Tag: Anna McMorrin

  • Anna McMorrin – 2022 Parliamentary Question on Iran

    Anna McMorrin – 2022 Parliamentary Question on Iran

    The parliamentary question asked by Anna McMorrin, the Labour MP for Cardiff North, in the House of Commons on 13 December 2022.

    Anna McMorrin (Cardiff North) (Lab)

    What recent assessment he has made of the political situation in Iran.

    John Spellar (Warley) (Lab)

    What steps his Department is taking to help tackle destabilising activities by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.

    The Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs (James Cleverly)

    These protests in Iran are a watershed moment. After years of repression, the Iranian people have clearly had enough. They are standing up to the authoritarian regime under which they live. Sadly, the regime has responded in the only way it knows: with violence. The UK is committed to holding Iran to account, including with more than 300 sanctions—including the sanctioning of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps in its entirety. We will continue to work with partners to challenge the regime’s aggression at home and its disruptive behaviour in the region.

    Anna McMorrin

    I thank the Secretary of State for his answer. Iranians are being hanged from cranes with black bags over their heads and their hands and feet bound while Iranian weapons are being used to perpetrate Putin’s illegal war murdering Ukrainians. Will the Secretary of State join me in condemning those human rights violations and tell me exactly what sanctions he will bring forward against Raisi’s abhorrent regime?

    James Cleverly

    I personally and the UK Government have regularly condemned the abuses in Iran. Of course, I recognise that that tone is reflected right across the House. We have sanctioned the morality police; we have sanctioned the Iranian judges whom we know to be involved in those secret trials. We will continue to work with our international partners, and directly, to sanction the members of the Iranian regime who continue to abuse the human rights of the people within that country.

    John Spellar

    The Minister has rightly identified that the clerical fascist regime in Tehran is increasingly using violence and terror in trying to crush the popular protests there, while also destabilising the region through proxies, as well as further afield. He knows that a vital underpinning of this dreadful regime’s activities is the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. He mentioned working with other parties; he knows that the United States has already taken action to proscribe the IRGC. Will that finally persuade him to sanction to the IRGC?

    James Cleverly

    We already sanction the IRGC in its entirety. We will continue to work closely with our friends in the international community to prevent the point that the right hon. Gentleman raises: the exporting of attack drones and other munitions to Russia, which are then being used by Vladimir Putin’s troops to attack civilians and civilian infrastructure in Ukraine. We will continue to sanction individuals, and as I say, the IRGC is already sanctioned in its entirety.

    Mr Speaker

    I call the shadow Minister.

    Fabian Hamilton (Leeds North East) (Lab)

    The Metropolitan police have warned about threats described as an “imminent, credible risk” to life against British-Iranian journalists in the United Kingdom. The Iranian regime has also threatened BBC Persian journalists. I ask the Foreign Secretary again to set out what further targeted sanctions the Government will be taking against the whole Iranian regime and, more importantly, to ensure that the Government act against any threats to individuals in the United Kingdom.

    James Cleverly

    The hon. Gentleman will understand that it is counterproductive to detail what future sanctions designations might be brought in—we want to ensure that the targets of those sanctions do not in any way try to evade the sanctions before they are brought in. The UK remains absolutely determined to ensure that Iran does not intimidate people within this country. We will always stand up to aggression from foreign nations. We will absolutely not tolerate threats, particularly towards journalists who are highlighting what is going on in Iran, or indeed towards any other individual living in the UK. On 11 November, I summoned the Iranian chargé d’affaires to highlight the UK’s position on this; and, working with our colleagues in the Home Office, we ensured that the Iranian journalists who were under threat according to our information were protected by the British police.

  • Anna McMorrin – 2022 Comments on Government Whips During Fracking Vote

    Anna McMorrin – 2022 Comments on Government Whips During Fracking Vote

    The comments made by Anna McMorrin, the Labour MP for Cardiff North, on Twitter on 19 October 2022.

    Extraordinary stuff happening here during the vote on fracking which is apparently “not a confidence vote”. I’ve just witnessed one Tory member in tears being manhandled into the lobby to vote against our motion to continue the ban on fracking.

  • Anna McMorrin – 2022 Speech on the Energy Prices Bill

    Anna McMorrin – 2022 Speech on the Energy Prices Bill

    The speech made by Anna McMorrin, the Labour MP for Cardiff North, in the House of Commons on 17 October 2022.

