Tag: Jo Stevens

  • Jo Stevens – 2021 Comments on the Tracey Crouch Review

    Jo Stevens – 2021 Comments on the Tracey Crouch Review

    The comments made by Jo Stevens, the Shadow Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, on 21 May 2021.

    Of the ten members of this panel only one is a fan representative so this hasn’t got the look or feel of being fan-led.

    There is no information about when, how and in what way fans will be involved in this review and not even a timescale given about when this information will be available.

    Fans are still waiting for ministers to explain how their views and ideas will be listened to so that we can all be confident that this review really will live up to the Government’s promise that it will be led by the fans.

  • Jo Stevens – 2021 Comments on the Draft Online Safety Bill

    Jo Stevens – 2021 Comments on the Draft Online Safety Bill

    The comments made by Jo Stevens, the Shadow Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, on 12 May 2021.

    Over two years ago the Conservatives promised ‘world leading’ legislation in their White Paper. Instead we have watered down and incomplete proposals which lag behind the rest of the world. Even the Government’s press release admits that it’s proposals will only tackle some of the worst abuses on social media.

    Labour backs criminal sanctions for senior tech executives to bring about a change of culture in these companies who for too long have been given a completely free rein.

    As the NSPCC has identified these proposals do very little to ensure children are safe online. There is little to incentivise companies to prevent their platforms from being used for harmful practices.

    The Bill, which will have taken the Government more than five years from its first promise to act to be published, is a wasted opportunity to put into place future proofed legislation to provide an effective and all-encompassing regulatory framework to keep people safe online.

  • Jo Stevens – 2021 Comments on Boris Johnson and European Super League

    Jo Stevens – 2021 Comments on Boris Johnson and European Super League

    The comments made by Jo Stevens, the Shadow Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport on 26 April 2021.

    Yet again Boris Johnson’s integrity and honesty are in question.

    The public has a right to know what exactly was promised to Manchester United by both officials and the Prime Minister.

    If Boris Johnson gave the European Super League his backing and then publicly turned on the plan then the British people deserve a full, clear and immediate explanation and apology.

  • Jo Stevens – 2021 Comments on Football Social Media Blackout

    Jo Stevens – 2021 Comments on Football Social Media Blackout

    The comments made by Jo Stevens, the Shadow Digital, Culture, Media and Sport Secretary, on 24 April 2021.

    The threats and racism faced by footballers on social media are appalling, but sadly, no-one is surprised by this anymore.

    The only way to make social media companies take responsibility for what appears on their platforms is criminal sanctions against senior executives. And yet, despite all their tough talk, the Conservatives have dropped them from the proposed online safety law.

    Ministers can hold as many zoom meetings with footballers as they like, but actions speak louder than words. They have caved in to big tech lobbyists by watering down proposed legislation, as well as delaying it for more than two years. That’s how concerned they really are.

  • Jo Stevens – 2021 Comments on Boris Johnson Meeting with Ed Woodward

    Jo Stevens – 2021 Comments on Boris Johnson Meeting with Ed Woodward

    The comments made by Jo Stevens, the Shadow Digital, Culture, Media and Sport Secretary, on 22 April 2021.

    The Prime Minister and his ministers made very public and vocal condemnation of the European Super League. The public would therefore expect the same message to have been delivered in any private meetings.

    Downing Street should release the minutes in order to clear up any confusion and avoid accusations of hypocrisy.

  • Jo Stevens – 2021 Speech on the European Football Proposals

    Jo Stevens – 2021 Speech on the European Football Proposals

    The speech made by Jo Stevens, the Labour MP for Cardiff Central, in the House of Commons on 19 April 2021.

    I thank the Secretary of State for advance sight of parts of his statement. This is a watershed moment for our national game, and this statement is welcomed, as is the chair of the review, but it is short on detail and on the urgency that this situation merits; fans will have noted that. The Secretary of State tweeted last night extolling the virtues of the football pyramid, but if anything exposed the Government’s lack of understanding of our broken football system, that tweet summed it up. Tory trickle-down economics does not work, and it especially does not work in football.

    Football governance is broken, football finance is broken and football fans, whichever club we support, are ignored. The hedge fund owners and billionaires who treat football clubs like any of their other commodities have no care for the history of our football, for the role it plays in villages, towns and cities up and down our country, and especially for the fans who are the beating heart of it. They should understand their role as custodians, rather than cartel chiefs. The future of our national game and all our clubs depends on it.

    Labour has repeatedly called for the reform of the governance and finances of football by the Government. Government intervention is needed to fix this broken system. That is why we pledged in all four of our manifestos going back to 2010 to take action, and it is why I and the shadow Sports Minister, my hon. Friend the Member for Wirral South (Alison McGovern), repeatedly urged the Government to get on with their promised fan-led review of football—a promise that they made in 2019. It is nearly a year since our letter to the Sports Minister offering support and help with 16 questions that the review should focus on. We know that Members across the House have supported reform for the past 11 years of Conservative-led Governments, so it is time for the Government to get off the subs bench and show some leadership on the pitch, because we need reform of football.

