

  • PRESS RELEASE : Second major investment boosts fees for legal aid lawyers [November 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : Second major investment boosts fees for legal aid lawyers [November 2022]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Justice on 30 November 2022.

    Criminal legal aid lawyers will receive the biggest boost to their pay in decades thanks to wide-ranging reforms announced by the government today.

    • solicitors see a further £21 million investment in fees and long-term reforms
    • an extra £138 million to be spent on legal aid every year to ensure long-term sustainability
    • overhaul of how legal aid funding is paid to reflect time spent on complex cases

    The reforms are part of the second phase of the response to the independent review into criminal legal aid.

    With an extra £85 million for solicitors on top of the £43 million investment for barristers in legal aid payments, there will also be an additional £11 million for expert fees to eventually be paid each year and ensure long-term sustainability for the sector.

    Changes includes £16 million to raise the lowest fees payable to solicitors representing clients in police stations – the first step towards simplifying and improving fee schemes over the next three years.

    Currently, fixed fees do not differ between case complexity, so a lawyer spending 20 minutes on a shoplifting case and four hours on a murder trial would likely receive the same fixed fee for both jobs.

    The restructure will standardise payments to distinguish between these cases, paying a different lower or higher standard fee to reflect the hours of work done. By increasing the lowest fees in the system, the government will boost solicitor pay packets and overall funding for police station work will rise by 30 per cent.

    In 2024, the government will also bring forward proposals for reform on a new Litigators’ Graduated Fee Scheme (LGFS) – how legal aid funding is paid to law firms – to ensure solicitors are properly paid for work carried out in a range of more complex cases in the crown court.

    Proposals will include a new way to calculate payments reflecting the type of offence, trial outcome and length, and the amount of evidence in each case – rather than the current system which is mainly based on the number of papers served to the prosecution, regardless of if these are ever read and how much time was involved in preparing them.

    Deputy Prime Minister, Lord Chancellor and Justice Secretary Dominic Raab said:

    We are reforming criminal legal aid so our lawyers are fairly paid for the vital work they do delivering high-quality legal support for those who need it.

    We have taken on board the recommendations of the independent review and are modernising the system to deliver justice for victims now and in the future.

    Additionally, £5 million per year will be invested in the youth court to ensure solicitors representing children involved in the most serious cases receive higher fees to better reflect the complexity of this work. This will secure quality representation for young people and will benefit solicitors as well as junior barristers.

    With this additional £21 million of investment a year, solicitor firms will see a total fee increase of around 11 percent for all criminal legal work.

    This is part of £138 million to be invested into the legal aid sector per year alongside our full response to the Criminal Legal Aid Review. It will ensure high-quality legal support is available for those who need it, and that lawyers are better and more fairly paid in line with the work they carry out.

    The latest measures also come following the package confirmed by the Ministry of Justice last month that saw criminal barristers vote to return to work.

    This included a 15 percent fee rise for barristers working on existing as well as new criminal cases. Over the next 2 years, there will also be £3 million for case preparation, like written work and special preparation, and a further £4 million for lawyers involved in pre-recorded cross-examinations, used to reduce the trauma of a trial for vulnerable victims and witnesses.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Scottish Secretary responds to Scotland’s GDP for third quarter of 2022 [November 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : Scottish Secretary responds to Scotland’s GDP for third quarter of 2022 [November 2022]

    The press release issued by the Scottish Office on 30 November 2022.

    The latest Scottish GDP figures for the third quarter of 2022 (July-September) are published here today and show a 0.2 per cent decline on the previous quarter’s figures. The same was noted earlier this month for UK-wide GDP.

    Commenting on the figures, Scottish Secretary Alister Jack said:

    The UK Government is doing everything in its power to restore economic stability, reduce inflation and achieve sustainable long-term growth – as we deal with global challenges.

    We are giving extra support to those who need it most through help with energy bills, increasing benefits and pensions in line with inflation and raising the National Living Wage. All of this is on top of an additional £1.5 billion for the Scottish Government to help support public services in Scotland.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Ukrainian families join Downing Street Christmas switch-on [November 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : Ukrainian families join Downing Street Christmas switch-on [November 2022]

    The press release issued by 10 Downing Street on 30 November 2022.

