Tag: Angela Rayner

  • Angela Rayner – 2020 Comments on UNICEF Involvement in UK

    Angela Rayner – 2020 Comments on UNICEF Involvement in UK

    The comments made by Angela Rayner, the Deputy Leader of the Labour Party, on 16 December 2020.

    The fact that UNICEF is having to step in to feed our country’s hungry children is a disgrace and Boris Johnson and Rishi Sunak should be ashamed.

    We are one of the richest countries in the world. Our children should not have to rely on humanitarian charities that are used to operating in war zones and in response to natural disasters.

    Charities and businesses across the country have done a brilliant job stepping in where the Government has failed, but it should have never come to this.

  • Angela Rayner – 2020 Comments on the Living Wage

    Angela Rayner – 2020 Comments on the Living Wage

    The comments made by Angela Rayner, the Deputy Leader of the Labour Party, on 23 November 2020.

    This crisis has shown who we can’t survive without and who is the real backbone of our economy and our society – our key workers.

    It is just plain wrong that three quarters of our care workers do not even earn a living wage, and so many key workers are being paid poverty wages that they can barely survive on.

    When the Tories voted against free school meals they said they wanted to focus on the structural causes of child poverty.

    Poverty pay causes child poverty, so if the government actually cares about tackling child poverty then they would act to increase the minimum wage to a level that people can actually live on and support a family on.

    Nobody should be working for poverty wages. Every worker should be paid a wage that they can actually live on, and that means a real living wage of at least £10 an hour now.

  • Angela Rayner – 2020 Comments on Care Workers and the Living Wage

    Angela Rayner – 2020 Comments on Care Workers and the Living Wage

    The comments made by Angela Rayner, the Deputy Leader of the Labour Party, on 13 November 2020.

    Ministers fell over themselves to pose for the cameras and clap our carers earlier this year, but applause doesn’t pay the bills and warm words don’t put food on the table.

    It is a moral outrage that three quarters of social care workers do not even earn the real Living Wage. This situation was wrong before this pandemic, but now it is absolutely unconscionable.

    After all that they have done for all of us, a pay rise is the very least that our care worker heroes deserve.

  • Angela Rayner – 2020 Speech on Fair Economic Support

    Angela Rayner – 2020 Speech on Fair Economic Support

    The speech made by Angela Rayner, the Deputy Leader of the Labour Party, on 21 October 2020.

    I beg to move,

    That this House calls on the Government to publish clear and fair national criteria for financial support for jobs and businesses in areas facing additional restrictions, to be voted on in Parliament; and calls on the Government to make good on its claim that workers faced with hardship who are subject to the Job Support Scheme extension will receive at least 80 percent of their previous incomes.

    I start by placing on record my thanks to the staff at Stepping Hill Hospital in Stockport who recently cared for my aunt, who died of coronavirus last week. I speak today not just as a Member of this House, or just as a Mancunian, but as someone like the many others across our city and our country who have in the past few weeks lost loved ones to this terrible virus. That, more than anything, is why I come here wanting the Government not to fail but to succeed, because lives literally depend on it.

    We know that a public health response will save lives only if it is supported by a fair economic settlement. The British people want to do the right thing, and they will do the right thing, but we need to support them in doing so. That is why I was so appalled by what I witnessed yesterday. I was with fellow Greater Manchester MPs on a Zoom call with the Health Secretary, who was handing us scraps from the Prime Minister, while our elected Mayor found out from Twitter. The Government then tried to blame it all on our Mayor for not doing what he was ordered to do from Whitehall. I have heard of power without accountability, but apparently the Government’s idea of devolution is accountability without the power.

    We were offered £8 per head—or, to put it another way, 30 seconds of work for a consultant working on the collapsed test and trace system. Let me say this: £8 per person is an insult. And now the Government are attempting to play us off against each other across GM. Well, let me tell the Prime Minister: our Mayor stood up for Greater Manchester, but he spoke for Great Britain. Indeed, his call for Parliament to have a say and a vote on these measures is one that so many Government Members have made.

    Gary Sambrook (Birmingham, Northfield) (Con)

    On the point about votes in Parliament, many of us called for votes in this place on national restrictions a couple of weeks ago but, unfortunately, near enough all Opposition ​Members did not bother to turn up for those votes, including the one on the rule of six. If the Opposition get their way and have votes on localised restrictions, will they even turn up?

