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Home
Live Debate
Commons Chamber
Commons Chamber
Wednesday 2nd July 2025
(began 1 day, 1 hour ago)
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11:34
Rt Hon Hilary Benn MP, The Secretary of State for Northern Ireland (Leeds South, Labour)
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Right. Right. Questions
11:34
Oral questions: Northern Ireland
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Right. Questions to
11:35
Q1. What assessment he has made of the potential impact of the adequacy of the A75 and A77 roads leading to Cairnryan Ferry Port on the Northern Ireland economy. (904876)
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Question number one.
11:35
Rt Hon Hilary Benn MP, The Secretary of State for Northern Ireland (Leeds South, Labour)
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Question number one. Connectivity Review, Recognising
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Connectivity Review, Recognising the Importance of the A75 and A77.
the Importance of the A75 and A77. The government has invested up to £5 million for feasibility and it has encouraged the Scottish government
to improve the A77. to improve the A77.
11:35
John Cooper MP (Dumfries and Galloway, Conservative)
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There cannot be a person in Northern Ireland who has not been
along the A75, A77, or had issues with access to Cairnryan. We know that these are the highways from
hell in Scotland. The A75 was closed because of an overturned lorry this
morning. Can I count on the support
of the mate of the Northern Ireland Office to get the Department of Transport to engage here and the Scottish cup government as well.
11:35
Rt Hon Hilary Benn MP, The Secretary of State for Northern Ireland (Leeds South, Labour)
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I echo his point. It says average speeds on the A75 and A77 are lower
than other Scottish rows. The Secretary of State for Scotland has
written to the honourable member to discuss this member and we hope to
see the road improved.
see the road improved.
11:36
Torcuil Crichton MP (Na h-Eileanan an Iar, Labour)
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There is also the A9 been waiting for the improvements for 25 years. The SNP cannot get this done. Can
the Minister push the Scottish government into action?
11:36
Rt Hon Hilary Benn MP, The Secretary of State for Northern Ireland (Leeds South, Labour)
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I have many responsibilities and
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I have many responsibilities and
was not aware that the A9 was one of them but I hope the Scottish government has heard that strong
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plea. I will answer questions two,
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I will answer questions two, seven, and 10 together. The new strategic partnership with the EU will deliver a broad range of
economic benefits for Northern Ireland, in particular agreement on agrifood and plants to further
smooth the flow of trade across the Irish Sea, reduce costs for businesses, and improve consumer
choice in Northern Ireland.
11:37
Joe Morris MP (Hexham, Labour)
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I'm pleased that the new agreement to be a trading partner
agreement to be a trading partner with the EU will make it easier for import and export. The Secretary of State assure us that we will continue to prioritise high welfare
and food standards on both sides of
the Irish Sea.
11:37
Rt Hon Hilary Benn MP, The Secretary of State for Northern Ireland (Leeds South, Labour)
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I happily give my honourable friend that the shouldn't. In another context, he will have
noticed the agreement with the USA,
it was said we would hold up the standards for fruit and that agreement and that is exactly what we will do.
11:37
Julia Buckley MP (Shrewsbury, Labour)
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Which of the agrifood requirements does the Secretary of State expect to be removed on goods
moving from Great Britain to
Northern Ireland as a result of the SBS agreement with the EU? Speak about once we have negotiated a
about once we have negotiated a legal terms and put the report in line, in terms of the arrangements, there will be no need for the SBS
there will be no need for the SBS paper, the mandatory checks of physical checks on the fruit moving
with the Northern Ireland health levels, a ban on meat products
levels, a ban on meat products moving, and end on the GP amendment,
moving, and end on the GP amendment, and no more checks on agrifood now for positive.
That is by the agreement has been widely welcomed in Northern Ireland. in Northern Ireland.
11:38
Becky Gittins MP (Clwyd East, Labour)
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I'm pleased to see the proposed SBS agreement has been welcomed by the boss from an community including
in my constituency. This is
alongside the Ulster Farmers Union, Federation Of Small Businesses, CBI,
Horticultural Fit Association, and supermarkets including Marks and Spencers and Asda. Does the Minister
agree the SBS agreement would bring
huge benefits for Wales, Northern Ireland, the rest of the UK?
11:39
Rt Hon Hilary Benn MP, The Secretary of State for Northern Ireland (Leeds South, Labour)
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I certainly would and it is a
rare agreement that invites so much praise, certainly across the wide range of opinion in Northern Ireland and we all want to see it as quickly
as possible and so we have to turn it into legal text, sort out our own
rulebook, and then the benefits will flow for businesses right across the UK.
11:39
Carla Lockhart MP (Upper Bann, Democratic Unionist Party)
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The Windsor Framework is causing untold damage to businesses in
Northern Ireland, costing £86 to bring a simple product from Great
Britain into Northern Ireland and farm machinery is now subject to EU
import procedures with some having to be turned back from the ports to
Scotland in recent days. There is a report confirming small businesses have been hardest hit with rising
costs and uncertainty. Will the Secretary of State accept the reset is not helping in the here and now
and commit to implementing some article solutions in helping these industries?
11:40
Rt Hon Hilary Benn MP, The Secretary of State for Northern Ireland (Leeds South, Labour)
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On the agricultural point she has
made, if machinery is coming into Northern Ireland and staying there, it can be broken, subject to cleaning, with a label that is
relatively straightforward. It is
only if it might be moving into
Ireland that it would need to go through the rattling. To make this general point, in 2023, Northern Ireland purchases of goods from the
rest of the UK rose by 16.2% and Northern Ireland is the fastest
growing region in the UK.
11:40
Robin Swann MP (South Antrim, Ulster Unionist Party)
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With the benefit to agricultural machinery, I'm sure the Secretary of
State is aware of the issue with the farmer taking machinery from Northern Ireland to Scotland to
participate in an agricultural show and bring it back and it was
rejected because it may have been soiled on the other side. Does the Secretary of State really thinks
that make sense because -- really think that makes sense?
11:41
Rt Hon Hilary Benn MP, The Secretary of State for Northern Ireland (Leeds South, Labour)
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That was the requirement of the last government and it was to address the basic problem which is two different systems and an open
border. Everybody knows that it is agricultural machinery, it needs to be properly cleaned. If that is the
case, the appropriate label which is straightforward to supply, there is nothing to stop the machinery moving back to Northern Ireland.
11:41
Jim Allister KC MP (North Antrim, Traditional Unionist Voice)
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If the reset deal is supposed to
make an end to the SPS checks, when
will this be demolished? Instead, of course, the Secretary of State
presides over the boost on the
economy and without this they had to
kowtow to EU diplomats and in the meantime the Secretary of State looks the other way. When will they
stop acting as the Secretary of State for the EU and start acting for Northern Ireland?
11:42
Rt Hon Hilary Benn MP, The Secretary of State for Northern Ireland (Leeds South, Labour)
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I don't accept the characterisation from the honourable
gentleman. At some point, he has got to acknowledge that, following our
departure from the EU, and this was the issue the previous government had to address, one set of rules for
the UK, another for the EU, an open border. How will you deal with that? I'm afraid mutual enforcement is the
only idea I have put forward -- I am afraid that mutual enforcement is not a practical possibility and so he has to take some responsibility
for the consequences.
for the consequences.
11:43
Claire Hanna MP (Belfast South and Mid Down, Social Democratic & Labour Party)
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The agreement was widely welcomed to unpack and undo some of the
damage done by Brexit which was discussed by some of those on the opposite benches and a report this
week highlighted continuing problems for particularly small business. Can the Secretary of State reassure businesses that there will be
codesign and full consultation as he text and at workings of the very
positive you are put through? -- Very positive deal. Very positive deal.
11:43
Rt Hon Hilary Benn MP, The Secretary of State for Northern Ireland (Leeds South, Labour)
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We will consult as widely as possible and taking forward the
agreement that has been a claim with
the EU. There is help available for small businesses and it is important is as effective and easy to understand for those seeking to trade. Of course, I will look
carefully at the report that has been produced. been produced.
11:43
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Regarding the trade agreement with the EU, what barriers are you
aware of that currently hamper trade with Northern Ireland between them with Northern Ireland between them and the UK? What is the timescale for removal of them?
Well it moves freely from
Northern Ireland to the rest of the
Northern Ireland to the rest of the UK. One of the great advantages of the trade agreement that has been
the trade agreement that has been negotiated with India, and with the UK, America, and with the EU, in the case of India, a significant
case of India, a significant reduction of tariffs on whisky, which will benefit whisky producers
which will benefit whisky producers and Northern Ireland.
They will be
able to sell lamb to India. The deal with the USA will allow farmers to sell lamb.
sell lamb.
11:45
Mike Wood MP (Kingswinford and South Staffordshire, Conservative)
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Contrary to what the secretary of state has just told the House, two weeks ago, the Federation Of Small Businesses in Northern Ireland
published a report suggesting one third of small businesses remove goods between the UK and Northern
Ireland have ceased supplying customers either in Great Britain or
Northern Ireland. Under the protocol, if the UK experiences the version of trade, we are entitled to
take unilateral action to safeguard
our internal market. Will the Secretary of State to help you House, does he think that one third
of small businesses ceasing trade in this way amounts to the version of trade? If not, perhaps you could
11:45
Rt Hon Hilary Benn MP, The Secretary of State for Northern Ireland (Leeds South, Labour)
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There are other small businesses
that are able to trade, the point
that he needs to recognise is, if some small businesses manage to move their goods from GBE to Northern
Ireland, and others can do so. In the end, it is an individual
business decision for a business where it chooses to sell its goods. It is the Windsor Framework that applies not the Northern Ireland
Protocol. In the Windsor Framework represented as he will accept a very significant improvement on what was
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there before. Liberal Democrat spokesman. Thank you Mr Speaker. The
11:46
Dr Al Pinkerton MP (Surrey Heath, Liberal Democrat)
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Thank you Mr Speaker. The Federation of Small Businesses has
said that SMEs in Northern Ireland continue to face disruption under the Windsor Framework. More importantly, and sadly, the
government has failed to effectively commune a cake that are posted benefits of jewel market access so
far. If jewel market access is indeed a competitive advantage, as
so many people across this House think it can be and should be, can the Secretary of State specifically identify what concrete benefits it
is providing to Northern Ireland right now? How does he respond to
the great criticism of firms across the UK who are burdened with red tape and the fog of uncertainty?
11:47
Rt Hon Hilary Benn MP, The Secretary of State for Northern Ireland (Leeds South, Labour)
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I was very interested by that observation in the FSB report
because, as the House will testify, I spend a lot of my time extolling the virtues of that jewel market access that Northern Ireland has got
as a result of the Windsor Framework. And I meet companies as I
travel around Northern Ireland to tell us about the benefits that they
are feeling of it. I think we all of us have a responsibility to extol the virtue of jewel market access because in my experience, businesses
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can see an opportunity that allows them to sell more products, will seize it with both hands. Question number three Mr Speaker.
11:47
Q3. What recent discussions he has had with technology businesses on investing in Northern Ireland. (904878)
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Question number three Mr Speaker. Thank you Mr Speaker. With permission I will answer questions
11:47
Fleur Anderson MP, Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Northern Ireland Office) (Putney, Labour)
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permission I will answer questions three, five, and 12 together. I take every opportunity to promote investment into Northern Ireland and
our tech companies in particular. I really spoke at the big data conference in New York, and at
London tech week, highlight our cutting-edge companies in Northern Ireland. And I held a roundtable with tech business leaders and
visited a company in Belfast last week to talk about the Industrial
Strategy and ways that we can boost investment and growth.
11:48
Steve Yemm MP (Mansfield, Labour)
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Thank you Mr Speaker. I thank the
Minister for her answer. I wonder if
the Minister might outline good reasons for technology companies to invest in Northern Ireland? And what she has done to promote that great
opportunity?
11:48
Fleur Anderson MP, Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Northern Ireland Office) (Putney, Labour)
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I welcome the opportunity to
promote Northern Ireland tech companies here in the chamber today. More than 1500 international
companies have set up operations in Northern Ireland. They tell me it is
Northern Ireland. They tell me it is
the government support, the strong working between the government and the Executive, it is jewel market access, to the unique concentration of tech companies and the academic
support from Ulster and Queen's University. But above all it is the people. Northern Ireland has a workforce with industry ready skills
and innovation in their DNA.
11:48
Emily Darlington MP (Milton Keynes Central, Labour)
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Thank you Mr Speaker. Does the Minister agree with me that the strength of the Northern Ireland
tech sector means it can play a huge part in becoming an AAI superpower supported by this government?
However, as we heard in the Northern Ireland select committee, chaired by the honourable Member from that
Tower, there is a huge link between
online safety and rates of domestic abuse we are seeing in Northern Ireland. Can she comment on how we
can absolutely support and develop the sector while keeping women and girls safe?
11:49
Fleur Anderson MP, Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Northern Ireland Office) (Putney, Labour)
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We know that violence against women and girls is an epidemic, and online safety is an important part
of that. Coupled with Northern
Ireland being an AI superpower, as she rightly says, there are opportunities here for AI companies was not I have met many of them, and
they have the chance to work on the tech to ensure that perpetrators are court, justice is done, we make sure
that online safety as well is taken extremely seriously. The Industrial Strategy, the work it will do to
promote AI work with the new AI Growth Zones can ensure that we lock
that in.
that in.
11:50
Neil Coyle MP (Bermondsey and Old Southwark, Labour)
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Tech businesses are huge in my central London constituency. I recognise for the UK to do well we need London to continue thriving and
for Northern Ireland and the rest of
the country to succeed as well. Can the minister assure me that the full benefits of the new Industrial Strategy will support companies in
Northern Ireland and that this government is generating business opportunities for every corner of the United Kingdom?
11:50
Fleur Anderson MP, Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Northern Ireland Office) (Putney, Labour)
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The Industrial Strategy is good
news for Northern Ireland. It is a bold long-term plan to give businesses and investors the
certainty they need to thrive. The
eight sectors of the strategy map well with Northern Ireland's world- class strengths including advanced manufacturing, cyber, defence, creative industries, life sciences,
and financial services. Each of
these, there is increased UK-wide funding opportunities, and in Northern Ireland there are specific funds on cyber security, advanced manufacturing, and £30 million of
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that all important R&D investment for innovation. Thank you to the Minister for
11:51
Sorcha Eastwood MP (Lagan Valley, Alliance)
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Thank you to the Minister for responses. Northern Ireland is indeed open for business and I'm delighted at the companies that are expressing investment in my
expressing investment in my hometown. Would he agree that the Dublin II Belfast economic corridor
that takes in my constituency is going to play a key part in this, and that is a huge opportunity for
investment?
11:51
Fleur Anderson MP, Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Northern Ireland Office) (Putney, Labour)
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Belfast is already at the heart of the U.K.'s Industrial Strategy on cyber and tech. That is leading in
the world as well. The government has a bold vision to be by 2035 one
of the top three places in the world to invest, create, and scale up tech business. Belfast and the growth and
city deals at the heart of that is very much an important part. I have met businesses across Belfast and Northern Ireland that are leading on
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this, and it is very exciting to see. Thank you Mr Speaker. Does the
11:51
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Thank you Mr Speaker. Does the list Minister accept that poor road access is one impediment to
investing in Northern Ireland? It is another reason why we should see the
11:52
Fleur Anderson MP, Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Northern Ireland Office) (Putney, Labour)
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A 75 upgraded? The Secretary of State has already answer the question on the
already answer the question on the road. It is important we look at all the parts of infrastructure which are holding Northern Ireland back in
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any way and address those. Businesses in Northern Ireland
11:52
Mr Gregory Campbell MP (East Londonderry, Democratic Unionist Party)
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Businesses in Northern Ireland can take advantage of the logistics,
would the Minister agree that one area in my constituency is the
available land base, it has a seaport close by, and airport next to it and does she think it is an excellent location for such a hard
and tech businesses?
11:52
Fleur Anderson MP, Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Northern Ireland Office) (Putney, Labour)
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The member is an excellent representative for his constituency, and the opportunities that are
there. I'm sure that his plea and his bid has been heard here today.
11:53
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Thank you Mr Speaker. As chair of the select committee and also as
chair of the group for ITV, last night we hosted an event in
night we hosted an event in
Parliament where we had ITV and UTV.
What conversations you have with public sector broadcasters like ITV about future investment in Northern Ireland?
11:53
Fleur Anderson MP, Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Northern Ireland Office) (Putney, Labour)
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The role of so many different
types of business including public sector broadcasters, but also tech companies, fintech, cyber-security,
and other advanced manufacturing are all part of the ecosystem in
Northern Ireland which is so strong. I think it is the fact that
I think it is the fact that
broadcasters can talk to it, advanced many factors can talk to others, it makes Northern Ireland such a fantastic place to invest in.
I'm glad that has been highlighted here in the House of Commons today.
11:53
Sir Ashley Fox MP (Bridgwater, Conservative)
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Thank you Mrs vigour. Britain leads the world in the gene editing
of crops. This technology enabled farmers to produce disease and drought resistant crops, reduce
costs, and increase food production. The UK-EU agreement means Britain
has to follow EU rules on sanitary
and phytosanitary laws. Will the Minister give the house an assurance
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that the agreement will not slow that technology in Britain? That is why the Secretary of
11:54
Fleur Anderson MP, Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Northern Ireland Office) (Putney, Labour)
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State has been extolling and making clear how important the SPS
agreement is. We are not taking our foot off the pedal in any way towards that. It is not only agri- science will also life sciences that
are really leading the way for
Northern Ireland, for the UK and across the world today. We want to make sure we continue to support them in every way we can.
11:54
Rt Hon Hilary Benn MP, The Secretary of State for Northern Ireland (Leeds South, Labour)
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Question four Mr Speaker.
Finance Minister to discuss funding. The government will provide Northern
Ireland with a record settlement of
£19.3 billion per year on average. It is the largest in the history of devolution. The executive will also continue to receive over 24% more
per person in line with their independently assessed level of
need.
11:55
Noah Law MP (St Austell and Newquay, Labour)
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Thank you Mr Speaker. Does the Secretary of State agree that record
funding for Northern Ireland reflects this government's broader commitment to fairer funding across the UK, including in areas like
Cornwall where there are seasonal pressures, historic underfunding and these are finally being recognised? Any income would recognise the
opportunity to further shape our own future to have a level of devolution
closer to that enjoyed in Northern Ireland.
11:55
Rt Hon Hilary Benn MP, The Secretary of State for Northern Ireland (Leeds South, Labour)
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The spending review settlement does indeed reflect the government's
commitment to provide resources right across the United Kingdom. The
money made available for Northern Ireland means, one year ago, people
were saying there was going to be a financial and fiscal cliff edge. No
one is saying that now.
11:56
Gurinder Singh Josan MP (Smethwick, Labour)
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Thank you Mr Speaker.
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That is very bad taste is no need to run through.
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to run through. Thank you Mr Speaker. The funding provides vital investment for many
amenities across Northern Ireland in recent years. Can the secretary of state confirm that the local growth
state confirm that the local growth fund will give sectors the long- awaited security they need?
11:56
Rt Hon Hilary Benn MP, The Secretary of State for Northern Ireland (Leeds South, Labour)
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awaited security they need? My honourable friend will have noticed the funding made available
for local growth. Of course as part of the spending review, discussions on the fiscal framework will be taken forward by my right honourable
friend, the Chief Secretary to the Treasury, and the Department of
Finance, to talk about things like the review. And capital borrowing by the Northern Ireland Housing
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executive. Thank you Mr Speaker. Whether in the Stoke-on-Trent and the West
11:57
Gareth Snell MP (Stoke-on-Trent Central, Labour )
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the Stoke-on-Trent and the West Midlands or the communities in Northern Ireland, the spending review anticipates helping those
with good jobs and industrial
improvements. Can the Secretary of State set out how the spending review will help improve the industrial base in Northern Ireland?
11:57
Rt Hon Hilary Benn MP, The Secretary of State for Northern Ireland (Leeds South, Labour)
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The Spending Review gives a
Northern Ireland Executive more funds to disperse as it sees fit. It
comes alongside the publication of the Industrial Strategy. The funds which the government is making
available, and the £30 million that will come to Northern Ireland
through UKRI. So there is funding available, and there is great wealth
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talent and potential in Northern Ireland to make the best use of it. Thank you Mr Speaker for top what
11:58
Jim Shannon MP (Strangford, Democratic Unionist Party)
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assessment has the Minister made on the impacts of Barnett funding on health Northern Ireland? Given that
health levels falls below the
required level teacher. It is important we have the funding for health, can the secretary of state
outline what it will be?
11:58
Rt Hon Hilary Benn MP, The Secretary of State for Northern Ireland (Leeds South, Labour)
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The government makes available funding through the block grants to the Northern Ireland Executive. The
object will know it is for the Northern Ireland Executive to decide how it distributes the money between
all of the needs in Northern Ireland including health, were of course there are significant pressures. But
the public services transformation funding, the last government made available, is now beginning to be
used to reform some of the way in which the health service works.
11:58
Alex Burghart MP (Brentwood and Ongar, Conservative)
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Shadow Secretary of State.
spending review settlement for the Northern Ireland Office explicitly
covers the Finucane inquiry. So far the government has refused to say
how much money has been set aside for that inquiry. Will the Secretary of State please tell the House how
much does it expect, does the government expects the inquiry to cost?
11:59
Rt Hon Hilary Benn MP, The Secretary of State for Northern Ireland (Leeds South, Labour)
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The Finucane inquiry is beginning
its work now. It will publish as is
normal statements of expenditure it is engaged in for top it depends how long the inquiry lasts and what
evidence is taken. The honourable Member can rest assured that he will receive another in due course as the
process unfolds.
11:59
Alex Burghart MP (Brentwood and Ongar, Conservative)
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The government has had a Spending Review stop it must know how much it intends to spend. There will be a line in the treasury accounts set
aside for the Finucane inquiry. I don't understand why the Secretary of State find it so hard to tell
House how much we expect to spend. Similarly the government must know how much compensation it expects to pay Gerry Adams following its inextricable decision to drop the
appeal that we lodged in the case. We have repeatedly pressed the government to legislate to prevent
that compensation from being paid.
The government has dragged its heels. This morning policy exchange has published an excellent new
report legislating about Gerry Adams which sets out a clear legal
solution. The government has nowhere further to hide. They finally do the right thing?
12:00
Rt Hon Hilary Benn MP, The Secretary of State for Northern Ireland (Leeds South, Labour)
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I would say to the honourable gentleman he needs to keep up. As I answered a Parliamentary Question
yesterday in which I made it clear
that we will deal with the issue that arises because of the application of the Katoto principle
in the Supreme Court judgement of 2020 which the last government could not sort out. We will deal with it
in our forthcoming legislation and I
in our forthcoming legislation and I
12:00
Rt Hon Gavin Robinson MP (Belfast East, Democratic Unionist Party)
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Can I commend the secretary of the at least that? He answered the
question yesterday and on a day when the Labour Government were prepared to take money out of the pockets of
the most vulnerable, at least they had the courage to show Gerry Adams
would get none, so thank you. Can I ask him not to ignore the warnings of the Federation Of Small
Businesses you were explicit in the report that the Windsor Framework is fracturing the internal market of
the UK.
That is cause for concern. On the topic of the Spending Review,
he was asked if the capital being available was additional or not and
he knows the blue book has a flat line for the next four years for what was it?
12:01
Rt Hon Hilary Benn MP, The Secretary of State for Northern Ireland (Leeds South, Labour)
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It is in addition.
12:01
Rt Hon Gavin Robinson MP (Belfast East, Democratic Unionist Party)
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The blue book has a flat line for the next five years but talking of
economic growth, he knows there is commitment for enhanced investment in Northern Ireland. When do they
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believe the businesses of Northern Ireland will benefit from that? Abbasid caliph Al-Ma'mun that if the right honourable gentleman will
12:02
Rt Hon Hilary Benn MP, The Secretary of State for Northern Ireland (Leeds South, Labour)
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the right honourable gentleman will bear with us, I hope you will see
progress in the not too different future. -- The IOC to the right honourable gentleman.
12:02
Prime Minister's Question Time
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I would like to say to the gallery welcome to the representative from Jordan. We now
come to Prime Minister's Questions.
12:02
Rt Hon Sir Keir Starmer MP, The Prime Minister (Holborn and St Pancras, Labour)
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This Saturday...
who can cheer the most and I have never known one Prime Minister get
never known one Prime Minister get as much cheering. as much cheering.
They were quite right too. This
week marks the 77th birthday of the NHS and I want to begin by thanking the dedicated NHS staff for their
service. In the 77th year, I am proud that this Labour government
has delivered 4 million extra appointments, 1700 extra GPs, and the lowest waiting list for two
years.
The Labour Party is proud to
be the party that created the NHS. Tomorrow, we are announcing the 10 Year Health Plan to build an NHS fit
for the future so that in the years and decades to come, we can still proudly celebrate the anniversary of
the NHS. May I also wish England and Wales the best of luck in the
Wales the best of luck in the
women's euros and congratulate the under 21 squad of for retaining the
euros.
In addition to my duties in the South, I will have further such meetings later today.
12:04
Paul Waugh MP (Rochdale, Labour )
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When this government extended free school meals to 500,000 more
children last month, a working mother told me it would save for
£500 a year and said she was over
the men and only Labour would have done this. Does the premise to agree
that people voted for the Labour one year ago not just for change but for
Hope and that cutting child poverty is the moral mission of this government, to help every child in the country?
12:04
Rt Hon Sir Keir Starmer MP, The Prime Minister (Holborn and St Pancras, Labour)
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I am proud of extending free school meals for 500,000 children in
Laura's. We are proud of giving
children the best start in life and the task force visited Rochdale
recently and will continue to back parents like Laura and we've already
opportunity to congratulate the member for Rochdale for helping the
member for Rochdale for helping the
12:05
Rt Hon Kemi Badenoch MP (North West Essex, Conservative)
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There are
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opportunity. It has been a difficult week for
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It has been a difficult week for the Prime Minister. Let's start with something simple. Can the Prime Minister tell the House how much the
12:06
Rt Hon Sir Keir Starmer MP, The Prime Minister (Holborn and St Pancras, Labour)
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Minister tell the House how much the welfare bill is going to be?
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Let me start by saying that the free school meals matter on this side of the House. In relation to
Balfour, last night we delivered a bill which ends mandatory reassessment of those with severe
reassessment of those with severe disabilities. That is the right
disabilities. That is the right thing to do. It re-balances universal credit, which is long
universal credit, which is long overdue, and it said that the pathway for progress. It's
pathway for progress. It's consistent with the principles I set out to write - if you can work, and
you should.
The state should provide help if required and the system does
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not do so. If you cannot work... Usual voices, same names, please, it is too early to leave the
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chamber. If you cannot work, you must be
supported and protected. The reformed welfare system we are putting in place will be better for individuals, the taxpayer, the
economy.
12:07
Rt Hon Kemi Badenoch MP (North West Essex, Conservative)
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economy. I don't think the Prime Minister watch what happened in the House yesterday. The bill was completely
yesterday. The bill was completely gutted and it was a U-turn in the middle of the debate, removing
clause 5. Where was he? The reason he cannot answer the question is because he knows it does not save
money and will cost millions. He is the first minister in history to
propose a bill which would save money and ended up with a bill that costs money.
Can the Prime Minister
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tell the House how many people it will get into work if it does not save money? It gives me the opportunity to
12:07
Rt Hon Sir Keir Starmer MP, The Prime Minister (Holborn and St Pancras, Labour)
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It gives me the opportunity to say we have started changing the
say we have started changing the Jobcentres and investing in support back to work with the Trail Blazers scheme which is doing what she asked, letting people back into
work. It will help people back into
work and of course the Timms review is ongoing. What will not help getting people back into work and
will not help control the costs is voting to keep a broken system. That
is what they did last night.
Everybody in this House accepts that the current system is broken. It
invites the question, who brought
it? They broke it. Last night, they
voted for the status quo. The broken system is the quality and it will not help individuals, the taxpayer,
and certainly not the economy.
12:08
Rt Hon Kemi Badenoch MP (North West Essex, Conservative)
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I will tell him what we did on
welfare. Why are they laughing? They do not know. My party delivered the
biggest reform and got record numbers of people into work
including millions of disabled people. And we cut the deficit every
year until Covid. The fact is we are not scared of doing difficult things
on this side of the House. We got people back into work. He forgets
that since the election, since he became Prime Minister, an additional 1000 people per day are sailing onto incapacity benefit, 50% more than
incapacity benefit, 50% more than
us.
-- signing. Astonishingly, because of the mess they made yesterday, sickness benefits alone
are set to rise to £100 million, on his watch. He cannot reduce that
now.
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We have had a run in before and I do not want any more. I can hear your voice every time.
your voice every time.
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I will start again. Sickness benefits are set to rise to £100
benefits are set to rise to £100
benefits are set to rise to £100
He cannot reverse it. It is because of U-turn. You signed the amendments until the bill was gutted. He said he would take difficult decisions
he would take difficult decisions but in reality he is too weak to get anything done.
12:10
Rt Hon Sir Keir Starmer MP, The Prime Minister (Holborn and St Pancras, Labour)
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anything done. I will tell them what they did to the welfare system, they broke it.
the welfare system, they broke it. It is the same as the NHS. What did they do? They broke it. The same
with the economy - they break everything that they touch. And now
she describes the broken system that we are trying to fix. What does she
do? She voted against fixing the system that they broke. They voted
last night for the system that is keeping 1 million young people not
learning or earning and that is a disgrace of their system.
They voted
for a system where we have 3 million people out of work on ill-health and they voted for that. We are fixing it and clearing up their mass, just
like with the NHS and the economy.
12:11
Rt Hon Kemi Badenoch MP (North West Essex, Conservative)
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He has got some brass neck. As he
read the papers this morning? That bill will achieve nothing. It is a pointless waste of time and is proof
that he does not have a plan. I will tell the House what will happen, in November, the Chancellor will put up
taxes to pay for his incompetence. On this side of the House, we know
that you cannot tax your way to growth. People out there are
frightened. These are the same people who cheered when they talked about the National Insurance rise
and the jobs tax.
Why are they complaining now? Can he reassure
people by ruling out tax rises in the Autumn Budget?
12:12
Rt Hon Sir Keir Starmer MP, The Prime Minister (Holborn and St Pancras, Labour)
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She knows that no Prime Minister or Chancellor rates the budgets of the future at the dispatch box. She
knows that. She talks about growth. For 14 years, we had stagnation. I
am pleased to show the progress that we have made. I will update the
House. Last week, Amazon put on £40 billion of investment into the country, one of the biggest investments of our time. That brought inward investment to £120
billion in the first year of this Labour Government. I can tell the
House that business confidence is at its highest for nine years.
Longer than the whole time that the Leader
of the Opposition has been in Parliament. Figures this week
demonstrated and shortly had the fastest growth in the G7 in the first quarter of this year. What a
difference to the mass that they made. That is the difference Labour Government mix. Government mix.
12:13
Rt Hon Kemi Badenoch MP (North West Essex, Conservative)
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He talks about jobs. Unemployment has risen every month since he took
office. Look at what is happening. This man has forgotten that his
welfare bill was created to plug a black hole created by the Chancellor but instead they are treating new
ones. -- Creating. She looks
absolutely miserable. Labour MPs... She looks absolutely miserable.
Labour MPs... They can point as much
I feel like but the fact is Labour MPs are going on the record, saying the Chancellor is toast and the
reality is she is a human shield for his incompetence.
In January, he
said that she would be in place until the next election. Will she really?
12:13
Rt Hon Sir Keir Starmer MP, The Prime Minister (Holborn and St Pancras, Labour)
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I know that she certainly won't.
I was cheered up when she asked questions in response to a statement because she always makes a complete mess of it and shows how irrelevant
and not serious they are. She talks about the black hole - the left a
black hole of £22 billion in the economy and we are clearing it up. I am really proud that in the first
year of the Labour Government we have free school meals, breakfast clubs, Chelsea, £15 billion invested
clubs, Chelsea, £15 billion invested
in transport in the Midlands.
Planning and structure is moving forward and be a billing 1.5 million
homes and the biggest investment in social homes. And the free trade
deals. There was the US trade deal on Monday and the tariffs came down
and that secured jobs at JLR and that is what we are proud of. that is what we are proud of.
12:14
Rt Hon Kemi Badenoch MP (North West Essex, Conservative)
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It is of for the chancel he could not confirm she will stay in place. This week marks the first
anniversary of Labour coming into
office. The whips cannot get them in the lobbies but can get them to
cheer at the right time. It has been
described as shambolic. I could go on. The fact is there has been mistake after mistake. There is no
plan to get people into work, to cut the welfare budget, there is no strategy, just a series of
humiliating U-turns like winter fuel and grooming gangs.