    Ukrainian families joined the Prime Minister at 10 Downing Street as he turned on the street’s Christmas tree lights on Monday.

    The Prime Minister welcomed Ukrainians to the event, including families from conflict zones in the east and south of Ukraine, who are now being hosted across Greater London through the Homes for Ukraine and Ukraine family schemes.

    He was also joined by Points of Light award winners who have been commended for their charitable work, Catterick Garrison soldiers from the Prime Minister’s constituency in Richmond, Yorkshire and the winners of this year’s the Champion Christmas Tree Grower of the Year Awards who provided Downing Street’s Christmas Tree.

    During the event attendees enjoyed a rendition of Silent Night outside Number 10 sung by the Millbank Academy Year 3 student choir and music from the Ensemble of the Central Band of the Royal Air Force.

    Guests were then invited to a reception inside Number 10 to enjoy a hot chocolate, together with mince pies and gingerbread.

    Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said:

    At its heart, the Christmas story is one of compassion and hospitality. I’m delighted to welcome our friends from Ukraine, who have chosen to make the UK their home during Putin’s illegal invasion of Ukraine, to join in our Christmas tradition of lighting the Downing Street tree this year.

    Sentiments of hope are never stronger than during the festive season and no one has displayed this more this year than the people of Ukraine in their fight for freedom. We continue to stand wholeheartedly behind Ukraine in this fight.

    While Christmas is a time of celebration, I know it can be a difficult time, especially if you are away from your loved ones. Wherever you are this Christmas, I wish you joy and peace, and a very happy New Year.

    The UK has been a leader in humanitarian support for Ukraine, including by supplying generators, fuel trucks and ambulances.  We recently announced a further £10 million for NATO’s Comprehensive Assistance Package to provide winter clothes and shelters for the Ukrainian Armed Forces to keep them warm this Christmas.

    Kateryna Balabanova, PhD, a Ukrainian displaced person living in the UK, said:

    My family and I are deeply grateful to the British people on behalf of all the Ukrainians. The help provided by the UK Government and the nation as a whole is an unprecedented sign of brotherhood. Now my children can plan to develop a bright future, and we all can be safe before we are able to go home. This Christmas, we hope Ukraine wins this war soon, liberating itself from the invaders, and that Russia’s barbarity will become history.

    The 19ft tree was provided by Bishops Offley Christmas Trees from Staffordshire, who are the winners of the British Christmas Tree Growers Association’s (BCTGA) annual Champion Christmas Tree Grower of the Year Awards. For over 20 years, BCTGA has provided the tree to stand outside Downing Street.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Statement on inaccurate claims about Country of birth statistics and the Census [November 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : Statement on inaccurate claims about Country of birth statistics and the Census [November 2022]

    The press release issued by the National Census on 30 November 2022.

    Inaccurate claims about the future of nationality and country of birth statistics

    Following yesterday’s release of Census 2021 ethnic group, national identity, religion and language bulletin, there have been misleading claims regarding the ONS’ plans on the future publication of nationality and country of birth statistics. It has been suggested that in future the ONS will not ask people their country of birth or publish data on the subject.

    This is simply not true. No decision has been taken on the future of the census. The National Statistician will be making a recommendation to government at the end of 2023 on what is needed for us to continue to realise our ambitions for more frequent, timely and inclusive population and social statistics.

    On our regular, annual, population statistics by country of birth and nationality we have recently released a statement which makes clear why we have taken the decision to change our way of producing our Population of the UK by country of birth and nationality series, which is based on our Annual Population Survey (APS), not Census 2021.

    Essentially, this is because of an underlying issue with the data used to produce it. On Thursday 24 November we published a more timely measure of the non-UK population, for England and Wales, which rolls forward Census Day 2021 data for that population with net migration and deaths. At this moment in time this is the best measure we can produce because of the data issues explained in the statement. Going forward, we plan to produce provisional measures of the non-UK born population, depending on user needs and working closely with colleagues in National Records of Scotland, Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency and other government departments, next year. We will provide an update on this in early 2023.

    Misleading statistics

    There have also been misleading statistical claims that the latest census data show that white people are now a minority in London and Manchester.

    This is confusing responses from people who have identified with the ‘white British’ ethnic group with responses which identify with ‘white’ ethnic group.