    Angela Rayner

    As the hon. Member has turned up today, I hope he will do the right thing and support people with an economic package so that they can do the right thing and we can save people’s lives across Greater Manchester and the whole of this country. I hope he will do the right thing and support us in the Lobby tonight.

    The Government have not given us the chance to have our say, so today we are giving the House the chance to do so. Our motion calls for the Government to bring forward fair national criteria for financial support in areas facing additional restrictions, and it provides for Members to have a vote on the criteria.

    Mr Tanmanjeet Singh Dhesi (Slough) (Lab)

    I congratulate my hon. Friend on making some excellent points in her speech. Given that the Government’s strategy to deal with the pandemic is not working, does she agree that, rather than using divisive tactics and treating the regions of our nation with utter contempt, the Prime Minister needs to adopt a united, one nation approach? Does she also agree that, if we want to impose stricter measures, we need to provide support to individuals and businesses, and that we cannot have lockdown on the cheap?

    Angela Rayner

    I absolutely agree with my hon. Friend. Over the past 24 hours, the people of Greater Manchester, regardless of their political persuasions or colours, have been absolutely dismayed by the way in which our democratically elected Mayor has been treated, but this is about the treatment not just of our Mayor but of the people of Greater Manchester. This is not some spiteful little game; this is about people’s lives, people’s loved ones and people’s jobs. They have spent years building up our economy in Greater Manchester. This Government choosing the path that they have chosen has done one thing for Greater Manchester: it has completely brought us together in saying that this Government and Prime Minister must do the right thing by the whole of our nation and support everywhere, not pick us off one by one.

    Alun Cairns (Vale of Glamorgan) (Con)

    What advice would the hon. Lady offer my constituents in the Vale of Glamorgan, where the infection rates are exceptionally low, given that a one-size-fits-all approach has been taken across the whole of Wales? Retailers, hairdressers, personal service providers, beauticians and all those sorts of businesses have been closed, irrespective of the exceptionally low rate. Does that make sense? What does she have to say to those businesses that have invested all their time, effort, money and innovation in creating employment and wealth?

    Angela Rayner

    The right hon. Member makes a point about what the Welsh Government are doing. What they are doing is putting people, business and lives first. They are working with local government and with businesses to bring the R number down. The Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies has said that the plan for Greater Manchester as it currently stands will not bring the R rate down and that it will lead us into poverty and destitution. When I speak to the experts, they tell me that poverty and destitution ​have a link to how deadly this virus is. In parts of areas such as Oldham in my constituency that have faced restrictions since July—I have not been able to see my granddaughter because of those restrictions—the rates have gone up. We do not want to plunge our businesses into destitution. I am proud of the Welsh Government’s defence of the people and their support for the people of Wales. I just wish we had a better Government here in Parliament.

    Our motion calls on the Government to implement their own promise that workers on the job support scheme extension will receive at least 80% of their previous income. I remember the promises the Prime Minister made, not just in this crisis but before it. He offered levelling up for communities such as mine, but he is not levelling us up; he is letting us down. Under Thatcher, we were consigned to managed decline, but now it feels like mismanaged decline. And it is not just a conflict between the north and the south, or between London and the rest. The elected leaders of our nation’s cities, regions and countries have been treated with the same contempt, from Wales to Wigan.

    Patrick Grady (Glasgow North) (SNP)

    I pass on the condolences of the Scottish National party to the hon. Lady and her family on the loss of her aunt.

    We are not in a position to field a Front-Bench spokesperson today—that might have been easier if the Government had allowed us virtual participation—but I can confirm that we will support the official Opposition in the Lobby this evening, precisely because of the hon. Lady’s point about the need for support across the UK. Any enhanced package that is provided to Liverpool, Greater Manchester and South Yorkshire must attract consequentials above what has already been guaranteed to Scotland. Scottish businesses are looking at the additional package of support that the Government have found for these English regions, and expect additional funding to be delivered to Scotland. Does she agree that that should happen for Scotland and the other devolved Administrations?

    Angela Rayner

    I thank the hon. Member for his contribution. I absolutely agree. All our nations and regions —the whole of Great Britain—have to come together, because this virus is a challenge for us all. We cannot treat people in different parts of the country and in our nations disproportionately and disgracefully.