    It is good to be here, especially on the day on which our acting Prime Minister, the new Chancellor, took control of these chaotic finances following the mini-Budget. The results of this Government’s callous disregard for human lives will be felt—is already being felt—by households and businesses across the country. Businesses in my constituency, particularly pubs and restaurants, are writing to me; one that has had to use candlelight in the evenings has just received a bill for £24,000 and does not know how it is going to pay that bill.

    This country is in desperate need of stability, but instead we have a Prime Minister who has dragged it through chaos and mayhem in just a few short weeks, making U-turns into a hobby. In the last few months, it has been predicted that 7 million homes will be in dire fuel poverty this winter. Professor Sinha of the Institute of Health Equity said there was “no doubt” that children would die this winter. That is how serious the situation is becoming, but we are not seeing adequate action from this Government. We are seeing support for new licences and new extraction for oil and gas companies, rather than the Government’s simply investing in home-grown cheaper renewables, which is what we needed to see throughout these 12 years of incompetence in the Government’s energy policy.

    This crisis has been created by a Conservative party which is falling apart at the seams, and it must not be resolved by an increase in that party’s dependence on oil and gas. Last year, the Government made a pledge at COP26 to keep global warming below 1.5°, and they need to act on that. This is a human crisis, it is a crisis that we are seeing throughout the country, and it is a crisis that will not be resolved by the incompetence that we are seeing now.

  • Anna McMorrin – 2022 Tribute to HM Queen Elizabeth II

    Anna McMorrin – 2022 Tribute to HM Queen Elizabeth II

    The tribute made by Anna McMorrin, the Labour MP for Cardiff North, in the House of Commons on 9 September 2022.

    It is an honour to rise, on behalf of the people of Cardiff North, to pay tribute and offer my deepest condolences to His Majesty the King, and to the whole royal family as they mourn the loss of their mother, grandmother and great-grandmother, Queen Elizabeth—our longest-serving, greatest monarch, who devoted so much to our country throughout her long and exceptional life. Communities across Cardiff North share in their grief, as we all share in their grief.

    The magnitude of this loss should not be understated. Through our lifetimes, through difficult times and upheaval—whether at home or abroad—the Queen has been our constant for 70 years. Her life of service and dedication, and her love for all of us, demonstrate her values, and these we must hold on to as we move into a new era, keeping her memory alive in our hearts through this historic moment of change. As a loyal public servant, her bond with all four nations of the UK was unmatched. Of course she loved Scotland, but I know that she had a special place in her heart for Wales. She was gifted a playhouse, Y Bwthyn Bach, from the people of Wales when she was six years old—apparently it is still in the grounds of Windsor Great Park—and when the Senedd was established, she insisted on being there in person for every royal opening, which is where I met her. She surprised us all with her encyclopaedic knowledge of Welsh politics and of devolution, taking pride in the fact that she knew every single detail. She understood the role that devolution had—and has—within our constitution.

    Her connection to Cardiff was strong. She visited many times, and not just to cheer in the rugby and enjoy our music. Footage from 1971 shows her opening Wales’s largest hospital, our University Hospital of Wales, spending time chatting with patients, never holding back and always taking as much time with people as possible, her compassion shining through. We have also seen her passion: her speech at COP26 last year was one of the most powerful, calling on world leaders to act with urgency on climate change. Her determination is only surpassed by that of our new King. He is a passionate environmentalist and conservationist, and I am confident that his passion for combating climate change will shine through his reign.

    Queen Elizabeth was our symbol, our leader for so long, but more than that, she was an incredible woman. Unassuming, principled, kind and loving, she was able to lead when times were difficult, but she also showed a constant love for all of us—something that we all felt. We will miss that, and as we mourn, we think of the loved ones we have lost, and of loved ones we may not see. Today is a reminder to hold them close, to reach out, to mend scars and wounds and to move forward with love. Life is short, and if nothing else, we must remember what is most important.

    I want to remember someone close to me, and to end with one of my late father’s favourite quotations from Dylan Thomas:

    “Do not go gentle into that good night…Rage, rage against the dying of the light.”

  • Anna McMorrin – 2021 Comments on Youth Custody and Reoffending

    Anna McMorrin – 2021 Comments on Youth Custody and Reoffending

    The comments made by Anna McMorrin, the Shadow Minister for Victims and Youth Justice, on 29 July 2021.