    In London, 53.8% of usual residents identify their ethnic group within the high-level white category. In Manchester, 56.8% of usual residents identify their ethnic group within the high-level white category.

  • PRESS RELEASE : UK sanctions Russian officials behind conscription, mobilisation and criminal mercenaries [November 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : UK sanctions Russian officials behind conscription, mobilisation and criminal mercenaries [November 2022]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 30 November 2022.

    The Foreign Secretary has announced a new package of 22 sanctions targeting officials who have promoted and enforced mobilisation in Russia.

    • Deputy Prime Minister of Russian Federation and officials behind the forced mobilisation of citizens in Russia sanctioned
    • Arkady Gostev, Director of the Federal Penitentiary Service of the Russian Federation, also sanctioned for supporting the recruitment of prisoners into Wagner Group
    • The UK has now sanctioned over 1,200 individuals and over 120 entities in response to Putin’s war in Ukraine

    The Foreign Secretary has today (Wednesday 30 November) announced a new package of 22 sanctions targeting the officials who have promoted and enforced the conscription of citizens to fight in Russia’s illegal war in Ukraine.

    This includes the Deputy Prime Minister Denis Valentinovich Manturov, who is responsible for overseeing the Russian weapons industry and responsible for equipping mobilised troops.

    10 governors and regional heads have also been sanctioned. This includes the heads of Dagestan, Ingushetia and Kalmykia – some of Russia’s poorest ethnic republics, from which a significant number of conscripts have been drawn. In July, the UK sanctioned 29 regional governors for their role in providing financial support to Russian proxy administrations in Ukraine.

    Foreign Secretary James Cleverly said:

    The Russian regime’s decision to partially mobilise Russian citizens was a desperate attempt to overwhelm the valiant Ukrainians defending their territory. It has failed.

    Today we have sanctioned individuals who have enforced this conscription, sending thousands of Russian citizens to fight in Putin’s illegal and abhorrent war.

    The UK will continue to use both sanctions and military aid to support Ukraine in the defence of their independence.

    Arkady Gostev, Director of the Federal Penitentiary Service of the Russian Federation and Dmitry Bezrukikh, the head of the Federal Punishment Service of the Rostov region, have also been sanctioned.

    Bezrukikh and Gostev have reportedly worked closely with oligarch Yevgeny Prigozhin, ally of Putin and head of the Wagner Group, to fill the ranks of the mercenary gang that is supporting Russia’s army in Ukraine.

    They have drafted criminals, including murderers and sex offenders, in exchange for pardons from President Putin – resulting in Bezrukikh’s region being dubbed ‘The Wagner Group recruitment hub’.

    Also sanctioned today are Ella Pamfilova, chairperson of the Central Election Commission and Andrey Burov, head of the regional election commission in Rostov, who were both responsible for organising the sham referendums in the four temporarily occupied areas of Ukraine. Pamfilova has since actively supported Russia’s forced mobilisation.

    The UK has continued to support Ukraine through delivering vital military equipment, as well as implementing targeted sanctions to undermine the Russian war machine.

    The UK has committed over £2.3 billion in military aid to Ukraine, including most recently a package including 25 anti-aircraft guns and technology to counter deadly Iranian-supplied drones.

    UK sanctions are also having a significant impact on Russia’s ability to maintain their war machine. Technology imports have forced them to mobilise Soviet-era tanks and use semiconductors from kitchen appliances to restock equipment. Recent Defence Intelligence has shown that Russia is likely removing nuclear warheads from ageing cruise missiles, and using them in Ukraine, as a desperate attempt to maintain their assault.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Regulatory Horizons Council (RHC) publishes independent recommendations on the future regulation of neurotechnology and AI as a medical device [November 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : Regulatory Horizons Council (RHC) publishes independent recommendations on the future regulation of neurotechnology and AI as a medical device [November 2022]

    The press release issued by the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy on 30 November 2022.

    The Regulatory Horizons Council (RHC) has published 2 independent reports today (30 November 2022) on the regulation of neurotechnology and AI as a medical device, to encourage the safe and rapid development of these 2 key technologies.

    The Business Secretary, Grant Shapps, has written to the Regulatory Horizons Council welcoming the reports, saying:

    Technological innovation is fundamental to the government’s plans for unlocking growth.