    In Greater Manchester, we were promised a powerhouse, but what we have at the moment is a power grab. Even here in London, just this week, the Government have threatened to seize control of the tube. We now have a Prime Minister so determined to punish a Labour Mayor that he wants to whack a transport tax on his own constituents, yet the Government still refuse to take the decisive national action that is needed. Instead, they have tried to play people off against each other—divide and misrule.

    Kevin Hollinrake (Thirsk and Malton) (Con)

    I am very sorry to hear about the hon. Lady’s aunt.

    Will the hon. Lady she be straight and honest with British citizens when she talks about a national lockdown? Is it not the reality that the SAGE paper says that it might take multiple circuit breakers to keep this virus at low levels? Will she be clear about the impact that that would have on jobs and businesses in this country?

    Angela Rayner

    The hon. Member invites me to be clear and honest, and the one thing that probably most people know is that I tell it how it is and I always have. I can be clear and honest with him: the Prime Minister’s plan, as it currently stands, will not protect the people of Greater Manchester and will plunge us into more poverty. We have seen the evidence that says that. I promise him and other hon. Members across the House that the Labour party will always put the people, and the protection and security of the people, first. I ask the hon. Member to get the Prime Minister to do the same thing, instead of playing party politics with people’s lives and livelihoods.

    Today this House can vote for a fair deal for all and to end these political games. No more will the Health Secretary have to tour the country like a pound shop Noel Edmonds, announcing “Deal or no deal?”. The Government can honour their own promises that every worker facing hardship on the job support scheme will get at least 80% of their previous income, because what is good enough for the office worker in the City of London is good enough for the caterer in the city of Manchester, and what was good enough for the whole country in March is good enough for the midlands and the north today. We are trying to hold the Government to their own promises. Businesses need consistency, and they need that promise honoured.

    The Prime Minister told the House on 14 October that

    “whatever happens, a combination of the job support scheme and universal credit will mean that nobody gets less than 93% of their current income.”—[Official Report, 14 October 2020; Vol. 682, c. 368.]

    He then said that those on low incomes will get at least 80% of their income. Perhaps he can tell that to the waitress in my constituency who earned £9 an hour on a 32-hour week, serving in a central Manchester bar that has now closed. The Resolution Foundation has shown that she will end up with less than 70% of that wage under the Government’s current plan. So the Government are telling my constituents to survive on less than the minimum wage for months, because the Government cannot tell us when an area will leave tier 3 and how those restrictions will be lifted.

    Mr Toby Perkins (Chesterfield) (Lab)

    I am grateful to my hon. Friend for giving way and thank her for the case that she is making. Is she interested, as I am, that not a single one of the interventions that she has faced from the Conservative side has been relevant to the motion that we are debating? They all seem to be dragging us back on to Labour party policy, rather than standing up for the financial settlement that they are offering to Manchester, and that we know will be going to so many other areas. So can she help me in inviting them to actually speak about the 80% that we are trying to ensure gets into some of the most impoverished people’s—some of the most impoverished workers’—pockets, rather than trying to change the debate into the one they want to have?

    Angela Rayner

    I thank my hon. Friend for his contribution. I will go a little bit further and compliment some of the Tory Members who have stood up as part of Greater Manchester, and I will be incredibly disappointed if what I have seen over the past 24 hours results in this ​becoming a party political fight. Because in Greater Manchester, despite what the Prime Minister and the Health Secretary were trying to suggest, we were united in trying to support our citizens across the conurbation in doing the right thing, bringing the virus rate down and supporting our economy. I hope we can continue to do that. I hope we do not get distracted by messages that are not in the motion, and I absolutely hope the Prime Minister does the right thing, because this is not just about Greater Manchester—this is coming to a town near you. In so many areas now, the R number is increasing. So many areas are in tier 2; so many areas are going to go into tier 3. This is a marker to ensure that our economy survives through those problems.

    Mr Clive Betts (Sheffield South East) (Lab)

    On that point about coming to a town near you: it is indeed coming to cities and towns in the Sheffield city region, it was announced today. The package of assistance is totally inadequate. It is nothing like what the leaders and the Mayor asked for. It is exactly the same as has been offered to other areas—the standard package. It is not locally negotiated; it is the standard package. As the leader of Rotherham said, “They put lots of civil servants into a room with us to tell us what we couldn’t have.” That is actually what has been happening in the negotiations.