What is shocking
is if the other party in the House voted for even more welfare spending
yesterday. Those MPs behind them, the Liberal Democrats, Reform, and the Conservative party believe the
country needs to live within its
We know what we believe Mr Speaker.
But this is a prime minister who has U-turns on everything he has done in office. Including his own speeches because he does not know what he
believes. With left-wing Labour MPs now running the government, isn't it working people will now pay the
price?
12:16
Rt Hon Sir Keir Starmer MP, The Prime Minister (Holborn and St Pancras, Labour)
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Mr Speaker this is why she always cheers me up she talks about living
within their means having left a £22 billion black hole. She talks about the first year. I am really proud of our first year in government. We
promised two million extra NHS appointments, we delivered 4
million. A promise made on a promise delivered. We promise the biggest upgrade to workers rights in a generation within the first 100
days. Promise made promise delivered. We promise free breakfast
clubs, a promise made in a promise delivered.
Banning bonuses for water bosses who pollute our rivers, that
is the mess they left, a promise made and delivered. We created GB Energy, a promise made in a promise
delivered. The largest increase in defence spending since the last
Labour government, a promise made in a promise delivered. We are putting more money in the pockets of working
people particularly the 3 million lowest paid through the national minimum wage will stop a promise
made in a promise delivered. We are only getting started, the Chancellor has led on all these issues and we
are grateful to her for it.
are grateful to her for it.
12:17
Natasha Irons MP (Croydon East, Labour)
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Thank you Mr Speaker. Unlike the members opposite this government has not dragged its feet in banning the zombie knives, ninja style sword and
its efforts to tackle knife crime. In Croydon where youth crime has cast a devastating shadow across the communities, the police is running
as horrendous deemed this month to get these dangerous weapons of our streets. All the Prime Minister are jointly in commending the tireless
work of Croydon police officers and we outline what is governed is doing
to make sure the Met office has the resources it needs to protect neighbourhood policing and face unique challenges they are dealing with?
12:18
Rt Hon Sir Keir Starmer MP, The Prime Minister (Holborn and St Pancras, Labour)
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She is right to raise the importance of banning these despicable weapons. I know how much
he cares about this issue. The ban on zombie knives and machetes came into effect last year will stop and
the ban on ninja swords will come into effect this August. The Crime
and Policing Bill will increase penalties for illegal sales and give the police new powers to seize knives. Mr Speaker, I have to say
this, what did the party opposite do when we put that bill before the
House to take these measures? They voted against it.
Knife crime went
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up, it sought on their watch and they've clearly learnt absolutely nothing. Visa Ed Davey Liberal Democrat
12:18
Rt Hon Ed Davey MP (Kingston and Surbiton, Liberal Democrat)
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leader. Thank you Mr Speaker. Yesterday
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Thank you Mr Speaker. Yesterday the government was asking this house to vote for a bill which would mean
someone with the conditions like Parkinson's or multiple sclerosis would qualify for a Personal
Independence Payment today but someone diagnosed with the same condition in a few months time would
not. We all know that the cost of
welfare needs to come down, but that was not a fair way to do it. Until
he lost control yesterday, the Prime Minister was arguing for that approach.
Has he changed his mind on
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this or not? Mr Speaker, the Stephen Timms
12:19
Rt Hon Sir Keir Starmer MP, The Prime Minister (Holborn and St Pancras, Labour)
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Mr Speaker, the Stephen Timms review will take place, a very important review to look into this
important review to look into this issue. What we did to last night was end mandatory reassessment to those
with severe disability. I thought that he and his party cares about things like that. It is the right
thing to do and they voted against it. We have rebalanced Universal
Credit, long overdue. I think he believes that, but what did you do
last night, he voted against it.
We set out a pathway to reform PIP, something he argues for every week
but what to do do we have the chance, he voted against it.
12:20
Rt Hon Ed Davey MP (Kingston and Surbiton, Liberal Democrat)
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Mr Speaker, the House and his backbenchers will note he did not answer my question. Moreover if you
looked at our proposals for welfare reform for cutting down the bill, he would not be in the mess that he is
in. Moving on Mr Speaker, from
Hillsborough to Grenfell, the contaminated blood scandal to nuclear test veterans, the bereaved
and survivors of some of our country's most appalling scandals have come together to call for a
legal duty of candour, and the
secondary duty needed to make it practical and effective for investigations and inquiries.
Now
they are frightened that the government is watering down these proposals to such an extent that they would be toothless. So after
months of delay, can the prime minister reassure campaigners that
his Hillsborough Law will include a real legal duty of candour as he
promised?
12:21
Rt Hon Sir Keir Starmer MP, The Prime Minister (Holborn and St Pancras, Labour)
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Yes it will. As he may know, I have known some of the families from Hillsborough for many years now. I
met them over a decade ago. And know exactly what they have been through
and various other groups that have suffered similar injustices. With
similar follow-up which is an additional injustice on top of the
original injustice was not that is why we will bring forward a Hillsborough Law. It is a commitment I made. I have been talking to the
families recently personally myself in recent weeks to make sure we get
this right.
It is important we get it it will have a legal duty of candour.
12:21
Kim Johnson MP (Liverpool Riverside, Labour)
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Thank you Mr Speaker. The Prime
Minister visited my constituency in
2022 and told families, " One of my first acts will be to put the Hillsborough Law on the statute book. " He repeated the same promise
at conference last year, that the bill would be published at the
anniversary in April. It didn't happen. However, the government are now planning to table a watered-down version that does not deserve to be
named Hillsborough Law. After PMQs,
my honourable friend, the member for Liverpool West Derby will introduce the real Hillsborough Law.
Can the
Prime Minister finally honour his
promise and back the law in full? If not, why not?
12:22
Rt Hon Sir Keir Starmer MP, The Prime Minister (Holborn and St Pancras, Labour)
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I'm grateful to her for raising this and I remember well the visit
we had full stop this is a very serious issue. It is important that we get it right. I am fully
committed to introducing the Hillsborough Law including a legal duty of candour for public servants
and criminal sanctions for those that refuse to comply. It is
important we get it right full stop I have been personally engaged with families on this because as I say I have been involved and seen
firsthand what they have been through for over 10 years.
I first met them when I was Director for Public Prosecutions. It was a
consideration of what would happen. That was about a different issue actually was about the issue of great concern to them. We will bring
this forward full stop I just want to take the time to get it.
12:23
Rt Hon Stephen Flynn MP (Aberdeen South, Scottish National Party)
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Thank you Mr Speaker. In his victory speech last year, the prime
minister promised to end the chaos. Does he think the public still believe him?
12:23
Rt Hon Sir Keir Starmer MP, The Prime Minister (Holborn and St Pancras, Labour)
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Mr Speaker we have delivered more in the first year of a Labour
government that they have delivered in 20 years. Let me give him one
example. We have waiting lists, we said we would do two million extra appointments we have done 4 million
for the NHS in England. What a contrast where they have been in charge for that 20 years, Scotland doctors now saying in the past week
I think, that " The Scottish NHS is
dying before our very eyes.
" They should be ashamed. Their own public health minister is admitting that
health minister is admitting that
the SNP failure is costing lives. Scotland needs a new direction so it can bring waiting lists down in Scotland just like we have done in England.
12:24
David Taylor MP (Hemel Hempstead, Labour)
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Thank you Mr Speaker. Hemel Hempstead is a new town and was
built by the Labour government after the Second World War, provided decent housing to families like mine. Yet 80 years on, the number
one issue is a shortage of houses. I welcome this government's commitment
to build thousands of new homes. In my constituency, we are looking at a Hemel Gardens community scheme that
provides 11,000 of them. Does the Prime Minister agree with me that
this development needs to be a mix of genuinely affordable houses to buy, council houses to rent, be
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company by the right health, education, and road infrastructure? I totally agree with him to stop
12:25
Rt Hon Sir Keir Starmer MP, The Prime Minister (Holborn and St Pancras, Labour)
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I totally agree with him to stop it is projects like this that are essential to building the 1.5 million homes that we need. Whilst at the same time creating vibrant
at the same time creating vibrant and strong communities. In keeping with the Attlee legacy we are
supporting 47 locally led garden communities to deliver tens of thousands more homes. And of course
delivering the biggest boost to social and affordable houses in a
generation.
12:25
James MacCleary MP (Lewes, Liberal Democrat)
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Thank you Mr Speaker. On Monday
afternoon this week and three year old girl was usually injured after been hit by a car in New Haven in my
constituency. She is recovering well in hospital. Resident in New Haven
and nearby Sussex coastal towns a warning about how unsafe these roads are. Indeed the county council
submitted a fully costed plan for
safety issues on the A259 two government but funding remains blocked. The Prime Minister to
personally intervene to unblock the
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funding needed to make this road and surrounding roads safer to ensure this is never repeated? I am very sorry to hear of the
12:26
Rt Hon Sir Keir Starmer MP, The Prime Minister (Holborn and St Pancras, Labour)
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I am very sorry to hear of the incident that he quotes. My sympathies are with the family I
think I would send the best wishes of the whole House to the family and
to the little girl. He speaks about
this, I hear a lot about this road because I know it needs addressing.
I know how strongly this has been
being raised was a decision will be set up shortly to stop I think he has met the relevant minister but I
will ensure he is kept fully updated with development.
with development.
12:26
Olivia Bailey MP (Reading West and Mid Berkshire, Labour)
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Thank you Mr Speaker. I'm proud to represent thousands of people working in the defence sector. Ordinary people doing extraordinary
jobs to keep our country safe. I was delighted that the Defence Secretary recently joined me in my constituency to mark this government
£50 billion investment in the Atomic Weapons Establishment. Does the
Prime Minister agree with me that our commitment to defence sector investment is vital not just for a
national security but for jobs, opportunity, and growth in
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constituencies like Reading West? I pay tribute to her. She is a fantastic advocate for her
12:27
Rt Hon Sir Keir Starmer MP, The Prime Minister (Holborn and St Pancras, Labour)
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fantastic advocate for her constituents. She is right to highlight the important work by the
defence sector, in her constituency and right across the United Kingdom. We are investing £15 billion in a
sovereign nuclear warheads program. That will support nearly 10,000 jobs including many in her constituency.
That is the defence dividend in action, the historic boost to
defence spending reflected in good well-paid jobs across the UK.
12:27
Adrian Ramsay MP (Waveney Valley, Green Party)
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Thank you Mr Speaker. Given that the government appears to be in
listening mode, will the Prime Minister agree to scrap other measures that are pushing more
people into poverty, such as the
people into poverty, such as the
cruel two child in a fit cap benefit cap and what remains after yesterday's dog's breakfast of a
bill?
12:28
Rt Hon Sir Keir Starmer MP, The Prime Minister (Holborn and St Pancras, Labour)
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I don't want to be ungenerous with anything I listen to him and
his party. They were the ones that put an £80 billion unfunded tax commitment before the electorate at the last election. They are the ones
that talk about change and clean power but every single time there is
an infra-structure project or any change needed, they block it including their own constituencies.
12:28
Jo White MP (Bassetlaw, Labour)
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Thank you Mr Speaker. Whilst we all revere the football stars of the
past, many are struggling with welfare issues including organised
financial fraud. May I give the Prime Minister of this letter on player welfare from 303 former
players, local champions like John styles, international superstars
including Kevin Keegan and Graham Souness have signed it. Would he
agree to a request to meet group of ex-players cited in the recent letter to the prime minister, from
one of his heroes, Michael Thomas, when he played for Arsenal or Liverpool?
Liverpool?
12:29
Rt Hon Sir Keir Starmer MP, The Prime Minister (Holborn and St Pancras, Labour)
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May I start by congratulating Dawn on her recently received and deserved MBE. I remember Michael
Thomas very well, putting that goal
in in 1989 to take the lead. It was a fantastic victory. I have had the pleasure of meeting him and
discussing with him the very campaign he raises will stop I will
certainly meet again. Athletes have brought us so much joy, we should have proper support from their sporting bodies on health and
welfare we will ensure they do.
12:30
Steff Aquarone MP (North Norfolk, Liberal Democrat)
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I refer members to my role as a serving county councillor. July is
Care Month and Jane Austin told us the best place to convalesce by the
sea's chroma in my constituency. Thanks to Norfolk's Conservative
county council, it risks losing its convalescence facility for ever. Rio
pullman centres are what the NHS needs but the Tories are shutting it down. Will the Prime Minister ensure that the relevant Health Minister
meet with me and campaigners to discuss what can be done?
12:30
Rt Hon Sir Keir Starmer MP, The Prime Minister (Holborn and St Pancras, Labour)
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I thank him for raising this issue. In decisions around services are matters for the integrated care
board. And that means they are taken
locally. I'm glad he has raised this because we agree the sector does need reform and unlike the party
opposite we are investing in the sector, £4 billion of additional funding alongside dependent
commission to adult social. To
commission to adult social. To
12:31
Martin Rhodes MP (Glasgow North, Labour)
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Figures from the British transport police sure a staggering 47% rise in violence and public
order offences against rail staff between 2021-24. This epidemic was allowed to escalate under the previous government which failed to act while frontline workers were increasingly protectionist. The
supreme Minister agree transport workers deserve to do their jobs without fear and from the commitment
of the government to ensure companies are held fully accountable
for protecting those who keep railways safe and moving?
12:31
Rt Hon Sir Keir Starmer MP, The Prime Minister (Holborn and St Pancras, Labour)
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Shocking statistics and rail
staff work incredibly hard to keep the country running and people say.
Abuse and assault on staff is utterly unacceptable and we are taking measures to ensure that they
are safer and we want to approve the use of body cameras which have been
proven to reduce violence against staff by up to 47%. I take this
opportunity to thank the outstanding British Transport Police for everything that they do to support
staff and passengers.
12:32
Harriet Cross MP (Gordon and Buchan, Conservative)
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This time one year ago, farmers and many others across the country
were about to go to the polls and perhaps thought Labour for the first
time because they took the Prime Minister at his word that he and his party would never leave farmers in
the background again. Within weeks, the trust had been shattered by the
family farm tax. Farmers know how devastating that would be and so do the industry and so do we on these
benches and more of his own backbenchers do, too.
Following the U-turn on winter fuel payments and
the U-turn on grooming gangs and the many U-turns on welfare payments yesterday, will the Prime Minister
tell farmers across the country when it will be their turn for a U-turn
and when people scrap the family farm tax?
12:33
Rt Hon Sir Keir Starmer MP, The Prime Minister (Holborn and St Pancras, Labour)
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And they have people lining up,
farmers, to boot them out of office and long may they remain there. We put additional funding for farmers in the Budget and we are building
back for farmers and working on that and where they did not spend the money, we are spending it with
farmers.
12:33
Charlotte Nichols MP (Warrington North, Labour)
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Over 29,000 jobs are provided across the north-west including thousands in my constituency in a
globally leading centre of nuclear innovation. I welcome the new modern industrial strategy which will give
businesses the confidence to invest after years of economic chaos under
the last government. Can the Prime Minister outline how the industrial strategy will support growth in the nuclear sector which is vital for
energy security and creating thousand was highly paid, highly skilled and unionised jobs?
12:34
Rt Hon Sir Keir Starmer MP, The Prime Minister (Holborn and St Pancras, Labour)
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She is a champion of nuclear and I know how important it is to
thousands of her constituents. We are securing home-grown energy and driving down bills by unleashing the
Golden Age of nuclear and that includes the announcement two weeks
ago, small modular reactors, meaning jobs and investment opportunities across the country, including her constituency.
12:34
Victoria Collins MP (Harpenden and Berkhamsted, Liberal Democrat)
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The rushed changes to the welfare
bill left Parliament with whiplash and more importantly have left many
valuable people living in limbo, like those in my constituency who
are going to lose PIP will stop it is not right that in a society,
vulnerable people have to worry about what the government will do next. Does the Prime Minister understand that this has eroded
trust at a time when we need it most?
12:35
Rt Hon Sir Keir Starmer MP, The Prime Minister (Holborn and St Pancras, Labour)
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I think what would be better for building trust is an accurate description of what we are doing.
The terms enquiry is really
important. -- Timms report is important and we have a broken
system and that is not working of the system is not working for the taxpayer, the economy. We have to get on with reform and we will do it
in the way that we set out yesterday.
12:35
Peter Dowd MP (Bootle, Labour)
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I pay tribute to veterans from
the Royal Navy who are in the gallery today. A 50 needle fell to
his death from a multi-storey car park in Liverpool, in 2020. He was
one of many. -- A 15-year-old. He
was one of many who have died in tragic circumstances in my constituency and my multi-storey car park safety bill seeks to deal with
this. Will the Government look at this as part of a national suicide
prevention scheme? prevention scheme?
12:36
Rt Hon Sir Keir Starmer MP, The Prime Minister (Holborn and St Pancras, Labour)
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The answer is yes, we will. I thank him for raising it and I think across the House we all have tragic experience of suicide and our
thoughts are with David's family and
friends. We will conduct a call for evidence with regard to building
regulations and minimum guarding rates to make sure protections are in place to help prevent future tragedies.
tragedies.
Are concerned about the amount of applications granted for solar farms so can you give them reassurance we
so can you give them reassurance we will change the law and good agricultural land will be saved to produce food, as it should be? produce food, as it should be?
It is right that we do both.
We must support agriculture but people across the country are also
concerned about bills coming down. They went up under the last
government and the only way to get them down is on renewables, and that is what we are doing.
12:37
Jessica Morden MP (Newport East, Labour)
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Final question.
Centenary Action presented sashes
handmade by a team of women working out of Newport to every one of our
264 women MPs to mark today's 27th anniversary of the Equal Franchise
Act. Will the Prime Minister welcome this which celebrates the contribution women met in public
life? Does he agree that we must continue to break down barriers for
women on the way to achieving the
women on the way to achieving the mission of gender-equal Parliament.
12:37
Rt Hon Sir Keir Starmer MP, The Prime Minister (Holborn and St Pancras, Labour)
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It is really significant progress in this House to have so many women
MPs. I krivvy proudly saw 100 new female MPs elected, meaning it is
now at a record high. -- I am incredibly proud. This should be a
incredibly proud. This should be a
source of great posts on the anniversary of the Equal Franchise Act that we have this record number
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We
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We come We come to We come to the We come to the urgent We come to the urgent question.
12:39
Rt Hon Priti Patel MP (Witham, Conservative)
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We come to the urgent question. Them Priti Patel.
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Them Priti Patel. To ask the Minister for the Commonwealth of will make a statement on the ratification of the
statement on the ratification of the treaty on sovereignty for British
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Indian Ocean Territory. I thank the right honourable Eddie for the question. On 22 May,
Eddie for the question. On 22 May, the Diego Garcia Treaty was signed and icy Defence Secretary told the
and icy Defence Secretary told the House on the day of signature, it
12:40
Stephen Doughty MP, Minister of State (Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office) (Cardiff South and Penarth, Labour )
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House on the day of signature, it secures the strategically important military base on the island of Diego Garcia. The military base is essential to the security of the UK
and key allies including the USA and is essential to keeping the British people say. It is one of our most
people say. It is one of our most
significant contributions to the transatlantic Defence and Security Partnership. It enables operations across the Middle East, East Africa,
helping protect against threats and
has a unique strategic location.
The treaty ensures the UK remains incomplete operational control of
the Diego Garcia into the next century and there are robust
measures including a 24-mile nautical buffer zone where nothing can be built without UK consent, rigourous process for the wider
islands under strict ban on foreign security forces on the outer islands and a binding obligation to ensure
the base is never undermined. These robust proportions provide an
effective veto for the UK over any opportunity that presents a threat and they will categorically prevent
a series from compromising the base.
The treaty sets out to ratify, once both parties have completed relevant
to permitting processes, and this includes scrutiny in parliament and making the necessary due to domestic
law. The treaty was laid before the House under the usual process set
out in the Constitutional Reform and Governance Act and we welcome the
agreement in the other place which recognised the importance of ratifying the treaty to secure the base and the debate in which the peers rejected a cynical
conservative motion to block the ratification.
Before the treaty is
ratified, the government will bring forward primary legislation which will be scrutinised and debated in
the usual way and secondary legislation, as necessary. Ahead of ratification, the government will
make a ministerial statement in both
places, providing an update on the
Chagossian eligibility and then it
will enter on the first of the month, following the date on which both parties exchanged letters to confirm the process is complete.
This landmark agreement secures the future of the strategic military
base on Diego Garcia and there is also an important contribution to the Defence and Security partnership
that we hold.
There was no alternative but to act and, in doing so, we are protecting our interests
at home and overseas and if the Opposition do not recognise that fact, why did they start negotiating
in the first place?
12:43
Rt Hon Priti Patel MP (Witham, Conservative)
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There was a process of 21 days which is about to include and it is a disgrace that Labour have denied
this pace a meaningful debate and
vote on ratification. The Minister says we will get a vote on the bill but that is not the same as voting
on the treaty. Earlier this week, there was a debate in the House of Lords where the liberal Democrats
sided with Labour, backing this £30 billion surrender treaty which is
subsidising tax cuts in Mauritius.
Why can't we have a debate? What are
they afraid of? Are they concerned
about the impact of the unpopular tax rises? Why is so much money being handed over for a territory
that we own? Body that will force them into an embarrassing U-turn? Are they afraid MPs will do the
maths and see the money going to Mauritius will be at least £30
billion and not the £3.4 billion valuation claim that ministers talk about. Are they afraid that the
barefaced hypocrisy and poor treatment of the liberal Democrats will be exposed? The Minister said
there must be concerned about the future but they have been betrayed,
leaving any decisions on resettlement and support through the
trust fund in the hands of Mauritius.
With the legal case ongoing, will the Minister extend the process until this has completed
and will he admit that the bad deal was made weaker by giving up the
unilateral right to extend the lease on the place and giving the class to
operate sovereign rights? They are
so willing to finally admit this. Kindly confirm that there are no guarantees under current protections
will continue? There is too much lack of clarity around this with no
guarantees and security, on the
safeguarding, and answered questions about ratification requirements around the base, no guarantees that there will not be further attempts
to stop operations at the base.
And if there is a further attempt to
build nuclear weapons with the treaty and that will apply to the
Chagos Islands. He should scrap this treaty or at least have the courage to bring it here for a property bed,
12:45
Stephen Doughty MP, Minister of State (Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office) (Cardiff South and Penarth, Labour )
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I say this as someone who likes
and respects the honourable Lady but I am disappointed by the tone of these remarks. I don't know who
writes this stuff and whether it is performative politics of rhetoric, I
don't know. I should point out that
I have received and answered over 100 written Parliamentary Question from the honourable Lady. I have answered over 250 questions on this
deal and the process in total. We have had no less than six urgent
questions in this House.
We have had two statements from the government by the Foreign Secretary and the
Defence Secretary. I personally briefed the right honourable lady and answered many of the questions
in my office a couple of weeks ago in good faith and in detail. I was subjected quite rightly to robust
scrutiny not only from the Foreign Affairs Committee of this House but also from the international
relations Defence Committee in the other House and the international Arrangements Committee in great
detail on these issues. I don't know whether the right honourable lady and her team are not reading the
transcripts of the answers to the questions,, she might not like the answers but I have answered the
questions.
I've set out the position on costs, I said that the positional
security arrangements will stop I set up positions on the vetoes that we have. The fact is that this deal secures this space, secures our
national security, and that of our allies. It is actually right that it has had the proper scrutiny. There
will be a vote because there will be a vote on the legislation which we will be putting before the House in
due course. due course.
12:47
Phil Brickell MP (Bolton West, Labour)
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Thank you Mr Speaker. On a recent visit to the Foreign Affairs Committee to Washington I was struck by support expressed by the US
government for the deal to secure the long-term future of the military base on Diego Garcia. Alongside the
US, our Five Eyes allies support the deal. NATO supports the deal, India supports the deal. Does the Minister
agree with me that the benches
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opposite would do well to listen to our closest neighbours and allies instead of trying to play party politics with a national security? My honourable friend is actually
12:47
Stephen Doughty MP, Minister of State (Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office) (Cardiff South and Penarth, Labour )
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My honourable friend is actually right. National security is the top priority of this government. And
priority of this government. And working with our crucial allies including the United States is key to that. He is right to point out the supports gained through a full
and detailed agency process in the US for this deal at the highest levels of the Ms Rachel. The support from our Five Eyes partners and
India. The fact is this deal secures the base, it secures the capabilities and it would not have
been signed off if it did not do that.
12:48
Calum Miller MP (Bicester and Woodstock, Liberal Democrat)
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Liberal Democrat spokesperson. The shambolic process of securing the steel has left many questions
for the House. But the glaring omission has been the failure by
successive governments to properly consult the Chagossian people. For much of the history, Chagossians
have been denied notation on who governs them and their right to
self-determination. We now fear that in handing over the sovereignty of the islands to Mauritius, without
properly reflecting the interests of Chagossians, the government is only reinforcing that legacy.
The right
honourable Member criticises the actions of Liberal Democrat peers and the other place, yet it was only
the Liberal Democrats who championed those rights of the Chagossian people and secured a commitment from
the government to make statements to both houses on their approach before
ratification. In light of these shortcomings, it is wrong that the government has not brought forward the treaty to this house for scrutiny. The Minister reversed that
decision today and give parliamentarians opportunity to assess and vote for the deal?
12:49
Stephen Doughty MP, Minister of State (Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office) (Cardiff South and Penarth, Labour )
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Mr Speaker, I genuinely wants to
thank the honourable gentleman for the generally constructive way in which he and his covenant approached
this process. He is right to speak about the Chagossians, and as I pointed out many times, the
Chagossians interest in this matter has been at the heart of our discussions. We have the trust fund,
and visits again, and Mauritius will be able to start a program of
resettlement. He has heard the remarks made by my honourable Friend
in the other place on this in response to questions that his honourable colleagues raised.
We have been clear about what we will
do in that regard. I do have to do challenge the suggestion this treaty
has not received scrutiny. It has been receiving scrutiny in the
Foreign Affairs Committee and the other place and it has received scrutiny to Parliamentary Question's. So it is receiving scrutiny and it is right that it
does.
12:50
Tim Roca MP (Macclesfield, Labour)
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... The scrutiny, but I was really
taken by the questions he mentioned he had received from the honourable lady on the subject will stop can
you tell me how many questions he has received all other matters of global importance?
12:50
Stephen Doughty MP, Minister of State (Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office) (Cardiff South and Penarth, Labour )
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It is an important question he
asks. Since the treaty was late, I have had 50 written questions from
the right honourable lady. In comparison on Gibraltar I have had four, when you CRAG I've had two,
Poland I've had one. He is right it
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has received scrutiny. It is amazing the Minister had
12:51
Rt Hon Sir James Cleverly MP (Braintree, Conservative)
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those figures to hand. Thank you Mr Speaker. The
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Thank you Mr Speaker. The honourable gentleman who I have a huge amount of respect for keeps
huge amount of respect for keeps saying the government had no choice but to do this deal. I do not
believe that to be true. My successor, Lord Cameron, did not
believe that to be true which is why neither I nor he signed off an
agreement. So in detail, please will he explain to the House why he
believed that he had no choice including what body at what time with what jurisdiction?
12:51
Stephen Doughty MP, Minister of State (Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office) (Cardiff South and Penarth, Labour )
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Mr Speaker in the interest of time I will refer to the detailed evidence I gave in the House of Lords on this matter the other day
including the legal circumstances. He knows the risk to the operations to the base in the medium and short-term. And he recognised the
risk of a binding legal judgement which we believe to be inevitable stop his government knew that that
is why they started the process will stop you may not have been able to conclude the deal, I accept that,
they went to 11 rounds of negotiations because they recognised the importance of doing this deal to
secure the facility because it is so crucial to our national security.
We
put a national security first. We put securing this space first and that is met with the approval of the
United States and our Five Eyes allies.
12:52
Dr Scott Arthur MP (Edinburgh South West, Labour)
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Thank you Mr Speaker. I have to admit I'm rather confused because I
am sure that the opposition spokesperson was in the cabinet when the decision was made to start these
negotiations? I'm sure that is the case. I do think often we focus on
the military aspects of this deal, can the Minister confirm that this
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deal will end the dangerous irregular migration route into the UK? He is absolutely right. We
12:52
Stephen Doughty MP, Minister of State (Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office) (Cardiff South and Penarth, Labour )
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He is absolutely right. We already took action early before the conclusion of this deal to ensure
conclusion of this deal to ensure the route was closed down by the
memorandum of understanding with centre Lena. He is actually right on
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that point and that is why we have done this deal. Mr Speaker could the Minister
12:53
Sir Bernard Jenkin MP (Harwich and North Essex, Conservative)
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Mr Speaker could the Minister tell that house why does he think China supports this deal? Mr Speaker, I have been very very
12:53
Stephen Doughty MP, Minister of State (Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office) (Cardiff South and Penarth, Labour )
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Mr Speaker, I have been very very clear, United States supporters deal, our Five Eyes partners support
deal, our Five Eyes partners support the deal, India supports a deal. Mauritius was one of the few countries not to join the Belt and
countries not to join the Belt and Road Initiative. It is clear this is in the interests of our security and our lives otherwise the US would not have agreed to it in the first place.
12:53
John Slinger MP (Rugby, Labour)
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place. Clearly language like surrender
is inflammatory and inappropriate. Conservative members of this House
wax lyrical and make a song and dance about national security. I wonder if my honourable friend the Minister would remind them that on
their watch, our Armed Forces are
hollowed out with the army reaching its lowest size since the Napoleonic wars, and spending never once reached 2.5% on their watch. Isn't
it true that the Labour Party and
the Labour government are the party of strong defence and strong national security?
national security?
12:54
Stephen Doughty MP, Minister of State (Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office) (Cardiff South and Penarth, Labour )
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Mr Speaker, he is absolutely right, and whether it is the ambitious agenda for national
security and defence set out in the Strategic Defence Review, whether it is unity leadership that we showed at the NATO summit last week, whether it is securing are crucial
national security bases including Diego Garcia, this government is leading from the front and it comes
to national security. Quite rightly the brass neck of the other side of the hollowing out our Armed Forces, leaving the still undone and so the
other matters, I simply don't understand it.
12:54
Andrew George MP (St Ives, Liberal Democrat)
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I simply ask the Minister the same question I asked him when he
first came to the House on this issue, that is, in relation to the
cost consequences of this deal, he knows that the lions share of interest is in relation to the
military base in Diego Garcia. My question is, what contribution was
the United States making to the very
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significant costs compensating Mauritius? United States makes significant
12:55
Stephen Doughty MP, Minister of State (Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office) (Cardiff South and Penarth, Labour )
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United States makes significant contributions to Diego Garcia which
contributions to Diego Garcia which are crucial. They are much greater than the costs we will pay relation
to the space under this deal. They benefit the United Kingdom, the US, and our allies, and this is
priceless. This government will not scrimp on a national security.
12:55
Peter Swallow MP (Bracknell, Labour)
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The cost of this deal is equivalent to one quarter of a
percent of our defence budget and this is against the government that
has increased defence spending, the highest sustained increase defence spending since the Cold War. So when the Minister speaks to an
international friends and allies, what is their message about the work that we are doing to restore
confidence in national security and our reputation on the global stage? And what message should the
opposition take from those
conversations? I repeatedly hear a strong vote of confidence in our investment in national defence whether it is European partners or
whether it is European partners or United States.
When you hear about leadership and our ongoing support
for Ukraine which we agree on, but he asks about the value and the
he asks about the value and the costs. And I have set out the costs on a number of occasions. But it is
a fraction of 1% of our defence
a fraction of 1% of our defence budget who are there and it compares
favourably to other allies, including France who pay for their including France who pay for their base.
The ago Garcia is 15 times larger and the capabilities priceless.
12:57
Stephen Doughty MP, Minister of State (Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office) (Cardiff South and Penarth, Labour )
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The Minister quite rightly says
that the base in Diego Garcia is vital for national security which we
vital for national security which we all agree. The key issue is, what is
the notification that has to be given to the Mauritius government of the base being used for operational purposes? purposes?
Mr Speaker, my honourable friend
replied on this and I answer these
questions the other day. We do not have to provide notification in advance of the treaty refers to this
after, that is in the normal course of business.
I am clear that the
operational autonomy of this base
are secured under this deal.
12:58
Rt Hon Sammy Wilson MP (East Antrim, Democratic Unionist Party)
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It is amazing that you give up an
important security base without
being necessary to have to do so. Government will allow them to have
tax cuts we impose tax burdens on our own country for stop the
Minister stands there and says he does not have time to explain why it
was necessary to do so full stop surely the way to ensure we have
proper scrutiny of this is to have a proper debate or is he afraid that his own backbenchers once they hear the real story will find it as
difficult to walk through the lobbies for it as they did for the benefits bill yesterday? To work I
risk have respect for him but reject his assertion.
