Tag: Speeches

  • Ed Miliband – 2020 Comments on Businesses Becoming Insolvent

    Ed Miliband – 2020 Comments on Businesses Becoming Insolvent

    The comments made by Ed Miliband, the Shadow Business Secretary, on 21 October 2020.

    We are already seeing mass redundancies and rising unemployment, but measures to prevent businesses from becoming insolvent have helped keep the number of business closures low.

    Labour welcomed those measures. Yet Ministers cannot explain why they have pulled the plug on this protection. If it was right to help businesses stave off insolvency in June it is right now. The government seem to have moved from ‘we’re all in this together’ to ‘sink or swim’.

    Ministers claim to want to protect struggling businesses, but the decision to remove this key protection for business owners flies in the face of that claim. They must urgently change course or the risk is that we see insolvencies snowball before Christmas.

  • Ellie Reeves – 2020 Comments on Report on CPS Letters

    Ellie Reeves – 2020 Comments on Report on CPS Letters

    The comments made by Ellie Reeves, the Shadow Solicitor General, on 22 October 2020.

    Communication with survivors of rape and domestic abuse is essential to maintain confidence in the criminal justice system. But this report shows a stark deterioration and a lack of Government action over the last two years.

    The fact that so few case letters are of the right quality, and so many are lacking in empathy, is a stark reminder that the Conservatives are letting down victims.

    The CPS must urgently review whether it is delivering on its commitments to ensure victims have faith that the criminal justice system will be there for them.

  • Kate Green – 2020 Comments on Free School Meals

    Kate Green – 2020 Comments on Free School Meals

    The comments made by Kate Green, the Shadow Secretary of State for Education, on 16 October 2020.

    Millions of families face the prospect of losing their livelihoods because the government has lost control of the virus.

    It’s sink-or-swim plans for support could leave more than one million children at risk of going hungry over the school holidays.

    Now is the time to act. Labour will not stand by and let families be the victims of the government’s incompetence. If Boris Johnson doesn’t change course, we will force a vote this week and give his backbenchers the chance to do the right thing.

  • James Duddridge – 2020 Statement on the Presidential Elections in Guinea

    James Duddridge – 2020 Statement on the Presidential Elections in Guinea

    The statement made by James Duddridge, the Minister of State for Africa, on 16 October 2020.

    As Guinea goes to the polls on Sunday, we urge all parties to ensure that the presidential elections are conducted in a peaceful, transparent and credible manner. The UK is a friend of Guinea. We want to support Guinea in protecting democracy and to promote good governance.

    We are concerned by the violence and loss of life in Guinea following the legislative elections and referendum in March. Recent violence has exacerbated these concerns. We urge the Guinean authorities to ensure that deaths are properly investigated.

    We call on all parties to reduce tension, engage in constructive dialogue, and refrain from violence. Doing so will ensure the people of Guinea can enjoy the benefits of a free and democratic society.

  • Rachel Reeves – 2020 Comments on Serco Profits

    Rachel Reeves – 2020 Comments on Serco Profits

    The comments made by Rachel Reeves, the Shadow Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, on 16 October 2020.

    This is grim beyond belief. While Serco is raking in the profits, people are paying the price for its failure.

    If the Government can’t bear to curb its obsession with pouring money into big companies over our local public health teams, it surely can see that this wasteful approach lacks basic common sense and isn’t reducing the transmission of the virus.

    It is time to sack Serco and bring in a short circuit breaker, so we can fix test and trace, protect the NHS and get control of the virus.

  • Lucy Powell – 2020 Comments on the Hospitality Industry

    Lucy Powell – 2020 Comments on the Hospitality Industry

    The comments made by Lucy Powell, the Shadow Minister for Business and Consumers, on 16 October 2020.

    Pubs and bars across the country are on the brink. Those in Tier 2 have been hit by restrictions without the economic support to cushion the blow, and those in Tier 3 are receiving just a fraction of what they got in the last lockdown.

    So many jobs in hospitality are on the line, but this Government is just washing its hands of the industry. The waves of job losses we’ve seen in recent weeks show just how perilous the situation is.

  • Mike Amesbury – 2020 Comments on the Cost of Waking Watches

    Mike Amesbury – 2020 Comments on the Cost of Waking Watches

    The comments made by Mike Amesbury, the Shadow Housing and Planning Minister, on 16 October 2020.

    The Government has utterly failed to tackle the building safety crisis. Three years on from Grenfell hundreds of buildings are still covered in the same cladding that caused the Grenfell Tower fire, and thousands are wrapped in other forms of dangerous cladding.

    As lockdown restrictions increase across the country, leaseholders will be left trapped in unsafe homes, forced to pay extortionate fees for waking watches.

    The Government must urgently accelerate the pace of remediation, and get a grip of the crisis facing leaseholders.