    Angela Rayner

    I thank my hon. Friend for his insight. Many of the local leaders I have heard from have said that it felt like they had been blackmailed and pressurised into taking a deal. Greater Manchester and the Mayor were not just trying arbitrarily to get more than somewhere else. We put a package together based on the needs of our city, our conurbation, our lowest-paid and the businesses that needed the support. It was not a bargaining chip to get this or that; it was about making sure that there was a floor that meant people were given the support that, by the way, this Government promised. They promised that support, and we are just asking them to keep to their promise.

    Nadia Whittome (Nottingham East) (Lab)

    Does my hon. Friend agree that it is grossly unfair that while the Prime Minister, reportedly, is complaining about not being able to live off £150 k a year, he is expecting my constituents in Nottingham, and all the constituents of every one of us in this House, to live off two thirds of the minimum wage unless a proper economic settlement is provided?

    Angela Rayner

    I thank my hon. Friend for her contribution. People on the Government Benches might grunt, but my hon. Friend was a care worker before coming into Parliament, like myself, and knows exactly how people on the minimum wage feel, and I commend her for standing up for her constituents, not leaving them behind like many Members on those Benches seem to be doing now.

    Even the two-thirds wage support under the job support scheme extension is only available to businesses legally required to close. Someone who works for a firm that is not required to close, but whose business is severely impacted as a result of the restrictions—such as a brewery supplying pubs that have to close—gets absolutely nothing.

    Imran Hussain (Bradford East) (Lab)

    My hon. Friend is making an excellent contribution, which highlights the points. Does she agree that much of the debate is around tier 3 support, not to say that tier 2 areas have no support whatsoever, which emphasises the point that she makes?

    Angela Rayner

    I absolutely agree with my hon. Friend. I say to the hon. Member for Winchester (Steve Brine) who keeps chuntering: you had your chance, mate. Let other people in.

    For hundreds of years, Mancunians have been told to know our place, but we have never listened—from the People’s History Museum to the Mechanics Institute, from our science and industry to women’s suffrage. We will not be told what our place is, and we will not be bullied into taking it. We are proud of our history and proud of our collective contribution to our great country and determined to build a great future together.

    This is not just about Greater Manchester; this is about all of us. We will not be picked off one by one. We will not be offered the crumbs when we helped bake the loaf. We deserve a fair slice and our people deserve a Government willing to protect them and to do as the Chancellor promised—“Whatever it takes”. In recent days, it has been Lancashire, Liverpool and Greater Manchester. Next week, and in the weeks ahead, it will be communities in other parts of the country that find themselves in tier 3. If the Government are prepared to wilfully inflict so much harm on their own people in the middle of a pandemic in one part of the country, they will do it to people elsewhere as well.

    We are staring down the barrel of a bleak winter, because the Government have lost control of the virus: infections are rising; hospital admissions are rising; and deaths, tragically, are rising. The testing system has collapsed. People and businesses across the country will be anxious that they will not be able to make ends meet and put food on the table. Our motion today will ensure a fair national deal for the country, a vote of this House on it and the Government’s own promises to workers kept. Madam Deputy Speaker, I commend this motion to the House.

  • Angela Rayner – 2020 Comments on Free School Meals

    Angela Rayner – 2020 Comments on Free School Meals

    The comments made by Angela Rayner, the Deputy Leader of the Labour Party, on 21 October 2020.

    This vote is about our values as a country and whether the government, in the middle of this crisis, is happy to let our children go hungry.

    Millions of families up and down the country are facing a bleak winter of real hardship as the furlough scheme is withdrawn and further restrictions are put in place without proper support for businesses, jobs and livelihoods.

    It is a moral outrage that the government will happily spend over £6,000 a day on consultants and line the pockets of Serco shareholders in return for a Test and Trace system that has collapsed whilst leaving almost a million children in areas subject to Tier 2 and Tier 3 restrictions to go hungry.

    No child in our country should be waking up hungry and having to face the day worrying where food might be coming from. But if Tory MPs don’t do the right thing today this vital support will be withdrawn next week and over 1.4 million children across our country will go hungry.