    It is not as if there has been a blockage in Parliament preventing the Government from taking action to sort out the problems. Former Conservative Sports Minister, the hon. Member for Maidstone and The Weald (Mrs Grant), has said:

    “no one is speaking for the football world with the independence and authority needed to address the big issues.”—[Official Report, 26 January 2021; Vol. 688, c. 207.]

    She is right. The former Conservative Chair of the Digital, Culture, Media and Sport Committee, the hon. Member for Folkestone and Hythe (Damian Collins), has said:

    “We should have long ago reformed the governance of football”.

    He is right as well. The current Conservative Chair of the Select Committee, the hon. Member for Solihull (Julian Knight), has said:

    “What’s needed is a fan-led review of football with real teeth and here we have more evidence to strengthen the case for it.”

    I welcome the review, but why the long delay? Why create the vacuum that has allowed these super-league proposals the space and ability to become a reality? Eleven years have been wasted when a small amount of Government time could have been found to bring primary legislation to the House to sort out the problems. Instead, it has been all punditry and no progress on the pitch, and in that time, clubs and fans have suffered disasters. Fans in Bury know only too well the importance of reforming the way in which football is governed, and supporters in Liverpool, Edinburgh, Manchester, my city of Cardiff, Portsmouth and most football towns and cities have seen the damage done to clubs when profit outstrips the role of supporters in our game.

    We are in a global pandemic and the owners of the six clubs behind this proposal think that now is the time to ride roughshod over their fans and endanger the future of football, on the back of a year when fans have been at the heart of supporting communities up and down the country. What a contrast! These proposals have been carved out behind closed doors without consultation with fans or players, and they have at their heart a plan that is anti-football—a super league from which teams can never be relegated and in which they are always guaranteed a place because of their wealth. That represents a fundamental attack on the integrity of sporting competitions.

    It is very rare that an issue unites football fans and organisations across the rivalries and divides, but this super league proposal has managed to do just that. From supporters trusts and groups, including the Football Supporters’ Association, to the Professional Footballers’ Association, the Football Association, UEFA, the Premier League, the League Managers Association and the European Clubs Association—I could go on—it has been universally rejected as the greedy, obscene and selfish proposal that it is.

    Let us act urgently. It is already too late for some clubs and their supporters, so I ask the Secretary of State when the review will be launched, what the terms of reference will be, who will take part and when it will report. What exactly will the Government do to stop the European super league decimating our national game? They should explore every option, and I hope that they will, whether that is a super-tax on revenue or investigating whether the proposal breaches the clear rules that govern markets and competition in this country.

    For football fans up and down the country, our message is clear: Labour stands ready to do whatever it takes to stop this plan, and I hope that the Government will make exactly the same commitment.

  • Jo Stevens – 2021 Comments on European Super League

    Jo Stevens – 2021 Comments on European Super League

    The comments made by Jo Stevens, the Shadow Minister for Sport, on 20 April 2021.

    Proposals for a breakaway league are nothing short of an attempt to stitch up competition for a few elite clubs at the top. That’s why Labour has today asked the CMA to investigate them.

    We urge supporters across the country to add their names to this letter and show the groundswell of feeling against these damaging proposals, that would do immense damage to football and communities across the country.

    This must now be a watershed moment. We cannot simply go back to the status quo in which smaller clubs struggle to stay afloat and fans are excluded from decisions. The Government must get on with its fan-led review and ensure that football is given back to the people who built it.

  • Jo Stevens – 2020 Comments on the Hospitality Industry and High Streets

    Jo Stevens – 2020 Comments on the Hospitality Industry and High Streets

    The comments made by Jo Stevens, the Shadow Culture Secretary, on 28 December 2020.

    Visitors normally flock to the UK because of our rich heritage, vibrant restaurant scene and stunning natural attractions.

    This has been a devastating year but it is within the gift of the Government to support our vital tourism sector so that it can be there to welcome back visitors, both from the UK and abroad, when it’s safe to do so.

    Labour has consistently called for sector specific support and reallocating this public money from businesses that have returned it is an obvious solution.

  • Jo Stevens – 2020 Comments on the Online Harm Bill

    Jo Stevens – 2020 Comments on the Online Harm Bill

    The comments made by Jo Stevens, the Shadow Secretary of State for Digital, on 7 December 2020.

    The long-awaited online harms bill is a once in a generation opportunity to tackle these dangerous elements of the internet which have real-world consequences.

    We need the Government to take this seriously whether it is hate speech, disinformation or self-harm content.

    The internet should be a safe place for everyone and this legislation must be ambitious in its scope.

  • Jo Stevens – 2020 Comments on Anti-Vax Content

    Jo Stevens – 2020 Comments on Anti-Vax Content

    The comments made by Jo Stevens, the Shadow Digital, Culture, Media and Sport Secretary, on 14 November 2020.

    The Government has a pitiful track record on taking action against online platforms that are facilitating the spread of disinformation. It has been clear for years that this is a widespread and growing problem and the Government knows, because Labour has been warning them for some time, that it poses a real threat to the take up of the vaccine.

    This is literally a matter of life and death and anyone who is dissuaded from being vaccinated because of this is one person too many.