Desperate Tories re-announce energy bill plan with no proper detail or commitment to help working people – Long-Bailey

Rebecca Long-Bailey, Labour’s
Shadow Secretary for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy, in response to
the Conservatives’ announcement on an energy price cap, said:

“This is desperate stuff from the Tories,
re-announcing something they tried to get a headline for just a fortnight ago.
But just as when they announced it last time, there’s still no proper detail
nor any real commitment to helping working people.

“When the Tories say they’ll ‘cap’ bills, the
question they need to answer is whether they can guarantee bills won’t go up
for people next year – that’s the real test. A cap suggests a maximum amount
that can be charged, not a promise that bills won’t go up year on year.

“The reality is that the Tories aren’t offering
anything for working people. Their record is one of failure and broken
promises, letting ordinary people down at every turn. Over and over they’ve
promised to get bills down but under them households are almost £900 worse off
due to increase energy bills since 2010.

"Only Labour can be trusted to deliver a country
for the many rather than just the few. All the Tories offer is broken promises
and a record which has seen working people worse off.”




Labour to end NHS car park charges

The next
Labour government will make parking at NHS England hospitals free for patients,
visitors and NHS staff. Labour created the NHS to be free at the point of use,
so the next Labour government will eradicate the hidden charges of car parking
fees.

Labour
will increase the rate of Insurance Premium Tax to 20% for private healthcare
insurance products to fund the policy, replacing the £162 million England’s
underfunded hospitals currently raise from car parking charges by scrapping the
subsidy for people that can afford it, rather than charging people who can’t.

Last
month, a Freedom of Information request by Unison revealed some hospitals are
charging staff, including nurses struggling with low wages, nearly £100 a month
to park, resulting in reports of nurses having to rush out in between
appointments to move their cars and avoid fines.

All
of Labour’s new spending commitments are fully costed and transparent. This
policy will be paid for by a new charge on private healthcare insurance.

Announcing
the policy, Jeremy Corbyn, Leader of the Labour Party, said: 

“Labour
will end hospital parking charges, which place an unfair and unnecessary burden
on families, patients and NHS staff. Hospital parking charges are a tax on
serious illnesses.

“Our
hospitals are struggling from under-funding at the hands of Theresa May’s
Conservative government, but the gap should not be filled by charging sick
patients, anxious relatives and already hard-pressed NHS staff for an essential
service.

“Our NHS
needs a Labour government that will stand up for the many, not the few.”




Labour’s new manifesto ambition to make Britain’s children the healthiest in the world

Labour are today (Monday) announcing that a Labour
government will mount a major programme to improve health and wellbeing of
every child in the country. Our ambition is to make the next generation the healthiest the world has ever seen.

Jonathan Ashworth, Labour’s Shadow Health Secretary,
will set out the party’s plans to combat health inequalities and end the
scandalous link between deprivation and child health.

Labour will:

·        
Introduce
a new Index of Child Health to measure progress against international standards
and report annually against four key indicators: obesity, dental health, under
5s, and mental health.

·        
Legally
require all Government departments to have a child health strategy to set out
how they will support the UK’s ambition to have the healthiest children in the
world.

·        
Support
school nurses and health visitors to make sure that all children have access to
the healthcare they are entitled to.

·        
Set
up a £250m annual child health fund to support the strategy, by clamping down
on management consultancy costs in the NHS.

·        
Ensure
extra funding for Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services and support for
counselling in every school.

·        
Ring-fence
the public health budget over the course of the Parliament to allow councils to
invest in leisure activities and health awareness campaigns 

Today (Monday) Labour is outlining the
first stage of its plan focusing specifically on obesity which is costing the
NHS £6bn a year.

Labour pledge to
ban adverts promoting unhealthy food from being broadcast during primetime
television, such as the X Factor, Hollyoaks and Britain’s Got Talent. A ban on pre-watershed junk food advertising would
reduce children’s viewing of junk food adverts by 82%.

Labour’s Shadow Health Secretary,
Jonathan Ashworth, will pledge that a Labour Government elected after the
General Election would:

·        
Halve
childhood obesity within ten years and make Britain “the healthiest country in
the world to grow up in.”

·        
Introduce
legislation banning junk food advertising from being broadcast before 9pm

·        
Publish
a new childhood obesity strategy within the first 100 days outlining a roadmap
to halving childhood obesity rates within ten years

Jonathan Ashworth, Labour’s Shadow Health Secretary,
will say:

“The scandal of child ill-health is a long-standing,
growing and urgent challenge. It should be matter of shame that a child’s
health is so closely linked to poverty and that where and in what circumstances
you grow up can dramatically affect your life chances.

“Evidence shows the link between
deprivation and poor health in childhood, so with child poverty on the rise,
the need for action becomes more acute.