  • Angela Rayner – 2020 Speech to Labour Connected

    Angela Rayner – 2020 Speech to Labour Connected

    The text of the speech made by Angela Rayner, the Deputy Leader of the Labour Party, to Labour Connected on 20 September 2020.

    Friends. Comrades. Welcome to Labour Connected.

    In these unprecedented times, we aren’t able to hold our Annual Conference, but I was determined that we would still meet.

    Being elected your Deputy Leader is the honour and privilege of my life.

    And in the last six months, I have been humbled by the response of the Labour family to the coronavirus crisis.

    Our Labour councillors keeping our public services going and our Labour members who have been working on the frontline and volunteering in their communities. You are the very best of our movement.

    This crisis has shown who we cannot survive without.

    The NHS and social care staff who have put their lives on the line.

    The posties, bus drivers, shop workers, delivery drivers and so many others who have kept us all safe, fed and connected.

    On behalf of our Party and the labour movement, I want to pay tribute to all of you.

    Your service and your sacrifice will never be forgotten.

    You have rightly been praised as heroes this year. But the truth is that you have always been heroes. You’ve always been the backbone of our country and of our communities.

    Before I became an MP I was a home carer, working nights in Stockport on poverty pay and a zero-hours contract.

    So when I listen to social care workers who are being paid a wage that they can’t live on I know how it feels.

    And when they tell me how badly they have been let down I feel their anger.

    The government has left them without protective equipment, failed to provide the promised testing and discharged patients carrying the virus from hospitals into our care homes.

    And it is a disgrace that the Prime Minister tried to blame our care workers for the spread of coronavirus in care homes.

    The Health Secretary admitted he couldn’t live on Statutory Sick Pay of £94 pounds a week.

    And many social care staff are casual workers who get nothing, not even that derisory amount.

    They are left in an appalling position.

    Forced to choose between going to work and putting vulnerable people at risk, or isolating at home and not being able to pay the bills.

    On his very first day in office, the Prime Minister promised to fix the crisis in social care, with a plan he said he’d already prepared.

    The coronavirus crisis has made the crisis in our social care sector even more urgent.

    But now it turns out that it won’t be published until next year.

    It’s time he got on with it. Show us the plan. And guarantee that every social care worker will be paid at least the real living wage.

    Ministers have fallen over themselves to clap for our carers.

    But applause on a Thursday night doesn’t pay the rent. A pat on the back doesn’t put food on the table.

    On Wednesday, the Prime Minister couldn’t even say how much the average social care worker was paid. He had no idea.

    So I’ll tell him again. The average wage for a social care worker is £8.10 an hour.

    This was a moral outrage even before this pandemic. But now, it is indefensible.

    After all their sacrifice and hardship, we can’t go back to business as usual, where the very same people who have risen to this challenge continue to be underpaid, undervalued and exploited.

    And we will fight to make sure that every worker earns a decent wage for their work.

    Fight for the nurses, midwives, hospital porters and other NHS staff who were denied a pay rise earlier this year.

    And fight any attempt to freeze the minimum wage.

    And who could be better suited to rebuilding our communities and our country than the key workers who have got us through this crisis?

    That is why, working with our trade union movement, we are supporting key workers who want to run for office in May 2021 and beyond.

    You kept our country running. Now we want you to lead the recovery in every town hall and in every community.

    Over the next three days, we will show what we can achieve with a new leadership for our party and for our country.

    At this time of national crisis, we are offering the country the leadership it needs.

    We will act in the best interests of the British people, and in our shared mission to defeat this terrible virus.

    And we will call this failing Conservative government out for its serial incompetence that is holding Britain back.

    The coronavirus crisis has changed everything for all of us, for our country and for our Party. But our values haven’t changed.

    And it is those values of fairness and compassion that are seeing our country through this crisis.

    Our key workers have answered the call, our public services have risen to the challenge, and the British people have shown the Tories beyond all doubt that Thatcher was wrong and there IS such a thing as society.

    A society in which people come together to support each other and have each other’s backs.

    A society in which we have all seen the power of community during this crisis.

    These are our values. Labour values. And they must be the foundation of our country’s recovery.

    Out of this crisis, we can build a better, fairer, more equal society.

    In 1945, out of the ruins of war, it was a Labour government that rebuilt our country.

    Built our National Health Service.