There is full support
his assertion. There is full support for the steel and full support from our allies in the United States and Five Eyes partners. And on the point
Five Eyes partners. And on the point about this, at no point did they say
they were planning to fund this deal with the money from income tax savings was the rationale for this
savings was the rationale for this deal is because our national security was at risk, and the operations of the base could not
operations of the base could not function as they did.
That is why the opposition started the negotiations and why be concluded them.
12:59
Rt Hon Dr Andrew Murrison MP (South West Wiltshire, Conservative)
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After yesterday's complete chaos, my constituents are bracing themselves for big tax increases in
the autumn. How does he think they feel when a the Mauritian government
crowing about virtually abolishing income tax in Mauritius thanks to
the largess he is about to pour them?
12:59
Stephen Doughty MP, Minister of State (Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office) (Cardiff South and Penarth, Labour )
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I am genuinely surprised by the comments from the honourable gentleman who is a former defence
minister, and indeed his own service will stop you will know the
importance of this space. You know the importance of securing it and you will know the risks to operations that were inherent under
the last government was not that is why his previous government started this process was top it is what we have concluded it. It is why in
relation to the cost, our costs for this deal broadly compatible to what
France pays for basing Djibouti.
This has more capability.
13:00
Dr Luke Evans MP (Hinckley and Bosworth, Conservative)
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In his response he quoted the answer from the Defence Secretary to
my question saying he had no choice. The reason for doing this is because you are worried that you might be taken to court. So you do have a
choice. The government could have a fight in the courts. The government
could then appeal that decision in the courts. Yet it has chosen not
to. And it won't explain why. That
is why this side of the House is so upset.
Could he set out what was the immediacy and why he and his
government won't go to that court, the tribunal he is so worried about,
to have that fight? If it gets shuts down, we on this side understand
that, we have a legal response ability to pay, we will. But we don't and we haven't had our day in
court as a country. That is a
13:01
Stephen Doughty MP, Minister of State (Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office) (Cardiff South and Penarth, Labour )
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I have to correct and because we
have had these in court on this
issue and he forgets to mention the Tribunal of the Law of the Sea, the
vote in the UN, and the other legal processes. It is our view and was the view of the previous government
and it was touch and inevitably legally binding judgement follow.
With such a key national security
asset, it is not responsible to leave it in this way. The responsible thing to do is secure the base, secure the base with allies, and that is exactly what we
have done.
13:01
Richard Tice MP (Boston and Skegness, Reform UK)
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China might support the terrible
deal but let me tell the Minister that the British people do not support the appalling deal to give away the strategic security asset
and P tens of billions of taxpayer money in the process and suffering
tax rises to pay for it in order
that there are tax cuts in Mauritius. Since the government is in the mood for U-turns, why don't
they do one on this terrible deal? they do one on this terrible deal?
13:02
Ben Obese-Jecty MP (Huntingdon, Conservative)
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I will not take lessons from the
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party that favours Vladimir Putin. The Secretary of State said with regard to the potential legal ruling
against us is that the most serious is the International Tribunal for
is the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea. How would there have been a binding legal judgement
13:02
Stephen Doughty MP, Minister of State (Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office) (Cardiff South and Penarth, Labour )
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because it is notable it has not been recognised since that
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statement. I mentioned a moment ago. The long-standing view of the UK is that
long-standing view of the UK is that it would affect the prospect of defending the legal position and sovereignty with such litigation. If
sovereignty with such litigation. If we chose to ignore binding
we chose to ignore binding judgements made against us, the effect on third countries and international organisations would have an impact for the operation of the base and the delivery of
national security functions. International organisations have adopted decisions based on the
adopted decisions based on the sovereignty of Mauritius and others would follow suit and that would affect access by air and by sea, the
affect access by air and by sea, the ability to control the maritime area around the base, and to support the critical national security function
critical national security function and the UK would likely face an
and the UK would likely face an order within a matter of weeks.
The position is clear and we have explained this and the previous
explained this and the previous government was aware. However much he shouts and does not like the arguments, the fact is that they are the facts.
13:04
Rt Hon Jeremy Corbyn MP (Islington North, Independent)
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the facts. Would the Minister confirmed that 40 years ago, the most disgusting
40 years ago, the most disgusting cynical injustice was done against the Chagos Islands and it was the
resolute campaign of the islanders, over decades, often alone with little friendship or support, that eventually brought the case into
international law and got a ruling
from the International Court of Justice which has brought about this situation. Instead of opposition parties obsessing with the twilight
of empire, shouldn't they think
about the injustice done to the people of the Chagos Islands and the
fact that, wherever these people are resident and regardless of their opinion, they do have the rate of
return? Will he give us some idea of what the attitude will be about the
right of residence, visit, and return to Diego Garcia itself, where
the majority have come from? They are people who have been badly
treated by history and are now being used as pawns by people who are more
interested in defending some strange notion of the twilight of empire rather than justice for those
people.
13:05
Stephen Doughty MP, Minister of State (Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office) (Cardiff South and Penarth, Labour )
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The primary purpose of the deal
was to secure the base one Diego Garcia a national security of the UK and of allies. He is right to point
out the situation regarding the
Chagossian people and it is on the face of the treaty and we recognise
the importance for them and he is well acquainted with that and we
will be starting visits, including Diego Garcia, and we have committed
to the members on the Liberal Democrat benches and in the other
place and we are listening to the
different Diego Garcia groups and trying to make sure that their interests are at the heart of this as we move forward.
13:06
Jim Allister KC MP (North Antrim, Traditional Unionist Voice)
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The Minister will be aware of the pending judicial review challenge
focused on the lack of consultation
with the Chagossian is. Why was there not fool an adequate consultation with the Chagossian people?
13:06
Stephen Doughty MP, Minister of State (Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office) (Cardiff South and Penarth, Labour )
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I will not comment on ongoing
judicial matters but as I have said that a number of times, negotiations were between the UK and Mauritius
are necessary but we recognise the importance of the island to the Chagossian people and that is why we
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set out these measures, the measures are set out ago, and they are being put in place. Point of water.
13:06
Points of Order James Cartlidge MP (South Suffolk, Conservative)
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Point of water. In answer to the honourable
member for St Ives, the Minister seem to reply that the US would
paint for a larger quantum of the
funding for the deal. I think he was referring to the operational cost but can I ask for confirmation that the US is not contributing to the
settlement?
13:07
Stephen Doughty MP, Minister of State (Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office) (Cardiff South and Penarth, Labour )
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If the Minister wishes to respond, I will ask him to do so.
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Perhaps it was the noise and shouting but I was clear the contribution from the US was two
contribution from the US was two operations on Diego Garcia and they are not contributing towards the
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are not contributing towards the cost of the treaty. That includes the discussion on
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That includes the discussion on the urgent question. Can the front
the urgent question. Can the front benches now change as quickly as
benches now change as quickly as
13:08
Michael Shanks MP, Parliamentary Under Secretary of State (Department for Energy Security and Net Zero) (Rutherglen, Labour)
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Thank you. We come to a statement from the Minister Of State for Energy. With permission, I will make a
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With permission, I will make a statement on the publication from the energy system operator following
the energy system operator following the review into the fire at the
North Hyde substation in March. This
was conducted jointly by the Energy Secretary and Ofgem in the immediate aftermath of the fire disrupted the power supply to over 70,000
customers including Heathrow airport which closed operations on 31 March
this year. Our from the grid was -- the power was restored quickly from
the grid to customers in the aviation sector due to the associated closure of Heathrow
Airport.
The Secretary of State for transport made a statement at the time where she committed the government would update the House as
soon as the relevant investigations had concluded and that is why I make the statement on the day that the
report was published by NESO. I would like to reassure members the
government is taking action in response to the report and will
consider the findings of the review and are committed to a government response to set out a plan on how the identified issues will be addressed to improve energy
resources.
Having reviewed the report, as I am sure members will agree, and deeply concerned that
risks were not addressed by a key
operator of the energy system,
National Grid Electricity Transmission. The asset should have remained out of service until mitigating actions were put in place
or the attitude have been carefully monitored until it could be -- the
asset should have been carefully monitored until this could take
place and appropriate action was taken about the severity of the risk at North Hyde.
This was probably because of the catastrophic fire in
March 2035. I spoke this morning to
NGET admit it clear that work critical assets must be prioritised
accordingly. Fire suppression systems must not be left inoperable. I'm pleased to see the regulator is taking swift action in response to
the findings and the opening unofficial enforcement investigation
into NGET and of general consider
potential breaches relating to the maintenance of the electricity
system at North Hyde. I spoke with Ofgem yesterday to express support
for the investigation and the planned audit of the National Grid critical substation assets which will be essential to understanding any other potential risks on the
network and ensuring that they are appropriately mitigated.
The report
appropriately mitigated. The report
also highlights that North Hyde Substation, built in 1968, is
subject to different design standards than newer sites built in the 1990s. There is not a physical barrier between the two transformers
at North Hyde, which allowed the
fire to spread. It's essential because it the risk caused by differing design standards across the Ella Pardy network particularly
as we move towards Clean Power 2030. And this will be a key component of
the government response.
The extent of the impact of the incident on Heathrow operations must come into
focus. Heathrow Airport Limited had their own review which was published
on 20 May and it investigated the circumstances which led to the port
ceasing operations for most of March 21 and the several recommendations in the review to further improve the
resilience of the internal electricity network and these are
Lane with the findings from NESO that it is the responsibility of Heathrow are not the National Grid to improve electricity resilience at
Heathrow.
Heathrow benefits from three separate supply points to the network and it is rare for any state
network and it is rare for any state
to have such network -- to have such a connection to the network and
Heathrow should consider investing in the distribution network to take advantage of the multiple supply
points. I welcome the continued and effective collaboration between Heathrow and the energy operators as part of the review. My Department and the Department for transport
will work to ensure the collaboration continues across these critical sectors about the instances
are rare, and there is a robust and
resilient system in the UK, there are wider lessons to be learned.
The
majority of recommendations made by NESO include improvements that could
be made across the sector and in collaborations with NESO, Ofgem and
other departments, we will look at the findings. We are also applicable
to wider government policy on resilience in the energy sector and
across other critical infrastructure sectors. Ensuring the protection and resilience of critical national
interest continues to be a key priority for government action already being taken. The government
has recently published a tenure of the structure strategy which is committed to strengthening resulting
standards across infrastructure and
-- 10-year strategy.
It will look at the new strategic approach to resilience and is the outcome of the
resilience review announced by the Chancellor in this place last year. My Department is taking steps already to enhance the current
approach to the designation of infrastructure in the energy sector and we have introduced specific
licence restrictions giving
responsibility for data gathering to NESO, ensuring our structure is as resilient as possible. We will work
with the cabinet of a son by the
government to develop a full response to the report and look at some of the cross-sector resilience challenges which have been highlighted, particularly given the
importance of the energy sector for so much of national interest.
In
closing, I want to restate that Great Britain continues to have a little bit energy network and while incidents like this are rare, it is
essential that we learn the lessons
and we must improve resilience. The government has set out plans for how we will continue to do so. I would
like to thank NESO for carrying a bit apprehensive of you and the
report shows the value of learning from past emergencies like this. The
newly established functions of NESO will enable the government and the
energy sector to fully understand the risks and proactively ensure that Great Britain continues to have a reliable energy supply which is
critical to all of society.
I commend the statement to the House.
13:15
Rt Hon Claire Coutinho MP (East Surrey, Conservative)
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I welcome the right honourable lady back to her place in the House and I called the shadow Secretary of
State.
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I feel older, wiser, and significantly more sleep deprived. I thank the Minister for the statement
thank the Minister for the statement and I also thank NESO for their work. The report is clear there have
work. The report is clear there have been serious failings from the National Grid to fix an issue that
National Grid to fix an issue that was known about for many years. What is important is what happens now.
is important is what happens now. First of all, I would ask the Minister, who made the decision at National Grid to defer the critical
maintenance of the transformer in 2022? He said he would hold them accountable.
Can I ask him how? He
accountable. Can I ask him how? He spoke about bridging the conditions and so what are the penalties for doing that and what are the
doing that and what are the accountability mechanisms he will use? Second, the report says the
use? Second, the report says the site at North Hyde did not meet modern standards for physical barriers between transformers. Can the Minister confirm he has asked
the Minister confirm he has asked the National Grid to review the substations built before the legislation was put in place Quetta
legislation was put in place Quetta finally, what steps will he take a look at the energy sector, particularly in light of the
particularly in light of the heightened geopolitical risk that we
heightened geopolitical risk that we The key message we should take from the report on the Heathrow blackout
is important to an energy security in national security.
And it is his
Secretary of State was playing with fire. One week after the blackout hit Heathrow, Spain and Portugal
gave us a stark warning of what happens when countries failed to protect the energy security. Public
transport is down, payment systems down, millions of people unable to cook, travel, or contact their
families. Tragically, people lost their lives. In the case of North
Hyde, the blackout affected schools, the London Underground, Lincoln Hospital, and 70,000 customers, some of whom had to move out of their
homes.
That is the price you pay when you don't take energy security seriously. It is not a nice to have,
energy is a basic need. And yet this government is putting our energy at risk. The National Security Strategy
they published just last week had 12 mentions of climate but not a single mention of the risk that China poses
to our energy system. Last year our
intelligence services warned that Chinese sponsored hackers working to
disrupt and destroy critical info structure in the event of conflict.
And yet, the Secretary of State is
rushing to make Britain dependent on Chinese solar panels, on Chinese rare earth, on Chinese batteries in
just five years time. We have seen China limit the export of critical minerals in their trade war with the
minerals in their trade war with the
US. We have seen switches found in Chinese inverters. The US intelligence services have warned us about the risk of surveillance
devices in Chinese wind turbines. I first wrote to the Secretary of State eight months ago asking him to
publish an assessment of what his targets mean for our reliance on Chinese imports.
He hasn't even
bothered to reply. If the Secretary of State wants to hand over the keys of our energy supply to the Chinese Communist Party should come to this
House and explain why. We are also
lucky enough in this country to be surrounded by our own gas fields. But the Secretary of State does not
care. This is a man who would rather import gas from Norway, from the
very same fields in the North Sea that he is banning Britain from
using.
This is a man who is blocking off any contingency plan that
Britain might need in a crisis. I don't say this lightly Mr Deputy
Speaker but this is a man putting a national security at risk. Today we are talking about the first transformer fire in a decade this
country need not even bother to turn up. That is the problem. Secular
state might prefer to be in Zille or Beijing whether he is today we should be here to explain himself because, as the former head of MI6
said, he is pursuing an energy policy that is quickly crazy when it
comes to national security.
I want clean energy from nuclear, from the
next generation of British innovation but first and foremost I want energy that keeps the lights on
and keep bills down. This government is going to leave us typically reliant on foreign imports, from China, Norway, Qatar, anywhere long
as it's not Britain. So any Esso
will do their work we must do his work as well. Alongside the work of the North Hyde Review can confirm we will come back to the House and
update the House against the energy risks in this country?
13:20
Michael Shanks MP, Parliamentary Under Secretary of State (Department for Energy Security and Net Zero) (Rutherglen, Labour)
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I was going to start, and it will regardless of the rest of that speech by warmly welcoming her back
to her place as that shadow Secretary of State was I will miss sparring with my Scottish colleague
though I'm sure we will still have opportunities to do so. The right honourable lady might come to Miss the lack of sleep at home rather
than the noise in this place but she is welcome back for top she is on to
take the last few months to write a wrapup speech on a whole range of issues I'm glad to give her the
opportunity to pontificate on any of those things.
But let me stick to the questions related to the statement delivered today. She asks about the role that the National
Grid has played in this. Ofgem's open enforcement investigation into
this incident to get to the bottom of what National Grid has done or not and whether there are possible breaches of licence, that
investigation should now take its course. There are clearly serious questions to answer and that is the point I would put to National Grid
today. I've asked for an immediate response and the actions they are taking, and assurances that there
are not further maintenance backlog they have not acted on.
I expect by the end of this week. Ofgem have
also instructed a wider audit of maintenance work across the energy
system which will identify if there are similar issues to this. On the
point of being held accountable, clearly I will wait for the outcome of Ofgem's investigation. It is
responsible of the Ofgem is the regulator to determine if they are in breach of licence conditions, and
what the appropriate action should be. We will wait for the findings to
come through.
In terms of the physical barrier, she raises an important point. Really there is a difference between when some of the
infrastructure was built and the different standards at different times will stop I think there is a
wider review we need to make to see what is possible with some of the infrastructure. It won't always be
possible to build them to the standards we now expect. Everything that is being built now is being built to the highest standards. I
want the same assurances she has called for anything that was built previous to those is safe clearly.
On the wider resilience questions, I'm not going to get into a back and forward and frankly there are some quite ludicrous claims that the
right honourable lady made I hope this isn't an indication of the tone
we can expect in the years ahead because there are some difficult decisions for us all to wrestle with full stop there is a really
important question about delivering
energy security, and an increasingly uncertain well. That is why we are sprinting towards clean power to remove the volatility of fossil
fuels from our system for top she opposes all of that investment.
There is also a critical role to play in upgrading the network infrastructure across the country
which a party also opposes. So there are some searching questions I think for the Conservative party, who of course went out of this info
structure for 14 years. About what their role as was but also about
what parts they want to play. It is easy to shout from the sidelines and accusations will stop it is far more
useful and important for a party that was in government for 14 years and now the official opposition to, some credible questions about how we
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deliver the energy system of the future. We will get on with delivering it. Chair of the energy select
13:23
Bill Esterson MP (Sefton Central, Labour)
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committee. It beggars belief that no action
was taken after the risks are identified in 2018 at the
identified in 2018 at the
substation. The NESO report highlights problems and externally
between organisations. It draws attention to energy Company is not
knowing Heathrow and a 10 to 12 hour arrangement for switching supply and National Grid not appear to know
Heathrow was a customer of North Hyde Substation. It is a matter of
immense luck that the explosion and
fire took base at 11 PM so there was no one present.
Because otherwise this would have been a very different discussion with people
having died. The Minister
highlighting the unacceptable lack of action by National Grid. Will he
ensure proper oversight and information sharing internally at National Grid, externally between
organisations, so that we have the safety and resilience in our
national energy, where it applies to Critical National Infrastructure and
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beyond? I thank my honourable friend for
13:24
Michael Shanks MP, Parliamentary Under Secretary of State (Department for Energy Security and Net Zero) (Rutherglen, Labour)
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I thank my honourable friend for his questions. Firstly on the point of joining up, I think he is absolutely right. The response I've
absolutely right. The response I've seen from National Grid identifies that as one of the points they will take away around how they join up
information sharing the data in the
systems and how we make sure this is followed through. It is important learning not just what National Grid
across the energy system, what other transmission owners do but also what government does around sharing information where we can.
There's a
lot of learning and recommendations we take forward. On the question of Heathrow, much of this was
identified in the Kelly review which looked specifically at the
operations full stop on the question of whether there was a single point of failure at Heathrow. Heathrow of
course is one of the biggest consumers of electricity in the
country. It is also one of the most important piece of critical national info structure. I think it's important they reflect on this report today as well and take some
lessons from it.
It has shown, this is a lesson for everyone, the importance of investing in
electricity resilience, preparing for the worst even if we think of as
a low chance of actually happening, and this final point I would be to agree with, it is in all their
interests to spend time, effort, and investment in making sure that our energy system continues to be as
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resilient as it possibly can be. Liberal Democrat Frontbench Spokesperson.
13:26
Luke Taylor MP (Sutton and Cheam, Liberal Democrat)
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Thank yous the Deputy Speaker. This report is an utterly damning assessment of a national resilience.
assessment of a national resilience. This time through decay but also a lack of readiness as part of the climate crisis changes dynamic. Old
equipped operating at higher temperatures just as climate control
and air conditioning needs is at its peak. The British people will be
rightly alarmed that the problems were known as long ago as 2018. There is a much wider point here, beyond just the technicalities of
this failure.
The resilience of grand critical structure has been
elected for far too long. I came to this place as an engineer for
precisely the sort of reason, we are short-term are narrowing our vision.
We can't expect to remain a world leader in infrastructure if we cannot future proof and simply invest in the resilience of our
assets. It might not get pulses racing to build and maintain infrastructure there is no ribbon to
cut when this happens will stop but
we should all get behind it if we are serious about bittersweet of the
report outlined there were so many missed opportunities to fix the issues at the substation.
We all have to look simply to Ofgem's consequential investigation into the
National Grid wanted is published. It is not just about grid
resilience. This time it was a fire caused by faults, the next time it
might be a deliberate cyberattack or an act of terrorism which could have a more disastrous impact. We must look beyond the short-term, the
strategic and long-term plan to join at national infrastructure, safe and reliable for all. The government must bring about a strategy and
quickly to review the resilience of all similar assets including every UK airport which are also critical to our national economy and our
society.
With that in mind I will
ask the Minister to confirm whether an assessment has been made of the likelihood of repeat of this incident both at Heathrow and at all
other places of Critical National Infrastructure? And whether the
government is taking the opportunity to finally pick up the National Infrastructure Commission report
from 2020 and 2023, which was ignored by the last government, and 2024 which will not implement it quickly enough, to implements
standards and frameworks for resilience for key sectors such as aviation, telecoms, water, and
energy.
This will future proof our ageing infrastructure to make it
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reliable and safe. I thank the judgement was questions. I think it's actually
13:28
Michael Shanks MP, Parliamentary Under Secretary of State (Department for Energy Security and Net Zero) (Rutherglen, Labour)
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questions. I think it's actually right to broaden this not just to electricity and not just to North Hyde but wider questions around national critical infrastructure. I
would also just say, he is right around investing in the future. I
always think grid networks sets the
heart a little faster that is me, and I think investing in it is what this government is doing to stop
this week Ofgem announced record investment, and I hope all sides of the House will reckon as importance of investment.
On some of the points
around wider resilience, the work
that The Cabinet Office is doing, it has been too much of a fragmented
landscape across government. It is right that leads government department response or for a number of key risks, and the National Risk
Register, the departments have expertise but if the information is
not shared coherently we do increase the chance of not getting the
answers right. We are also looking at how we share data across all sectors of Critical National Infrastructure within government.
You will say more about that in the resilience action plan which The Cabinet Office is working on at the
Cabinet Office is working on at the
moment. And of course the 10 year 10 Year Infrastructure Strategy is also about how we will invest in the long-term info structure that keep the country running.
13:30
Dame Chi Onwurah MP (Newcastle upon Tyne Central and West, Labour)
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Chair the science led committee.
electrical engineer, and is the chair of the Science, Innovation and Technology Select Committee, I am
amazed that such a critical and large part of our Critical National
Infrastructure in the National Grid was not properly maintained for
seven years. And that Heathrow, the busiest airport in the world, had a
single point of failure. Could the Minister say to me, he's outlined
some of the processes and procedures which will follow, but could he say
to me how he intends to improve the
standards of engineering, maintenance culture and excellent in our Critical National
Infrastructure, which have clearly been allowed to fall significantly under successive Conservative
13:31
Michael Shanks MP, Parliamentary Under Secretary of State (Department for Energy Security and Net Zero) (Rutherglen, Labour)
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Firstly, on the question of Heathrow, it is important to say
that Heathrow had multiple routes into its electricity network fee, in
fact, it is unique, and this report
and the processes that were identified in the review, it will
give Heathrow airport limited pause for thought on how the network is
configured and how they can adapt to situations. This is an incredibly rare circumstance but the whole
point of resilience and planning for these moments is that you plan for the thing that you think is unlikely
to happen but will have impact if it does happen, and Heathrow closing is one of that category.
On the second
point, I think she is right to highlight this point. I want to be
careful not to prejudge the review because there is something to be
said for standards changing over time, maintenance backlogs having to
be met, and if the issue is that maintenance hasn't been carried out, that is an issue we will take
forward, but if it is just pieces of infrastructure that have been
subject to standards that have changed over time, we have a wider question around how we can adapt
that for future standards, so we will look at all of these points, but the resilience of the electricity system is incredibly
robust.
When you do everything we can to make it more robust and
particularly for instances like this, do not have quite such a significant impact as they did on 20
March.
13:32
Sir Bernard Jenkin MP (Harwich and North Essex, Conservative)
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Can I follow upon that and ask the Minister if he will undertake to
have a full and frank and open discussion with the relevant
directorate within his own department about what his department has learned from this exercise from
this disaster, and in particular, what exercises must be undertaken,
tabletop or virtual, to practice
resilience in the event of future such failures because I think my right honourable friend is right to
one about the increasing fragility of energy security in this country,
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and there is plenty of informed opinion that supports that view. I thank the gentleman for the
13:33
Michael Shanks MP, Parliamentary Under Secretary of State (Department for Energy Security and Net Zero) (Rutherglen, Labour)
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I thank the gentleman for the point. I have spoken to colleagues on these questions who are
on these questions who are constantly looking and we review the processes which is right. Also,
working outside of government in breaking down the silos that have
been there before so that we are coordinating with different parts of government that have different responsibilities, but we will push
to do more of that. The question of exercises important. We had a significant exercise on this government that looked at response
to a significant power outage, we
are putting recommendations to that, but more exercise is useful, and I would separate here the response to
the infrastructure itself failing which is what we now to investigate,
but that review did set out that Heathrow's response was in line with their response plan, that the
outcome was not what any of us would have wanted, goes to a wider
question about the infrastructure at Heathrow, not so much the plan that was put in place so there are two
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slightly different things but they are both important. I would like to thank the
13:34
Ruth Cadbury MP (Brentford and Isleworth, Labour)
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Minister for bringing this statement today and I would like to thank any
are so for this damning report.
Heathrow Airport Limited's power setup internally virtually guarantees hours of disruption in a
scenario like this, and on 21 March, that meant over 1/4 of a million
passengers were affected, airlines lost significant revenue for which
they will not get compensated, and countless time critical freight
loads were also affected, yet in Spain and Portugal, airports didn't
close when those countries had full
power outages.
So, by any definition, Heathrow airport surely counsels critical national infrastructure as it undeniably
requires operational continuity. I
know the Minister confirmed the airports responsibility for its own power resilience, so does the government itself have a role in
ensuring that end-to-end, power supply and critical national
infrastructure and the risk is robust and that risks like power outages like these are actually
managed adequately.
13:36
Michael Shanks MP, Parliamentary Under Secretary of State (Department for Energy Security and Net Zero) (Rutherglen, Labour)
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I think my friend for the question and to any ESO who have
looked at this, but on the question
of Heathrow, I think there are lessons to be learned for Heathrow, and they will be learning those lessons, and I am in communication
with the transport secretary who has responsibility for Heathrow as a
piece of critical national transport infrastructure. The one thing that
is worth saying is that it's backup generators did operate in the way
they were supposed to, but Heathrow is a huge place of infrastructure, and it is not intended that those
would continue to run beyond landing
plan safely and other things that go with critical systems within the
airport.
The question Heathrow has to answer is that they have three points of electricity generation coming into the power station, and
the way that network is configured is clearly a question for them to look at and the wider question of
the resilience and their ability to adapt to situations like this is something they will take forward. The government has important roles
and we will do all we can to make sure that National Grid is doing their bit, that the distribution
operator is doing what they need to
do and that they are meeting expectations we would expect from our most important piece of transport infrastructure.
13:37
Graham Leadbitter MP (Moray West, Nairn and Strathspey, Scottish National Party)
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The report exposes issues, but
the government's response was wanting as well. On the Monday
following the outage, there was a 3DO conversation with Heathrow with
no assessment with the National Grid. Can the Secretary of State
assured house that sufficient lessons have been learned to ensure
that the power supplying has said that the government is not left without answers, and additionally,
members will understand the phrase
that it takes such a serious outage.
There are shockingly poor risk management.
13:38
Michael Shanks MP, Parliamentary Under Secretary of State (Department for Energy Security and Net Zero) (Rutherglen, Labour)
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I didn't realise in my statement earlier that the honourable gentleman was now the SNP energy
spokesperson, so I welcome him to his place and I hope you bring the same customary sunshine that his
predecessor did to deliberations in this place. Can I firstly say that
the incident itself, clearly there are lessons to be learned from the
way the energy infrastructure worked on the 20th and 21st of March and Heathrow in the configurations the
internal network and how that works.
I think the incident is when we want
to avoid by all costs, but actually, the process was carried out safely.
Passengers were informed that things were kept to a minimum, but if an airport such as Heathrow closes,
there will be disruption, so I don't take the criticism of the handling from it from the gentleman. He is
right about how we make sure that we are regularly auditing the processes of maintenance works taking forward.
The three transmission owners in the UK have a responsibility for doing
that, and that is regulated by Ofcom, and they regularly check on this.
In the second part of the
review that they have announced is to specifically look at whether
those mountainous backlogs have been processed, and how we can make sure this process is happening and that
we don't think sitting on a list without being delivered. without being delivered.
13:39
Rt Hon John McDonnell MP (Hayes and Harlington, Independent)
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I was there on the day. This was a huge fire, a massive fire. 200 of
my constituents were evacuated from their homes during the night. Smoke following them down the street. This
could have been a bigger disaster if
it hadn't been for the firefighters
who courageously went on site, the help they got from the council, but also the backup services in the NHS,
so I want to place on record that I hope the houses congratulations and
the admiration for what they did.
The constituents want to be
reassured, and this report demonstrates the catalogue of
failures of the identification of a problem in 2018. This is seven years
on. I welcome the honourable lady back, and I just say that sleep
deprivation can affect the memory as well. It was her party in government
for most of this period, and I am worried now that, again, sites like
this could be very easily targeted by terrorist activity. So, we need a
process of reassurance, and the recommendations set out in terms of what they do to ensure the
resilience is there, it has to take into account that the government has
a role in driving through this program and recognising that we
can't rely on some of these other agencies without a real government thrust of leadership but also
securing accountability because they do not want other areas to
experience what we did that night.
experience what we did that night.
13:41
Michael Shanks MP, Parliamentary Under Secretary of State (Department for Energy Security and Net Zero) (Rutherglen, Labour)
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I'm sorry that I didn't say at the start of my statement that he is absolutely right to recognise the
role that emergency services to on the night, and also the engineers
who worked in incredibly difficult circumstances to try and get things
reconnected as possible. He is right
to say that. I think there are very serious questions to answer here, and I hope that came through my
statement. It certainly came through in the conversation I had with National Grid earlier.
We are
clearly seeking urgent assurances that the work that should have been
done has been done, but also, there is no other situation similar to this. It is always taken forward a serious way with two reviews in the
National Grid itself, the other into the wider energy system to make sure there are other energy systems to
learn. I completely agree with the point that the government does need to be front footed on this and take
a real leadership role in driving us forward.
We can't lead it to individual companies to mark their
own homework. We are doing that, and Park that is doing work across government, but will also soon be
chairing a new group that brings together everyone who has responsibility for critical national infrastructure and energy systems to make sure the energies,
cybersecurity, and other threats to an infrastructure are taken
seriously, but that actions are taken to make sure we don't have a repeat of this in the future.
13:43
Richard Tice MP (Boston and Skegness, Reform UK)
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This substation is probably one of the most important in the country
and yet this damning report uses the word a catastrophic failure of
maintenance. And therefore, surely, we must ask the question, actually,
given the National Grid also failed earlier this year to recognise how close we came to a national
blackout, we have to ask the question, are they grossly negligent
and as the Minister still have full confidence in the management of
National Grid?
13:43
Michael Shanks MP, Parliamentary Under Secretary of State (Department for Energy Security and Net Zero) (Rutherglen, Labour)
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I think the gentleman may be slightly confusing to things, the
national energy system is not part of National Grid. It was made into a publicly owned company by the
previous government and introduced by us when we came into government,
so they are responsible for managing the energy system. It operates the
electricity network in England, so I think these two things are slightly different. He is right to highlight
the scale of this future, and that is the point of me giving statement today and why actions have been
taken and will be followed up on in a serious way.
We did not come close
to a blackout and it is important to say that there is a lot of misinformation about a particular
set of statistics which I think misunderstood by people. We did not.
We have never come close to that, and in our history, we have never had a national power outage, the aim
of all of the work that we do is to build for a safe and resilient system as we can, so when
circumstances like this to happen, we need to account for the fact that accidents happen.
We have done everything we can to have
mitigations in place but to make sure that is down to a fault or a
failure of maintenance or anything else, then we make sure that never happens again.
13:45
Tom Collins MP (Worcester, Labour)
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As with any serious incident, this had multiple causes that were
both operational and in design. I
urge the Minister to make sure that these supply not any distribution sites but energy storage sites will
be have an absence of storage going forward. He mentioned a rightful redundancy and flexibility in our
systems and the single points of failure. That applies to large pieces of infrastructure but is
harder with our distributed infrastructure around
telecommunications, for example, so we need to adopt diversity in our energy system.
