Tag: 2022

  • Giles Watling – 2022 Speech on Marine Management Organisation

    Giles Watling – 2022 Speech on Marine Management Organisation

    The speech made by Giles Watling, the Conservative MP for Clacton, in Westminster Hall, the House of Commons, on 13 December 2022.

    I beg to move,

    That this House has considered the effectiveness of the Marine Management Organisation.

    It is an honour to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Pritchard. I am thrilled to have this opportunity to stand up for coastal communities, particularly my own in Clacton—a place that I have been a part of and lived in for over 55 years and have represented both locally and nationally since 2007. I have seen at first hand what works in our environment and what does not. Our extraordinary coastline has existed for hundreds of thousands of years. It is home to a Ramsar site and is a site of special scientific interest; it is a salt marsh, with superb beaches, cliffs and backwaters.

    Recently, I tabled a private Member’s Bill that seeks to put in place a pilot to devolve many functions of the Marine Management Organisation to local authorities. The MMO is a group that I have increasingly come to see as not fit for purpose. It lacks experience and is flippant in respect of the needs of local communities. Indeed, I have been told that we once had turn up to look at a marine development in the backwaters two officials from the MMO who seemed to be surprised about tidal range and direction.

    More recently, the Naze Protection Society waited 13 weeks for a licence from the MMO to undertake vital coastal works that involved protecting a sewage farm from incursion by the sea. Every tide that came and went and every storm that happened made those works more difficult and more expensive. The Naze Protection Society contacted me in desperation, as it had the money, the materials and the contractors standing by but was held up for want of a simple licence from the MMO. I made a couple of calls to the Minister and the Secretary of State, and the licence was issued almost immediately. It should not take a call to an MP to get this simple stuff done.

    In my opinion, the MMO is failing. For that reason, I have worked with my excellent local authority, Tendring District Council, which has offered to put in place a pilot that it will run, absorbing and discharging the licensing and management duties. I want to see that happen for three core reasons, which also illustrate why I felt this debate was needed. First, it seems rather odd to me that we allow the MMO so much centralised power. We have seen planning and licensing become core parts of local authorities’ action plans. Councils are accountable and, by their very nature, have a deep understanding of local issues and the local scene. We need to look to a slimmer MMO, more devolution and a non-executive directors board of experts with real-life experience, holding the MMO to account.

    Secondly, we should really be moving past all these organisations with people who just seem to collect non-executive directorships. We have spoken a lot in this place about how expensive distant and unaccountable quangos can be.

    Sir James Duddridge (Rochford and Southend East) (Con)

    I share the same Marine Management Organisation group as my hon. Friend and have not found them as problematic as he has, but his assertion that we should move closer to local government is quite compelling. I was surprised that some relatively small works on a café on Southend pier had to go via the MMO, which is very centralised. It would be much more appropriate for Southend-on-Sea City Council to look at those issues, and I would appreciate it if my hon. Friend’s local authority could look into Southend also being involved in the pilot to bring those functions closer to the public and democratic accountability.

    Giles Watling

    I thank my hon. Friend for his intervention; he is wise to mention that we should devolve those powers. In the end, that is exactly what this is all about. I am suggesting certain pilots, and my own local authority is happy to pilot them. I gently suggest to my hon. Friend that he should go to see his local authority and get it to agree to do a similar project. I think he might get some success.

    The MMO is an example of the fact that His Majesty’s Government are sometimes happier going after lower-hanging fruit. For example, we scrapped the dreaded development corporations in 2010, because everybody saw them as bodies that did not care about local feelings towards development while still not achieving the revolution in house building the nation needed. It was a bloated public body that was ripe for the plucking, but just because the Marine Management Organisation’s offences are against fewer people and therefore less easily seen, they do not seem any less egregious. If local government can take on such duties, why should such an accountable body as Tendring District Council not do it? That is the correct argument that the Government executed in respect of development corporations.

    Finally, and most pertinently, the MMO has displayed a flippant and unaccountable culture. When Members do things in this House, it should matter. If we criticise a public body for how it treats our constituents, that body should reach out and seek to offer reassurance on what it is doing in our communities. After all, nobody has a God-given right to spend taxpayer cash or to public power and authority. Sadly, since I tabled and spoke to my private Member’s Bill, I have not heard from the chief executive officer or chairman of the MMO—not a dicky bird.