    Built the welfare state.

    And transformed Britain, and the lives of the British people, forever.

    We did it once, and we can do it again.

    We can show the British people a vision of a better, fairer society that Labour will deliver.

    My first step in politics wasn’t in the Oxford Union, it was in my trade union.

    Not debating for bragging rights at the bar but negotiating because our livelihoods depended on it. I know which Union I’d rather be in.

    Because I was born in Stockport, but I was made in our movement. I never went to university, but when I joined my union I found an education and a vocation.

    Together we are strong, and in the months ahead our movement will need all of our collective strength as we fight to save jobs and protect our communities.

    We will be campaigning on three economic priorities. Jobs, jobs, jobs.

    We will speak with one voice as one labour movement.

    We can’t let ordinary working people pay the price for this crisis.

    Yet if the government ends the furlough scheme with no support in place for the sectors and areas that need it. Then workers and employers alike face a cliff edge, with mass unemployment just one step away.

    Our communities know about the human cost of mass unemployment.

    Our communities are still bearing the scars left by the last time a Tory government abandoned them and consigned our people to “managed decline”.

    And there are workers facing another threat too.

    Mass firing, and re-hiring, on lower pay and worse terms, using the threat of the dole queue to pick the pockets of the very staff who have kept those companies going.

    So I say to companies like British Airways and British Gas. If you use our country’s name, then you better respect our country’s values.

    And if they won’t end fire and rehire, it’s time the government stepped up and ended it for them.

    Last Wednesday at PMQs, I faced a Prime Minister who pretends he’s a man of the people but has shown his contempt for women and the working class.

    As a single mum, he said my children would grow up “ill-raised, ignorant, and illegitimate”.

    He only knows one approach. Denying that problems exist and then blaming other people for his own incompetence.

    We are facing a second spike, further restrictions and the prospect of another national lockdown because of his failure and incompetence.

    Infections are rising, the testing system is collapsing and the government has lost control of the virus because they have failed to deliver an effective test, track and trace system.

    We have been here before.

    Now is the time for swift, decisive, national action. And that action must be clearly communicated to the British people.

    With lives and livelihoods on the line, we cannot afford to be too slow again.

    Never has there been a Prime Minister more out of his depth and ill-equipped to the task than this Bullingdon Club blagger.

    He lights up Downing Street green for Grenfell and then whips Tory MPs to block the Grenfell inquiry recommendations.

    He claps for our carers when it suits him for a photo opportunity. But he doesn’t even know what they earn, and won’t pay them what they deserve.

    He calls a Covid War Cabinet meeting to allow grouse shooting when frontline staff can’t get the tests they need and people can’t say goodbye to their loved ones.

    Yet it’s always someone else’s fault. Civil servants. The public health body they voted to create in the first place.

    Or even the public – for doing the right thing and trying to get a Covid test.

    And what about the other testing disaster this summer, in education.

    Not students failing exams. Exams failing students.

    Everyone responsible has lost their jobs except the man the Prime Minister put in charge – the Education Secretary.

    He’s gone from Private Pike to General Incompetence.

    He’s denied knowing there was even a problem.

    Now I don’t know if he’s lying or incompetent, or both.

    But if Boris Johnson still has confidence in him then he must be the only person in the country who does.

    His hero Thatcher once said ‘Advisers advise, but Ministers decide’.

    Now the motto seems to be ‘Ministers decide, but advisers resign.’

    He’d probably make the algorithm resign if he could.

    Under Boris Johnson, the only thing government advisers don’t have to resign for is driving to Durham with Covid symptoms.

    We will offer a better alternative. A new leadership for our country.

    We know we have a mountain to climb to win the next election, but we are determined to climb it.

    We must – and we will – restore people’s trust in Labour as a party of government.

    And this work starts now, ahead of next May, the biggest set of elections we have ever fought outside of a General Election.

    In Scotland, in Wales, in London and in local elections across England.

    There is so much at stake and so much on the line for our communities.

    It is up to us to fight against a return to austerity.

    To fight for the green jobs we need to meet the challenge of the climate crisis.

    To fight racial discrimination and show that Black Lives Matter.

    And when it comes to election time we won’t have press barons on our side or Russian oligarchs bankrolling our campaign.