    I am committed to growing the UK’s global reputation for regulatory best practice and capitalising our Brexit freedoms. Building on plans outlined in the Innovation Strategy and by the Taskforce on Innovation, Growth and Regulatory Reform, I intend to foster a regulatory approach that will promote innovation, growth and inward investment.

    The work of the Regulatory Horizons Council is a key part of modernising our approach to regulatory reform.

    Neurotechnology is an umbrella term that includes a wide range of devices that record or alter the activity of the nervous system. This includes promising medical applications that could improve the lives of thousands of people in the UK enduring health conditions such as Parkinson’s, Alzheimer’s, depression, rheumatoid arthritis and cardiac illnesses.

    From mind-controlled drones to devices that improve focus and reduce fatigue, emerging applications in the non-medical field could redefine how we interact with one another and leverage the potential of the human brain in unprecedented ways.

    The RHC’s new neurotechnology report suggests an interactive taxonomy to guide future conversations on neurotechnology governance and makes 14 regulatory reform recommendations to:

    1. establish a proportionate regulatory framework that encourages the safe commercialisation of medical neurotechnologies and addresses under-regulation concerns in the non-medical sector; and
    2. build an anticipatory governance framework to address forward-looking privacy, ethical and security challenges.

    Artificial intelligence as a medical device (AIaMD) is another emerging technology with widespread healthcare applications, such as supporting the early detection of cancers, and providing risk estimates of the likelihood a patient will develop a condition such as heart disease.

    The safe use of AI in medical devices has the potential to create efficiencies and cost savings in NHS processes through automation of routine tasks, and can detect predictors of disease with greater speed and accuracy than health professionals.

    The RHC AIaMD report outlines the challenges and current gaps in the regulation of AI as a medical device and provides recommendations on developing a regulatory framework that balances the needs for effectiveness, safety and equity, with the importance of ensuring that high-quality AIaMD innovations are brought to patients.

    The RHC is now undertaking a prioritisation exercise to identify its next programme of work. As part of this, it has accepted BEIS’ commission to undertake a review of the regulation of quantum technologies.

    Creating a regulatory environment that promotes innovation and growth of the UK quantum industry will enable the UK to lead the debate in international fora, and ensure that quantum technologies are used for the benefit of UK society – with global productivity gains from quantum anticipated to be worth $100 billion annually within the next few decades.

    Requests for more examination (relating to technological innovation), in areas you would like the Regulatory Horizons Council to investigate further, can be made by completing this form.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Increased prison sentence for man convicted of rape and controlling or coercive behaviour [November 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : Increased prison sentence for man convicted of rape and controlling or coercive behaviour [November 2022]

    The press release issued by the Attorney General on 30 November 2022.

    A man who raped a victim will spend longer in prison after his sentence was referred to the Court of Appeal under the Unduly Lenient Sentence scheme.

    The offender, who cannot be named for legal reasons, raped the victim after his behaviour towards her had become controlling and coercive for a number of years. The controlling and coercive behaviour both included physical violence and taking away her bank cards. Following the rape, the victim called the police and the offender was subsequently arrested.

    On 25 August 2022 at Snaresbrook Crown Court the offender was sentenced to 4 years and 6 months’ imprisonment for one count of rape and one count of controlling or coercive behaviour.

    His sentence was then referred to the Court of Appeal for being too low.

    On 30 November 2022 the Court ruled that the original sentence was unduly lenient, and handed down a new sentence of 8 years imprisonment.

    Speaking after the hearing, the Solicitor General Michael Tomlinson MP said:

    “The offender displayed utterly shameful behaviour before committing a dreadful act of rape. While no sentence can repair the harm brought about his actions, I am satisfied with the Court’s decision to hand down a sentence which is a better reflection of the severity of his crimes.”

  • Andrew Griffith – 2022 Speech on Illegal Money Lending

    Andrew Griffith – 2022 Speech on Illegal Money Lending

    The speech made by Andrew Griffith, the Economic Secretary to the Treasury, in the House of Commons on 29 November 2022.

    It is a pleasure to speak in this debate. I congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for Blackpool North and Cleveleys (Paul Maynard), who has a distinguished record in advocating for this subject that is matched only by his distinguished record in speaking up for his constituents.