    The Minister for Food, Farming and Fisheries (Mark Spencer)

    I want to make two points before my hon. Friend concludes. First, I hope he recognises that although local authorities are good at making local decisions, some decisions on the management of seas and oceans can have an impact on other local authorities down the coastline, particularly in respect of coastal erosion. Does he agree that there needs to be an authority to oversee the multitude of decisions that are made?

    On his second point, I will organise a meeting with the chief executive officer directly with my hon. Friend and myself, so that he can speak to him directly.

    Giles Watling

    My right hon. Friend is absolutely right. There should of course be a central overseeing body to oversee all this. I am seeking to devolve some of the powers to the local authorities because it makes sense: they understand exactly what is happening on the local scene.

    Brandon Lewis (Great Yarmouth) (Con)

    Does my hon. Friend agree that one of the benefits of the whole of East Anglia, working right down the coast from Great Yarmouth to his constituency, is that our local authorities —the county councils and the district authorities—work together closely on the issue of the East Anglian coastline? They face challenges in dealing with the MMO. For example, Great Yarmouth Borough Council has been frustrated in developing the operations and maintenance hub, a new area for renewable energy. It has seen delays of six months and eight and a half months to its progress because of the MMO’s slow decision making. Speeding that up—or, indeed, allowing the local authority to have more authority to get on with the works, given their knowledge from working with enabling authorities—would give us a faster and better way to deliver more jobs and a better coastal community.

    Giles Watling

    My right hon. Friend is absolutely right. We need to ensure that we get decisions much more quickly, before more damage happens to our coastline. I have heard nothing from the MMO and have not had any comment from it about how it proposes to devolve its functions to local government. This debate is publicly on the Order Paper, yet the MMO has not reached out to discuss it. That suggests that it either thinks that a House debate on its performance is irrelevant or does not even check to see what is happening in this place and whether it needs to keep abreast of debate. Either way, it shows an arrogance that is not becoming in a public body.

    What I find so sinister is that there is a private Member’s Bill to possibly radically alter how the MMO functions, and it feels that warrants no action. It is so seemingly content that it has the unrestricted right to gobble up taxpayer cash and play judge and jury in our communities that it has not bothered to articulate publicly why it should not be broken up. It clearly thinks that it is above reproach; well, no public body, including the MMO, is above this House. We often speak of the bonfire of quangos, and I think I have found another log for that fire.

  • Rishi Sunak – 2022 Comments on 80th Anniversary of Holocaust Being Debated in Commons

    Rishi Sunak – 2022 Comments on 80th Anniversary of Holocaust Being Debated in Commons

    The comments made by Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister, on Twitter on 15 December 2022. The speech referenced was made on 17 December 1942 by Anthony Eden.

    80 years ago, Parliament listened in stunned silence as the truth of the Holocaust was spoken in the House of Commons for the very first time.

    Today, in the presence of survivors, we stand together to remember and to reaffirm that truth.

  • Chris Bryant – 2022 Comments on Victor Cazalet

    Chris Bryant – 2022 Comments on Victor Cazalet

    The comments made by Chris Bryant, the Labour MP for the Rhondda, on Twitter on 15 December 2022.

    It was very moving to join a minute’s silence in the Commons to commemorate the 80th anniversary of Eden’s Holocaust announcement. Victor Cazalet MP was the first to detail the extermination of European Jews in the Commons. He was killed in action in 1943.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Lib Dems – No one should lose their home this Christmas [December 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : Lib Dems – No one should lose their home this Christmas [December 2022]

    The press release issued by the Liberal Democrats on 13 December 2022.

    Leader of the Liberal Democrats, Ed Davey, has called for an emergency ban on repossessions and evictions this Winter. This comes after the Conservative Government’s mismanagement of the economy caused spiralling mortgage and rental prices.

    These measures would stop banks from repossessing people’s homes who have been hit the hardest by soaring mortgage prices as well as bringing forward the promised ban on no-fault evictions, alongside a ban on evictions for arrears over the winter.

    We are deeply concerned that both renters and homeowners could face homelessness during one of the most difficult Winters in living memory.

    We are making these urgent calls on the Conservative Government as only days of Parliament remain before Christmas for the Prime Minister to take responsibility for the mess his Government has caused.

    The Conservatives have failed time and time again to bring forward the ban on no-fault evictions they promised and have made no attempt to stop repossessions caused by their disastrous mini-Budget. They must act now before it is too late.