    What we have is hundreds of thousands of people who can carry our message into their communities, on the doorstep, and in the workplace.

    The coronavirus crisis has changed everything. We will rethink how we organise and campaign for the times that we live in.

    But what hasn’t changed is the need for our movement, rooted in the life of the communities and people we serve.

    40 years ago, a girl named Angela was born.

    She was born into poverty and grew up in a Britain that was broken. Scarred by mass unemployment and hardship.

    The odds were stacked against her.

    But a Labour government changed that.

    The Sure Start centre, the council house, the minimum wage and further education that Labour governments and councils built and provided – they changed that life.

    That is what a Labour government does. That is what our movement does.

    It takes a girl from a council estate with no qualifications and no prospects.

    It gives her a chance, gives her a voice.

    Makes her a trade union rep, sends her to Parliament and elects her Deputy Leader.

    Today, there will be a child being born into poverty.

    Under the Tories they will grow up in a Britain that is again broken, scarred by inequality and insecurity.

    The odds are stacked against that child.

    It is the Labour Party that will change that.

    It is Labour – in government – that will change that child’s life.

    We will deliver a better, fairer future.

    A future that is ours to build, together.

  • Angela Rayner – 2020 Comments on Exam Results

    Angela Rayner – 2020 Comments on Exam Results

    Comments made by Angela Rayner, the Deputy Leader of the Labour Party, on 16 August 2020.

    Gavin Williamson’s handling of this year’s exam results has been a complete and utter fiasco. We have had weeks of chaos, confusion and incompetence.

    And yet, Boris Johnson has been nowhere to be seen. He has been watching from the sidelines while a generation of young people are being robbed of their future.

    We cannot have another week like this. The Prime Minister must now take personal responsibility for this crisis by addressing the country in the next 24 hours to explain precisely how he will end this historic injustice.

    No student should be worse off because of government failure. What we need is a return to teacher assessments for this year’s A-Level results and urgent action to avoid a repeat of the same injustice affecting hundreds of thousands of GCSE students this week.

  • Angela Rayner – 2020 Comments on Dominic Cumming’s Lockdown Breach

    Angela Rayner – 2020 Comments on Dominic Cumming’s Lockdown Breach

    The comments made by Angela Rayner, the Deputy Leader of the Labour Party, on 7 August 2020.

    The Dominic Cummings saga has already done incredible damage to public trust, and the public are rightly angry that there is one rule for the Prime Minister’s chief advisor and one for the rest of us.

    Dominic Cummings has said that there are photos and data proving that he is was in London on the 19th April, and the Prime Minister has said that he has seen this evidence. The public have a right to know whether the Prime Minister’s chief advisor made a second lockdown-breaching trip to Durham, and it is surely therefore only right that this evidence is produced.

    If Dominic Cummings was in London during both the morning and afternoon of the 19th April, and not in Durham as has been alleged, I’m sure that he the Prime Minister will welcome this opportunity to set the record straight.

  • Angela Rayner – 2020 Comments on Aquind

    Angela Rayner – 2020 Comments on Aquind

    The text of the comments made by Angela Rayner, the Deputy Leader of the Labour Party, on 24 July 2020.

    The Russia report laid bare the influence that super-rich Russian oligarchs have sought to exert over our politics.

    Given we already know that over a dozen Tory Ministers are being bankrolled by individuals and businesses with links to Russia, the public have a right to know the identity of the Russian tycoon behind this major UK infrastructure project.

    The Government has questions to answer about the links between party donors and planning applications if we are to believe that money does not buy influence over our politics.

    Labour is sure that the Prime Minister will be keen to reassure the public that bank-rolling the Tory Party does not buy Russian tycoons influence over planning applications and decisions relating to major infrastructure projects supplying our country’s energy needs.

  • Angela Rayner – 2020 Comments on Expulsion of Julian Lewis from Conservative Party

    Angela Rayner – 2020 Comments on Expulsion of Julian Lewis from Conservative Party

    Text of comments made on Twitter by Angela Rayner, the Deputy Leader of the Labour Party, on 15 July 2020.

    Julian Lewis MP has the Tory Whip removed after being elected as Chairman of the Intelligence and Security Select Committee, after beating hapless Chris Grayling. I wonder who in No10 ordered that the long serving Tory MP had the whip removed? What a grubby shower they are!