    As my hon. Friend so persuasively explained, loan sharks—he prefers to call them illegal money lenders, so I will do so going forward—can at best use unfair, hidden fees and sky-high interest rates and, at worst, some of the much more aggressive practices that he talked about. The Government recognise many of the concerns that he outlined, and I recognise them from stories that I have heard.

    Illegal money lenders prey on the most vulnerable people, which is one of the saddest things about this particular form of crime. As we heard in the case of Michelle, it causes the victims great harm and distress, as well as inflicting damage on the wider communities—sometimes, those communities already face adversity—in which they operate. It is a devastating crime.

    This is not a novel issue affecting only some. Only recently, I too met the Centre for Social Justice, including Matthew Greenwood, who has produced an excellent report, to listen to the findings about the prevalence of illegal money lending in England. I want to be absolutely clear with the House that lending money without Financial Conduct Authority authorisation is a crime. We want to clamp down on this immoral and damaging practice, and that is why, as my hon. Friend mentioned, the Treasury funds the illegal money lending teams across the UK. Those teams include specialist local trading standards officers who operate nationally and work alongside the FCA in maintaining standards in the consumer credit market. They can draw on geographically dispersed community intelligence officers, who are crucial in identifying local illegal money lenders, who disproportionately operate in low-income communities, and clearly, by the nature of the crime—my hon. Friend mentioned that there is often a family and friends link—can be hard to detect.

    Since the teams were established in 2004, they have prosecuted over 400 cases of illegal money lending and the associated criminality that accompanies it, and have caused nearly £90 million of illegal debt to be written off. That is a huge number, but there is more we can do.

    Jim Shannon

    I thank the Minister for the comprehensive and detailed response he is giving, which I think is what the hon. Member for Blackpool North and Cleveleys (Paul Maynard) is looking for. I mentioned the issue in Northern Ireland in my previous intervention. I know that the Minister may not have had an opportunity to speak to anyone in Northern Ireland, whether in policing and justice or in the Police Service of Northern Ireland, but if he has, can he give any indication of what discussions he has had with those in Northern Ireland, where paramilitaries seem to be the moneylenders, about how we can take those bloodsuckers—which is what they are—out of society and off the backs of the local people?

    Andrew Griffith

    I thank the hon. Member for his intervention. I have not had that opportunity: I am a relatively new Minister, but one who has already had impressed upon him the gravity and prevalence of this situation. I will undertake to understand the situation not just in England, but in all parts of our Union, including with the Police Service of Northern Ireland. Of course, if we are going to tackle this problem, it is right to tackle it in every corner of the Union and make sure there is no hiding place.

    The Government have increased funding since the Treasury took over responsibility in 2017. That funding has gone up by 37%, and this year, the Government will provide around £7 million to the teams. I understand the desire of my hon. Friend the Member for Blackpool North and Cleveleys for more resources to be put into this area. I will take that away, meet with the teams and those responsible, and see what more we can do, whether that is simply a question of resources and priorities or whether some legislative changes could be examined. I cannot make any promises at the Dispatch Box today, but I will do that for my hon. Friend as we seek to bear down on this issue.

    Those teams also provide support to victims and education to those who are most at risk, and they tell me that they have helped over 30,000 people through that process. They undertake community work, warning people like Michelle, my hon. Friend’s constituent, of the risks of loan sharks—perhaps that term is okay in this colloquial context—or illegal moneylenders. They also support people through the provision of legal and affordable credit, which is something I am very keen to increase. As my hon. Friend impressed on me, we have to work upstream, providing safe, legal and low-cost alternatives to cut off the demand for this product at source. I want consumers to build resilience through having a savings buffer, as well as getting young children into the savings habit at a very early age, as I did. That is a great life gift to give to somebody, and we are well placed to do so through the provision of things like credit unions—safe, legal and affordable credit when people need it.

    Jim Shannon

    The Minister is incredibly gracious in giving way, and I am not going to hold up the debate for much longer. I just want to say that I was very fortunate to have a mother who, when I was 16, gave me my first £10. I went down to the Northern bank, as it was then—it is now Danske bank—and that was the first stage in my savings. That instilled a habit in me, and probably in all my brothers and sisters, of saving and being able to pay our debts.

    Andrew Griffith

    I commend the hon. Gentleman and his mother—he probably would not be where he is today if not for that brilliant savings habit established at an early age. I had a National Savings and Investments blue book; I used to go along to the post office, put in my pound and get a little entry into that book.