“The UK has one of the worst childhood
obesity rates in Western Europe. Tooth decay is the single most common reason
why children aged five to nine require admission to hospital. Around 13% of
boys and 10% of girls aged 11-15 have mental health problems.

“When it comes to our children we should
be ambitious. It’s time we invested properly in the health of the next
generation. That means the sort of bold action we are outlining today to tackle
obesity and invest in mental health provision.

Labour will put children at the heart our
health strategy and put measures in place to make Britain’s children the healthiest
in the world.”




Jeremy Hunt has admitted what patients know: Tory failure on the NHS is “not acceptable” – Ashworth

Jonathan Ashworth, Labour’s Shadow Health Secretary, responding to Jeremy Hunt’s interview on Marr, said:

“We’ve
now had an admission of failure straight from the horse’s mouth: the Tory-made
A&E crisis is simply “not acceptable.”

“Jeremy
Hunt this morning was forced to admit to the British public that the 4-hour
A&E target has not been hit in over two years. This shameful statistic is
symptomatic of the crisis that the Tories have left our NHS in. Britain cannot
afford another five years of Tory failure.

“Only
Labour will give the NHS the resources it needs to deliver the service patients
deserve.”

Ends




Jeremy Corbyn speech

Jeremy Corbyn, Leader of
the Labour Party,
speaking at a rally in
Leicester today, said:

***Check against
delivery***

There’s no doubt that
Thursday’s local election results were disappointing for our party. We had welcome
victories in Manchester, Liverpool, Wales, Doncaster and elsewhere but too many
fantastic councillors, who work tirelessly for their communities, lost their
seats.

We face a huge challenge in the next five
weeks.

But this General Election campaign is
also a great opportunity. A chance to break free, to create a society in which
people are no longer held back by a system that is rigged for the rich. A
chance to rebuild Britain for the many not the few.

There is also a huge danger – that the
Tories’ fearmongering and spin machine will make some people settle for less
than they should. Resign themselves to things the way they are –
underestimating just how many more burdens the Tories could impose if their
mission to rig the system for the rich isn’t halted.

The stakes are high. We know from
yesterday’s election results that the gap between us and the Tories is not as
great as the pundits have been saying.

But we still have many people to
convince. We have four weeks to do that. Are we up to the challenge?

Millions are still sceptical and
undecided, not sure which way to turn.

And
who can blame them.

Andy
Burnham – who had a brilliant victory to become the new Mayor of Greater
Manchester yesterday – spoke last week of how alienated
people are from the political system.

He said we can’t just carry on doing what we are doing;
the time has come to do something different.

He’s right. Our
Westminster system is broken and our economy is rigged. Both are run in the
interests of the few.

Things
can and must be different.

Labour is
under attack because we are standing up to the elites who are determined to
hijack Brexit to pay even less tax and take even more of the wealth we all
create.

Labour is
under attack because we are standing up to the corporate interests plundering
our NHS – £13 billion of the NHS budget is already privatised – how much more
will be if the Tories get another five years?

That’s
why Labour is under attack. We’re drawing a line. Three decades of privatisation
– from energy and rail to health and social care – has made some people very
rich but it has not delivered richer lives for the vast majority.

In this
election, we will be outlining a plan to transform Britain – an upgraded
economy run for the many not the few.

It will
mean standing up to powerful vested interests. But we are ready for the
challenge.

The
Conservatives only stand up when taking orders from their billionaire friends,
who hoard our country’s wealth for themselves in tax havens.

Theresa
May thinks she can win the General Election by claiming she cares about working
people.

She talks
about building a fair society. Does she think people will forget what the
Tories have done to this country, how they’ve actually treated working
people? 

This Tory
leader sat alongside David Cameron in government for six years.

She was
in the cabinet room when they introduced the bedroom tax. So were the Liberal
Democrats as part of Cameron’s coalition. What was fair about that?

And what
was fair about racking up tuition fees?

Or about
taking benefits away from people with disabilities?

Or about
closing Sure Start Centres? Or starving schools of cash? Or opening up the NHS
to be plundered by profiteers?

And what
was fair about giving big business and the richest in society tax giveaways
worth tens of billions of pounds – while the rest of us were told to tighten
our belts, to accept a big dose of austerity?

The
Tories are hoping everyone has short memories.

But if
that fails, they have another card they are playing. That this election is
about Brexit and who can play at being toughest with Brussels.

But
Labour will not allow the Tories to put their party interests ahead of the real
national interest. The interests of the British people.

This
election isn’t about Brexit itself. That issue has been settled. The question
now is what sort of Brexit do we want – and what sort of country do we want
Britain to be after Brexit?

And who
can really be trusted to put working people first?

Labour
wants a jobs Brexit, a Brexit that safeguards the future of Britain’s vital
industries, a Brexit that paves the way to a genuinely fairer society and to an
upgraded economy.