Does he agree with me
that we need to be making sure there is widespread availability of multiple energy sectors to see a
lecture today backed up by hydrogen
13:46
Michael Shanks MP, Parliamentary Under Secretary of State (Department for Energy Security and Net Zero) (Rutherglen, Labour)
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Can I thank him for his point and he always reminds me how much he
knows about these things, and it is hugely welcome. He is right. There are wider lessons to be learnt right
across the system in both our large infrastructure but also the grid
which has many more power stations than we've had in the past in many different forms. There is less
storage which is becoming
increasingly important. With regards to telecoms, in the wake of storms we had earlier this year, we took
forward a number of actions for how we can make the system more
resilient.
One was that our use as a country is changing. Are very few
people now have access to traditional copper wire phones. This has an immediate impact on people's
has an immediate impact on people's
lives. I recently met with the Minister for telecoms to discuss this issue, and we will be working together with Ofcom and operators to
ensure that telecoms infrastructure is as resilient as it can be.
13:47
Points of Order Rt Hon Liz Saville Roberts MP (Dwyfor Meirionnydd, Plaid Cymru)
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That includes the discussion on the statement. Changeover, please.
Point of order.
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The means to request briefings on
urgent matters, this is particularly pertinent for the motion today on
pertinent for the motion today on Palestine Action. That he advised me how I am to arrive at such an
how I am to arrive at such an unformed decision when my briefing
13:48
Rt Hon Sir Roger Gale MP (Herne Bay and Sandwich, Conservative)
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was refused this week? I thank the honourable lady for
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I thank the honourable lady for giving me noticed on her order. She will understand this is a matter -- this is not a matter for the chair.
this is not a matter for the chair. She is put on record a considerable matter. I trust the frontbenchers
have taken notice.
13:48
Points of Order Rt Hon Jeremy Corbyn MP (Islington North, Independent)
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Following the point of order
you've just heard, can you consult with the speakers office about any
process that can happen between now
and the start of the debate so that the three organisations listed can
be voted on separately, because I think that would be a proper way of members of the house expressing
their views?
13:48
Rt Hon Sir Roger Gale MP (Herne Bay and Sandwich, Conservative)
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I thank him for his point of order. I'm afraid that his request
is simply in procedural terms not
possible. The capture is not responsible -- the Chair is not
responsible for the grouping. The motion will be put to the house as
on the Order Paper. Any further
points? We now come to the 10 minute Rule Bill. Rule Bill.
13:49
Ten Minute Rule Motion: Public Authority (Accountability)
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I booked a move that leave be given to bringing a bill with
regards to public statements and
officials. To define a public law duty for enquiries and
investigations, to enable victims,
to create offences, to provide funding for victims and their
relatives, and for connected
purposes. On 15 April, 1989, I entered Liverpool Stadium as a 16-
entered Liverpool Stadium as a 16-
13:51
Ian Byrne MP (Liverpool West Derby, Labour)
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year-old. Little did I know, I was walking into national disaster that
walking into national disaster that left 89 men dead. It was a disaster
left 89 men dead. It was a disaster
left 89 men dead. It was a disaster caused by police failure. Like so many others, I was just a working
many others, I was just a working class lad who happened to be there. Because of that, I, like so many
Because of that, I, like so many others, was subjected to a decade- long web of establishment denial.
It
long web of establishment denial. It shaped the course of my life and it's the very reason I stand here
today. We've all witnessed the bravery, determination and anguish of the Hillsborough families and survivors fighting tirelessly for
survivors fighting tirelessly for truth and justice in the face of repeated state obstruction. We never
repeated state obstruction. We never saw revenge or ask for -- we never
saw revenge or ask for -- we never sought revenge or ask for special treatment. We just wanted the truth about what happened to our loved
about what happened to our loved ones.
Instead, we were met with decades of silence and lies. Some of
decades of silence and lies. Some of those tireless campaigners, those giants of justice are in the house
today watching as we fight once again to end the very injustices
they have endured for over three decades. Police officers new who was responsible. They knew where
accountability the, and yet light --
lie after lie was told. Inquest and enquiries, immediate briefings, supporters were blamed for deaths of
supporters were blamed for deaths of
their fellow fans.
We were never know what we will never ever forget
-- we will never ever forget. Will families struggle to get funds for legal representation, those responsible were shielded by this are -- some of the finest legal
are -- some of the finest legal
minds in this country. I remember vividly someone who was seriously injured that they fundraising in the local pub for the Hillsborough
Justice Campaign. A grassroots
organisation which was powered by ordinary people, not the Treasury.
Grieving families fight for justice whilst the institutions responsible
were protected by a system designed
to shield itself.
This was not a fair system. This was a system where
the establishment treat ordinary
people as an inconvenience. We must
teach schoolchildren about Hillsborough. It must not be buried, it must be understood. It must never
be repeated. When I speak to
students about the truth... That's what those families are still faced with today. It is unjust Hillsborough. For decades, we have
seen the same institutional playbook used time and time again to cover up
used time and time again to cover up
hostile briefings and injustice until people simply give up and pass away.
Grenfell, Manchester Arena, the Post Office Horizon scandal,
infected blood, Covid-19, and so
many, many more. Each time, the same
expressions on the faces of the devastated families. Each time,
those battling the system designed to protect itself. Each time it
happens. Today, we have the power to
change that. Is the parliamentary read for the Hillsborough Law, I'm
proud to introduce this legislation. I'm proud but also deeply, deeply disappointed because this bill
should already be in law.
In 2022, Keir Starmer stood before the people of Liverpool at the Labour Party
conference and pledged, and I quote, one of my first acts as per Minister will be to put Hillsborough law on
the statute book. He said the same
again as Prime Minister in September 2024. Not a Hillsborough law but the Hillsborough law. That pledge filled
our heart with hope. It promised an end to the culture of denial and
delay, a decade of deceit. Make no mistake, this today is the
Hillsborough Law.
The one drafted introduced in 2017, the one shape by
the families for the families, which
includes a statutory... It creates
mechanisms so that state coverups
are much harder to conceal and truth is harder to bury. This bill is for the 97. It is also for the victims
of every other state failure, and every other family that might in the future face the number of being left
alone to fight through injustice.
The government brought forward a watered-down version, not the
Hillsborough, law that the Prime
Minister promised.
It fell short because it had no legally binding
duty come in the provision for funding of enquiries and loopholes
allowing public bodies to avoid disclosure. This was followed by a family listening day where ministers
hear directly from the families of the bereaved, including Hillsborough families. Those families made their
views crystal clear. Their
expectations were even clear. The
report was titled All or Nothing. Yet, the government deliver nothing
of what was promised. That bill was thankfully and rightfully shelved but we understand a new replacement
bill could be imminently introduced still, still without the provisions of the Hillsborough Law.
What does
of the Hillsborough Law. What does
that say about the lessons learned? This is not rooted in legal
complexity, it is rooted in self- preservation. It is being led by
those with most to lose, senior officials and institutions that fear
scrutiny. Let me be clear. This law
will not weaken public institutions. It will strengthen them. It will protect the vast majority of decent,
hard-working public servants, those who seek the truth. It will deliver
justice more swiftly.
It will
quicken enquiries. This legislation is right here. It is written. It is
ready. It requires no new drafting
and no more stalling. What it requires is political will. Just as
we, 166 MPs from across this house
signed a pledge supporting this and that cross-party reflects the will of the public. They do not want another whitewash. They want
integrity and they want action. Let me close with this. The law cannot bring back the 97, it cannot erase
the decades of pain or the trauma inflicted by callous lies and
institutional neglect, but it can This from happening again and it can restore some of the faith lost, not just in the system but the very idea
of justice.
So today, can I say loud
and clear for the Prime Minister :
don't let the promise fade away. I call on the Government to back this
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bill, the real Hillsborough Law, and I commend it to the house. The question is that the
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The question is that the honourable gentleman the member for Edinburgh have leave to bring in his
Edinburgh have leave to bring in his bill. As many of that opinion, say
bill. As many of that opinion, say "Aye". Those in the contrary, say "No". The Ayes have it. Who will
Ian Ian Byrne.
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Public
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Public authority Public authority accountability bill.
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bill. Second reading, what day? July
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Second reading, what day? July 11. The clerk will now proceed with the orders of the day.
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Armed Forces Commissioner Bill, consideration of Lords Amendments.
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Now. The government motion to insist on amendment to a and disagree with
on amendment to a and disagree with amendment to be and to see in lieu of that amendment.
14:01
Motion: Motion to approve the draft Armed Forces Act 2006 (Continuation) Order 2025
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of that amendment. Thank you. Before I start, I would like to place on record my
would like to place on record my thanks to all those honourable and right honourable members who supported Armed Forces Day events at the weekend the length and breadth
14:02
Luke Pollard MP, The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Defence (Plymouth Sutton and Devonport, Labour )
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of our country. The Secretary of State had the privilege of attending
State had the privilege of attending in Cleethorpes and I spent time with
in Cleethorpes and I spent time with the community in Plymouth how to see the fantastic turnout of not just Armed Forces personnel, their
Armed Forces personnel, their families, veterans and the charities and organisations that support them. Meeting and hearing from service
Meeting and hearing from service personnel and their families at this important moment of recognition for
important moment of recognition for everyone in this house and the great service and those in the military
provide for the nation.
I am disappointed that the Armed Forces Commissioner Bill has returned to
Commissioner Bill has returned to this house. The last time we were here, a full month ago, I explained that the bill already delivers what
that the bill already delivers what the other house had inserted. And therefore disappointed that the
therefore disappointed that the amendments named from Baroness Goldie seeks to replace the
government amendment with another which I'm afraid is deeply flawed amendment and I will explain why in my remarks here. I would like to be
my remarks here.
I would like to be absolutely clear that we are all in agreement on the intention behind
agreement on the intention behind the Lords Amendments. Defence personnel must feel empowered and
protected to come forward with their concerns, and I absolutely agree
that we need to address and eliminate toxic behaviours and
cultures in our Armed Forces. This government is committed to doing that. It is the whole reason we are shining a light on the welfare
matters in our and legislating for an independent champion in the Armed Forces Commissioner.
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And I commend the Minister and government for bringing this forward and I understand the issue. I spoke
and I understand the issue. I spoke to the Minister just beforehand. There are also and protected family
There are also and protected family members which is necessary. I have a complaint ready to hand the Minister
complaint ready to hand the Minister is facilitated by family members watching the effect on their loved
one, so does the Minister not agree that it is right and proper that loved ones have a mechanism to
ensure the right thing is done?
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ensure the right thing is done? I do agree with him that it is precisely for that reason that the government is insisting on our amendment, not accepting the
amendment, not accepting the opposition into the other place because the opposition amendment does not include family members and
does not include family members and I agree with him that having loved ones, family members for the purpose of the wording of the bill included
of the wording of the bill included within the remit of the Armed Forces Commissioner is an important new
Commissioner is an important new step for providing not just the opportunity for members in uniform to raise a general service welfare
to raise a general service welfare matter but also for the immediate family members as defined in the
secondary legislation that will accompany it, so I thank him for
that intervention.
I agree that there is a lot more we can debate on these matters, and there will be an
opportunity during the passage of the Armed Forces Bill, but I would say to all members that I am
concerned they going round again on this matter only holds up delivery of a key element that is used to
tackle the very issues this amendment is seeking to address, namely holding up the establishment
of an Armed Forces Commissioner, a key manifesto commitment for defence. The longer this bill is
prevented from being law, the greater the service we do to our Armed Forces and their family.
I
sincerely hope that we can today send a united message from this house that we do not wish to delay
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this vital legislation any further. I am incredibly proud of our
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I am incredibly proud of our Armed Forces and our relationship with them and sent Helens. The Duke
with them and sent Helens. The Duke of Lancaster paraded through St
of Lancaster paraded through St Helens town centre and we are incredibly proud. With the Minister agree with me that we need to get on
agree with me that we need to get on with this now so we can show a united front, speak with one voice and give them the support they need?
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and give them the support they need? I thank him for placing on record the military events in his constituency in St Helens. It is so
important that we recognise the local links and ties so many of our military units have to localities where they recruit from, where they
where they recruit from, where they are based on where they serve, but I agree with his point that the time
agree with his point that the time is right now to passes legislation, get it into law, and allow us to
get it into law, and allow us to move to a situation where we can have an Armed Forces Commissioner able to deal with the issues raised
by our people and their family members.
The government has taken on board the important debates in both
board the important debates in both houses and proposed amendments to a witch this house previously agreed to. This amendment honoured the
spirit of the noble Baronesses
amendments from the other place and went further than her proposals, delivering concrete legal
protections that were not included in the amendments that we have back before us today. We are seeking to
reinsert that better amendment again. This was an amendment made
early in the process and in good faith following discussions in cooperation with the opposition in
the other place.
We had hoped, given the strong cross-party support for the bill and clear argument in favour of the amendment that this
would enable us to conclude proceedings. Protection of people wishing to raise a concern anonymously and build trust and
confidence with the Armed Forces and their families in a way we cannot
envisage would be achieved by the proposed amendments we have before
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us today. I was very happy to serve on the bill committee for the Armed Forces
bill committee for the Armed Forces Commissioner Bill while it was proceeding through this place, there was a large amount of consensus
was a large amount of consensus around the need for us to carry on as quickly as possible, and I
as quickly as possible, and I recently wrote an article about the need to give our Armed Forces the assurances that this government is taking action to support them and
taking action to support them and their families.
Does he agree that it is time to get on with this? We have a consensus in this house for
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have a consensus in this house for the Armed Forces commission to begin as quickly as possible? I thank him for the work he has
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I thank him for the work he has done with Portsmouth North. It was a key manifesto promise made the general election and made with the
general election and made with the deliberate intent to provide an independent voice, a champion for
independent voice, a champion for those who serve. We know that, for many people, service welfare matters are not good enough. That is
are not good enough. That is childcare for many people. The poor
state of accommodation. The ability of the Commissioner to raise those issues, to investigate them, to use
issues, to investigate them, to use the additional new powers not available to the service complaints ombudsman currently is a step
ombudsman currently is a step forward for our people and a key plank of renewing the contract
between the nation and those who serve, and I agree that I would like
to see this get into law.
I would like to briefly remind the house of the protections currently afforded to the Armed Forces because one
thing I have been made aware of is that it is worth repeating some of those so there can be no doubt about
them. All defence personnel are protected in relation to
whistleblowing under defence policy which enables individuals to raise problems in a way that does not lead
to wrongful information. Because the
Armed Forces operate within a different legal and constitutional constructed civilians, they are not explicitly covered by the Public
interest disclosure act, however, as
a matter of policy under this government and the previous government, defence already recognises and ideas to the criteria
for disclosures and it follows the prescribed procedures and protections for those making a
qualifying disclosure.
The MoD will not except any victimisation for
individual raising a genuine concern. The amendment is supported by nonlegislative commitments which
further bolster trust and confidence in the Armed Forces Commissioner in
this respect, including reviewing and updating defences policies, policies and protections related to
raising a concern which would include whistleblowing in the sense that we are discussing it here
today. The government recognises the
importance of due protection for whistleblowers. Just this week, The Cabinet Office is hosting a whistleblowing conference to bring together cross government
representatives to review the current whistleblowing framework and discuss forthcoming changes under
the employment rights spell which contains a new section strengthening
protections for people wishing to make a protected disclosure under
PETA, including recognises sexual harassment.
The MoD is raising a
concern policy which will be reviewed and updated to reflect
these changes and we welcome the interest of members on both sides of the house in that process. Turning
now to the amendments inserted in the other place,
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Would he say what proportion of the Commissioner's time and that of
the Commissioner's time and that of
the Commissioner's time and that of his staff he envisages being devoted to individual matters of casework of
to individual matters of casework of the sort he has just described, and what proportion will be around some
what proportion will be around some attic investigations like the state of service housing?
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of service housing? That is a fair question, and the bill is drafted in such a way that
bill is drafted in such a way that there is no obligation or requirement for any Commissioner
requirement for any Commissioner appointed to resource against a government position on that. It is for the Armed Forces Commissioner to decide the allocation of resources
decide the allocation of resources
decide the allocation of resources and energy. If you were to look at the Armed Forces model which we have taken inspiration from, they undertake to 23 them attic
undertake to 23 them attic investigations a year with dedicated teams using the feedback that comes from both people raising a concern
from both people raising a concern officially, getting in touch to raise an issue but not necessarily expecting it to be dealt with as
expecting it to be dealt with as
casework which relates to correspondence, but it will be for the UK Armed Forces Commissioner to
make that determination.
The bill provides for its powers to do that,
and if we can come onto the amendment in the other place because the powers relating to whistleblowing, a key part of why we
don't think this amendment is suitable, and I will explain why now. The first 1 to address the use of the word whistleblower as being
inappropriate in this context, despite the value we place on the
function. The term has been more relaxed in terms of raising a
concern and whistleblowing which is used under the previous government with the whistleblowing charity
protect, suggesting that people may not want to come forward, and today,
we are talking about the policy that
will be implemented.
Although the term appears in a very few limited circumstances in law, there is no single definition of whistleblowing
in UK legislation. Simply using the term in this bill as proposed by the amendments would therefore have no
practical legal fact and would provide no protections that do not already exist or are provided for in
the amendment in lay. Terminology aside, I have several real concerns
on the new amendment. The whistleblowing investigations proposed in these amendments have
the same scope as the current investigations provided for by the
bell investigating general matters.
But none of the associated powers of
investigation. So, the amendment does not allow the Commissioner to
access sites to assess their investigation. The amendment does not allow the Commissioner to access documents to assist the
investigation. The moment does not require the secretary of state to cooperate, assist and consider any
findings or recommendations as is
currently the case with the wording, anime does not require reports to go to the Secretary of State or to be
laid before Parliament. The scope of the amendment is considerably narrower.
Issues raised under this section can only relate to people
subject to service law. That is the men and women of the Armed Forces are not family members as the
intervention from the member for Strangford enquired, and cannot be about terms of service. The
Commissioner would need to consult from the individual before starting
an investigation, constraining the
independence and possibly leading to the staff facing pressure to withhold consent, and the anonymity
protections would only relate to investigations under this section which is unlikely ever to be used for the reasons I have set out.
And
it removes the anonymity protections that the government is proposing to
include. More importantly, the bill is intended to provide a safe route
for people to come forward with their concerns and know that they will be considered by a truly
independent figure. We want people to feel secure and empowered to raise those concerns, and we want
the Commissioner to have the full range of powers that are raised with the Commissioner. The amendment as
drafted would restrict the powers to deal with the complaint raised by
this process, and I believe that is not actually what both sides of this house really want to see in relation to whistleblowing.
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The Minister will remember last week at Westminster Hall, a debate
week at Westminster Hall, a debate where I inaccurately and over
optimistically refer to this as the Armed Forces Commissioner act, not realising it was still going back-
realising it was still going back- and-forth between here and the other place and I was corrected by the
shadow defence minister, and I assumed it was a friendly correction about my misunderstanding about
about my misunderstanding about process, but have I understood that what is going on is some kind of
political difference over the use of the word whistleblower that is leading to a badly drafted amendment
leading to a badly drafted amendment being inserted into the bill which actually weakens it and will reduce
actually weakens it and will reduce its ability to do what the main body
its ability to do what the main body The department is actually at the
point of being able to go out and advertise for an Armed Forces Commissioner and for someone to be
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in that role of fighting for the welfare of our service personnel. Can I thank him for his
intervention? I hope that this is not party political because I think
that many of the members who are raising concerns about whistleblowing in the other place are doing so because they are
recognising that there are cultural
issues within our Armed Forces that need to be addressed. We are seeking
to raise issues around whistleblowing to get clarity on what the government is seeking to
do.
I hope that in the statements that my colleague Lord Coaker has
that my colleague Lord Coaker has
made in the other place and comments made in this space, colleagues on both sides can feel reassured that
we take harassment and abuse culture -- culture of harassment and abuse very seriously. We are updating
policies and procedures in relation
to whistleblowing and raising concern from the policy inherited from the British government to take it further. We recognise that the
Employment Rights Bill will support
this further.
That would further enhance protections for whistleblowers that we would seek to
implement. And that by updating these policies and including the cross government learning that our colleagues in the Cabinet office are
coordinating at the moment, we will have a stronger policy. Having placed goes on the record here, as
indeed my noble friend Lord Coaker would do -- will do when this bill returns to the other please come I
hope that will be enough for those members were concerned about this to be satisfied that there is a genuine
desire from the government to address these issues.
And that the amendment as drafted creates a
narrower scope for the Commissioner, actually prevents the Commissioner from achieving objectives they wish to raise due to the wording of the
amendment, and therefore it would be time to let the amendment passed --
the amendment fall away and the bill
to pass. I thank the honourable gentleman for his intervention. I can assure him he is not the only person who has intervened. We are
always grateful for his knowledge when he does so. We have deliberately drafted this bill to be
as broad and as clear and as inclusive as possible.
Through our communications campaigns and guidance that we have already
announced, we will make it clear to anyone that is subject to service law that they and their families can
approach the Commissioner to raise a general service welfare matter,
however big or small, and whether it affects them directly or not. In that respect, it provides for the functions as laid out in the intent
behind the amendments. But I'd like
to make clear is this. The powers to initiate investigations based on
information provided by the Commissioner already exist in the
bill.
In addition, there are existing policies and procedures in place for people in defence to raise
concerns that would fall outside the definition of a general service welfare matter. These have protections already in place. All
service personnel are covered by
protections, as our military personnel. Our commitment to review
and update defence policy plus the
deficiencies in the amendments inserted by the advice mean that now
is the time for both houses to do the right thing and bring this bill into law at the earliest
Will be addressing concerns in
detail and providing detailed
assurance about the changes we are making that confirm what I said at
the dispatch box today and to invite their contribution as we seek to develop the Raising Our Concern
policy.
I therefore encourage the house to support the government 's
decision so we can deliver this for brave servicemen and women as soon
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as possible. The question is that this house
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The question is that this house insist on Commons amendment 2A and
insist on Commons amendment 2A and disagrees with Lords amendment 2B and 2C. Shadow Armed Forces
Minister.
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Minister. Thank you. As I set out last month when we were previously
month when we were previously debating, it's very important -- it
debating, it's very important -- it is very important, this bill. This
is very important, this bill. This bill, with the team to establish an independent Armed Forces Commissioner with Ofsted like ours
Commissioner with Ofsted like ours holds the potential to provide the
holds the potential to provide the welfare and accountability network for our Armed Forces -- framework.
I
for our Armed Forces -- framework. I believe this vision enjoys broad
support across the house. Although, yet again, I have to place on record that when we are discussing
that when we are discussing important legislation that affects the welfare and well-being of Armed Forces personnel and their families,
yet again there is no Reform member
of Parliament in the chamber of the House of Commons. You can't spend
your whole life on tick-tock -- TikTok, particularly as it's a
Chinese system.
We must scrutinise how the Commissioner was macro
integrates with the existing
complaints system and how this will be navigated. Today, we focus on the
issue of whistleblowing which was extensively debated in the other
place and now lies before our House again. We must guarantee anonymity
for those who come forward. This is not a radical proposal but a reasonable compromise, incorporating
the exact wording of a government's Commons amendment alongside our
whistleblowing duty. The government
argues the existing mechanisms, confidential hotline and improved complaints processes are sufficient
and our amendment does not confer additional powers.
The Minister's
own letter of May 30 acknowledged that Baroness Goldie's amendment
sparked an important debate. Yet the government resist embedding a clear
statutory whistleblowing function.
Such a provision is essential to ensure personal coming forward without fear of reprisal. Lord
Coaker speaking in the other place
on 11 June claimed that the terms of whistleblower and whistleblowing might deter individuals from coming
forward, siting cabinet office guidance. This suggestion, I'm afraid, is plainly daft. If the term
whistleblowing were truly a barrier, why does the National Health Service successfully operate its freedom to speak up policy which explicitly
uses the term? Why does the Children's Commissioner issue an
annual Whistleblowing Report? These examples demonstrate the term is not
a deterrent but a recognised and effective framework for protecting
those who expose wrongdoing.
To argue otherwise undermines the very concept of whistleblowing regimes
across multiple sectors and public services in the United Kingdom. The
government further contends that whistleblowing lacks a clear definition. This is simply
untenable. Section 340 Q of the
Armed Forces Act 2006 is titled Investigation of Concerns Raised by
Investigation of Concerns Raised by
Whistleblowers. And section 43 B provides another statutory
precedent. These actual that it adds tangible value, ensuring the
protection of those who have raised
concerns.
How can the government then claim it lacks clarity or value in this particular instance? That is
totally inconsistent. The government was vision position is riddled with
these issues. -- The government's position. Now the government claim the revised amendment is too narrow. Lacking sufficient powers, Lord
Coaker argued, our amendment would limit investigations to current powers without enabling access to
powers without enabling access to
some confidential documents. If the government believes our amendment doesn't go far enough, why not support and propose their own
support and propose their own
brother amendment to enhance the Commissioner's powers? This inconsistency suggests a reluctance to engage constructively as if arguments are being plucked out of
thin air to block progress.
Lord Coaker who I dealt with when he was
in this place and have immense respect for also claimed that our
amendment excludes family members,
only those subject to service law. This is incorrect. Our amendment defines a whistleblower as a person
subject to service law or a relevant family member. Does a corporal's
sister could raise a concern if the court will faced pulling by another military colleague. This ensures
family members have a voice, directly contradicting the
government's assertion to the
contrary.
To illustrate, I will just give one a brief theoretical example. Friends in, let's consider the possibility of whistleblowing
the -- being somebody serving under Operation Banner. That is a topical
issue at present. The Minister will be aware. I don't know whether all Armed Forces personal serving in
Northern Ireland signed the
petition. I can say that as of today, over 164,000 people have
signed it. We therefore very much look forward to a debate in
Parliament on 14 July on exactly that matter, which I'm sure will be followed very closely by the veterans community and indeed by
their families.
So, in summary, this is not an Angels on a pinhead
argument. It is actually quite
important. The government assurance about the commissioners all are
welcome but insufficient. There must
Whistleblowing provision that service personal contract. And we
debated this, the Minister, to be fair, talked about the trust issue repeatedly. The other place recognise this, delivering another cross-party debate for the
government. Our amendment represent a reasonable compromise aligning
with the government's own wording of anonymity. To block it would signal
the government is not serious about working constructively with the opposition to improve the welfare of
Armed Forces personal.
I urge the government to accept this compromise
in the interest of all who served. I will listen closely to anything
will listen closely to anything further the Minister has to say. If the government persists in offering assurances without statutory weight,
assurances without statutory weight, I will test the opinion of the house. If we carry on playing ping-
house. If we carry on playing ping- pong, that a sport I was once quite good at. good at.
14:29
Rt Hon Mark Francois MP (Rayleigh and Wickford, Conservative)
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I called Liberal Democrat spokesperson.
welcome amendments 2B and 2C put
forward by Baroness Goldie. These amendments are not about politics,
14:30
Helen Maguire MP (Epsom and Ewell, Liberal Democrat)
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they were tabled by a Conservative
they were tabled by a Conservative peer and supported across the house. They represent a thoughtful, pragmatic effort to address a real
pragmatic effort to address a real and persistent problem, the need for an Armed Forces Commissioner who is not just the complaints handler, but
not just the complaints handler, but an independent figure capable of receiving, investigating whistleblowing disclosures about systemic welfare failure is,
systemic welfare failure is, confidentially and without fear of reprisal. I welcome that the Minister has engaged with Baroness Kramer and myself.
However, the
Kramer and myself. However, the insistence of -- on removing these
insistence of -- on removing these proposals and replacing them with something far lesser is deeply disappointing. This Mrs a genuine
disappointing. This Mrs a genuine opportunity to build trust with service personnel and their families. This is something the Commissioner must get right on start
Commissioner must get right on start or it will be near impossible to regain. Let's be honest about what
regain. Let's be honest about what is at stake.
Behind the language of whistleblowing are real people.
whistleblowing are real people. Soldiers, spouses and contractors
Soldiers, spouses and contractors who have seen something wrong and want to make it right. Not for themselves but for others. They are
themselves but for others. They are not filing a complaint, they are raising alarm. Yet, again and again, we have seen these people let down, and heard, and supported or even
punished for speaking out. From appalling housing conditions to serious allegations of abuse, the
public has grown increasingly aware that internal complaints mechanisms
Ernest Goldie's revised amendment
struck a balance.
They look at whistleblower protection and they respond directly to concerns raised
by government by making sure that reports must identify whistleblowers
without consent. It brings the Armed Forces Commissioner into line with modern expectations for public
service oversight. From regulators of financial service to the NHS and beyond, having a channel alongside the section is now standard. The
government argued that including the term in legislation could somehow
deter people from coming forward and reference previous analysis undertaken by the last government. I
find this baffling.
The term is well
established in UK law, understood by the public and associated with greater protections. It is clear,
accessible and trusted. Looting or
avoiding it sends the wrong message. These amendments would do more than
close a gap. They would send a message to our Armed Forces community that Parliament is listening that we recognise their
loyalty not just in word but in the systems we put in place to protect
them. The Lib Dems have long called for fair deal for service personnel and families.
We support this bill
and the Armed Forces Commissioner as soon as possible to be effective, the role must be equipped with the
right tools. It must work from day one. That means giving people a
confidential route to raise serious concerns knowing they will be treated with dignity and protected by law. I will vote against the
government's motion to prove this,
and I urge all Lords to do the same. Her compromised amendments uphold
the integrity of the bill, give the Commissioner proper reach and most importantly, give service personnel
and their families a voice they can trust.
Let's take this opportunity to make this stronger and help the
Armed Forces fairer, safer and more accountable. Thank you.
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I will seek to lead up this I agreed that we should arm the commission with the right tall on
commission with the right tall on day one. That is why I don't want to accept an amendment that restricts these tools and provides weaker protections for people raising
protections for people raising whistleblowing concerns throughout posed route. It is precisely because I want this to work that I am not
accepting a weaker amendment. I always find it useful to use the phrase flip it to see it, and I just
phrase flip it to see it, and I just want to try that here for top if we take the government amendment that
take the government amendment that restricted access to sites in
relation to a whistleblowing complaint, one that restricted access to information and documents
access to information and documents assisting other than a normal matter to cooperate, assist or
to cooperate, assist or recommendations on a whistleblowing complaint, I think this house would
complaint, I think this house would rightly reject that.
That is what this amendment delivers. Narrower
this amendment delivers. Narrower scope, fewer powers, less ability for the Commissioner to investigate those same reasons, but I hope the
those same reasons, but I hope the house can see from the remarks I have made that we believe in providing a route for people to
raise their concerns anonymously. Believing the protections for it. We are raising the concerns from the
last government in order to deliver that work, and I believe that the
bill should be passed so that we can implement it as fast as we can.
It's
for that reason that we say it is contrary to the position that was
put in place up until July. I don't support a poorer amendment. I have
engaged constructively and will continue to do so because I think
that is right to do that. It is the spirit of this government on the legislation that will continue to be
the case. But I will say to him that when I am not serious about working for the Armed Forces personnel, let
me be clear that I do not accept less from the Armed Forces personnel.
That is why am not
accepting his amendment because it provides fewer protections for people on the route that he is
taking. It provides fewer powers to undertake that work, and actually,
if it went the necessity to play ping-pong in this respect, he would
be agreeing with me on this. Let's pass this bill, put it into place, let's give the Armed Forces that independent champion that they so
richly deserve.
14:36
Rt Hon Mark Francois MP (Rayleigh and Wickford, Conservative)
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I have listened very carefully to what the Armed Forces Minister has said but I have to say I am afraid
that I am unconvinced. I think he used a phrase flip it to see it. I
can offer him your jaw is better
then a walk, so I think Baroness Goldie has on a great job on the other place in bringing together
people from across the political spectrum to concentrate on this very important matter, and I recommend that the house boats against the
government today to send it back to the other place where there should
be all-party negotiations included government ministers to see if we can find a way through, but as
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things sit here and now, I'm afraid we must press this into the division lobbies. This question is this house
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This question is this house insist on common amendment and disagrees with Lord amendment to be
disagrees with Lord amendment to be and to see in lieu of that
and to see in lieu of that amendment. Division, clear the
The The question The question this The question this is The question this is on The question this is on the The question this is on the order
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Order, Order, order.
The The Ayes The Ayes to The Ayes to the The Ayes to the right, The Ayes to the right, 321. The Ayes to the right, 321. The
The Ayes to the right, 321. The Noes to the left, 158.
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to the left, 158. The Ayes to the right, 321. The
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The Ayes to the right, 321. The Noes to the left, 158. The Ayes have
14:52
Division
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Ants Ants that Ants that the Ants that the committee Ants that the committee do Ants that the committee do with.
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Ants that the committee do with. The question is that the
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The question is that the committee be drawn up to give a
reason for disagreeing with Lords
reason for disagreeing with Lords amendment 2B and 2C. Kate Aidan will
amendment 2B and 2C. Kate Aidan will be the chairman of the committee. That the committee to withdraw
That the committee to withdraw immediately. As many of that opinion, say "Aye". Those in the
opinion, say "Aye". Those in the contrary, say "No". I think the Ayes
14:53
Points of Order
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have it. The Ayes have it.