    I do not mean to digress—not every part of the United Kingdom has an important fixture, a date with destiny, shortly—but I share the passion of my hon. Friend the Member for Blackpool North and Cleveleys about getting people into the savings habit. I will be meeting soon to understand more about the opportunity presented by community development finance institutions, which provide a local, place-based alternative source of credit to people. Also, as my hon. Friend mentioned, there is the brilliant Help to Save scheme, and it would be a delight to work with him to see how we can upscale that—I am sure that he has great insights into it. The scheme is very creditable. It does a good job, and I am delighted to learn that it has helped more than 350,000 individuals. However, as we learned on the prevalence of illegal lending, there is a great deal more to do, and I am keen to understand that scheme more. I recently met the management team of National Savings and Investments at its new offices just around the corner from here. It operates that scheme on behalf of the Department for Work and Pensions, and that could provide a great opportunity.

    I know that people across the United Kingdom are worried at this time about the cost of living. Some of them are seeing their disposable incomes decrease or be squeezed. We are fully alive to the fact that that may induce people to turn to illegal lenders. To help the most vulnerable, we have announced £37 billion of support for the cost of living this financial year. We have taken decisive action to support millions of households and businesses with rising energy costs this winter through the energy price guarantee and the energy bill relief scheme. I know that my hon. Friend would say that there is always more to be done, and that the Prime Minister would say that, however generous the Government wish to be, there is a limit to how much we can do. We seek to get the balance right.

    In addition to the energy price guarantee, millions of the most vulnerable will receive £1,200 of support through the £400 from the energy bills support scheme, the £150 from the council tax rebate and a one-off £650 cost of living payment. I hope that that gives my hon. Friend some reassurance about how seriously we take this issue and how we are putting the taxpayers’ money where our mouth is, in terms of helping the most vulnerable and trying to keep them out of the clutches of illegal money lenders. I undertake to him to continue to work hard to introduce safe, legal and affordable alternatives, as well as to be relentless in our pursuit of those who would try to exploit this opportunity.

  • Paul Maynard – 2022 Speech on Illegal Money Lending

    Paul Maynard – 2022 Speech on Illegal Money Lending

    The speech made by Paul Maynard, the Conservative MP for Blackpool North and Cleveleys, in the House of Commons on 29 November 2022.

    It is a pleasure to serve with you in the Chair, Madam Deputy Speaker. I will endeavour to make concision my watchword, with my eye half on the clock, but I want to give this issue an airing. Illegal money lending is a growing and pernicious problem in constituencies such as mine, but it receives little attention and is almost surrounded by stigma. I am grateful to the Centre for Social Justice for its assistance in preparing for today’s debate, particularly Matthew Greenwood, who authored an exceptional report on the issue.

    On the surface, illegal money lending sounds as though it might be a rather low technical offence—lending money as a business without approval from the Financial Conduct Authority. In practice, however, it is a frequently devastating crime that sees the exploitation of the financially vulnerable and carries with it deep financial, mental and physical costs. No two cases of illegal money lending are the same, but, in England today, the Centre for Social Justice estimates that up to 1 million people could be borrowing from an illegal money lender. Those people each experience illegal lending in their own way and for their own reasons. It is dangerous to over-generalise and I will try to avoid doing so.

    Anyone can be the victim of an illegal money lender—indeed, anyone can be an illegal money lender—but known victims tend to share a number of common experiences. Just over 60% have an income below £20,000 a year and almost half live in social housing. That constitutes a large proportion of my constituency, as Blackpool has eight of the 10 most-deprived neighbourhoods in the country. Illegal money lending is a danger that stalks every street in the centre of Blackpool. It is a risk to almost every home, but those who are often the victims have limited awareness of it.

    Sometimes illegal money lenders are called loan sharks, but I am not fond of that phrase, because the problem is much more insidious than the almost-cartoonish quality of “loan shark” suggests. The lender is not an unknown quantity circling menacingly outside the front door; too often, they are a friend or relation popping round for tea and sitting on the sofa. When people are struggling to afford the costs of everyday items and bills, and often unable to access credit, they turn to someone they know and consider a friend, or even a family member they trust, but they are deceived.