    No-one should face losing their home this Christmas because the Conservative Government crashed the economy.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Liberal Democrats Force Vote to Block Voter ID Laws [December 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : Liberal Democrats Force Vote to Block Voter ID Laws [December 2022]

    The press release issued by the Liberal Democrats on 13 December 2022.

    Today, Liberal Democrats in the House of Lords are using a rare Parliamentary procedure called a ‘Fatal Motion’ to try to block the new Voter ID regulations.

    A ‘Fatal Motion’ is the strongest possible opposition we can have to legislation and now is absolutely the right time to use it.These regulations would mean that photo identification would be required in order to vote – something that millions of people in the UK do not have.

    These changes are supposed to stop voter fraud, but in 2019 there was just one conviction for in-person voter fraud in the entire country. Liberal Democrat Council Leaders have also been raising these concerns with the Government. We cannot allow the Government to undermine the fundamental principles we stand for as Liberal Democrats.

    They are nothing more than the Conservative Government’s thinly veiled attempt to suppress the votes of people across the UK.To beat the Conservatives in tonight’s vote, we need Labour to back our motion. If they support us then we will defeat the Government – but, worryingly, they’re yet to confirm that they’re going to come on side.

    Whatever the case, they can’t stop us from standing up for what is right.

    Tonight, we will oppose these harmful laws, and ensure these Trumpian measures have no place in British democracy.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Lib Dems – Giving rural communities a stronger voice in government [December 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : Lib Dems – Giving rural communities a stronger voice in government [December 2022]

    The press release issued by the Liberal Democrats on 1 December 2022.

    Rural communities and businesses are being consistently neglected and let down by this Conservative Government.

    The cost-of-living crisis is hitting rural areas hard, but the Conservatives have rejected Liberal Democrat calls for a cap on the cost of heating oil and an expansion of the rural fuel duty relief scheme.

    They are undermining British farmers with the chaos and uncertainty around the roll-out of the new environmental land management schemes, and have sold them out by signing trade deals with Australia and New Zealand that undermine the UK’s high food standards.

    They are doing nothing to solve the big staff shortages in agriculture, hospitality and tourism – key sectors of our rural economy.

    They have let ambulance delays and GP waiting times soar out of control, and are allowing thousands of criminals to get away with stealing farm equipment, heating oil and lead from roofs.

    Meanwhile, from Cornwall to Cumbria, more and more second homes sit empty, while people cannot afford to buy homes from their families. And rural areas lag behind urban ones when it comes to superfast broadband and 4G.

    That neglect has to end. It’s long past time the Government recognised the importance of rural communities and started tackling the challenges they face.

    So today, Ed Davey has called on Rishi Sunak to appoint a new, cross-departmental Minister for Rural Communities. In his keynote speech at the Country Land and Business Association (CLA)’s annual conference today, Ed said:

    “We need to start with a change to the way the Government thinks about rural communities.

    “Siloing off ‘rural affairs’ in DEFRA plainly isn’t working. It leads to the neglect we are now witnessing of rural communities across government.

    “Why aren’t rural businesses a priority for the Department for Business? Why isn’t rural transport a priority for the Department for Transport? Why aren’t rural health services a priority for the Department for Health? Why aren’t rural schools and colleges a priority for the Department for Education? Why isn’t rural connectivity a priority for the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport?

    “In part at least, it’s because they all think ‘That’s DEFRA’s problem’.

    “Meanwhile, within DEFRA, ‘rural affairs’ is relegated to being just one of nine responsibilities of a single Minister in the House of Lords. That’s not good enough.

    “So today, I’m calling on the Prime Minister to appoint a cross-departmental Minister for Rural Communities, to make sure that rural voices are heard across Whitehall when decisions are made. So that rural communities aren’t forgotten or ignored by any part of government ever again.”

  • PRESS RELEASE : On this day in 2001 – 50,000 for home rule in Cornwall [December 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : On this day in 2001 – 50,000 for home rule in Cornwall [December 2022]

    The press release issued by Mebyon Kernow on 12 December 2022.

    Twenty-one years ago today, a delegation from Cornwall visited 10 Downing Street to deliver the list of names (on a CD) of the 50,000 people who had signed declarations in support of a Cornish Assembly. The delegation included MK leader Cllr Dick Cole and leading figures from the Cornish Constitutional Convention.