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have it. The Ayes have it. On a point of order. I rise to
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On a point of order. I rise to complaint, really, that the Digital Markets Consumer Markets Act
Markets Consumer Markets Act outlawed foreign ownership of
outlawed foreign ownership of
government -- UK media. There has
been only a marginal debate in the statutory instrument committee about
the increase of percentage. This is a major change and I think it would have been fair that the government set about having a proper debate on
that because it is a very significant issue for newspaper ownership here in the chamber, in the House of Commons.
The other
place will get a march -- much larger debate on this, and yet we
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are the elected house. I thank the right honourable
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I thank the right honourable member for his point of order. Whilst this is not a matter for the
14:54
Motion: Motion to approve the draft Armed Forces Act 2006 (Continuation) Order 2025
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capture, it is now on the record.
14:54
Luke Pollard MP, The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Defence (Plymouth Sutton and Devonport, Labour )
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capture, it is now on the record. About to move the Armed Forces
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About to move the Armed Forces
continuation act. -- I beg to move.
continuation act. -- I beg to move. This draft order provides concerned
This draft order provides concerned by continuing into force for another year that the Armed Forces Act 2006, the legislation which governs the
the legislation which governs the Armed Forces, be renewed for another year. This debate usually takes place in a delegated Legislation
place in a delegated Legislation committee before returning to the floor of the house for approval.
Given the significance to the country of the Armed Forces and the democratic oversight that Parliament divides, it is fitting that this
divides, it is fitting that this debate is being afforded time on the floor of the House today. This allows members to contribute who
allows members to contribute who wish to do so. We must put our people at the heart of defence. I know there is strong support for
know there is strong support for
know there is strong support for Parliament renews the Armed Forces
Parliament renews the Armed Forces Act every five years.
The next bill will be required to obtain Royal assent by December 2026. In the
intervening years, by approving an annual order in Council such as the one before us today. The Armed Forces Act provides nearly all
provisions for the existence of a service justice system. It provides for service offences and for the investigation of alleged offences.
The holding in custody and charging of Armed Forces personnel accused of holding an offence wherever in the
world they are serving. There is also an explanatory memorandum to
the order which states that the United Kingdom, the Isle of Man and British overseas territories,
excluding Gibraltar.
The extent of
any legislation is a statement about
which separate legal jurisdictions form part of the law. Now is extending to Gibraltar simply means that the 2006 part does not form
part of Gibraltar law and that is because Gibraltar has an agreement
with the United Kingdom that they
will draft their own version. Effectively, there is unlimited geographical jurisdiction. In some
geographical jurisdiction. In some
circumstances, civilians are subject to this also. A return to the 2006
act which provides legal basis for officers such as the judge advocate
general and the director of service persecutions as well as the appeal court and the service a civilian court.
It also sets out resources
for the accused to be dealt -- dealt
As such, the next Armed Forces Bill
will likely contain a mixture of both service and justice measures and nonservice justice measures. I
look forward to working with members across the house when he gets
introduced in due course. In addition, we have committed to tackling the unacceptable behaviours that have plagued our defence in the
past. Routing out those toxic behaviours that we have seen evidence in our Armed Forces.
There
is no place for abuse in the UK Armed Forces. Today's debate comes
against the backdrop of this government delivering for defence,
for our service personnel and for veterans. By putting people at the heart of defence plans and renewing
the contract with those who served. That is why last year we delivered
the biggest pay rise for our Armed Forces in 20 years. We follow this
up with another above inflation
up with another above inflation
This is why we This is why we secured This is why we secured a This is why we secured a housing deal, improving houses for forces, families, and saving taxpayers billions.
Were investing £7 billion to improve military accommodation
over the course of this Parliament. That's why we set new targets to tackle recruitment and retention crisis we inherited from the
previous government. The results of this are clear already. Inflow is up
this are clear already. Inflow is up
19%. Outflow down 7%. The army is experiencing a seven year high in application volumes. We are delivering for defence. That is why
we will be appointing Armed Forces Commissioner to improve service life and make it easier for veterans to access care and support for R £50
million valour network.
The government recognises the world has changed. We are in a new era of
threat which demands a new era for UK defence. The Strategic Defence Review published last month will
break Britain -- will make Britain stronger. It set apart for the next decade and beyond to transform defence and entered the hollowing
out of Armed Forces we have seen over the last 14 years. Decisive action has already been taken. We have set up and speeded up support
for Ukraine, signed a landmark
agreement with Germany, started work at pace on a new defence industrial strategy, ensuring defence is an engine for growth.
Implemented the
deepest LOD programme in decades, all of which has been underpinned by increase in defence spending of
nearly £5 billion this year. And a commitment to reach 2.5% in April
2027, 3% in the next Parliament and 3.5% in 2035, the largest increase
in defence spending since the end of
the Cold War. -- Since the Cold War.
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I'm grateful for him giving way.
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I'm grateful for him giving way. We should be prepared to fight by 2035 is the implication. That's in 10 years. Why after all the
10 years. Why after all the hullabaloo about the defence review have the government returned to what
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have the government returned to what in the 1920s was known as the 10 year rule? Let me say to the right
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Let me say to the right honourable member that his government left our Armed Forces
government left our Armed Forces hollowed out and undefended. He left them living in appalling accommodation, he left them in a retention and recruitment crisis
retention and recruitment crisis that meant 130 people were leaving for every hundred that joined the
for every hundred that joined the Armed Forces. We are fixing that. We
Armed Forces. We are fixing that. We are getting our defence back on track and that is why the defence review sets out the journey to transform our defence.
That's why
transform our defence. That's why the Chancellor has provided additional financial resources this year. That's why the Prime Minister
supported the defence investment pledge at the last NATO summit. We
pledge at the last NATO summit. We need to be ready to deliver for our
need to be ready to deliver for our defences. We need to be ready to stand with our allies. That is what we are doing today. We are ending
the hollowing out and underfunding.
I hope he would welcome that.
I hope he gets an opportunity when he
he gets an opportunity when he
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There are historical parallels. We were only spinning 2 1/2% of national wealth on defence. There
national wealth on defence. There was massive rearmament following that, and there was consensus on
that, and there was consensus on both sides of the house, and by 1945, we were spinning 50% of national wealth. I think it is much
national wealth. I think it is much better if the two parties try and work together on this and realise we
are facing an existential crisis in the world and things are very different than they were in 2010 or
different than they were in 2010 or 2015 and we should work together to massively increase defence spending.
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massively increase defence spending. I thank the gentleman for that and I agree with what he says. When
the shadow secretary with defence shadow secretary, we had a position of cross-party support on defence
of cross-party support on defence matters. It is really important we get back to that place because it is
get back to that place because it is for our adverse areas that look at the UK, they should see strong
the UK, they should see strong cross-party support as they do in ACS debate Ukraine.
There is a strong set of fans in the defence
strong set of fans in the defence review. There is increasing defence funding for getting to 2.5%, a
funding for getting to 2.5%, a figure we have not matched in the last 14 years. There is a real
opportunity to send him a message to our adverse areas and for the people who serve, and I hope his Frontbench
were listening strongly as I was in that respect. Members of the
opportunity to improve this order knowing that the government is delivering on our pledge to rewrite stop
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On a serious note, we on this side were accused of being pro-
Russian, pro-Chinese and pro- Iranians repeatedly by the Prime
Iranians repeatedly by the Prime Minister. He defended it. Because we
Minister. He defended it. Because we dared to defend things, we need to see things on both sides.
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see things on both sides. The unity we saw as they started a deal and we finished it. They agreed it was the right thing. We
agreed it was the right thing. We agreed it was the right thing to complete the deal. We put national security first in that respect,
security first in that respect, secure the future and won the
secure the future and won the
support of our US fans. It is up to us what side of the debate he wishes to be on.
We choose the side of our
to be on. We choose the side of our national security. Honourable members can approve this order today knowing that we are delivering on
knowing that we are delivering on the pledge to rewrite the contract between the UK and those who serve
between the UK and those who serve to improve it. The Armed Forces act and this order underpins the very existence of his man Armed Forces.
existence of his man Armed Forces. It backs those who, like my old man, stepped forward to serve like so
many across this house, stepped forward to serve our country, to protect our United Kingdom, our
allies and partners in an era of global instability to deploy globally in support of British objectives and support our national
security.
With the consent of the
house today, Parliament will acknowledge their service, pay tribute to service, and back their service. I beg to me.
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The question is is on the order paper.
15:05
Rt Hon Mark Francois MP (Rayleigh and Wickford, Conservative)
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The purpose of this is to provide the continuation of the Armed Forces act 2006 which would otherwise
act 2006 which would otherwise expire in mid-December 2025. In essence, the measure provided 2006
act to continue in force for a further year, taking us up to a
deadline of 14 December 2026. For those with a historical interest,
the principle of the legislation actually dates back as the Minister intimated to the Bill of Rights of
1688 which, given that it followed on from the Civil War, state the following.
Raising or keeping a standing army within the kingdom in
time of peace, unless it with the consent of Parliament is against the
law. This has resulted in a
requirements in 1688 that all legislation on discipline and the Armed Forces has to be annually renewed, hence this order. The
Minister stated that this should have support from all sides of the house and I'm sure that it does. But
yet again, when we are debating
defence, when we are debating an order that is fundamental to the discipline and integrity of our
Armed Forces, there is no reform MP in the chamber of the house of
commons.
Why? Because reform don't
do defence. And the Minister and I have seen that time and time again over the last year. So there's a
point of consensus if he wants one. However, whilst this order might appear to be merely a formality,
albeit an important one, it does provide me with an opportunity to ask my member for important
questions. But before I move on to
that, can I report to the Minister that the cadets, an important part of the Armed Forces family, are indeed well disciplined and in good
health.
When I attended Armed Forces Day on Saturday, I was honoured to
Day on Saturday, I was honoured to
be invited to inspect on parade. I asked one cadet why he decided to join the architects and he replied
because my mum made me. So, I attended Armed Forces Day in
Basildon as I have done for years, and I managed to grab a quick drink
with some veterans in the local hostelry thereafter. However, mysteriously, all four MPs in the
Basildon borough, none of whom are Labour MPs, appear not to have been
invited this year.
I can only presume our invitations are somehow lost in the post. Can I say gently
to the Minister, more in sorrow than
in anger, that playing silly games like this on Partizan Grounds is demeaning for the Labour left Council. Armed Forces Day is too
important for this sort of silly nonsense and it just embarrasses the council in the eyes of the public
and local MPs, so perhaps in all seriousness, he can have a word with
his colleagues on the council and make sure that unfortunate oversight doesn't happen again.
One other
point on that, traditionally, defence is a bipartisan issue. We
all believe in the defence of the round. I've always believed that as
the first duty of government, but can I say to the Minister that you
can't have it both ways. You can't on one hand plead for unity between
the government and the opposition
and then, when it suits you, imply that opposition spokesmen are somehow Russian or Chinese or Iranians fellow travellers because
they have the temerity not to agree with you and your bonkers trade-off deal, so my advice to the Minister
is make your mind up and be consistent, and then you will receive the respect that you asked
for in return.
Now, turning to the order directly, the Armed Forces are
normally subject to the Armed Forces act, normally subject to a review.
We had acts in 2011, 16 and 21, now
we can expect in the further one
before the item expires. Assuming for a moment that it will be the
Armed Forces Minister and myself who take this legislation through in behalf of our respective parties,
this is a good opportunity to ask the Minister what the latest timings
are on that legislation and we can expect to see a bill.
Secondly, pending that, perhaps the Minister
could give an idea what the key themes that are likely to be, and in
which areas if any the act is likely to differ materially from the existing act 2021. In fairness, he
dropped a hint that there will be justice provisions. If he has an
opportunity, he can expand on that slightly. I asked the question
because there will be large parties through to military charities and
others who based on previous experience will take a close and
important interest in the bell and be able to give them a good heads up
as possible which would clearly be desirable, so perhaps the Minister could assist the house this
afternoon in that regard.
As the expanded tree notes point out, where
this order not to be passed, the key
effect of the 2006 pack shall be to end the provisions which are necessary to maintain the Armed Forces as disciplined bodies. Crucially, the 2006 act confers
powers and sensor procedures to enforce duty to obey lawful
commands. Without the 2006 act, those powers and procedures will no
longer have effect, no powers of punishment in respect of a failure
to obey a lawful command or any other form of discipline or
misconduct.
We will still oh allegiance to his match with the power enforcement which would be removed. Clearly, that would be a
very undesirable situation and we will most certainly not be voting
against this order in a few minutes time. Nonetheless, there is an
important point here about members of the Armed Forces being required to obey lawful commands. This brings
me onto the third question. As recently as defence questions on Monday, we were debating in this
chamber the fate of the 300,000 or so British Army veterans who served in Northern Ireland.
They were lawfully commanded to help uphold
the rule of law in support of the Royal Ulster Constabulary GC, and to
protect all people in Northern Ireland from whatever tradition they might come from heinous acts of
terrorism, whether by bomb or by bullet. As the Minister will be well aware, the government has tabled the
so-called remedial orders which would cut out elements of the 2023 Northern Ireland legacy act, thus
potentially opening up some of those to an endless cycle of investigation and reinvestigation.
As currently
drafted, the remedial law makes it easier for the likes of Jerry
Allinson his compadres to sue the British taxpayer for hundreds of
millions of pounds. According to a press report in the daily Telegraph yesterday, and an associated PQ from
the Northern Ireland secretary, government has now decided to drop
the part of the remedial orders which would assist associates from
suing the British taxpayer. If that report is true, this is something that these benches would warmly
welcome.
However, it still doesn't solve the problem the potential persecution of our brave veterans who served in Northern Ireland often
who served in Northern Ireland often
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being persecuted at the behest. Whenever he and members of the
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Whenever he and members of the shadow defence team bring up this
law fair against our veterans, government ministers always say we
will be sure to give them maximum support. To me, that implies not
protecting them from the law fair supporting them as they go through the process, but the process is the
the process, but the process is the punishment. Everybody knows that
people who are involved in fatal accidents would only serve a limited
accidents would only serve a limited prison term if, heaven forbid, convicted, but the probability is
convicted, but the probability is that they won't be convicted but the punishment lies in what they have to go through before they are
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acquitted. My right honourable friend chair the Select Committee where they
the Select Committee where they produced a very good report on this whole issue. He is an expert on
whole issue. He is an expert on this. All I will say is that, when
this. All I will say is that, when it comes to legacy issues, Labour often provides legal support but not
necessarily always to veterans. So if the Minister wishes to maintain morale in the Armed Forces, perhaps
he would take this opportunity now to clarify precisely the
government's position on whether or not they still intends to table
remedial orders, whether they intend now to move straight to what the Labour manifesto describes as new
legislation in the whole field of
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legacy matters. Which is it? They also recognised that there
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They also recognised that there may be a bit of this concern in the government between the Minister of
government between the Minister of defence Frontbench and the Northern Ireland Office Frontbench as to how this proceeds.
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this proceeds. I hope there is. I very much hope
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I hope there is. I very much hope that MoD ministers in private, even if they can't say so in public, are
if they can't say so in public, are fighting tenaciously to have this
fighting tenaciously to have this mad order scrapped and to defend the Northern Ireland veterans in a way that the Northern Ireland veterans defended all of us. The Minister
defended all of us. The Minister understands what I mean by that and I think he and some of his colleagues may have been working on
colleagues may have been working on this, and if they have, then in good
this, and if they have, then in good
this, and if they have, then in good If there is an intention to still go
If there is an intention to still go ahead with the remedial order, and I
would welcome clarity on this, despite the fact that that would have disastrous consequences for both recruitment and retention, which the Minister mentioned a few
minutes ago, could the Minister confirm exactly what the government
's policy now is? Is it to go down
the remedial route or for new legislation? If it is new, what are
the timeframes? Would he be able to sign a statement to the effect that
in his view it is compatible with the European Convention on Human Rights.
However, it is now a
question as to whether where British
troops to be deployed to Ukraine as part of some coalition, potentially following a potential ceasefire, what would happen to those British
troops if they were subsequently to
be involved in combat with Russian forces or Russian acolytes? Would guarantee could the Minister give that if soldiers were to fire their
that if soldiers were to fire their
weapons, they would meet -- they
would not be subject to warfare? Law
fair? -- lawfare.
This is therefore
very much alive issue which deserves
to be raised in Parliament, not least on behalf of the soldiers who might have to do it for real. Given
all of this, would it not be helpful, as suggested a number of times by my right honourable friend,
to issue a formal declaration that we would derogate from the European
Convention on human rights. Soldiers
would be excluded from any potential prosecutions even decades later. The
Minister will now for himself this is now materially affecting morale in the Armed Forces, especially among the special forces community.
Any reassurance you can give concerning derogation would be
gratefully received. To summarise,
we obviously support this. It would
be helpful to have somebody -- some more information on timings about
the new act in order to allow interested parties to plan. This
would help to maintain morale and discipline in the Armed Forces. The
Minister could let us know about
future operations, especially those involving deploying troops to unit
-- Ukraine. And specifically whether
the government is contemplating removing clauses from the remedial order or abandoning the remedial
order altogether, or whether the intent to abandon the remedial order
and provide new legislation to achieve this aim? With those
questions, I conclude but for one other thing.
The father of the house gave us all very wise advice. We
should increase defence spending. We can argue over how much and how
quickly, but we certainly should in this increasingly dangerous world.
On these benches, we want to work constructively with the government and the ministerial defence for the
defence of the realm. Do unto others
as you would have them do unto you.
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Order, order. I will now announce
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Order, order. I will now announce
... On the ... On the draft ... On the draft Criminal ... On the draft Criminal Justice
... On the draft Criminal Justice
The Ayes, 333, Noes, 138.
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Thank you. I appreciated being in this debate on the floor of the House. It shows the importance this
House. It shows the importance this government puts on our Armed Forces
and in particular our personnel. This government is giving our
15:21
Chris Vince MP (Harlow, Labour )
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This government is giving our service personnel and the commitment to recruitment and retention issues.
As well as the increase in spending. As I was unable to make my
intervention, have to say I'm disappointed this has turned into a party political debate but I can
assure the house I don't intend to say more on the matter. I recognise
that this act reflects a constitutional requirement but also gives us an annual opportunity to
say thank you to our brave servicemen and women.
As I've mentioned previously, I am the son,
and like most people of my age, the grandson of veterans. I would also
like to recognise the sacrifice that our Armed Forces families make for
this country. This active -- if this
act is not renewed, marshals will no longer be able to enact punishment
longer be able to enact punishment
within the Armed Forces. We must support our servicemen and women as they support as, which is why I
welcome him and the veterans work on Op Valour.
As Lord Coaker said in
the other place, we inhabit a world which is more dangerous than in any
time since the fall of the Soviet Union. That is something everybody
in this house can reflect on. Any members across this is, iron -- I
attended -- I attend the ceremony
every week. I have to say I find it
incredibly moving. This morning was particularly moving 11 name was read
out of the son of a member of the House who passed away at the age of eight years old.
Of course, our
service personnel, a country cannot work in isolation. It's important to recognise the work that our Armed
Forces do in collaboration with our NATO allies. Finally, I would like
to thank all honourable gallant members of this house for what they
have done in the past careers to
keep us all say. I would also like to pay tribute to the servicemen and women of my constituency of Harlow
and the UK as a whole for their continuing service and keeping us and our families safe during these increasingly troubled times.
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I now call Liberal Democrat spokesperson.
15:23
Helen Maguire MP (Epsom and Ewell, Liberal Democrat)
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spokesperson. Thank you. Today's ocean may
appear procedural but it sits at the heart of how we uphold parliamentary democracy. Under the Bill of Rights
1688, ascending are the -- army in peacetime speak and sent it to
annually by Parliament. This is not just constitutional housekeeping, it
is a clear democratic statement that
power in this country derives from Parliament and Armed Forces serve the law and are not above it. I will
support this order.
Without it, the
system would fall away, discipline
would not be enforced and commanding officers would be stripped of lawful authority. There would be no means
to uphold the standards of service that we rightly expect. But with that annual consent, must come
annual scrutiny. The leadership they
serve must be worthy of the trust. Over recent years, Conservative governments have failed in their
duty to Armed Forces. Well a brutal -- while a brutal war raged in
Europe, the previous government was cutting troops from our Armed Forces.
Equipment programmes are
routinely over budget and behind schedule. The National Audit Office has repeatedly warned about
capability gaps. Our service personnel are too often asked to do
more with less. This includes living
in unacceptable conditions with a housing system that does not meet their needs. The effectiveness of
Armed Forces depends not just on Kate but on people. When those people are being let down, when we
ask them to serve under a legal framework, we are not keeping our
side of the bargain.
The Lib Dems are calling for a different part. We
demand a reversal of the shortsighted troop cuts and a long-
term plan to increase numbers --
increase troop numbers. Were also calling for cross-party talks to
agree to a sustainable path to meet
NATO's spending target of 5% of GDP. The strategy and numbers, we want to deliver a fair deal for those who served. That Ince proper pay in
decent conditions, it means high-
quality housing, come access to
mental health care, job opportunities.
We press the government to deliver long overdue
justice for LGB veterans, many of
whom are still awaiting compensation after years of discrimination and unfair dismissal. We also demand
full implementation of report recommendations to tackle harassment
and misogyny faced by too many women in the Armed Forces. Looking ahead,
we understand a new Armed Forces Act is expected to be introduced in the
next year. When this bill is brought forward, I will hold the government
to a high standard.
And must not copy and paste exercise. It must be an opportunity to improve the
culture of Armed Forces to ensure accountability and modernisation are at its heart. This continuation
order maintains the legal foundation of Armed Forces. Laws alone are not enough. We need leadership, we need
commit and is and we need a government that does not simply
consent to military presence once a year but honours their presence with
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actions and respect. Thank you. I welcome the Armed
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Thank you. I welcome the Armed Forces Act 2006 (Continuation) Order
Forces Act 2006 (Continuation) Order 2025. I pay respect to the Armed Forces and the role they play in the
defence of this nation and across the globe. Last year 's continuation
15:28
Ben Obese-Jecty MP (Huntingdon, Conservative)
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the globe. Last year 's continuation order was the first one I signed and I was very proud to do so. As a
veteran and now an MP I know first hand... The world feels more dangerous today than it did at that
time. The Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022 is has precipitated a seachange in the evolution of
warfare. There is activity that feels like warfare in a science
fiction film. This must run through
the strategic defence review -- this theme runs through the Strategic Defence Review.
We must increase
defence spending to ensure that we remain a capable NATO ally. As an
island nation in a safe part of the bed, our position as one of
postcolonial responsibility. A decentralised nuclear capability shows we are a nation that continues
to be taken seriously. We continue to be benched as NATO allies feel
to be benched as NATO allies feel
threat from Russia. The pledge drop to 5% is simply not credible and this smoke and mirrors approach
indicates that these sums do not add up.
There is a gap in spending
plans. Where will that money come
from? Spending cuts or hike taxes are unavoidable. Projections look at
best sluggish. Claims we can reach
best sluggish. Claims we can reach
4.6% on security 2.6% -- 2.6%.
Bearing in mind that a sizeable proportion of that is the at sea
deterrent. A long way from the
numbers the government is putting forward. The 4.1% figure the
government is now puffing it's just about contains everything from UK
art spending to rural broadband.
25
details that the RSS Attenborough plans environmental changes meaning
plans environmental changes meaning
that both team would face is --
that both team would face is --
We are writing checks that it seems we will be unlikely to ever catch. We are about to welcome a
modernisation process that is not appropriate. There is a project for
combat air that is not due to be
delivered to expected. In 20 years time, there will be a demand for
this to be true.
It is likely to have lived beyond 2070. To be believe the aircraft will be ready
by then? Drawings are clearly the
future of warfare. -- drones. We continue to use Ukraine as the
proving ground. There are issues
with the drone training and currently using eSports as the only
currently using eSports as the only
, we will replace 450,000 A3 rifles
by 2030 and that is a significant contribution and the discussions and changing the abolition as well and
there is the purpose of 5.56 which we will not have to go into in the chamber today but everything that goes with that in terms of rifle racks, ammunition coaches,
magazines.
The nitty-gritty of changing a weapons platform that
really does take a toll on exactly how we implement. We intend to
replace 6000 landlubbers by 2030 which is significant commitment in
terms of training soldiers to drive them, making sure we have the logistical trading in place to
service the vehicles. These tasks are small but resource-intensive and place more strain on the system.
Only today, I understand 1500 roles have been cut and the burden has
fallen on existing suppliers. This
is one of the factors that erodes goodwill and continues to contribute towards problems.
Only a few weeks
ago, I was in Poland visiting the RAF and conducting only two embassy role on the Russian border. The
personnel there were rightly
extremely proud to serve but at the same time the pressure is immense
and they had to repeatedly spend long periods away from home. Incredible, the additional penalty that BP is financial with all but
those on the highest LSA bands composite from being separated from
their family is at rest negligible.
Maybe being paid more to be an operations means you're not physically at home and you have to
pay for it be sitting or have your spouse look after them and you have
to pay for a dog walker rather than leaving the dog at home.
Those costs add up and are not factored into the extra payments that people received for being on tour. Meanwhile, we
continue to see those who have served the nation continue to enjoy
the support of. Concerns the treatment of Northern Ireland
veterans mean many are concerned
about their futures and being held accountable for actions to produce. There is potentially a huge issue
that future recruits. A loss of confidence that serpent your control
of this government may see you charged as a criminal one day.
--
Serpent. The community minister on the Frontbench served. I welcome the
continuation order 2025 and just as
I was proud to play a small part in the history of one of the finest
institutions in the country. I recognise delivering for service personnel. I do not dressing them
for one second. I place my concerns and limitations placed on the Treasury accounting. This is an
improvement from the smoke and mirrors afoot. Fiscal rules signed
botched legislation and this is a reason the government must demonstrate a commitment to tangible
results, not just pledges.
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I simply want to contribute to
15:35
Sorcha Eastwood MP (Lagan Valley, Alliance)
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I simply want to contribute to the on behalf of the home of army HQ in Northern Ireland. I'm proud of
in Northern Ireland. I'm proud of family members that have served, both in the regular army and the GC
and I will depart from some members of the House when I say that they
were professional in everything that
they did and they would agree that they did not self above the law but within the law, as every
professional soldier bit.
I pray tribute to the Royal British Legion branches have been incredible in
supporting veterans across Northern
Ireland and making sure that the are represented in remembrance events. I
want to echo some remarks made by
the shadow front bench in terms of the debts and something people overlook and we are blessed to have
both the cadets, the RAF cadets and the army and every time I look at
those young people in next my heart proud. I am also more confident for
the future.
Anna Berry changed security -- we are in a very changed
situation. The militaristic
challenges referenced in the opening remarks about recruitment and retention. Sometimes we have to change the dial plan we discussed
these things. This should be an opportunity for young people. I often hear that young people are
maligned and marginalised. Some of
them are going to be the engineers and strategic operations planners of the future. Sometimes they are desperately wanting to find meaning
in life and find that through service and I think that is what the
cadets provides.
I want to put it on
record my thanks to those who are serving, the gallant members throughout the house, the people who have served, and I have the complete
and utter back in all of this and I am proud of them and what they have
done and for their families, too. There is also a hidden threat that
many are still dealing with years from now. It is important that we
vitally remember those who have
15:38
David Reed MP (Exmouth and Exeter East, Conservative)
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I rise today to raise an important point that will be
important point that will be
reported in the media -- has been reported over the last 24 hours anticipated Royal Marines. I was a
former member of myself and this is an issue that we must discuss now
and I hope the Minister can give some answers. It's been reported Royal Marines are moving away from conventional amphibious operations
and large-scale beach landings and force protections from CER being
replaced by small flexible teams which will operate alongside Special
Forces.
I think adaptability is vital and I'm sure there are many
merits in this direction of travel but it is important that the Minister comes forward to tell the House and give the opportunity to
discuss this. I worry that abandoning these hard won
capabilities without a clear and credible replacement is not adaptation, but risk. Some questions
for the Minister, is the government removing the UK's amphibious warfare
capability? If so, what replaces it?
What is the long-term plan to get forces from the sea to the land if
not through this role? The (Multiple Multirole support ships, there is no answer and if this is flexible are
answer and if this is flexible are
scaled back presence.
Will the MRSS be able to deploy the commando units
at skill in difficult environments? If the latter, is that the full
extent of the national amphibious ambitions? Then onto the issue
around Special Forces support and I know we cannot discuss this in the chamber with the security member and
I understand we will not be able to discuss this in great detail but it
has been reported that 40 Mantle has been passed to operate alongside the
Special Boat Service including
hostage rescue.
But this is mean for the contribution to the support
group? Is it being restructured or reassigned? I think this goes to a deeper point with NATO allies and if we are talking in the Strategic
Defence Review about being Lizzo
first, this matters to national resilience where this is often the
only option and it matters to the men and women who serve fantasy of
clarity about the future identity and so I urge the Minister to come forward with honest and detailed
answers rather than slogans and spin
with clarity on the 2030 plans because the policy cannot be made in
stealth.
stealth.
15:41
Robin Swann MP (South Antrim, Ulster Unionist Party)
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I thank the Minister for bringing this forward in the House today. A
few questions with regard to statements that have been made by other honourable members and many
have spoken about the value of the cadets and the promotion of young
people and the additional skill training. What was concerning was
when I met some cadets in Northern Ireland and many were reporting that there was a fall in the core
financial support, the grant that they received from the Ministry of defence and I would like clarity
defence and I would like clarity
from the Minister and if it was true
and it was not a large sum of money with regard to the protections.
The
cadets provide a valuable service
and require parental support to be given as well. In terms of the continued support, the Minister and
I have had many exchanges and will
continue to have and that is about investment, not just in service personnel but the facilities
supplied and the BCs and I refer to
Northern Ireland. -- bases. The facility can be a strategic location
facility can be a strategic location
in national defence. I would like to hear that there is a possibility of further investment under the Strategic Defence Review.
I would
Strategic Defence Review. I would
like to thank all current and former serving personnel. The comments were
made on July 14 and I would encourage all members to participate
in that debate so we can show the support members of this House have.
support members of this House have.
In closing, Qaddafi Minister to join me -- could I ask the Minister to join me in celebrating the 100th
anniversary of service personnel
through Boris and support personnel at this point in time.
15:43
Rt Hon Mark Francois MP (Rayleigh and Wickford, Conservative)
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I called the shadow minister.
we have had a good debate which has been lively at times about an important subject and, for the avoidance of doubt, we will loyally
support this motion which I'm sure
will be passed without the need for vision. We have had good speeches including from the member for
Huntingdon who recalled time serving
in the infantry and I had the same honour, although, in my case, it was as a Cold War reservist rather than
a regular.
The honourable member asked a number of questions about
the future of the Royal Marines. The
government has flogged off a lot of amphibious shipping and he asked for
some clarification on the SSS class and what happens in the amphibious
role. Perhaps you could provide some reassurance. If it is true that in
the short term Royal Marines will
lose the amphibious role, can I ask if the parachute regiment were
consulted? The honourable member...
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I will. I can see the Security Minister
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I can see the Security Minister chuckling but I would also ask that
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chuckling but I would also ask that the RAF Regiment are consulted on that issue as well. I think they have had other
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I think they have had other things on the mind lately. I congratulate the honourable member for raising the important issue of
for raising the important issue of Northern Ireland and that takes me to where I would like to conclude. I
to where I would like to conclude. I hope when the Minister replies she can answer some of my questions
can answer some of my questions about what will happen to veterans. Again, for the avoidance of doubt, I
Again, for the avoidance of doubt, I think I know where his heart is on this and I cannot recall if he
this and I cannot recall if he served in Northern Ireland and I know he served with distinction in
know he served with distinction in Afghanistan and saw he understands that on these benches we have to
that on these benches we have to believe that government are doing the right thing.
Perhaps the Minister could give some assurance
Minister could give some assurance to those 300,000 veterans who are
to those 300,000 veterans who are still with us and who serve that they will remove the sort of
Damocles that hangs over them and
allow the people who served with distinction in difficult circumstances to sleep safely in
circumstances to sleep safely in
15:46
Luke Pollard MP, The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Defence (Plymouth Sutton and Devonport, Labour )
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Thank you Madam Deputy Speaker. Can I thank all members for their contributions to this debate. It was
contributions to this debate. It was
a good one. I will refer briefly
enclosing to a number of issues that have been raised. First I detect strong support for armed forces on
all sides of the house so I hope there won't be a division very shortly, and that is good to see. I think this debate has shown the
merit in holding the annual order on the Floor of the House but I suspect I will need to have a word with the
Leader of the House and the whips before I commit to a future one of those because that is definitely outside my control.