  • Tracy Brabin – 2020 Comments on the Film and TV Production Restart Scheme

    Tracy Brabin – 2020 Comments on the Film and TV Production Restart Scheme

    The comments made by Tracy Brabin, the Shadow Minister for the Cultural Industries, on 16 October 2020.

    This is good news for screen productions large and small, but it should not have taken so long and we’re concerned the delay has led to people leaving the industry.

    The Government should also do more to help other areas of our creative industries that simply cannot get back to work, and freelancers who have been locked out of meaningful support for months.

  • Ramblers – 2020 Statement on Attempt by NFU and CLA to Divert Footpaths

    Ramblers – 2020 Statement on Attempt by NFU and CLA to Divert Footpaths

    The statement made by Ramblers on 15 October 2020 on the document submitted to Government on diverting footpaths.

    The National Farmers Union (NFU) and Country Land and Business Association (CLA) recently published proposals for new legislation that would enable farmers to divert public rights of way where livestock – including cattle, pigs, goats and alpaca – are present.

    The Ramblers has joined with a range of access organisations to raise serious concerns about the plans, which risk preventing and discouraging the use of the path network at a time when improving access to the outdoors and nature has never been more important. The Ramblers is calling for greater focus on the steps that can be taken now to improve public safety around cattle – this does not require new legislation.

    Context

    Serious incidents caused by cattle to members of the public have profound consequences for all involved but thankfully these are rare. Statistics from the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) show that over the past four years there have been fewer than ten fatalities and 65 injuries caused by cattle to the public. This is against a backdrop of estimates from Natural England that there are 1.4bn visits to the countryside each year.

    The HSE provides guidance so that farmers can reduce the risks associated with keeping cattle where there are rights of access. We also advise that path users take a look at guidance on safety around livestock for walkers and horse-riders.

    As with other areas of life it is impossible to eliminate risks to public safety. Any steps taken to do so must be balanced, proportionate and not compromise the need to ensure that the path network remains usable and accessible to all.

    Our concerns

    The proposals from the NFU and CLA would:

    – permit farmers to divert any public right of way where livestock – including goats, pigs and alpaca, not just cattle – are present.
    – enable farmers to divert for 40 days out of every 90, ie nearly half a year.
    – allow farmers to decide when, whether and where to divert public rights of way, without oversight.

    The proposals have a number of serious shortcomings, which could have a serious impact on people’s ability to get outdoors and enjoy the countryside. For example:

    – there is no assurance that diversions would be no less accessible, convenient or enjoyable – a particular concern for those with limited mobility.

    – there is no guarantee that measures already available to farmers – as advised by the Health and Safety Executive – to reduce the risk to public safety will have been taken where cattle are grazed in fields where there are rights of access.
    there would be no consideration of the cumulative effect of such diversions should they take place across several fields.

    This would diminish the quality and use of the wider path network, make it difficult to plan routes and render meaningless any published maps and promoted routes.

    The Ramblers, with partner access organisations, have previously expressed to the NFU and CLA our serious concerns about the proposals and their potentially significant negative impacts on the path network and people’s ability to get outdoors. These concerns have not been addressed.

    A way forward

    The safety of users of the path network is of course a key concern for all. We remain unconvinced that legislative change of the sort proposed by the NFU and CLA is the solution. The Ramblers is calling for greater focus on the steps that can be taken now – this does not require new legislation.

    Instead there needs to be:

    – greater uptake of the range of sensible measures advised by the HSE and already available to farmers so that risks to the public are minimised.
    – more comprehensive and transparent reporting where incidents do occur to assess the extent to which these measures are being used by farmers and their effectiveness.
    – a more proactive approach from the HSE, as the government body responsible for enforcing health and safety in agriculture, to work positively with the farming community to protect the public.
    – more extensive and useful information, through a refreshed and better promoted Countryside Code, on public safety and confidence around cattle.

    The plans have been drawn up by the NFU and CLA – and not government. They have recently been submitted to Defra, the department responsible for public access, for its consideration. The Ramblers, alongside other access organisations, have already written to the minister responsible for public access, Lord Gardiner of Kimble, expressing our opposition to the proposals and seeking clarity on the Government’s position.

  • Robert Jenrick – 2020 Comments on Public at Cenotaph on Remembrance Sunday

    Robert Jenrick – 2020 Comments on Public at Cenotaph on Remembrance Sunday

    The comments made by Robert Jenrick, the Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government, on 15 October 2020.

    We will not let these difficult times stop us from properly commemorating the sacrifices of those who protected this country in our darkest hour, and those who are serving in our Armed Forces today.

    That’s why we have published advice for councils, so that local Remembrance Day events can take place safely and communities are able to honour our brave service men and women. We are safer because of the sacrifices they have made and the battles they have fought.