    Simply, that lender is not a friend, but a fraud who deceives their victims with an offer of financial support that does not materialise in practice. Having advanced money to their customer illegally, the lender does not adhere to the stringent credit regulations put in place more widely to protect consumers but exploits their sense of obligation to repay for financial gain.

    We have an excellent illegal money lending team in this country, who I know the Minister supports and works with closely. They can evidence annual percentage rate repayments into the thousands, as people are emotionally manipulated into a deep sense of obligation to repay a so-called mate who once ostensibly helped them out.

    Jim Shannon (Strangford) (DUP)

    Will the hon. Gentleman give way?

    Paul Maynard

    I will, of course. I was waiting for the moment.

    Jim Shannon

    I commend the hon. Gentleman for bringing this forward. In Northern Ireland, we have real problems with illegal money lending, and paramilitaries are usually involved. People on estates are desperate, with energy prices and everything else rising to a level that is absolutely beyond their means, and they think the only way out is via illegal money lenders. In these trying times, with the rise in the cost of living, many may be tempted to go down this route for a quick loan, so does he agree that more needs to be done—I am looking forward to the Minister’s response—to make people aware of the damage that loan sharks can cause? A £100 loan could mean an £800 repayment, and that is outrageous.

    Paul Maynard

    I thank the hon. Member for his intervention. As ever, he speaks a lot of sense. His evidence from Northern Ireland shows why we cannot generalise about this issue—there are specific circumstances there—but I join him in looking forward to the Minister’s reply, and I am sure those points will be taken on board.

    I was struck by one example in which an illegal lender took all a young girl’s money in repayments because she felt obliged to him, as he had taken the effort to go round and put drops into her pet dog’s eyes because she could not manage it herself. What an awful situation to be in. Coercion and intimidation are all too often encouragements to repay, and that should not be the case.

    What about when a victim cannot pay? Illegal lenders have been known to add arbitrary late fees, causing the debt to spiral out of control, and to threaten their victims and even demand sexual favours. I know the Minister is more than familiar with the practices of illegal lenders and their economic abuse, but for the benefit of a wider audience, let me tell the House about Michelle. Michelle met her lender on the school playground. She needed money and her friend—her lender—offered to meet that need. She thought she was borrowing from a friend. When she struggled to repay, her lender made it her business to know when money went into her account so they could make her repay. The more she repaid, the more she needed to borrow, but that was not all. Michelle received threats, and she had her windows smashed. As she tried to sleep at night, she was shouted at, making her own home an unsafe place to stay. It got so bad that Michelle and her two children were put into temporary housing. Why? Because she borrowed £50.

    I raise these issues not only because they are a blight on our communities, but because we are facing an increase in the cost of living. Those on the sharpest edges will be pushed further away from financial inclusion and the legal credit market into the hands of the most unscrupulous. I very much welcome the financial support that the Government have already given to support people’s incomes, but we must do all we can to prevent illegal money lenders from taking hold by supporting the illegal money lending team to do its job and provide long-term, scalable market solutions to financial exclusion.

    The illegal money lending team is a specialised body equipped to identify and prosecute illegal money lenders, but its current scale is insufficient to meet rising demand. Money is scarce, but support to improve the team and its data capabilities would go a long way to improve understanding of this issue and better tackle it. I know the Minister will be aware of the consumer credit levy that raises funds for the team, but perhaps funds could be found from elsewhere in the Department, even in these straitened times. Another part of this support must surely be improving the quality of debt advice and its ability to identify clients who are borrowing from illegal lenders.

    It is worth touching briefly on the Help to Save scheme, which is one of my pet favourite projects of the entire Government. It is a fantastic mechanism by which people on universal credit and some legacy benefits can save for a rainy day. To date, His Majesty’s Treasury reports that the scheme supports almost 360,000 people, but this is well below 10% of even those on universal credit. Improving access to and the uptake of this solution to financial resilience is a priority.

    May I make a wider point? I have participated in numerous online sessions, meetings there, speeches—you name it—and often all I hear is how we remedy the consequences of poor financial resilience, not how we avoid it in the first place. Help to Save should be front and centre in all our debates about this, not waiting for things to go wrong when we could solve them further upstream. I urge the Minister, as he is new to the job, to make Help to Save a personal passion, because it can make so much of a difference to so many lives.