Can I thank the
member for talking about cadets? He is right that we invest more in cadets, and that is why the
Strategic Defence Review set out our ambition to increase the size of our cadet force by 30%. A strong investment in the future of our
young people, providing opportunities not just to get lifetimes of skills, increase confidence and opportunities, and
also to provide a pathway for young people to serve in our Armed Forces,
to really realise the benefits.
Having seen the cadets on parade in Plymouth for Armed Forces Day at the weekend, I know there is strong
support for them in every part of the country and I'm grateful for raising that.
Young people find meaning through service is the line,
and I am grateful for that contribution and I agree. In relation to that Shadow Minister who
asked me a number of questions, we have to renew the Armed Forces Act
every five years. That will be renewed in the proper way. We are looking at what is necessary to
update that legislation especially as it would be coming after the
publication of the Strategic Defence Review. He will be familiar that the Strategic Defence Review made the case for a defence readiness bill
and we are looking at the details and I can reassure him that, as part of the commitment that we have
shown, indeed with a wide consultation that we have undertaken with the Armed Forces Commissioner
Bill, that we will continue in that
spirit for future legislation.
He will, he may have missed it, but
just before Prime Minister's Questions today, it was Northern Ireland questions, and I believe the Northern Ireland Secretary at the Dispatch Box raised, took questions
on a number of issues he spoke about full stop I might refer him to those
remarks. As he will know, these are matters for that Northern Ireland Office. Clearly defence has strong
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equities and views on these matters. I was watching Northern Ireland
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I was watching Northern Ireland questions. From memory, Northern Ireland Secretary said they would address this through primary
legislation. He gave no indication
as to what happens to the outstanding remedial orders. If they can't answer that today, perhaps the Minister the Northern Ireland Office
would write to us and tell us where we stand?
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we stand? As you will know because I've had similar conversations in a variety of formats in recent weeks, as a matter for the Northern Ireland
matter for the Northern Ireland Office, the policy intention is to repeal and importantly replace the unlawful legacy act. It has been found to be unlawful. It does not
found to be unlawful. It does not enjoy community support. It does need to be repealed and replaced,
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need to be repealed and replaced, and any government that was elected in July would have to do that. I am very grateful for allowing
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I am very grateful for allowing me to intervene. I want to say to him, this point about not enjoying community support, when we were
community support, when we were
community support, when we were having these debates, the highly divided communities will always stand up and say how this was unacceptable and how that was
unacceptable and how that was unacceptable, and quietly they would come up to us, their representatives, and say for
goodness sake go on doing what you're doing.
So the Minister may have some legal problems to overcome
but let him not be fooled by what is said in public about what really needs to be done.
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I thank him for his question in, and indeed it is a matter that my colleagues in the Northern Ireland Office follow closely on this one,
Office follow closely on this one, as they are the lead department with responsibility for repealing and replacing of the legacy act. I am certain that he will continue making
certain that he will continue making suggestions in that way. It is not for me to make announcement on the Northern Ireland Office behalf but I
Northern Ireland Office behalf but I am certain they will have listened to the right honourable gentleman and what he has had to say in relation to this.
I am also grateful
relation to this. I am also grateful for the remarks of the member for Huntington who I believe I told him
Huntington who I believe I told him just before this I look forward to seeing him on the front bench in the
seeing him on the front bench in the shadow defence role very soon. As he knows I'm a big fan of what he has to say, and I do like the way that
to say, and I do like the way that he brings his military expertise and
a certain good defence nerdery, which has a defence nerd I appreciate.
But I would say
appreciate. But I would say politely, the experience I have seen from engaging with our allies on
NATO's eastern flank, from Finland and the Baltic states and all the way down passing Belarus and others, is that the nations there value the
is that the nations there value the relationship with the United Kingdom even more over the recent past year.
even more over the recent past year. We have strong relations with the JEF nations of northern Europe we
continue to have deeper relations
with our Baltic friends including enhancing the force we have in Estonia.
In our cooperation and support for Latvia and Lithuania at
this time. So I don't recognise the
concern but he is right to raise it if any for allowing me to put this on the record, that we have strong support from these nations and
indeed we strongly support them in wanting to be sovereign and free and free from Russian aggression. I would politely say to him that Sir
David Attenborough does provide a really important presence in the Antarctic region. He will know, if
you haven't yet discovered polar region nerdery, can I recommend
that? The presence of HMS protector and that the presence that Sir David Attenborough provides there is not only an important presence as
support for our Arctic missions and Antarctic missions, but help us honour our obligations under the
Antarctic Treaty which is a very important part of the rules-based framework for the protection of the
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Antarctic. I thank the Minister for giving way. On the point about the Arctic
way. On the point about the Arctic and HMS Protector, what plans do we
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have to procure an icebreaker in order to increase our footprint in that region? I knew he was tempted to go into
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I knew he was tempted to go into this, I would be happy speaking to him about some of the aspects.
Clearly when it comes to some of the provisions of our ships and capabilities it is not just an MOT
capabilities it is not just an MOT matter, it is one that we share without Foreign & Commonwealth Office colleagues. I'm happy picking
Office colleagues. I'm happy picking that up with him. I'm not certain
that up with him. I'm not certain he's right there and he said on drones but nevertheless he is right when he says that Jones has fundamentally changed how warfare is
fundamentally changed how warfare is can ducted.
When it comes to defence spending I am proud that we have a
plan to return to 2.5% on defence, a figure not meant to 2010 full stop
figure not meant to 2010 full stop we need to spend more on defence which we live in more dangerous times. The member for Harlow spoke
times. The member for Harlow spoke about the sacrifice that Armed Forces families make and he is right to do so. It is something we should
to do so. It is something we should not forget indeed it is the reason why in the Armed Forces Commissioner Bill we deliberately extend the
powers of the Commissioner to have a requirement to engage with family
members of Armed Forces, and I'm grateful to the member for Epsom for
contributions.
Can I say that we do indeed have a government that
honours the service of Armed Forces every day. But she is right to raise
the issue of LGBT veterans. She will note the prioritisation that we have decided as ministers that the
initial payments as we stand up for the system to make payment should be directed at those people who are
over 80 or facing a terminal condition. We have completed that work. That was the right
prioritisation, so justice can be done with those folks who may not see many more days.
We are now
setting up the wider system so we can process that wider set of payments stop we will continue to do
so. Finally, just in relation to
questions from the member for Exeter and Exmouth East, the future commando for strategy that was published in the last government
moved away from full commando assault into small raiding parties. The excellent policy of the last
government and because of that I'm happy speaking to him about it. We
have a strong commitment to the amphibious role of the Royal
Marines.
We have a commitment to MMRS that was in the Strategic Defence Review for top I would be
happy speaking to him further on this, and I'm going to have to conclude in terms of time. I am very
happy meeting him to discuss this further. I can reassure him that the Royal Marines has a very bright
strong future in our Armed Forces.
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Madam Deputy Speaker, I think this raises more fundamental questions will stop just like the release of the Strategic Defence
release of the Strategic Defence Review to trade bodies, to the press
Review to trade bodies, to the press beforehand, we read about this, I welcome the offer to have a conversation about it with the Minister but why can't we have the
Minister but why can't we have the conversation in the chamber now?
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conversation in the chamber now? If I can refer him to all the debates I caught on the future of the Royal Marines under the last government, to make the case that
government, to make the case that the Royal Marines had a bright future and I was indeed that the opposition benches. We have a strong commitment to the future of the
commitment to the future of the Royal Marines. We have a strong commitment to this. He will know the changes that his government introduced in terms of the future
introduced in terms of the future commando force strategy and if you look at the lessons from Ukraine,
indeed the Royal Marines were well ahead of the learnings that we now see from there.
Happy discussing it with him further. I'm sure he will
with him further. I'm sure he will want to table a Westminster Hall debates so we can discuss this even more. I reassure him and the House
more. I reassure him and the House the future of the Royal Marines is safe and secure. We have a strong commitment to amphibious city we
commitment to amphibious city we need to make sure all our forces adapt to the environment in which they operate and someone who represents Stonehouse barracks, to something I feel personally.
I don't
recognise the concerns he raised but I'm glad honours cross-party basis
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there is strong support for Armed Forces and the continuation order. Thank you. The question is as on the Order
Paper. As many are of that opinion say, "Aye". And of the contrary, "No". The ayes have it. The ayes
"No". The ayes have it. The ayes have it. I will give the ministers a few moments to shuffle over. Before
few moments to shuffle over. Before we start on the next item of
15:57
Motion: Motion to approve the draft Terrorism Act 2000 (Proscribed Organisations) (Amendment) Order 2025
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we start on the next item of
business. Motion number four on Prevention and Suppression of Terrorism. Minister to move.
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Thank you Madam Deputy Speaker. I
15:58
Dan Jarvis MP, The Minister of State, Home Department (Barnsley North, Labour)
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Thank you Madam Deputy Speaker. I beg to move that the Terrorism Act 2000 (Proscribed Organisations)
2000 (Proscribed Organisations) (Amendment) Order, which was laid before the house on 30 June to prove. I'm grateful to the House for
its consideration of this draft order which will see three distinct
groups proscribed. They are, MANIACS Murder Cult, Palestine Action and
Murder Cult, Palestine Action and
the Imperial Organisation. The proscription of these three organisations will reaffirm the
U.K.'s zero tolerance approach to
terrorism.
Regardless of its form or underlying ideology. First, it may
be helpful if I set out some background to the proscription
power. To proscribe an organisation, the Home Secretary must reasonably believe that it is concerned in
terrorism. This means that the organisation commits or participate
in terrorism. It prepares for terrorism, it promotes or encourages terrorism, or it is otherwise
concerned in terrorism. Some 80 terrorist organisations are
currently proscribed under the terrorism act 2000. Proscription is
terrorism act 2000.
Proscription is
rightly ideologically neutral. It judges and organisation on its actions, and the actions it is willing to deploy in pursuit of its
cause. The U.K.'s definition of terrorism was established in law 1/4
of a century ago. It has stood the test of time and extensive scrutiny
since. I will make a little bit of progress and that I will give way.
It has three limbs. Firstly, the use or threat of action must reach a
certain level of seriousness such as serious violence, or serious damage
to property.
Secondly, the use or threat must be designed to implement
a government or intimidate the public, or a section of the public,
and thirdly, the use or threat must be made for the purpose of advancing
a political, religious, racial, or ideological cause. Successive independent reviewers of terrorism
legislation have upheld the U.K.'s
terrorism definition is effective and fit for purpose. Even as the
threat from terrorism has evolved. I
threat from terrorism has evolved. I
Prescription is one of the most powerful counterterrorism tools available to government and any decision to prescribe is taken with
great care, following rigourous consideration, as noted by Jonathan
Hall in his consideration of the
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Terrorism Act of 2022. I think the question that many of
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I think the question that many of us want to put to him is, why has he linked these three organisations
linked these three organisations together? He has clearly made a judgement on each of the three independently of each other. I think
independently of each other. I think it would be fair, and I'm sure many
would agree, if we take individual votes on the three because many of
us are concerned about the issue facing Palestine Action and that is
facing Palestine Action and that is the issue I would like to address today.
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I will explain with real clarity precisely why we have proceeded in
precisely why we have proceeded in the way that we have. I suspect he has a long memory and would recall,
has a long memory and would recall, I am sure, that when he has previously voted against prescribing organisations including al-Qaeda in 2001, the particular motion was
2001, the particular motion was bungled along with 20 other militant
bungled along with 20 other militant -- bundled along with 20 other
militant organisations and so there is clear precedent for this.
The reason that we do it is to demonstrate that we do not attach
any kind of ideological prism with which to seek to make a judgement.
The Home Secretary will take a view based on a legal threshold and that is the basis in which we will
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proceed. I thank the Minister for bringing this forward. I will be supporting
this forward. I will be supporting the government, if it does come to a vote, we will support the moment and
vote, we will support the moment and Labour. We understand we must have security and is important to have government, ministers, the police, army, MI5, MI6 all in harmony with that responsibility. In relation to
that responsibility. In relation to the membership of those organisations, would it be the
organisations, would it be the intention of the Minister...
If they are a list of those who may be
are a list of those who may be members of Palestine Action? I do not know, perhaps in the House, but
not know, perhaps in the House, but if there is, perhaps we would
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if there is, perhaps we would understand. Will they be subject to the rulings as well? I am grateful for the intervention and I know that he
intervention and I know that he speaks with great authority on these matters as a result of his extensive experience of dealing with matters like this in Northern Ireland. If
like this in Northern Ireland. If the House will allow me to make progress and if you can be patient,
progress and if you can be patient, I will explain the point he has raised and the point that other members are seeking to raise.
I will
now turn to the specific measures before the House today and take each
of the proposed additions to the list of proscribed organisations in order. First, Maniacs Murder Cult,
order. First, Maniacs Murder Cult,
also known as MMC. It is an insidious, white supremacist neo- Nazi organisation operating online
which aims to encourage individuals to engage in acts of violence
against people that it perceives as antisocial, including homeless people, drug addicts, and migrants,
or to further its own ideology and
agreed society through violence.
--
all to further. The government believes it commits, prepares for, and encourages acts of terrorism and
leaders and members had claimed a number of attacks globally which we
are committed in pursuit of the aims of the group. MMC provides material
that could increase the capability or motivation of an aspiring
attacker, including a gate which includes information on fatally
attacking someone with and they find using weapons. Members and
nonmembers sure the material including videos, violent attacks,
to encourage further attacks on
ideology.
A Georgian national on 20
May was extradited to the USA and
set to stand trial for soliciting head cranes and acts of mass
violence and he is alleged to have recruited individuals online to
commit acts of murder, arson, bombing, and mass poisoning in New
York. These are targeted specifically at members of ethnic
minority groups, homeless people,
Jewish schoolchildren. MMC has a true transnational audience including the UK. It does not matter
where the leaders of the network are based, if they are capable of
inspiring acts of violence and terror in any country.
Vulnerable
individuals including children are
exposed to the horrific material published and distributed online by
MMC. The government will not stand
by to allow these farms to persist. Prescribing MMC is key to helping to deter and preventing individuals
from engaging with the present content and it sends a clear signal
to social media companies to remove MMC's material from the platforms
and the threat posed by MMC must be
taken extremely seriously, whether they are inspiring acts of violence against people, influencing young
people to commit those acts, we will not hesitate to take action against
groups like these, to keep our country safe.
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I agree with the Minister that it clearly meets the threshold very
clearly meets the threshold very significantly. I am bound to ask the
significantly. I am bound to ask the question, when did the actions of MMC first come to the attention of the government? Why has it left it
the government? Why has it left it so long to bring forward this
so long to bring forward this proposal? Why has it simply left it to the point where it is convenient
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to bring it forward? I am sorry that the honourable member has chosen to make that final
member has chosen to make that final point. There is no political convenience in what we are seeking
convenience in what we are seeking to do today. What we are seeking to do today is ensure the security of the country. If he is a little bit
the country. If he is a little bit different, I will further make that
different, I will further make that -- a little bit patient, I will make that case to the House.
The public
that case to the House. The public attention garnered should not be confused with legitimacy and nor should a group formed five years ago
should a group formed five years ago be conflated with the legitimate campaign for Palestinian rights and
campaign for Palestinian rights and statehood and this has existed in
the country and the House for more than five decades. Let me be clear,
the prescription of Palestine Action
the prescription of Palestine Action
does not seek to ban protest that supports Palestine.
People can lawfully express their support in many ways without being a member or
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a supporter of Alice Tai in action mac. The Minister will be aware that
the High Court has granted action and rather than this being rushed through Parliament, should it not be
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through Parliament, should it not be delayed until the judicial process has concluded? We are not seeking to rush it
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We are not seeking to rush it through Parliament. These are matters the Home Secretary and I
have considered for some time. With regard to the point about legal
regard to the point about legal challenge, there is a clear route. Should an organisation be prescribed, and has the opportunity
prescribed, and has the opportunity to pursue a legal route of challenge. That is entirely within
the rate of any organisation who are prescribed to do so and that is a
prescribed to do so and that is a matter for them.
-- right. I think this is an important point. Freedom
of expression and assembly are cornerstones of our democracy. They
are fundamental rights and this government will always respect and protect them. We will always defend
protect them. We will always defend the right of the British people to engage in legitimate and peaceful
protest and to stand up for the
causes in which they believe.
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I often show visitors the statue
of Lord Falkland and the missing spur that was removed from the
spur that was removed from the Suffragettes chain themselves to it and I was here when protesters
and I was here when protesters
superglued the buttocks to the glass panel the mat, causing scandal and damage. Will the Minister confirmed
damage. Will the Minister confirmed that criminal damage, no matter how dangerously scandalously undertaken,
dangerously scandalously undertaken, will always be treated under criminal law and is not treated as a terrorist act?
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terrorist act? I am grateful to her for the
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I am grateful to her for the intervention and I know that she has given this matter serious consideration. It's an interesting
consideration. It's an interesting point that she makes and I will seek to provide evidence to her and
to provide evidence to her and others as I progress as to why we have chosen this particular course of action with this particular
of action with this particular group. I hope she will understand the reasons why we are proceeding in
the reasons why we are proceeding in the way that we are.
I was making the point about the importance of the right to protest. Essential as
these rights are, they do not
provide a blank cheque for this particular group to seriously damage property or subject members of the
public to fear and violence.
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On the question of Palestine Action, many of us in this chamber
Action, many of us in this chamber think that Palestine Action is in a
think that Palestine Action is in a different category from the other two groups he is seeking to
prescribe. Is he aware that several UN Special Rapporteurs have said
UN Special Rapporteurs have said that they have contacted the UK government to say that acts of
protest that damage property but are not intended to kill or injure people should not be treated as
terrorism.
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terrorism. I am grateful to the Mother of the House because she makes an important point and before I
important point and before I respond, I will say gently to her
respond, I will say gently to her and others that if they actions of the particular group we are considering at the moment had been conducted by an organisation who
conducted by an organisation who held different ideological motives,
held different ideological motives, my strong sense is that she and some of her colleagues would strongly recommend that the government move
recommend that the government move to prescribe them.
I have to say, I am afraid, that is the conclusion I
have arrived at. She specifically mentioned the point about the United
Nations. As a government, we did receive a letter from special
procedures mandate holders at the end of 2024 and the UK government
provided a response to this which has been published. I would gently there to her that ultimately matters
relating to national security and ensuring we keep the public safe are
very much matters for this country, not other organisations.
I will give way.
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Can I put on record that this heavy-handed approach threatens
basic freedoms and sets a dangerous precedent for all political dissent
precedent for all political dissent in the UK. Does he acknowledge that?
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I do not and I do not accept his characterisation of the decision that we have taken. If you will
that we have taken. If you will listen to what I have to say in the moment, I hope you will understand why we are progressing in this way.
why we are progressing in this way. The attack on the 20th on 20 June at
The attack on the 20th on 20 June at
The attack on the 20th on 20 June at Brize Norton has provoked shock and anger across the country but the reality is this was the latest
reality is this was the latest episode in Palestine Action's long
episode in Palestine Action's long
episode in Palestine Action's long history of such incidents.
They have initiated a nationwide campaign of property damage, with attacks that have resulted in serious damage to property and have crossed the threshold from the wrecked criminal
threshold from the wrecked criminal action and into terrorism. --
action and into terrorism. -- Direct. Palestine Action members have used violence against people
responding at the scene of the
attacks and for these roles in these
attacks, members have been charged with serious offences including violent assault, grievous bodily harm with intent, aggravated
burglary, which is an offence involving a weapon.
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I thank the Minister for some of
the things he has been saying. I wanted to pick up on the fact that OK has spoken about could be dealt with under criminal law. When my
with under criminal law. When my honourable friend mentioned the Suffragettes, for context and
Suffragettes, for context and history here, when the Suffragettes
carried out the captain of smashing windows, poster-based divestment, targeting telephone lines, bombing
targeting telephone lines, bombing and arson, I think we have to understand that there is a long
understand that there is a long history in this country of direct action which pushes the boundaries of democracy and is difficult for
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of democracy and is difficult for all of us but it is still direct action, not terrorism. I acknowledge his point about the
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I acknowledge his point about the history. I think it's a reasonable
history. I think it's a reasonable
history. I think it's a reasonable Ultimately this government has to respond to events that are taking
respond to events that are taking place in the here and now. This government has to take sometimes difficult decisions about what measures are required in order to
measures are required in order to keep the public safe. He is absolutely within his rights to seek to make comparisons about other
groups, but as I will explain in a moment, fundamentally the Home Secretary has to take a view about whether a legal threshold has been
crossed.
If it is, she has to make a judgement about whether she's wishing to proceed. I will have to make a bit of progress because I
still have some way to go. I will make some progress. Despite some of the rhetoric to the contrary, the
group's own materials stated that the organisation is not nonviolence. Which is echoed in the actions of
its members who have committed
atrocious attacks. Having carefully considered all the evidence, the Home Secretary has concluded that Palestine Action is concerned in
terrorism and should be proscribed.
The house will understand that I am
unable to comment on specific intelligence, or go into details about incidents that are sub judice.
However I can provide a summary of the groups activities, and it is right that I make that position
clear to the House. Since its inception in 2020, Palestine Action
has orchestrated and enacted a campaign of direct criminal action
against businesses and institutions, including key national infrastructure and defence firms
that provide services and supplies
to support Ukraine, NATO, our Five Eyes allies, and the UK defence industry.
Over time, and most
notably since the start of 2024, Palestine Action's activities have
increased in frequency and severity. Its targets have broadened to
include financial firms, charities, diversities, and government buildings. Its methods have become
more aggressive with its members demonstrating a willingness to use
violence. I will give way but I do need to make progress.
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I thank him because you spoke about the history of some of this and there is more recent history. The last government brought in the
The last government brought in the Public Order Act in order to deal with Extinction Rebellion. At that point the Home Secretary when she
point the Home Secretary when she was in the shadow front bench listed all the various crimes that could be
all the various crimes that could be dealt with. And she said then, the government are extending powers that we would normally make available
just for serious violence and terrorism to peaceful protest.
Police officers themselves have said
Police officers themselves have said that this is a serious restriction on a person's right to protest, and
on a person's right to protest, and in reality, is unworkable. She was right then wasn't she, and she is wrong today?
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wrong today? I am going to make a bit of progress because I hope to answer some of the points that he says.
some of the points that he says. Specific incidences for the decision
Specific incidences for the decision that have happened recently. I understand why he may not
understand why he may not necessarily want to listen to that but I would invite him to do so because it is a very important
context. I will make some progress. Some of Palestine Action's own material state we are not nonviolence and have specific
nonviolence and have specific targets.
The group has a footprint in all 45 policing regions in the
UK, and has pledged to escalate his campaign. This disgraceful pattern of activity cannot be allowed to continue. In applying the
legislative framework, the government assesses that Palestine
Action commits acts of terrorism. In several attacks, Palestine Action is committed acts of serious damage to
property with the aim of progressing its political cause. I'm not going to give way with the need to get
these points on the record. The aim of progressing its political cause and intimidating and influencing the public and the government.
These
include attacks in Glasgow 22, and last year, Instro Precision in Kent
and in Bristol. In such attacks, Palestine Action members. Entry onto
premises armed with a variety of weapons, and damaged or demolished
property causing millions of pounds worth of criminal damage. As the House has said, Palestine Action
members have used violence against people responding at the scene.
Drink Palestine Action attack against a Glasgow factory in 2022,
group tours over £1 million of damage including parts that are essential to our submarines.
Palestine Action caused panic among staff who feared for their safety, as pyrotechnics and smoke bombs were
thrown in the area where they were evacuating for top the sheriff, when
passing custodial sentences for the perpetrators said, "Throwing pyrotechnics into areas where people
are being evacuated would hardly be described as being non-violent. "
The government also assess that Palestine Action prepares for
terrorism. The organisation has provided practical advice to assist its members with conducting significant levels of property damage, at targets right across the
UK.
Example Palestine Action released and on the ground manual
which encourages its members to create small groups or cells and
provides guidance about how to conduct activity against private
companies and government buildings. It explains how to operate covertly to evade arrest and provide a link to a website also created by
Palestine Action, which contains a map of target locations across the UK. The government assesses that
Palestine Action promotes and encourages terrorism. This includes the glorification of its attacks
involving serious property damage on social media.
Palestine Action
attacks are not victimless crimes. Employees have experienced physical violence, intimidation, and
harassment. They have been prevented from entering their place of work. We would not tolerate this activity
from organisations motivated by Islamist or extreme right-wing
ideology, and we cannot tolerate it from Palestine Action. By influencing this measure we will
reduce Palestine Action's veil of legitimacy, tackle its financial
support, and degrades efforts to recruit and radicalise people into committing terrorist activity in its name. We must be under no illusion,
al-Islam action is not a legitimate protest group.
People engaged in
lawful protest don't need weapons. People engaged in full protest do
not throw smoke bombs and fire
pyrotechnics and innocent members of the public. And people engaged in lawful protest do not cause millions of pounds of damage to national
security infrastructure. Including submarines and defence equipment for
NATO. Proscribing Palestine Action will not impinge on people's right
to protest. Those who wish lawfully to protest or express support for Palestine have always been able to,
and can continue to do so.
I am conscious of time. That is why I
want to turn very briefly to the Russian Imperial Movement, or RIM.
It is a white supreme s no nationalist organisation that seeks
to create a new Russian in state.
The methods used to achieve those aims threaten UK, Euro-Atlantic, and wide international security and
prosperity. RIM conducts combat activity from its paramilitary units, and has actively fought
alongside Russian forces and other pro-Russian right-wing extremist groups in the ongoing Russia Ukraine
conflict.
In doing so, the government assesses that it has
committed or participated in acts of terrorism. RIM also prepares for
terrorism will stop it manages the paramilitary training program which increases the capabilities of
attendees conduct terrorist attacks. By proscribing RIM, UK will
reinforce our steadfast support of Ukraine and its resistance to Russian aggression, and our commitment to counter future threats from extreme right-wing terrorism in
the UK and Europe. Almost two years, it was my task on behalf of what was
then his Majesty's opposition to strongly support the action taken to proscribe the Wagner Group.
An
organisation which rightly stood condemned for its acts of indiscriminate violence and terror in Ukraine and elsewhere. I hope the
whole House will be as united as it was on that occasion in endorsing the action today taken against the
Russian Imperial Movement. To
conclude, the first duty of government is to keep our country safe. When our collective security
and our values are threatened, we will not hesitate to act. Today's proscriptions will send a clear and
unambiguous message that this Parliament stands against terrorism,
however and wherever it manifests itself.
Only in applying the U.K.'s
counterterrorism framework without bias can be maintain confidence. I
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therefore urge members to support these proscriptions. I commend the order to the House. The question is as on the Order
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The question is as on the Order Paper. Before I call the Shadow Minister, colleagues would have noted that on the Order Paper, this
noted that on the Order Paper, this debate is only 90 minutes long. It
debate is only 90 minutes long. It has to conclude at 527 which means backbenchers will be on a speaking limit of four minutes to begin with,
limit of four minutes to begin with, and only a few colleagues will get
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and only a few colleagues will get in as the debate has to conclude at 527. I call the Shadow Minister. Thank you Madam Deputy Speaker. I am grateful to them is that for
am grateful to them is that for statement and for bringing this important and very necessary measure to the house. I also thank him for the briefing I was provided with
the briefing I was provided with earlier today. Let us be clear what these measures are and are not about
the top do we support free speech? Yes.
We support the right to protest? Yes. Do we support the
Freedom of Expression (Religion or
Freedom of Expression (Religion or Belief System) Bill? Yes. But, these very freedoms that make a democracy are exactly the freedoms that these groups are considering and putting
16:26
Harriet Cross MP (Gordon and Buchan, Conservative)
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groups are considering and putting at risk why this is needed today. The groups we are discussing, Palestine Action, Maniacs Murder Cult, and Russian Imperial Movement,
have nothing whatsoever to do with
legitimate protest. They would not be facing proscription today if they were demonstrating peacefully,
respectfully, or legally. As so many groups and organisations across the
country do, and must continue to be able to do freely. These groups have chosen a different path entirely,
and for that, this action is rightly being taken against them.
We must be
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clear eyed about the broader threat to the landscape we face. I appreciate the Shadow Minister
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I appreciate the Shadow Minister for giving way. Does she agree, the only acceptable form of protest is
only acceptable form of protest is polite protest, that is not protest this permission?
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this permission? The right to protest is hugely important part of our democracy. We
important part of our democracy. We support the right to protest. We support the right to free speech was that we do not support the rights to
that we do not support the rights to criminal damage, intimidation, threats to the public. And that is exactly what these groups are doing
exactly what these groups are doing and that is why they are being proscribed quite rightly today. As I
proscribed quite rightly today.
As I said, we must be clear eyed about the broader threat landscape that we face. Terrorism remains one of the most serious threats to our national
most serious threats to our national security. Whether it comes from international networks, from those
international networks, from those radicalised online, from extremist groups operating on our soil, the threat is real. It is evolving, and it must demand our constant
it must demand our constant vigilance. Our security services work tirelessly, day and night, to
work tirelessly, day and night, to keep us safe.
They have disrupted countless plots that the public will
countless plots that the public will never know about. But we cannot be complacent. The nature of terrorism has changed. From sophisticated
networks to loan actors, with physical attacks against fibre networks, from foreign battlefields
to our own communities, and our response must evolve accordingly. We
should reflect on what terrorism is, as defined by the Terrorism Act
2000. It is the use or threat of action designed to influence a government, or intimidate the public, or a section of the public,
whether use of threat, action, is designed to advance political, religious, racial, or ideological
religious, racial, or ideological
causes.
The full list of actions are detailed in the Terrorism Act. They include Serious Violence Duty the person, actions that endanger life,
health and safety, and action that really damages property.
Proscription is not a step that is taken lightly but it is a stronger necessary tool that previous, as well as our current government, have
taken and should use to protect the public. And to ensure that our police and security services have
full access to the resources they need to keep the public and our institutions and our way of life
say.
No one can hear the steps that
the Minister set out in the actions of Palestine Action, MMR and RIM and consider these to be the actions of
these four legitimate protest groups.
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I thank the Shadow Minister for giving way. Will she accept that there is a distinction in intent
there is a distinction in intent when you look at Palestine Action, as compared to the other two
as compared to the other two organisations? There is no intention with the Palestinian Authority to
with the Palestinian Authority to cause intentional injury to people. And for that, there is already
And for that, there is already criminal matters that can be dealt with in court.
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with in court. I thank the member for that. If you are using pyrotechnics against people who are escaping an attack by
people who are escaping an attack by organisation, that is an intent. If
organisation, that is an intent. If you are intending to sabotage RAF jets at Brize Norton, that is intent. They are showing intent as
intent. They are showing intent as
intent. They are showing intent as well as organisations. These groups do not share our values as they do
do not share our values as they do not respect our country.
They do not care about our way of life, and they show no regard for the safety of our
show no regard for the safety of our citizens. We on our benches are proud that the actions have been taken by the previous Conservative government to strengthen our counterterrorism framework. We gave
counterterrorism framework. We gave our police and security services the powers they need to confront the evolving threats, and we welcome and support the Home Secretary now
making use of the same powers today. As the Minister said, proscription is a vital tool and a strong
deterrent.
But it is only part, yet very important, of what we need to
do to keep our country safe. On its own it is not enough. It must be followed with enforcement and we
will of course be watching closely to ensure that the police have the
resources and backing they need from the Labour government to ensure they can do just that. As both a minister
and I have said, the first job of any government is to keep the citizens say. We have the Official Opposition will always support the
government in that aim.
The
activities of these organisations have clearly met a threshold for proscription under the Terrorism CAPAC. To conclude we on this side
of the House are happy to support
of the House are happy to support
16:32
Richard Burgon MP (Leeds East, Labour)
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I want to speak specifically about Palestine Action. I think it is regrettable that the government
has brought one order banning three
organisations when he knows there is little disagreement on this and this is no way to do terror legislation
and I want to be clear that I would support this today if it only referred to the Maniacs Murder Cult
and Russian Imperial Movement
organisations. Many have condemned the proscription of Palestine Action
and many have said is a shocking escalation and will change the
colours against process.
I miss International UK high that they are deeply concerned at the use of
counterterrorism powers and these should not be used to ban such
should not be used to ban such
should not be used to ban such
actions. UN Special have said acts of protest that damage property but
are not intended to kill or injure should not be treated as terrorism
and likewise it has been stated that the sort of demonstration scene at the military base by Palestine
Action would not justify proscription as a terrorist
organisation.