    Looking back to the declaration campaign, Cllr Dick Cole said: “It was an immense statement that 50,000 people signed individual declarations seeking greater powers for Cornwall, and it remains a disgrace that the Westminster establishment ignored the declarations.”

    The anniversary comes just days after the launches of the so-called “devolution deal” from the Conservatives, which was all about local government tweaks rather than devolution, and Labour’s “A New Britain: Renewing Our Democracy and Rebuilding Our Economy,” which did not mention Cornwall once!

    Cllr Cole added: “While we look back to 2001, it is most important that we redouble our efforts to campaign for meaningful devolution to Cornwall.”

  • PRESS RELEASE : Consultation on “devolution deal” for Cornwall [December 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : Consultation on “devolution deal” for Cornwall [December 2022]

    The press release issued by Mebyon Kernow on 11 December 2022.

    Cornwall Council has just commenced a ten-week consultation on its so-called “devolution deal,” which Mebyon Kernow has rightly described as “not devolution at all.”

    Speaking on behalf of MK, Party Leader Cllr Dick Cole has criticized the consultation as “biased,” but he has also called on supporters of greater powers for Cornwall to use the consultation to demand proper devolution.

    He said: “The so-called ‘devolution deal’ is not devolution at all. It is simply a range of accommodations between central government and their Conservative allies on the unitary authority. Now is the time to challenge Cornwall’s Tories to ‘go back to the drawing board’ and deliver a more meaningful democratic settlement for Cornwall – and that needs to include our own national parliament.”

    The consultation runs until 17th February and can be found at https://letstalk.cornwall.gov.uk.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Disappointment at Labour’s “devolution” plans for Cornwall [December 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : Disappointment at Labour’s “devolution” plans for Cornwall [December 2022]

    The press release issued by Mebyon Kernow on 5 December 2022.

    Just days after the Conservatives published their weak and inadequate “devolution deal,” the Labour Party has published “A New Britain: Renewing Our Democracy and Rebuilding Our Economy.” It is the report from their “Commission on the UK’s Future.”

    Speaking on behalf of Mebyon Kernow, Party Leader Cllr Dick Cole said:

    “This new Labour document, which sets out their approach to constitutional change, is a massive disappointment from a Cornish perspective. There is no proposal for a Cornish Parliament. In fact, the document does not mention Cornwall once! Not once!

    “Proposals include a ‘Council of the Nations and Regions,’ as well as the replacement of the House of Lords with a new second chamber, which would be called ‘An Assembly of the Nations and Regions.’ Such proposals may be worthy of support, but the nations referenced in the document are England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales, while the regions are the English regions (as defined by the UK Government). The nation of Cornwall is invisible in this document.

    “At the press conference, it was pointed out that the 12-strong Commission represented “every region and every nation of our country.” Cornwall was not represented. The nearest member of the Commission was the mayor of Bristol!

    “Mebyon Kernow will be studying the document in more detail, and making representations during the promised consultation on it.”

  • PRESS RELEASE : Mebyon Kernow statement on proposed “devolution”  [December 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : Mebyon Kernow statement on proposed “devolution” [December 2022]

    The press release issued by Mebyon Kernow on 2 December 2022.

    Earlier today, a Government Minister (Dehenna Davison) and the leader of Cornwall Council (Linda Taylor) signed a “devolution deal” for Cornwall.

    The Conservatives will soon be launching a ten-week consultation on the document, which will start on Friday 9th December.

    Mebyon Kernow leader Dick Cole called on people to take participate in the consultation and challenged the UK Government to support “meaningful devolution” for Cornwall.

    In a statement issued today, Cllr Dick Cole said:

    “The promise of additional funding for Cornwall in the ‘deal’ is to be welcomed, but the ‘deal’ itself is not devolution at all.

    “As someone who has campaigned for meaningful devolution for his entire adult life, I am desperately disappointed that this is the best that governing politicians in Westminster and Truro can come up with. It does not include far-reaching powers being transferred from Westminster to Cornwall as happened in Wales and Scotland, which have their own parliaments. It is simply a range of accommodations between central government and their Conservative allies on the unitary authority.

    “Now that the actual deal has been published, MK will be publishing a more detailed critique of the document in the very near-future.

    “In the meantime, I would appeal to one and all to use the opportunity of the coming consultation to demand meaningful devolution for the historic nation of Cornwall.”

    The devolution deal can be viewed at:

    https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/cornwall-devolution-deal-kevambos-digresennans-kernow