    The Conservatives have completely lost control of youth custody, resulting in shocking welfare and rehabilitation for children, as well as a failure to protect the public from crime and reoffending.

    Youth reoffending rates remain unacceptable, well above adult figures, while incidences of self-harm and assault are disproportionately high compared to the number of children in custody.

    Labour is calling for an independent review to tackle the disastrous deterioration in youth custody. Ministers must heed our calls and swiftly get a grip.

  • Anna McMorrin – 2021 Comments on Rainsbrook Secure Training Centre

    Anna McMorrin – 2021 Comments on Rainsbrook Secure Training Centre

    The comments made by Anna McMorrin, the Shadow Minister for Victims and Youth Justice, on 19 July 2021.

    The Tories have overseen a dangerous deterioration of conditions in youth custody, undermining the rehabilitation of children and putting working people and families at risk of increased reoffending and crime.

    The slow response to conditions, closure of another secure centre, and the questionable extension of terms with the private US contractor show a shocking lack of ministerial oversight and this government’s recklessness with welfare and public safety. It is a damning reflection of the Conservatives appalling mishandling of the youth justice system.

    Labour have called for an independent review of conditions in youth custody and for ministers to get a grip of the crisis they created.

  • Anna McMorrin – 2021 Comments on the Total LNG Gas Pipeline in Mozambique

    Anna McMorrin – 2021 Comments on the Total LNG Gas Pipeline in Mozambique

    The comments made by Anna McMorrin, the Shadow Minister for International Development, on 26 April 2021.

    The risks with this project were clear from day one. The decision to invest was short-sighted, contradicted environmental, humanitarian and security warnings in the government’s own impact assessment, and has risked UK taxpayers money.

    The Conservative Government have serious questions to answer over how much and what protections are in place around the public money already committed.

    The government must use this indefinite pause wisely – instead of continuing to lock low-income and climate vulnerable countries into a new generation of fossil fuel reliance, the UK must seize the opportunity to fully withdraw support from the project, align with new fossil fuel policy, and invest in green and sustainable development and transition.

  • Anna McMorrin – 2021 Comments on Prime Minister and US Climate Leaders’ Summit

    Anna McMorrin – 2021 Comments on Prime Minister and US Climate Leaders’ Summit

    The comments made by Anna McMorrin, the Shadow Minister for International Development, on 22 April 2021.

    The Prime Minister’s statement highlights the gulf between his government’s climate rhetoric and delivery.

    Stripping away vital aid funding as well as continued funding of fossil fuel projects overseas despite his government’s new policy shows talk is cheap. This Government’s hypocrisy must end.

    This Earth Day world leaders must listen and learn from climate vulnerable communities everywhere and ensure they are at the heart of decision-making and mobilise the finance to advance progress. Taking real climate action will mean greater health, prosperity and security for all home and aboard, from East Africa to East Yorkshire.

  • Anna McMorrin – 2021 Comments on Yemen

    Anna McMorrin – 2021 Comments on Yemen

    The comments made by Anna McMorrin, the Shadow International Development Minister, on 25 March 2021.

    The Conservative Government chooses to slash life-saving aid to Yemen and fuel conflict with UK arms instead of coming together to help this war torn country in its darkest hour.

    After six years of immeasurable suffering, the humanitarian situation in Yemen is on the brink of irreversible catastrophe.

    Millions of Yemenis are without critical lifelines and face one of the worst famines in a generation. The UK should not be cutting aid and instead play its part saving lives.

  • Anna McMorrin – 2021 Comments on Humanitarian Crisis in Syria

    Anna McMorrin – 2021 Comments on Humanitarian Crisis in Syria

    The comments made by Anna McMorrin, the Shadow Minister for International Development, on 10 March 2021.

    After a decade of death and destruction, the humanitarian crisis in Syria is on the brink of descending to a disturbing new low. Millions of innocent families and children face displacement and unimaginable conditions.

    The UK Government must redouble its efforts to end hostilities, help reauthorise reduced aid routes and protect the many millions caught up in this spiralling conflict, particularly in the North East and North West where regime and rogue forces act with impunity.

    This is a time for leadership not retreat. Any attempt by the UK Government to cut vital lifesaving aid would further signal Britain’s shameful retreat from the world stage at a time when we need the international community to act together.