Today, however, we are not voting on whether people agree with the tactics of Palestine
Action, nor for the people think the
objectives are right or wrong but further the actions they have taken against property, not people, should lead to them being treated as
terrorists when what they have done can be prosecuted under criminal damage and there is a long history of protest activity acts of
trespass, criminal damage, sabotaging. The recent statement on
this by the Home Secretary refers to criminal damage and live court cases
showing they are is legal provision
to deal with Palestine Action.
There are a variety of potential consequences if this proscription is passed today against Palestine Action and supporting adjoining
Palestine Action would carry up to 14 years in prison and it risks criminalising thousands of
criminalising thousands of
volunteers and supporters including students, nurses, retirees,
professionals. Many of them have never engaged in direct action but risk being criminalised. I met with Amnesty International today and was
offered freight the examples of how this could place constituents at
risk of prosecution under Section 12 of the Terrorism Act, with a maximum sentence of 14 years.
This would
include a person who tweets that they oppose war crimes in Gaza and
think palace Lecce of a point could be charged under this provision as
could someone who said they do not support the actions but think protest is important and they respect the sacrifices palace Lecce
are willing to make, risking arrest
to crimes. Also, having a placard
saying that the should not be proscribed. These are people who would never take part in direct
action but their speeches could be trolled and they could face legal
proceedings.
-- trawled. This could
result in a prison sentence of up to 14 years. People consider terrorism
to be a heinous act such as shooting people, people up, assassination, acts of violence. I would urge
coloured to consider the consequences to their constituents of the proscription of Palestine
Action alongside the other groups.
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I'm grateful to the Minister for his time to discuss this issue with me. I have been mentioned, there are
me. I have been mentioned, there are three organisations listed today and the order is not amendable. Taking
16:36
Lisa Smart MP (Hazel Grove, Liberal Democrat)
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the order is not amendable. Taking each of them in turn, Russian Imperial Movement is an
ultranationalist military organisation operating inside
Russia. The group has been
proscribed by the US and Canada. The justification for prescription Mike
is clear and we are happy to support it. Maniacs Murder Cult is also
destructive and believes society should be destabilised so a new
neo-Nazi white supremacist order can rise from the ashes and they have
taken part in acts of violence including motor and bombings as a deliberate tactic to instil fear.
The rational justification for
prescription Mike is clear and we -- proscription is clear. In terms of Palestine Action, on 20 June, as has
been widely reported, two members of Palestine Action gained access to
Brize Norton and circumvented
security under cover of darkness. Incidents involving members of Palestine Action also include the
tax at six in Bristol in 2024 and
again this year at Elbit Systems and
incidents in Glasgow. No matter how strongly any of us feel about the
appalling humanitarian crisis in
Gaza, and many of us across the House and the country feel very strongly indeed, this does not
justify attacks on military bases.
Those responsible must face the full
force of the law and there is no doubt about that. That is already
the law and that is not what is in front of MPs today. The question is
not about whether people are
committing crimes are not but further someone who expresses support for them should face up to 14 years in jail. The bath which
14 years in jail. The bath which
groups should be determined as terrorist organisations is high and transparency is crucial to maintain public trust in counterterrorism frameworks and so I have listened
carefully to experts raising concerns, including from the UN, as
mentioned previously by the Mother of the House.
Also what the ministry said and the words of the Home
Secretary about making this decision based on damage to property, notwithstanding the comments about
balance. The proscription of an
organisation on this basis would be I'm precedented, I believe. I welcome the Minister correcting me if I am wrong but today the
organisation has been proscribed in the UK for property damage is
critical. In terms of meeting the legal definition of terrorism in terms of serious criminal damage,
decisions on proscription to build up to the Home Secretary and there are questions as to whether it is proportionate in this case, given
the level of threat posed to the republic and I would welcome more details from the Minister on Friday believes that this is a
proportionate response because I remain to be convinced.
Currently the maximum custodial sentence for offences relating to membership or
expressing support for a terrorist
organisation which has been proscribed is 14 years. When the
actions do not pose the same threat too late, the blanket application of
the penalties risks being disproportionate. The Home Secretary rightly has substantial powers to
take action to keep the country safe but it is right and entirely proper
that we scrutinise the use of these powers and press the government to ensure any use of them is
proportionate.
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21 years ago, I should been wrecked but assisted in court defending an activist who broke into
16:40
Zarah Sultana MP (Coventry South, Independent)
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defending an activist who broke into an RDF basin tried to disable a bomber to prevent war crimes in
Iraq. It became a landmark in action
against an illegal war and that was our current trimester, Sir Keir
Starmer. Fast forward to 20 June, 2025, and two activists on behalf of
Palestine Action went into RAF Brize Norton and spread red paint, not
fire, and were prosecuted for criminal damage which is normally
done. The Home Secretary is using
this act to proscribe as a terrorist group.
Never before has it been a crime to support the group. These include non-violent people the
teachers, students, ordinary people, my constituents and yours and they are being classified alongside neo-
are being classified alongside neo-
Nazi militias and cons. This is
people who are exporting the ties between the government and the
Israeli apartheid state anti-war machine. Let us be clear, to equate a spray can of paint with suicide bombers not just absurd but
grotesque and the deliberate distortion of the law to chill
descent, criminalise solidarity and suppress the truth.
Amnesty
International have opposed these along with UN special rapporteur
Poole and at this late stage we
should be withdrawn. Anyone expressing support for the trip could face 14 years in prison under
this law. This is anyone calling for
them to no longer be classified by proscription. By this we can,
millions of people, including many constituents, could be placed under
the sweeping restrictions and let us
not forget what is happening in Gaza with hospital's bomb, children's
staff, tens of thousands killed, and more amputations per capita than
anywhere else on earth and Israel on trial for genocide.
The government was not response to criminalise
solidarity and continue exporting the jacks that are decimating Gaza.
We must understand the history of the country and the tradition of civil disobedience. From the
suffragettes, without whom I would not have had the vote, let alone the
village of being an MP. Those who oppose the tactics of Palestine Action must recognise the vast gulf between criminal damage and
terrorism and if the order passes, what is next? Climate protesters,
striking workers, feminists in the street? We seem a crackdown on civil
liberties with musicians censored and journalists arrested and MPs, including some sitting here, harass.
I know the government was to use anti-terror laws to make peaceful
protest crime. If democratic institutions function as they should, this would not be necessary.
To conclude, if this proscription passes, as it will come up we must
understand that no campaign will be safe and we also have to recognise
that this will go down as a dark day in our country's history and will be remembered and people will ask which side you were on and I stand with
the millions that oppose genocide because I am one of them and I oppose the blood-soaked and if the government is trying to silence us and I will say loudly and proudly that we are all Palestine...
**** Possible New Speaker ****
Order.
16:45
Rt Hon Sir Iain Duncan Smith MP (Chingford and Woodford Green, Conservative)
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**** Possible New Speaker ****
Order. For listening to this, I have concerns about the last of the three
concerns about the last of the three organisations and generally about the application of criminal law but I do support the government
position. It cast into late while I
position. It cast into late while I
listened to this. -- light. There is an organisation that we have not taken action against in this way,
the IRGC, and this is the elephant
the IRGC, and this is the elephant
The IRGC crater they use proxies, sponsor terrorism, as demonstrated
without dispute all over the world.
They are... They support her -- Hamas and Hezbollah. They have been
supplying them with weapons. We have been complicit in the terrible
killing. They are very heavily involved in that. They are
sanctioned but not proscribed in
that does not give you the powers to deal with the proxies and those for
them. There was a campaign for
proscribing and they say that, and the foreign office says this
endless, that they will look at the political wishes are getting through to Iran but how is that going and how has it gone over the last year?
Not at all.
You cannot reason with these characters. Global terrorist attacks have a huge number rooted in
IRGC money and treating and high levels of activity in the UK and the
propaganda in the UK is trying to build arrangements in the UK and
Plainview, at times, even on links where they can be tracked but do it
openly because nothing can be done. Of course, they support Hezbollah,
who is also prescribed. I think the IRGC should be the debate and the decision and that should be the law
decision and that should be the law
of the House and the IRGC should be proscribe and they do not, it begs the question, what are we doing
the question, what are we doing
**** Possible New Speaker ****
Can I firstly associate myself
16:47
Clive Lewis MP (Norwich South, Labour)
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**** Possible New Speaker ****
Can I firstly associate myself with the comment of the Frontbench for the Liberal Democrats, I thought they made some good comments.
Secondly, I agree with that proscription of the two far-right fascist organisations. I think they should be proscribed. But can we as
a House accept that there are those
of us here today who have a different take on today's proscription for Palestine Action? We don't have to agree with the
behaviour or actions of Palestine Action to make the case here today that this proscription is wrong.
I
would also like to ask honourable members to acknowledge the fact that
many of us here today would take a different view on this issue, are a
part of this democracy just as much as those who agree with proscription. It is just that our
take on the delicacy of our democracy and what this proscription does and how it undermines our
democracy and opinion happened to differ from other people. I know members on the opposite benches have
repeatedly said that when it comes
to ULEZ and low emissions campaigners, they understand and
empathise with those constituents who have smashed and vandalised
them.
So direct action is not something that is just of the left, it is something that everyone in our
democracy can partake in. This is a judgement call on how we best protect our democracy. And an acknowledgement that not all threats
are external and are violent. Some threats are based on the decisions
that we hear ourselves take in this place. Sometimes we may take decisions which fundamentally
undermine our own democracy. I have no doubt that some of this will be called terrorist sympathisers by
some who disagree with our position.
But that would be wrong. When you
look round the world, and watch as democracy and the rule of law is
being systematically smashed. Corporations, the wealthy, have
increasing power and wealth to influence our democracy for top look over at the Atlantic, the United
States, our democracies are delicate and precious was the decisions we
take here determine whether those democracies will survive as we go into the future. I look around the
world I look around this country for top I look at the party, the
authoritarian party that is 10 points ahead in the polls and worry
about the future of our democracy was it means that our government has to make decisions that take that
into account.
Take into account that we may not be in government one day, it may be the authoritarian right
and they will take this further and
faster and deeper than we ever have. So we should be putting in a fireguard now, protecting our democracy. This doesn't do that. And
I will conclude by saying, I
understand what terrorism is. I was in London on seventh of July 2007.
And I watched my community this city
attacked by real terrorists. At that point, rightly or wrongly, I decided I was going to Afghanistan to fight the terrorists.
And I went because I
love this country and I love our democracy and I want to see it protected. I think the proscription
order against Palestine Action undermines that I wish my government wouldn't do it. Thank you.
**** Possible New Speaker ****
As we have heard, the issues around the proscription of Palestine
around the proscription of Palestine Action has thrown a number of legitimate concerns and there is no
legitimate concerns and there is no doubt it will have an impact on our right to protest and the civil liberties that we have enjoyed for
liberties that we have enjoyed for decades. It is right to condemn and prosecute criminal activity especially those that threaten our
especially those that threaten our national security. Surely this must be done within the framework of existing legislation, as it was has
existing legislation, as it was has been.
This looks nothing other than a direct response to Palestine Action being able to infiltrate an
16:51
Pete Wishart MP (Perth and Kinross-shire, Scottish National Party)
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RAF base and causing damage to a defence aircraft. The decision to proscribed organisation is
ultimately matter for the government and it is up to the Home Secretary to decide who goes on that list. It
is based on intelligence the government holds full stop eidetic the Minister has convinced many of us today that this has met the
Schuld for proscription and we need to hear more about their concerns about this particular group. Before
that happens, the government must take into account whether it is proportionate, justified, and in the
national interest to proscribe such an organisation.
Terrorism legislation as we know has extremely
legislation as we know has extremely
broad powers that it hands to the state, and as such it must always be treated with the highest degree of caution and restraint. We live in a
society where organisations have a democratic right to campaign and express views on particular issues
in a democratic respectful and lawful manner. It is important that
the right to lawful protest is not affected by the Home Secretary's decision today full stop it is extremely concerning this decision
could lead to these powers being extended to other campaigning
organisations.
It is inexplicable that Palestine Action has been linked to groups such as the Maniacs
Murder Cult and the Russian Imperial
Movement. Groups known to House, and should of course be proscribed for.
For Palestine Action to be included alongside these groups is at best a cynical and calculated move by the
government in order to ensure that this order gets through today. People all over the UK including many of my constituents rightly feel
very strongly about the appalling crimes being committed against
innocent civilians in Gaza on a daily basis.
Many of these people
have been taking part in weekly protests, to make their voices heard to show solidarity with al-Islam.
These people are now concerned that
they might be caught up in this proscription. I am also concerned that many young people who are sharing social media posts from
Palestine Action could now be considered as glorifying what will
soon be a proscribed group. We need clarity on what actions could result in people being charged under this
terrorism legislation. Example, does wearing a Palestine Action badge
handed out at a demonstration or rally means that they could be charged with terrorism?
Organisations like Amnesty International and even the United Nations have expressed concern about
this proscription regarding the U.K.'s broad definition of terrorism will stop this week, an Israeli
strike in Gaza killed at least 20
Palestinians.
This is what we should be discussing today and every day
until a permanent ceasefire is reached and all the hostages are released. The government must act in the national interest of the that is
what they have got to do, they have to keep us safe from all of the different challenges presented to
them. We need clear reassurance about the wider impact of what has
**** Possible New Speaker ****
been proposed today. Thank you Madam Deputy Speaker. I welcome the Home Secretary's
welcome the Home Secretary's
decisive action on Palestine Action, Maniacs Murder Cult and the Russian
Imperial Movement today for the 20 months on from the horrific terror attacks of 7 October, the suffering
of people in Gaza has rightly been the subject of much international campaigning for money has been raised to support charities getting
aid into Gaza, the hostages worked tirelessly to keep the plight of the
tirelessly to keep the plight of the hostages on the world agenda.
And hundreds of people have contacted MPs and this is all genuine
MPs and this is all genuine activism, importantly within the bounds of the law. Palestine Action
bounds of the law. Palestine Action is something different. Over five
16:56
Jon Pearce MP (High Peak, Labour)
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is something different. Over five years it has conducted a campaign of violence, intimidation, and criminal
damage was not in one attack on a business in Bristol, two police officers were attacked with a sledgehammer. The officers also then
found not only sledgehammers but whips, axis, and other home-made
weapons. Palestine Action have attacked business in my constituency in the High Peak, intimidating the
workers there. Last month at RAF Brize Norton, military planes were vandalised and £30 million of damage done. Such attacks undermine our
national security, our Armed Forces, and can never be justified.
I
implore the Home Secretary for responding in the strongest possible
terms. But Palestine Action also has a track record of attacks against his country's Jewish community. In
May this year, a building housing Jewish owned businesses in North Manchester was vandalised with red
paint and graffiti reading. Later that month, a Jewish owned business
in Stamford Hill was attacked by the organisation with windows broken, red paint graffiti, and damage done
to the buildings. In the latter
case, Palestine Action claimed the business was linked to the Israeli companies, which proved baseless.
This campaign of anti-Semitic harassment reveals the logical
conclusion of their extremism. An important difference between all of the other groups that have been mentioned in this House is that this
group targets a specific group in our country of a specific ethnic or
religious minority. This does not
help, with smashing windows, it will not free Palestine. It undermines the work of so many people who
support the Palestinian cause and towards a peaceful future. It leads
to an environment where British Jews feel unsafe and harassed.
It is something that should never be
tolerated. Legitimate protest is a
fundamental democratic freedom, but Palestinian action abandoned that legitimate action a long time ago. I welcome the government's swift
action today in ensuring that this organisation can no longer pose a threat to our security, to our
businesses, and to the Jewish community.
**** Possible New Speaker ****
Thank you Madam Deputy Speaker. As the debate opens today, I intervened on the Minister I'm
intervened on the Minister I'm grateful to him for giving way. I need an explanation, and I hope you
need an explanation, and I hope you will get one as to why groups are always put together in these orders
and not dealt with separately and individually. Clearly there are different orders of concern here. And I want Solly to speak about the issues surrounding Palestine Action.
issues surrounding Palestine Action.
We live in a democratic society, and we have to also understand where our rights have come from. The member
16:58
Rt Hon Jeremy Corbyn MP (Islington North, Independent)
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rights have come from. The member who has just spoken from High Peak represents the place where, in 1932,
the mass trespass took place. It was
led by a Jewish activist in the Communist Party at the time he was demanding rights of access for the countryside. He was roundly
condemned by all of the mass media and he was put on trial, put in
prison, and he was eventually released from prison after mass protests in his support. Without him
and others, the access to countryside simply would not have happened at that time.
When you look
at all the other people that over decades of history have stood up for
free speech and for democracy, going back to the suffragettes and others,
those that can paint to end apartheid in South Africa. And
interestingly, during all of the anti-apartheid years, whilst we did
condemn the ANC and did believe for a while that Nelson Mandela was a terrorist, he never banned the ANC
in Britain because the advice they got was it was important that there be a place that people express their
voice of hope of the end of apartheid.
The women that went to
Greenham common to protest about the deployment of nuclear weapons there
were also never labelled as terrorists. Yes they were charged under Colonel trespass, as indeed
many others have been, as those that undertake direct action are very
well aware of the risks they take. But it crosses an enormous threshold to suddenly announce that Palestine Action, speaking out against the horrors of what is happening in
Gaza, where hundreds are mown down every day by the Israeli Defense
Forces, simply for queueing for food, when they are desperately hungry, and the children are
starving for top surely we should be looking at the issue that Palestine
Action are concerned about and the supply of weapons from this country to Israel which has made this
possible.
If this order goes through today will have a chilling effect on
protest. I quote a letter that was sent to the Home Secretary on 28th of June will stop "Direct action is
of June will stop "Direct action is
Standing and respected part of British history for from the suffragettes chaining themselves to railings, to striking miners, to anti-apartheid campaigners occupying institutions and disrupting trade,
civil disobedience and direct action that have always been a necessary force for progress and justice. " The letter comes from the chair of
North London Council of mosques and someone from the Newark Muslim
Forum.
On behalf of the London Council of mosques who are concerned
about the chilling effect that this piece of legislation which agreed
piece of legislation which agreed
My last point, legal action is being taken and there is a case in the
High Court on Friday. Can we have it made clear that this will not be put into force until all legal avenues
have been exhausted and there will
not be some temporary position, later to be withdrawn if there is successful legal action? I think we have to know all legal avenues have
been fully explored in this case.
**** Possible New Speaker ****
The push to proscribe Palestine Action as a terrorist organisation
17:02
Kim Johnson MP (Liverpool Riverside, Labour)
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Action as a terrorist organisation is a disastrous point of historic
proportion and risks criminalising
activists and is legally dubious. Many experts have spoken out against the misuse of terrorism was copy move unjustified and warning of a
chilling effect on protest and advocacy generally, especially in relation to the defence of human
rights and international law. We
have seen the chilling effect on
protest and Palestine Solidarity Campaign had been prevented from protesting today and have been police restrictions of the demonstration.
For hundreds of
demonstration. For hundreds of
years, process -- protests have gone ahead outside Parliament. We have
seen this in terms of the Assisted Dying Bill, abortion, and more. The question members must ask ourselves today is whether nonviolent
political group should be designated as a terror threat. If Palestine
as a terror threat. If Palestine
Action is proscribed then anyone with a branded T-shirt or bag could face a terrorism charge. Amnesty
International has flagged the proscription of Palestine Action and
it means that even lawyers could fall foul of counterterrorism
legislation for meeting with people.
This could come from issues with members who are not members of the organisation have never engaged in direct action. The scope of what we are talking about is insanely
bright. Is the government going to demand that we vote to criminalise
constituents in this way? The proscribing of Palestine Action today would set a dangerous
precedent for the future of counterterror laws and it would be
the first group proscribed for damage to property and the first action group and the proscription is neither necessary nor proportionate
and there is legislation that deals with this where necessary and the Home Secretary has not provided an
impact assessment and we have
received no reassurances around how
it has been applied to the impact of the wider movement and if this was considered by the Home Office and
the proscription review group.
Allegedly, there have been meetings with representatives from the
Israeli government and arms companies like Elbit Systems but
none with human rights groups.
Whether the members of the House agree with the actions of Palestine Action today, we should all agree that categorising them together with
the other two obscure groups to
ensure it is proscribed is a disgraceful manipulation of
parliamentary procedure. Neither of the two other groups have been
mentioned in Hansard because they are so obscure and this is transparent and shows the government
knows how shaky proscription is.
They are coming for Palestine Action today. If this passes, who and what
will be next? I look forward to the Minister answering the concerns raised in the debate today,
particularly around gripping the three organisations together. Thank
**** Possible New Speaker ****
you. I start by putting on record that
I know at least two people who have
previously participated in protests by Palestine Action. This is about fundamental principles and this is a
fundamental principles and this is a chilling moment for British democracy. Let's be clear about what
is happening. Our political process group is being silenced. Isn't it usually ironic that this is being done today when this morning,
done today when this morning, hundreds of women MPs including the Home Secretary herself celebrated
Home Secretary herself celebrated the 97th anniversary of equal votes for women which was a victory won by
the Suffragettes who were themselves a direct action protest group.
I
a direct action protest group. I
17:07
Ellie Chowns MP (North Herefordshire, Green Party)
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a direct action protest group. I To associate direct action with terrorism. Secondly, it will have a chilling effect on democratic rights to free speech on protest. Thirdly, it is utterly cynical of the
government to wrap up proscription of Palestine Action with two other clearly terrorist groups. Terrorism
Act makes it clear that strict
criteria must be met before the Scripture McAvennie group and this
is not necessary nor proportionate and has been made clear by Amnesty International, there is ample
criminal law for criminal damage caused by a group like post-
election.
They may have engaged in criminal damage and been charged
with offences like disorder and aggravated burglary and may have carried it actions I do not condone. Indeed, I condemn physical attacks
against property but understandably they have stirred up genuine fear
and I find the works written by one of the cofounders at a rally in the
aftermath of the Hamas attacks of October 7 horrific but that does not make members of Austin Ekeler
terrorists. The bar for this must be
set high.
The stated aim of this group is to prevent workrooms,
prevent crimes against humanity, prevent genocide. It is not just
members and supporters of Palestine Action being silenced but by association the proscription presents a grave risk to free speech
and protest rights of millions of people who are greatly concerned
genocide is happening in Gaza on this government's watch. Millions of people are active, either online and
communities are campaigning to end the complicity of the UK anti- genocide and is a clear risk that
proscribing Palestine Action to criminalise people for shooting a
social media post and see them in your footages.
It is clearly disproportionate when compared with the actions of the other groups. I
am concerned with the utterly cynical decision of the Home Office
to wrap Palestine Action with two other groups who do meet the test. It's clearly been done to make it difficult for MPs to vote against the motion and I wanted on motion
that I and my colleagues absolutely oppose the proscription of Palestine
Action and will oppose any other attacks on civil disobedience which is a pro part of UK history and if
you compare these charges against Pastor Lecce against the other two
groups, including paramilitary
organisations, neo-Nazis organising supremacy, these are terrorist acts
and the proscription of Pastor Lecce
is not worthy of democracy committed to human rights, supposedly.
There is opposition including from the former Lord Chancellor and Justice
**** Possible New Speaker ****
Secretary Lord Falconer. Palestine Action to bring the genocide in Gaza to an end. Order. I want to start by making clear
**** Possible New Speaker ****
I want to start by making clear to members that the order that we are voting one is not about whether
are voting one is not about whether or not we are supportive of the political position or protest
17:10
Nadia Whittome MP (Nottingham East, Labour)
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methods of Palestine Action. Vote
against the motion, you do not have to agree with them at all and can support holding them criminally liable for actions. The question is about whether they should be
proscribed as a terrorist group and placed alongside the likes of al-
Qaeda, Islamic state, National Action. It Is Fitting It Is Taking
Place on the 97th Anniversary of Women winning the right to vote on equal terms with men, thanks in no small part to the Suffragettes are
carried out action more extreme than anything those have done for
Palestine Action.
Today, the role is commemorated. Whatever you think of your actions, Palestine Action are
part of a similar tradition of the target being stopping genocide in Gaza. It is unprecedented for a
government to ban a civil disobedience protest group in the
way it is attempting to do so today but what is not unprecedented as protesters breaking into military
bases. This is something that is not
in resulting in WUBSA in the past. It would be overreach and would set a dangerous precedent that could be
**** Possible New Speaker ****
used in the future to further silence dissent. I thank the on ability for giving
**** Possible New Speaker ****
I thank the on ability for giving
**** Possible New Speaker ****
I thank the on ability for giving way. We are from a place at one side
cruise missiles and people broken and attacked jets with hammers and are prosecuted under criminal law. They were held to account. Under
They were held to account. Under this government, potentially, they
**** Possible New Speaker ****
this government, potentially, they would have been classified as a terrorist organisation. I agree entirely with his
**** Possible New Speaker ****
I agree entirely with his intervention. Experts from the UN
intervention. Experts from the UN are urging us not to do this and saying that they are concerned that the unjustified labelling of the protest movement as terrorist.
protest movement as terrorist. Hundreds of lawyers have written to the Home Secretary warning that the
the Home Secretary warning that the proscribing Palestine Action would conflate activism of terrorism and
conflate activism of terrorism and Amnesty International and Liberty have expressed concerns. There is a briefing about the decision and it has been called absurd.
It is
has been called absurd. It is important to remember that this proscription would not just affect members of Palestine Action but
members of Palestine Action but anybody supports them. Relating to a fundraiser, posting positively about the trip on social media would mean
committing a crime. We would risk criminalising huge numbers of our
constituents. I regret that we are
being denied the opportunity to vote separately on the proscription of
Palestine Action and the other two
organisations, whose proscription I would wholeheartedly support.
Dripping these organisations together -- classifying these
organisations together means that
**** Possible New Speaker ****
therefore have no choice but to vote against this today. I must say I never thought that
17:13
Rt Hon Sir Julian Lewis MP (New Forest East, Conservative)
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**** Possible New Speaker ****
I must say I never thought that the day would arise when I, as a nonlawyer, would be advising the
nonlawyer, would be advising the government of lawyers that they have to be really sure of the legal basis
for what they are doing. As I said in an intervention on the subject on 23 June, it would do the country and
the government now favours to lose
in court challenge to the process of proscription. The secret sabotage of planes would certainly have been an act of terrorism leading to
proscription, it was performative and these people and those that they
had done it.
The question I would put to the it is, are they going to at least adopt a belt and braces
policy when it comes to the prosecution of people who did that
terribly irresponsible and wrongheaded act of sabotaging the
planes? Will they prosecute them as well on the basis that they have
done criminal damage? That they have done something to attack the forces
of the Throne, which borders on
sedition. Otherwise, I fear that by using the wrong aspects of the law to pursue some people who did some
very bad things in the, the government will end up actually
scoring an own goal frame these
people walk free with our triumph in court under their belt.
I am not
convinced that the policy that the government has adopted on this matter, although justified in terms
of the unacceptable behaviour of the perpetrators, is, nevertheless,
going to stand up in court when there are plenty of other legal methods that could be used to deal
methods that could be used to deal
with this form of extremism. And extremism it is, but it is not, in my opinion, pass the threshold to be
classified in the legal sense as terrorism.
It may be the case that
if I had able to accept the offer of the Minister, which I understand he
made to have a word with me on Privy Council terms before the debate, and
I thank them for that and I'm sorry I could not take it up, but it may be that he could have told me things
about the group that would have convinced me that it crossed that threshold if it is not able to tell
these things in public, and there
may be good reasons why, then I suspect he will not be able to tell it to the courts either.
I would say
to the government, and I do not think anyone would accuse me of
being soft on extremist groups that are antimilitary, but with the best will in the world, I say to the
government to adopt a legal belt and braces policy when it comes to
prosecuting drip and do not rely on proscription because I can see
proscription because I can see
**** Possible New Speaker ****
Let me place on record my full support for the prescription of
support for the prescription of Maniacs Murder Cult and the Russian Imperial Movement. These are vile
murderous fascist colds, and then being placed on the proscribed list is justified and necessary. But it is precisely because we must take
terrorism seriously that we must also have clear minds. To put Palestine Action in the same
17:17
Imran Hussain MP (Bradford East, Labour)
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Palestine Action in the same category as these murderous extremist organisations erode the
credibility of our legal framework and risks undermining Civil Rights.
Proscription must be used judicially
full stop conflating protest with terror in a dangerous step that undermines the very freedoms our counterterrorism laws are meant to
protect. Where there is criminal activity, there is adequate legal
provision within the criminal law to deal with that. What we are being
asked to do is proscribe them under
the Terrorism Act to treat civil descent, whether or not we agree or disagree with that civil descent as
extremism.
That is a concerning shift, and we risk crossing a line.
Hundreds of lawyers including Caseys
and human rights advocates have warned that this is not a hallmark of democracy. We have heard earlier
today that United Nations Special Rapporteurs have expressed serious
concern about this measure. What we have not heard is the huge
duplication that this would have on some of our communities. The risk of being criminalised simply for
showing support for Palestine under
this proscription, people could face prosecution for something as simple as wearing a badge, sharing a post online, or attending a peaceful
protest.
The question for this House is do we really want to become a
society where nonviolently expressing solidarity, or even
speaking out, could be interpreted as terrorism? This will only further
fuel fear and repression. Local groups could suddenly find
themselves under suspicion. Whole communities could be cast as suspects, not for what they do but
for what they stand for. And there are numerous examples, I don't have
the time today, the member for Leeds East has eloquently set out a number
of examples that should send shivers frankly down the backs of everybody's spine in this place.
This is not the way forward. A non-
violent protest, what are democracies meant to protect, now
risks being labelled as terror. The legal basis for this proscription is unsound. The democratic consequences
are severe, and the moral cost is frankly unacceptable. Let me be
clear, it will disproportionately target campaigners and minority communities, and it will set a
precedent that reaches far beyond
this one group. Today it is Palestine Action, tomorrow it could be climate activists. We are standing on a slippery slope
proscribing a protest group is not strength.
I urge this House to
defend our hard-won rights and civil liberties. To conflate protest with
terrorism is not democracy, and therefore I will not support, and I
**** Possible New Speaker ****
want to put that on the record, any proscription of Palestine Action. I can squeeze in one more speaker.
**** Possible New Speaker ****
speaker. Thank you Madam Deputy Speaker. I came to this country as a child.
17:20
Shockat Adam MP (Leicester South, Independent)
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came to this country as a child. This country nurtured me, educated
me and a brace me I love this country for so many reasons for top there are two reasons I love it for
more than anything else, one is its sense of fairness, and the second is a sense of ability to be free to be
able to express how you feel. That is why today I speak specifically about Palestine Action and I said
that if we proscribe this organisation under the Terrorism Act, we will for the first time in the nation's history outlaw a
domestic protest group as a terrorist organisation.
Britain has a proud but often hardfought tradition of civil resistance will
stop remember the reference of the suffragettes who were branded as criminals for smashing windows but
are now celebrated as heroes of justice was not remember the civil rights movement where protesters occupied street and broke unjust
laws to dismantle segregation. We remember the global campaign against apartheid. Ministers in this House
where people face trespasses, and
the very freedom we hold dear today, votes for women, racial equality,
the end of apartheid, were not born out of men and women in suits and the establishment of the but by
people out there.
It is that tradition we are about to disrupt today. This decision, rushed through
Parliament in a matter of days, with unrelated foreign neo-Nazi groups
and debated for mere minutes is a reckless abuse of process. It denies Parliament the gravity of
deliberations and issues that is demanded. Proscription has already been condemned by a vast range of
people from Lord Faulkner. This is going to continue. What is even
worse, this statutory instrument risks criminalising anyone who
supports sympathisers or praises the
aims of Palestine Action.
It opens the door to the prosecution of journalists, filmmakers, campaigners, and politicians were doing nothing more than expressing
solidarity. This is Orwellian dystopian on steroids. Let us ask
ourselves, we set this president today, who will be next? History
will judge us harshly, and I urge my colleagues to not allow this dangerous step to go unchallenged.
Do not allow a Home Secretary in a moment of political expediency to permanently expand the reach of the
anti-terror laws into the heart of the domestic process will stop and
do not let this House be the one that shrank the boundaries of freedom and expression was we know it to those who fought so hard for
our freedoms, who dared to descent, refused to be silent.
Let us summon the courage now. Vote against this proscription, protect our democratic
**** Possible New Speaker ****
tradition and the right to protest. I now come to the Minister.
**** Possible New Speaker ****
I now come to the Minister. Madame Deputy Speaker, I'm grateful to all of those who contributed to this debate. The proscription of these three
proscription of these three organisations affirms the U.K.'s zero tolerance approach to
terrorism. To be clear, these prescriptions would not affect anyone's legitimate and lawful right
anyone's legitimate and lawful right to protest. Whether that is about Palestine, Gaza, or anything else.
Palestine, Gaza, or anything else. The government has to take action when Palestine Action has orchestrated a nationwide campaign
orchestrated a nationwide campaign of property damage, featuring attacks that have resulted in
attacks that have resulted in serious damage, tax that have
serious damage, tax that have resulted in serious damage on property and crossed the legal threshold.