    Finally, let me touch on credit unions and the consumer credit market more widely. Accessing credit should be something that everyone can do. It should not be stigmatised as wrong for certain types of people, as sadly I often hear in this place. We need to do much better through innovation at ensuring that those who most need credit can access credit that is affordable, and that successful repayments can open the door to future, cheaper forms of credit. That journey—the focus of the much lamented and unadvanced Woolard review—is crucial if consumers are to steer clear of illegal lenders.

    Part of creating a healthy credit ecosystem is emphasising the role of credit unions, which are strong, community-focused organisations that offer low-cost, alternative credit. However, they are not currently up to the task of plugging the entire credit gap because of over-prescriptive legislation that is both old and in need of modernisation, as well as designed in such a way that it limits their growth, scalability, size and membership.

    I know that this is an area of work that the Minister is taking an interest in, and I welcome the provisions in the Financial Services and Markets Bill, which he is shepherding through the House. The Bill will help to expand credit unions’ coverage across the credit spectrum and improve access to services, but if we are to truly scale these lending bodies, we need to reimagine what is called the common bond. By tweaking existing legislation to allow credit unions to have a maximum membership rather than a maximum potential membership, we might allow them to cover a wider geographic area, pool their talent into bigger, more professional bodies and compete with one another to offer the best services. That would create scale, and it seems to me to be a sensible, market-oriented Conservative policy. If only we had so many more of them at the moment. Come along—it cannot be that difficult.

    More widely, it is important that the consumer credit market is fit and able to serve customers across the credit spectrum. I urge the Minister to undertake work to see whether the Bill can be adjusted to accommodate those views. Reimagining the common bond, promoting strategic mergers and supporting the illegal money lending teams to clamp down on illegal lenders are small tweaks. I know that those are issues that he takes seriously. I hope—I ask this in every Adjournment debate—he will meet with me and the Centre for Social Justice to discuss how we can take this agenda forward. I thank him for his time today and for listening to me. I thank hon. Members present and hope that, as I have been concise, the staff of the House can make it in time for kick-off.

  • Penny Mordaunt – 2022 Statement on John Nicolson

    Penny Mordaunt – 2022 Statement on John Nicolson

    The statement made by Penny Mordaunt, the Leader of the House of Commons, in the House on 29 November 2022.

    I thank my right hon. Friend the Member for Haltemprice and Howden (Mr Davis) for moving the motion. I deeply regret it, but I understand why he has had to do so.

    I heard what the hon. Member for Ochil and South Perthshire (John Nicolson) said today, and I am glad to see him in the Chamber. I do not think his argument that he was not aware of the right course of action or of the appropriate response to journalistic inquiries, which is to state that any such correspondence is confidential, is a reason for not passing the motion. I sincerely hoped he would make an apology. I think there is consensus across the House about the right course of action. Had he taken that opportunity, the matter could potentially have been brought to an end today.

    The procedure for raising breaches of privilege is a long-standing and important convention that ensures the privileges and rights of this House are protected.

    John Nicolson

    I think there is a misunderstanding. I quite clearly said that I was apologising to Mr Speaker. I was unaware of this convention, and I wished to cause him no hurt. I apologised, and I am repeating that now.

    Penny Mordaunt

    I am afraid that the way in which the hon. Gentleman phrased it, and the way in which he has not appreciated—

    Pete Wishart

    Will the Leader of the House give way?

    Penny Mordaunt

    I will continue.

    The hon. Member for Ochil and South Perthshire has not appreciated the damage that has been done in these circumstances. The Speaker’s role in this is integral, including in avoiding—

    Pete Wishart

    Will the Leader of the House give way?

    Penny Mordaunt

    No, I will not give way. I am going to have my say.

    The Speaker’s role in this is integral, including in avoiding frivolous complaints. It is important that his role is respected.

    Pete Wishart

    Will the Leader of the House give way?

    Penny Mordaunt

    No.

    Correspondence on such matters must remain confidential and, in this place, we all suffer if that does not happen. As Mr Speaker noted, it is not for him to determine whether a contempt has been committed. I therefore support the motion and the need for the Committee of Privileges to thoroughly and correctly investigate any potential breach. I think we all regret where we are today. I am sorry the hon. Member for Ochil and South Perthshire did not make a full and frank apology, and I support the motion.