Labour’s
plan to transform Britain will mean:

·        
investing in infrastructure
and new industries,

·        
rebuilding our NHS and
social care services,

·        
giving our children and
young people a chance to fulfil their potential.

We won’t
be paying lip-service to working people.

We will
introduce a comprehensive programme to strengthen rights at work, make sure new
jobs are good jobs, and end the race to the bottom in pay, conditions and job
security.

Low pay
and insecurity have spread like an epidemic under the Tories.

Labour will
invest in skills and jobs, and take action to enforce a floor under employment
standards across the board – so that all jobs are decent jobs, so that all
workers – the true wealth creators – can play their part in transforming
Britain and benefit fully from it.

Transformation
means that, instead of a country run for the rich, Britain will be a country in
which people are not held back, in which everyone is able to lead a richer
life.

And
that’s why we are fighting to win this election. Fighting to win, not because I
yearn for the trappings of Downing Street office but because I want a better
Britain

A country
for the many not the few.

The local
election results yesterday leave us in no doubt about the scale of our
challenge.

We know this is no small task – it is a
challenge on a historic scale. But we, the whole Labour movement and the
British people, can’t afford not to seize our moment.

We have five weeks to win the General
Election so we can fundamentally transform Britain for the many not the few.

When we
win, we form the NHS.

When we win, we introduce the Equal Pay Act.

When we
win we establish a National Minimum Wage – one of my proudest days in politics.

When we
win, the British people win. The
nurse, the teacher, the small trader, the carer, the builder, the office worker
win.

Labour is
offering a real choice, a real alternative to the rigged system that is holding
us back and the Conservatives who are running our country down in every way.

An
alternative for the many not the few.

And we
need to be that real alternative because too many people in our country worry
that voting won’t change anything, that all politicians are the same.

We are
not all the same but people are frustrated that the system remains rigged for
the few, that the lives of the many don’t seem to be getting better.

They
vote, nothing changes.

The
economy is still rigged in favour of the rich and powerful.

We have
to show that we are different, that we will transform Britain. That we are for
the many not the few.

When
Labour wins there will be a reckoning for those who thought they could get away
with asset stripping our industry, crashing our economy through their greed and
ripping off workers and consumers.

When did
the Conservatives – Osborne, Cameron, May, Johnson – ever stand up to their
financial backers and demand our money back?

Never and
they never will.

Instead,
they make our nurses, our carers, our soldiers, our disabled, our young people
trying to get a home of their own, our elderly looking for dignity in
retirement and those working hard to get on, foot the bill instead.

It makes
me angry. It makes me really angry. And I know it makes the people of Britain
angry too.

So today,
I say to tax cheats, the rip off bosses, the greedy bankers.

Enough is enough.

The people of Britain are taking
our money back.

We have
always stood up for the many not the few.

And I will always stand up for our
beliefs.

That can be lonely, I know.

I
campaigned against privatisation, tax cuts for the rich, letting the banks
become all powerful and the Iraq war when many politicians were pushing them
through or not standing up against them.

We stood
up for workers’ pay, better public services, a fairer society, a more equal
economy and for peace and justice.

Standing
up for your beliefs in any circumstances, takes great determination. It can be
frustrating. It takes its toll. It is far easier to compromise your beliefs and
go along for the ride.

But
strength is holding on to what you believe in. Standing up for the many against
the few means a struggle against the odds.

Looking
out for the few is easy; winning for the many is hard.

I have a
message for Theresa May. If you feel the need to go on about what a great
leader you are, then show it by debating with me in this election campaign. We
are for the many, you’re for the few.

But this is about so much more
than Theresa May and me.

This is a
once in a lifetime opportunity for you, the people, to decide what sort of
country you want to live in.

We are
full of so much potential, which is being stifled and held back in favour of
the few.

Together,
we can transform Britain.

And we
must transform Britain because now it is rigged for the few.

In this
election, Labour is standing for decent jobs, investment for the future, shared
wealth creation, security at work, affordable homes for all, a fully funded NHS
and schools, training and skills, an end to rip-off privatisation, fair
taxation and a fairer, more equal country.

As we set
out our detailed plans for Britain, the scale of the change we are offering
will become clear.

So let’s
turn our country around. Let’s come together to transform Britain. Together, we
can win for the many not the few.

Make sure
you are registered to vote.

Please
help others get registered to vote.

Make sure
you use your vote.

Talk to
your friends, family, neighbours and co-workers about this General Election.

It is so
important.

This
election could be a great and proud moment in our national story.

Don’t
wake on up on 9 June to see celebrations from the tax cheats, the press barons,
the greedy bankers, Philip Green, the Southern Rail directors and crooked bankers
that take our wealth, who have got away with it because the party they own, the
Conservative Party, has won.

We have
five weeks to ruin their party. We have five weeks to have a chance to take our
money back. We have five weeks to win so we can transform Britain for the many
not the few.

We must
seize it. Thank you.