I'm not going to give way.
17:24
Dan Jarvis MP, The Minister of State, Home Department (Barnsley North, Labour)
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way. It is clear that the list is not wishing to give way. He has until
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527. These are attacks that have
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These are attacks that have resulted in serious damage to property, and have crossed the legal threshold from direct criminal action into terrorism. They have
action into terrorism. They have used violence against people responding at the scenes of attacks.
Members have been charged with a series of serious offences including violent disorder, Rivas bodily harm,
with intent. An aggravated burglary, which is an offence involving a
weapon. So this order would degrade their harmful activity. It will also
reduce the threat particularly to
vulnerable individuals from MMC's violent content.
And it will reinforce our support for Ukraine and commitments to countering
extreme right-wing terrorism in
Europe. Madam Deputy Speaker.
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This is, I am on my feet. This is a very tight debate that has to
a very tight debate that has to conclude at 527 the Minister has time he may wish to take your intervention shortly. Is your point
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of order really relevant right now? Let me explain, I want to know,
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Let me explain, I want to know, if this order goes through, and I go out there to the demonstration that is mobilising at the moment to say I
17:25
Points of Order
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is mobilising at the moment to say I am opposed to this, will I be prosecuted?
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Not a point of order. That is not
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a point of order. Madam Deputy Speaker I'm happy to respond directly to the right honourable gentleman's point of
honourable gentleman's point of order. The process involving prescription action requires this
prescription action requires this House and should it do so later this
House and should it do so later this evening it will go to the other place and it is for them to agree or
not and it will be for the Home Secretary or myself to sign an order and the order would become law at midnight on the night it had been
midnight on the night it had been
signed.
I'm not going to give way.
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Order. Minister continue.
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Order. Minister continue. Thank you Madam Deputy Speaker. I don't think the right honourable gentleman listens to what I said, I explained the process that is in
explained the process that is in place. I am grateful to all of those
who have considered this matter. It is a necessary and proportionate step to protect the public and
step to protect the public and defend our values. That is after all the first duty of the state. Under
this government, nothing will matter
more.
With that, I commend this order to the House.
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The question is, this is not the time for a point of order. The question is as on the Order Paper as
question is as on the Order Paper as many are of that opinion say, "Aye". And of the contrary, "No". Division,
17:28
Division
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The The question The question is
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The question is as The question is as on The question is as on the The question is as on the Order Paper as many are of that opinion say, "Aye". And of the contrary,
say, "Aye". And of the contrary, "No". Tellers for the ayes Gen Kitchen and Christian Wakeford.
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Lock Lock the Lock the doors.
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Order Order order.
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Order order.
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Order order. The ayes to the right, 395. The
noes to the left, 26.
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noes to the left, 26. The ayes to the right, 385. The
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The ayes to the right, 385. The noes to the left, 26. The ayes have
noes to the left, 26. The ayes have it, the ayes have it. Unlock. Point
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of order. As Madame Deputy Speaker knows,
17:42
Points of Order
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every single person who just voted no wanted to vote yes. To the prescription of the Maniacs Murder
prescription of the Maniacs Murder Cult and the Russian Imperial Movement but were prevented from
Movement but were prevented from doing so by the cynical way that the government lumped together these two clearly terrorist organisations with
clearly terrorist organisations with Palestine Action which we could not support. Can the Speaker please
support. Can the Speaker please advise me and those other MPs who
just voted no if there is any way in the future that prescription orders for unrelated organisations can be
voted on separately so that each MP can apply their own critical
assessment of whether each group has met the tests of proportionality and necessity required for a terrorist
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prescription? I thank the honourable lady for having given notice of her point of
having given notice of her point of order. The chair does not have the power to separate out decisions on
power to separate out decisions on the contents of a statutory
instrument. In making her point of order she has put her points and her concerns on the record. Point of
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order Zarah Sultana. Thank you for subduing the previous debate on the prescription of Palestine action the member hi PQ
of Palestine action the member hi PQ
I have notified spoke without declaring he is chair of Labour Friends of Israel and has accepted hospitality and overseas trips funded by pro Israel lobby
funded by pro Israel lobby organisations first of the House was discussing a non-violent direct action group that directly
action group that directly challenges the Israeli state which is on trial for genocide against the Palestinian people.
Can you advise,
Palestinian people. Can you advise, Madame Deputy Speaker and what mechanisms are available so the
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mechanisms are available so the British public are truly aware of what interests are being represented on this floor? I thank the honourable lady for
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I thank the honourable lady for her point of order and need for having given advance notice of it
having given advance notice of it will stop the procedure for raising a complaint of this sort is by writing to the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards, and it
Commissioner for Standards, and it
is not a matter for the chair. Motion number five, on agriculture.
Minister to move. The question is as on the order paper. As many as are
17:44
Remaining Orders of the Day
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of that opinion say, "Aye." Of the
contrary, "No." I think the ayes
have it, the ayes have it. Motion number six on subsidy control,
minister to me. The question is. As -- As many as are of that opinion
say, "Aye." Of the contrary, "No." I think the ayes have it, the ayes
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have it. I beg to move that this House do now adjourn.
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now adjourn. The question is that this House do now adjourn. Sir John Hayes.
do now adjourn. Sir John Hayes.
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Thank you. Speaking long before... GK Chesterton said big
business is now an organised calming. Some would say militarism
calming. Some would say militarism without military values. -- Virtues. Heaven knows what he would say if he
Heaven knows what he would say if he was allowed now as global corporations have such influence on all our lives. It's the small and
all our lives. It's the small and medium-sized businesses in my Lincolnshire constituency and
Lincolnshire constituency and constituencies across this country that make up the backbone of our
that make up the backbone of our economy.
But they also provide the particularities for colour and shape make that colour and shape the
make that colour and shape the places each physical home. As they small and medium-sized businesses
small and medium-sized businesses that reinvest in the communities
that reinvest in the communities Is those businesses which provide opportunities for local people. We
all know them from our daily experience as customers of businesses, but we also know them
from the representations made to us as members of Parliament. Today, I
speak in the interest of those small businesses, those entrepreneurs,
those people who devote so much of their time and skill and energy for the common good, for the national
interest and the common good drive
all I do in this place.
Those
businesses make up about 99% of businesses. Just think of the influence of the effect of the other
17:46
Adjournment: Regulatory environment of corporate businesses and franchisees
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1%. When SMEs are accused of wrongdoing, breaking the law even,
they often have little in the way of resources to defend themselves. They
are at the mercy of powerful regulators and at the caprice of giant competitors. In contrast, the
big multinational companies which
have come to dominate too much of our economy, have armies of compliance officers, lawyers and
compliance officers -- lawyers.
Faceless, heartless multinational firms often have little in the way of roots here, with many tech firms
using such ruthlessness to justify
decisions to pay little if any tax.
Corporate businesses have grown even
Corporate businesses have grown even
bigger -- ever bigger. You see profiteering, for example in supermarkets, over recent years, who
give their suppliers, primary
producers like farmers, very often a raw deal. We see them distort the
raw deal. We see them distort the
food chain yet take advantage of the disruption brought by the pandemic and the war in Ukraine. Indeed, the pandemic exacerbated the power of
greedy globalist. Unite the trade
union has highlighted big firms profit margins have soared compared
to the pre-pandemic period.
The
profits of the 300+ largest companies in Britain increased by 19%, compared to pre-pandemic
levels. Contrast that with the
plight of smaller businesses with ever greater cost and ever more unfair competition from their giant
competitors. But if the claims of
the globalist... Do remember them a question mark the people addicted to modernity and change, the claims of those enthusiastic globalists that
the world would be a better place for their activities were true, who
has really benefited? An economy where standards are falling,
productivity has told, where the state grows ever bigger in the face
of rising were clusters.
The only beneficiaries are the few people at
the top of those corporate businesses. It's not monopolies we need, it's a multiplicity of
businesses. Start-up firms, local
firms, firms that innovate, that
engage in new activities. They need
greater freedom while the monoliths need to be regulated so they don't
exploit the marketplace which they dominate. Think for a moment about the banks. I have a vision of
banking and I hope you might to, rooted in the dad's Army approach.
The captain figure in close touch
with his customers, caring about the
business which he ran. And that
wasn't just just a fiction in my younger years. I remember going to
the bank as a young man and asking
if I could borrow £500 to buy an old car. I was a student at the time.
The manager, a bit like Captain Mannering, interrogated me for half
an hour and eventually said, " Yes,
I think we can lend you the £500." Imagine that scene now.
At best, you
have an online connection with
someone remotely situated. I thank the honourable member was referring
to the £500 he still owes me from the days when I used to work for
him. The point is that nowadays the connection between customers and
suppliers has become at best detached and at worst remote. Now
you have a conversation with someone remotely situated person who knows nothing about you or your
circumstances and probably doesn't
care.
I will happily give way. Is it
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about the £500? Without interest. Can I just say that I agree with him. I also agree with something else which is that
with something else which is that people don't realise the really big multinationals, like, for example,
multinationals, like, for example, Amazon on, they don't make profits and what they sell you but what they
and what they sell you but what they do is hold your data and that is what they sell and that is where they make their money and their
they make their money and their profit.
Your data derives you no income at all and yet they money -- they make money off the back of that. Therefore, you have to start
that. Therefore, you have to start at what we've all been complicit with which is the idea of getting
something for nothing.
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My honourable friend as ever
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My honourable friend as ever makes an excellent common. We --
makes an excellent common. We --
makes an excellent common. We -- comment. We need a better system. I
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give way to my honourable friend. Can I commend the honourable
gentleman? We all love him because
of the wisdom he brings to this chamber. He is a good friend of
Northern Ireland as well. I say this
because... He will like what we are
doing in Northern Ireland. We assess the impact on businesses with five or fewer employees. Does he not
agree that increase in regulation must come with increased cooperation
to secure better business which benefits us all?
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He, as ever, makes a worthy
contribution for our consideration. Government has a lot of power in all
Government has a lot of power in all kinds of ways. It certainly has the power to regulate the kind of unfair practices that I've begun to set
practices that I've begun to set out. It also has a power as a customer, and government procurement
customer, and government procurement has never been used as well as it might be to support British businesses and in particular British
businesses and in particular British
small businesses.
My proposal to the Minister is let's look at that again. Let's look at government as a
huge customer of all kinds of businesses. Decades of
businesses. Decades of nonintervention driven by the belief
in liberal economics resulted in an extraordinary amount of foreign
takeovers in British firms. Overseas companies own national critical
companies own national critical infrastructure. The government
infrastructure. The government recently approved the Vodafone 's -
recently approved the Vodafone 's -
Three merger.
Have a look into the
ownership of the group? This merger must not become. It's another
corporate an answer for shareholders at the expense of our national
at the expense of our national
interest and the common good. I was speaking to a constituent of mine
who was a previous franchisee who I
met. I'm mindful of a legal case at which those franchisees of Vodafone
are involved and I have taken advice, and amended my speech heavily as a result of that advice
from the table office.
I do think it is important to set the context in the broader terms I've described that relates to the behaviour of
large companies that adopt the franchise model. I give way to the
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honourable gentleman. I thank him for giving way and I congratulate him on securing this
congratulate him on securing this
debate will stop can I refer to the by -- can I refer to my register of
by -- can I refer to my register of interest. I wonder if he shares my view that the merger between Vodafone and Three will have real consequences for customers in terms
consequences for customers in terms of pricing but also job losses here in Britain?
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in Britain? That is certainly the risk. It is
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That is certainly the risk. It is why we have the Competition
why we have the Competition Authority. My right honourable friend from the forest will know as
friend from the forest will know as a former member of the IC which I
a former member of the IC which I remain a member of -- New Forest. It
remain a member of -- New Forest. It is important to gauge the national interest in all kinds of ways when
interest in all kinds of ways when one considers business activity.
I will say no more about that because it will be digressing. I will give
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it will be digressing. I will give way to my neighbour. I'm grateful to the right
honourable gentleman forgivingly. He
makes a case about the difference between small businesses,
interpreters, franchisees and the big corporate. Does he share my concern that franchisees suffer the risk of essentially corporate
bullying from the mega companies, the likes potentially of Vodafone, and they don't have any form of regulatory umbrella comfort, and
then entities like the British Franchise Association may sound
effective, but they are actually fruitless -- toothless in the face
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of such corporate power? As ever, he and I are on the same page. He is absolutely right that
page. He is absolutely right that franchising can be used as a method to exaggerate the power of the business at the heart of the
business at the heart of the franchise and to weaken franchisees. My assertion is that it is common and it is particular in the case of
and it is particular in the case of Vodafone. I'm going to take two
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more. I thank the right honourable gentleman forgivingly and I congratulate him for securing this
congratulate him for securing this very important adjournment debate. Like him, I have met Vodafone
Like him, I have met Vodafone franchisees both in my constituency, particularly the high street
particularly the high street franchise holder who I met again
franchise holder who I met again today. I'm grateful to him for setting out the legal advice that he received about the ongoing case, so
received about the ongoing case, so I will be careful about what I say,
I will be careful about what I say, other than to say I think there are
major corporate's that treat their franchisees very badly that sign
them up on one set of terms, when rate card, and then change the goalpost, and then when people descend and complain about that,
they find their franchises withdrawn and they lose their investment when they have put a great deal into that
corporate giant.
I think that this is a matter that in the future, in
the near future is going to require
some ministerial attention. I thank the right honourable gentleman very much for bringing this to the House's attention.
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I actually very much supported
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I actually very much supported union's position on this. I thought this was wrong at the time. When you
this was wrong at the time. When you look at organisations like CK, this organisation from China has links
organisation from China has links and control over UK Power networks.
It intriguing the network that they have come hugely around communications networks and power networks, all of those are falling
networks, all of those are falling into hands of collaborates grammar conglomerates that have nothing to
conglomerates that have nothing to do with the UK -- conglomerates that have nothing to do with the UK.
They
have nothing to do with the UK. They operate outside of the legal
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operate outside of the legal Is precisely why I posed the early question to the Minister about
early question to the Minister about how closely he and others have
how closely he and others have looked to that measure. I say no more than that about it, but it does seem to me to be a legitimate question to ask. Where those things
question to ask. Where those things considered in this particular case? And how are they generally
considered? If my right honourable friend is right, that there are threats that result from this, under
existing legislation, and regulation, it's perfectly possible
for government to become involved in these kind of commercial affairs.
I
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will give way once more and then make a bit of progress. And I put on record that I
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And I put on record that I omitted the use of right honourable in my early intervention, so can I
in my early intervention, so can I correct that? But also the right honourable gentleman for Chingford made a very important point in terms of big businesses operating outside
of big businesses operating outside of the UK, perhaps in some cases
of the UK, perhaps in some cases abusing their position. Can I also on a lighter note encourage him to
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join the trade union? I would be happy to supply him with a membership form. Again crave at the honourable member. It seems to me there is a
member. It seems to me there is a mead across the House that more must
mead across the House that more must be done. And this minister, an experienced member of this House
experienced member of this House will have gathered that that mood could easily from this small beginning become a crescendo, might
beginning become a crescendo, might endanger the very safety office office and the government as a whole, so let's hope this is the beginning of a journey for the government, the Minister towards the
government, the Minister towards the regime that counters the very things that have been described by members
that have been described by members from across the House.
Because I'm a
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long-standing friend of the right honourable gentleman I will certainly give way to him, but then I must make progress. I'm very grateful to him, the right honourable and learned
right honourable and learned gentlemen is doing the House a
gentlemen is doing the House a favour in his work tonight. I should first declare an interest in that I have a close relative who works for the CMA and don't wish to comment on
the CMA and don't wish to comment on competition matches, multitasking perhaps to work with me to support the government's work, I believe
the government's work, I believe ministers are shortly to do some further work to offer greater support to small businesses both in
support to small businesses both in terms of opening up government procurement but other matters as
well.
Certainly my own constituency like him, I'm a very keen supporter of small business and my own small business competition has provided a
great deal of recognition for businesses, whether they are repairing small musical instruments
repairing small musical instruments through to local florists to people providing other services and indeed many other forms of small business.
many other forms of small business. So you want to commend the broad thrust of his work tonight, although
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I don't want to comment on the CMA. Very grateful for the honourable gentleman's support. Now during the
pandemic, the government introduced the business rates relief package which allow businesses with
which allow businesses with commercial leases to gain relief on the business rates. Is designed to help firms, physical stores
compensate for lost football during knockdowns and it was an essential lifeline to those smaller
businesses. This automatically was applied to businesses through local
councils. From 11 March 2022 June 2021, relief is at 100% with no cash
cap and ratepayers with more than one property were entitled to relief
each eligible property.
Franchisees were eligible to receive this relief, and it would have been
automatically applied to stores
operated by companies like Vodafone and others and not through the franchise program. It's worth noting that some corporations that
benefited from that scheme such as Tesco, although I hold no candour
for Tesco generally, have since returned the money to the
government. Now the question is whether Vodafone, how Vodafone use
that money. Did it achieve its original purpose? I'd be interested
in the Minister's answer to that question.
Or was it redirected in
some way out of tune with the
government's intention and the proper purpose? It's worth noting as
I say that this wasn't only
available to Vodafone but all those organisations that have franchises. And I wonder how other organisations
handled this matter and how that compares with the circumstances
surrounding Vodafone. The important
thing to recall, to remember, to
consider as we debate these matters, the franchisees are small business owners with families.
It was
important to them. Business rate
relief was therefore of huge significance and make a meaningful difference to people. As was intended by the right honourable
member for Richmond and Northallerton who was Chancellor at
the time. The government's stated purpose from the COVID business rate
relief was to give support to companies when bricks and mortar was
much reduced, the trade. The question is was that reality? The
fact the government later introduced
caps, to those who made a great difference was topknot to subsidise
large globalist corporations with hundreds of stores and access to other tax relief.
So I wonder what
assessment the Minister has made of
how this kind of funding was used
during the COVID pandemic. Too often franchisees, payments by those who franchise them are cut drastically
and with little or no insulation.
Contracts often terminated with just a few days notice, stores repossessed with little notice of
them without valid reasons for doing so, leaving debts to repay with no
income. Cases claim they face fines, clawbacks, grossly disproportionate errors in question, in some cases
errors that led to fines results in
failures of major corporation systems that the financial burden is often unfairly placed in the franchisees.
And communications
raising serious concerns, though made, are often unanswered. And
pressing issues ignored for long periods of time. Leaving franchisees
without support or resolution to
their problems. Moreover, it emerged that in the case of Vodafone, whistleblowers have warned of a
series of senior Vodafone executives and scores of its franchised store
owners face financial ruin. So let ask the Minister what steps the government is taking to regularly
corporate businesses relationship
with their franchisees? We are not speaking as a set of powerful businesses with deep pockets and
balance sheets.
Ordinary people, mothers, fathers, sons, daughters,
who saw an opportunity when they became a franchisee to build a
meaningful business of their own. Under the banner of a global household name. To make a difference
so their family but also to their community, to the towns in which
they are situated. The people, their savings, the homes and the reputations on the line because they
believe a franchise agreement, the company like Vodafone but there are
others too would be safe and secure.
As I said, the competition and
markets authority last month confirmed the merger of Vodafone and
three. So can the Minister confirm
the matter of the problems with franchisees? Discussed ahead of that
merger being approved. Indeed more broadly, can such a measure really
be said to benefit the British public, given its forecast to cost 1,600 UK jobs and evidence from
overseas shows the countries with fewer mobile phone operators tend to
charge higher prices to consumers. Can Mr confirm what steps the
government is taking to investigate allocations of inappropriate use of
government relief used during the pandemic? Specifically in relation to businesses and franchisees, with
the Minister confirm that all should
be investigated as part of the enquiry into COVID by the COVID
Commissioner? For those franchisees, facing financial distress, with the
Minister urged banks to show leniency and support too and will he commit to looking afresh at the lack
of enforceable regulations governing
franchisor contact? A key lesson from the Post Office candour is you
must not allow the sophisticated power of the corporate body or the impression created by an impressive balance sheet to persuade is to
ignore the voices of less powerful
individuals who speak out.
Many franchisees have given up stable
jobs. Some have taken up personal loans, some remortgaged their homes.
Yet they trained staff, open stores, serve customers, and they are told
by the big businesses that they are partners. But when the going gets
rough, and the commission cuts come with little warning, when franchisees performance plummets due
to decisions beyond their control, when stores repossessed with adequate notice, they are left out
in their own, high and dry. No
lifeline, no dialogue, just silence from the corporations they once trusted.
I can't believe that this
minister doesn't feel as I do about corporate malpractice, about greedy
soulless heartless firms act
irresponsibly and hide behind the high wall of their subsidies. Governments have a duty not only to promote entrepreneurship and
business but to protect entrepreneurs and ensure businesses
do not take unfair advantage of their staff. We must call time on
the era of corporate giants using legal structures not as a framework
for partnership but as a shield for avoidance.
For avoiding their
responsibility and their decency.
Trading on public trust must be held accountable for the actions they take which cause real harm. We must
move away from globalist faceless corporate model which has enraged a
view and towards a different kind of economic order where we shorten
supply lines and encourage small and medium-sized businesses, where we
understand the economic survey civil purpose. I call it fraternal
economics. Where community and economic activity are down together
in a common cause.
We can build that kind of economic future, but it requires government to know when to
step forward, to support business, and went a step back, not to
suffocate entrepreneurship. That is
a future that is within our grasp. But it will require this government
perhaps any government to think afresh about the power balance between large faceless businesses
and those smaller entrepreneurs those ordinary people, people like
most of us I guess you simply want to get on and do the best for their family and their community.
I know
which side I'm on. I am on the side of those people because I know they
make so much difference in my constituency and across the whole of
our kingdom. Thank you.
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Minister. Gareth Thomas. Thank you. In the usual way I thank the right honourable member
for South and the deep pinks for tabling this debate. Having crossed
tabling this debate. Having crossed swords with him when our positions were reversed, I approached this
debate with a particular degree of wariness, not least because he has assembled a very distinguished and
assembled a very distinguished and cross-party group of members to participate in this debate. And as
participate in this debate.
And as well as his own contribution, we heard from The right honourable member for Chingford, heard from my honourable friend from Stockport,
honourable friend from Stockport, the honourable gentleman for Boston my honourable friend for Durham, and
my honourable friend for Durham, and my other honourable friend here
my other honourable friend here today from rating as well. --
Reading. Both of them making important points. I do very much agree with in particular the opening
agree with in particular the opening remarks, some of them that the right honourable gentleman made about small and medium-sized businesses
small and medium-sized businesses being very much the backbone of our communities, important and
communities, important and fundamental to the strength of each one of our constituencies.
And we as a government are determined to do
much more to support our SMEs going forward. It's why we will publish a
strategy to support SMEs, shortly
appoint my honourable friend for Reading alluded to. The honourable gentleman, right honourable
gentleman was actually right in saying we should do more as a country to celebrate our
entrepreneurs and to champion their interests. They are brave, risktakers. They create wealth and
make all our communities better and richer. And we are determined as a
government to encourage more people to come forward as entrepreneurs, to
take the risks, to succeed and grow
It's why we have already taken a
number of measures to support SMEs, establishing a Business Growth Service inspired by the US Small
Business Administration.
The Secretary of State has already
committed to doing just that. We saw the outcomes of the Spending Review
being a two thirds increase in the
British Business Bank, helping to tackle significant challenges that
tackle significant challenges that
SMEs face. The issues around
procurement for British SMEs, and I'm very sympathetic to the need to
open up public procurement for SMEs.
We will have more to say that about -- we will have more to say about
that in the business strategy.
He
also rightly raised some of the legal issues that small and medium-
sized businesses face in general terms to the difficulties many have
when legal issues arise. Again, we
will have more to say on that in the
Small Business Strategy shortly. He
also, I thought, made, towards the end of his remarks, a powerful link to the appalling miscarriage of
justice. The scandal of how the post office treated its sub-postmasters in the past. There are many lessons
to learn from that scandal.
Some of them I hope he will draw confidence
from in terms of this government being determined to address them
when he sees the green paper that we are seeking to bring forward. And
the whole house I am sure would appreciate the words of Sir William
Williams remixer Wyn Williams -- Sir Wyn Williams. We must learn our lessons and make sure nothing like that ever happens again.
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There is a close parallel between the way the post office is
the way the post office is constructed their business and some of the other remarks are made. Would
he therefore ensure that his Small Business Strategy includes specifically something on franchising. It's a really important
franchising. It's a really important part of getting right our approach to regulation around the relationship with those smaller
relationship with those smaller businesses and corporate giants.
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businesses and corporate giants. He will forgive me. I've already given a flavour of some of what might be in the Small Business
might be in the Small Business Strategy. I will leave him to wait a
bit longer before he sees the Small Business Strategy in full. I did
want to come unto the substance of
want to come unto the substance of his concern in this debate. He rightly and understandably raised
rightly and understandably raised the experiences of a number of franchise operators who alleged
franchise operators who alleged mistreatment and being badly let
18:20
Gareth Thomas MP, Parliamentary Under Secretary of State (Department for Business and Trade) (Harrow West, Labour )
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down by Vodafone during Covid. No one in this room will have failed to have been moved by their stories. I
18:20
Adjournment: Regulatory environment of corporate businesses and franchisees
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have been moved by their stories. I have read a number of those in terms of correspondence from colleagues across both sides of the house about
18:20
Gareth Thomas MP, Parliamentary Under Secretary of State (Department for Business and Trade) (Harrow West, Labour )
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across both sides of the house about those stories. There are without question some very serious allegations that are being levelled
allegations that are being levelled at Vodafone in this case. As he has alluded to and I'm sure he will
alluded to and I'm sure he will understand, I'm unable to comment on
ongoing legal dispute, but I will of course respond on behalf of the government today as best I can, given the ongoing nature of the
given the ongoing nature of the case.
Until now, there has not been
case. Until now, there has not been sustained concern about the quality
sustained concern about the quality or effectiveness of the self- regulation of franchises in general.
regulation of franchises in general. However, I recognise that this particular case has raised concerns
particular case has raised concerns across the house and I will check carefully what happens in this case, and the final outcome and
and the final outcome and conclusions that any court case
might come to.
As honourable members will no doubt be aware, franchising
is growing in the UK. It makes a big contribution to our economy. Just over £90 billion annually, according
to the latest British Franchise Association survey. The franchising
industry is covered by the same
general protections in law as other businesses at the moment. I will
come unto some of those in a moment.
In addition, franchising industry also effectively self regulates itself through the British Franchise
Association, which provides a Code
of Conduct.
On the whole, as the House will recognise, there are
significant advantages of self-
regulation in general. This is in terms of greater flexibility, responsiveness and lower cost. I will give way.
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Thank you. I thank the Minister
for giving way. Is he aware that
for giving way. Is he aware that Vodafone left the BFA and walked out of the self regulatory framework and
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Code of Conduct that they had? If he will forgive me, I'm not going to comment on the particular
going to comment on the particular circumstances of Vodafone and its
relationship with franchisees in
relationship with franchisees in general, or those franchisees, former franchisees that are bringing
former franchisees that are bringing court action, but I note the comment
court action, but I note the comment that he has made. In terms of... Of
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course. Can I thank the Minister for
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Can I thank the Minister for
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Can I thank the Minister for giving way? Can I just ask him, as he is representing His Majesty's Government, does he feel that there
Government, does he feel that there is a need to legislate on this particular issue as the Code of
Conduct doesn't go far enough, but also as the honourable member for
Durham has just had, there might be cases of larger corporations opting in and out as and when it suits
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them? As I alluded to, I recognise that
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As I alluded to, I recognise that this case has raised concerns across the House about the quality and
the House about the quality and effectiveness of both the
effectiveness of both the legislation of governance franchisees and other arrangements
franchisees and other arrangements around franchisees, and their
around franchisees, and their relationships. As I say, up to now, we have not had a significant
we have not had a significant representation that the quality of regulation in franchises is not well
regulation in franchises is not well equipped but I recognise the
equipped but I recognise the concerns across the House that this particular case has brought up.
As a result, I will track very carefully
result, I will track very carefully how the court case unfolds. I was
noting the advantages that on occasion self-regulation brings.
occasion self-regulation brings. There is also a freedom in terms of contracting. What that means is that
contracting. What that means is that both individuals and businesses have the right to enter into agreements
and set their own terms, free from unnecessary government interference.
That freedom at the moment allows franchise agreements to be tailored to individual needs.
It allows people to set up shop on the High
Street or elsewhere with the power of a big band behind them. Self-
regulation, again, on the whole, allows the franchise industry to set
standards and guidelines based on industry-specific needs. It allows
the industry to adapt more quickly to market changes as well. It's my understanding that it's the franchise agreements which are the
main instruments governing the relationship between franchisors and
franchisees. Those agreements normally cover key issues such as
fees, territory rates, contract duration.
Anyone entering a business
contract should seek legal advice before entering into agreement.
Having talked a little bit about self-regulation and its benefits, I
did allude to earlier that there are
existing protections in law which cover all businesses, including franchises. For example, under the
Mr President -- Misrepresentation
Act, anyone can claim damages. Ultimately, it would be for the courts to decide whether or not
misrepresentation had occurred and what the remedy would be. There are other forms of legislation as well,
like the unfair contract terms.
That
represents -- references the
application of the reasonability test.
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He is absolutely right. The contract is well established.
contract is well established. Business contracts are enforceable in the way he sets out. The problem
in the way he sets out. The problem with franchising is that it is a hierarchical relationship. It's a hierarchical relationship which creates this kind of dependency. The
creates this kind of dependency. The franchisee is dependent on the larger business. There is an inbuilt
larger business. There is an inbuilt
larger business. There is an inbuilt advantage of that larger business -- in which that larger business is at
in which that larger business is at an advantage.
The supermarkets, for
an advantage. The supermarkets, for example, have so much power that the primary producer is significantly weakened in that commercial
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relationship. I thought the honourable gentleman made a very interesting
gentleman made a very interesting speech with a series of interesting analogies, and I have noted those
analogies, and I have noted those and the points that he has made. As I've said, I will track this
I've said, I will track this particular court case and its
particular court case and its conclusions, and I always try to make myself available when right honourable members want to discuss
particular issues pertinent to my brief.
I leave that offer for the
right honourable gentleman as things
unfold. I should stress again that
only the courts can really decide on the application of contractual terms and it's absolutely right that
independent businesses seek legal advice on the circumstances of the
situation. As the right honourable gentleman will be aware, legislation
cannot prevent wrongdoing. It can deter and it can punish but only after the event. It is important for companies, obviously, to conduct
companies, obviously, to conduct
business for the.
We already have rules that encourage this. Encourage
this weather that is criminal offences or fraud, audit requirements, prompt payment reporting, which is something that
my department has begun to strengthen, and we will again publish further proposals shortly.
publish further proposals shortly.
The right honourable gentleman will probably agree with me that the public expect and deserve access to
truthful reporting from our most important businesses on their finances and related issues. This is critical for trust and it is
critical ultimately for economic growth.
That is why through the
Audit and Corporate Governance Bill we will ensure accountability for company directors. Section 172 of
the companies act already requires company directors to frame regard in
their decision making to a wide range of stakeholder interests, which includes the impact of the
company 's operations and the wider community. It also requires directors to have regard to the
desirability of the company
maintaining a reputation. This
requirement applies to business transaction, including treatment of franchisees.
Large companies must report annually on how their
directors have complied with these requirements. Taken together, the
section 172 helps ensure that
companies run responsibility beyond the company and its shareholders. The right honourable gentleman
touched on the subject of additional regulation of franchises and the way
-- and the franchise model. This government is dedicated to
implementing an ambitious regulatory agenda. In March, we published our
action plan for regulation, aiming to streamline regulation and support
to streamline regulation and support
growth.
Well that includes plans to cut cost to businesses by 25%, it
also includes a commitment to strengthen accountability for
Simplifying investment, growth and
transparency. Also includes an ambitious package of regular through reforms that will support our growth
driving sectors and wider economy.
But as we stated at the Industrial Strategy's launch, that's not just the end of the journey. It's just the beginning. Changes we can make
to increase the U.K.'s economic resilience and channel support the most productive part of our economy,
we want to continue to work with members across this House to
implement them.
So in conclusion, let me take this opportunity to thank the right honourable gentleman but also to thank other honourable
members who participated in this
debate today. Franchise regulation is a complex and difficult issue, and this particular case has raised
concerns as I've said across the
House. As I promised I will continue to look closely at how this case
develops, and ultimately what conclusions are reached. And I'm
conclusions are reached. And I'm
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very happy to continue to have conversations about this case and its implications outside of the chamber. The question is that this House
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The question is that this House do now adjourn. As many as are of that opinion say, "Aye." Of the contrary, "No." The ayes have it.
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