Jeremy Corbyn statement following House of Commons’ approval of the Queen’s Speech

Jeremy
Corbyn, Leader of the Labour Party said:

“The
Conservatives survived by the skin of their teeth today, supported by the DUP,
but this is a government in chaos.

“The
Conservatives are all over the place on Brexit, with ministers contradicting
each other. On public sector pay, they say one thing and then do another,
voting yesterday to continue the cutting the pay of our nurses, firefighters,
police and other public sector workers. And today, they were forced to finally
promise that women from Northern Ireland will no longer have to pay for
abortions on the NHS under opposition and public pressure.

“This
Government is out of control, with no mandate for continued cuts to our
schools, hospitals, police and other vital public services or for a
race-to-the-bottom Brexit. Labour will oppose these policies every step of the
way.

“Labour
offers a clear alternative, laid out in our manifesto, which would put wealth,
power and opportunity back in the hands of the many not the few.”




Passengers should not have had to go to the courts to seek accountability – McDonald

Commenting on today’s High Court ruling ordering the Secretary of
State for Transport to produce a report into Southern Rail within 14 days, Andy
McDonald MP, Labour’s Shadow Transport Secretary said:

“Passengers should not have had to
go to the courts to seek accountability.

“Ultimately, the buck stops with
the government. Tory ministers, who designed and awarded the franchise, have
been ducking their responsibility for Southern’s abysmal service and for
directing this unnecessary industrial dispute.

“A Labour government would stand up for the interest of passengers rather than train companies, taking Southern back
into public ownership and creating a new body to have strategic oversight for
the railway to end the chaos and fragmentation that has plagued
Southern.”




This chaotic Government is breaking its own laws by refusing to set out its timetable for the state pension age – Abrahams

Debbie Abrahams MP, Shadow Work
and Pensions Secretary
,
raised a Point of Order today on the Government’s failure to meet its legal
deadline to set out its state pension age timetable. Debbie said:

“This
chaotic Government is breaking its own laws by refusing to set out its
timetable for the state pension age.”

“Should
they implement the recommendations of the Cridland Review, up to 34 million
people will be expected to work longer.”

“Given
their complete failure to adequately communicate the equalisation of the state
pension age for women, it is absolutely vital that this Tory Government comes
clean with its plan now.

“In our manifesto Labour is committed to leaving
the state pension age at 66, as part of our plans to ensure a secure and
dignified retirement for the many, not just a few.” 




Referring the bid to a phase two inquiry by the CMA is the Government doing just the bare minimum – Watson

Tom Watson MP,
Labour’s Shadow Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport,
commenting on Karen
Bradley’s statement on the Sky/Fox merger, said:

“There
are no surprises in the statement today.

“Referring
the bid to a phase two inquiry by the CMA is the Government doing just the bare
minimum. If the Government now accepts further undertakings in lieu instead it
will throw the integrity of this process into question. 

“Ofcom’s
finding that the Murdochs remain fit and proper to hold a broadcasting licence,
despite ‘significant corporate failure’ at Fox News, is disappointing. If the
executives who ran a company involved in systematic and widespread criminality,
including phone hacking and police bribery, can pass the fit and proper test,
it begs the question – is the test itself fit for purpose? 

“If
Karen Bradley really wants the facts then part two of the Leveson Inquiry must
go ahead to investigate the corporate governance failures that allowed the
phone hacking scandal to take place.

“It’s
clear the rules need to be reviewed and the next Labour government will look
again at the laws governing media ownership in this country. 

“The
General Election result last month shows the Murdoch media empire can no longer
deliver Tory majorities. So the Government has nothing to lose. It must not let
this bid proceed.”




This inquiry must provide answers for the Grenfell Tower community – Healey

Responding
to the appointment of Sir Martin Moore-Bick as head of the public inquiry into
the Grenfell Tower fire, John Healey MP, Labour’s Shadow
Secretary of State for Housing
, said:

“This
inquiry must provide answers for the Grenfell Tower community, find out what
has gone so badly wrong, and help ensure this tragedy is never repeated.

“Two
weeks on from the fire, trust is low in the community around Grenfell Tower so
it is vital that the inquiry gains the trust of Grenfell families and that their voices are heard throughout this process.

“Given
we do not know when this inquiry will be completed, it must not be used by the
government to delay making the urgent changes we already know are needed.

“We
do not need a public inquiry to tell us that tower block residents need a
commitment to up-front funding for necessary remedial work, including
re-cladding and retrofitting sprinklers starting with the highest-risk
buildings. Ministers have failed to give this clear funding commitment, and
they should do so now.

“We do not need a public inquiry to know that
our system of fire safety checks and controls is failing, and that an overhaul
of building regulations is urgently needed as was recommended to the government
in 2013 following the Lakanal House fire.”