Labour win binding Commons decision on the release of economic impact studies to the Brexit Select Committee

MPs have
unanimously passed a Labour motion calling on the Government to share the 58
Brexit impact studies to a parliamentary select committee.

The
Speaker of the House of Commons has been clear that today’s decision is
binding. Speaking during the debate, John Bercow, said: “Motions of this kind
have in the past been seen as effective or binding.” 

Labour is
now calling on ministers to urgently set a date for when the papers will be
released to the Brexit Select Committee.

Keir
Starmer MP, Labour’s Shadow Brexit Secretary, said:

“This
is a victory for Parliament and for democracy.

“Labour
has been absolutely clear since the referendum that ministers could not
withhold vital information from Parliament about the impact of Brexit on jobs
and the economy.

“It’s
completely unacceptable for the Tories to have wasted months avoiding
responsible scrutiny and trying to keep the public in the dark. The reality is
that it should not have taken an ancient Parliamentary procedure to get
ministers to listen to common sense.

"As
the Speaker has made clear, the Government cannot ignore tonight’s binding
decision. David Davis must now respond to Parliament’s ruling and urgently set
a date for when he will share these papers.”




Today’s announcement is a betrayal of low-paid care staff by the Tory Government – Julie Cooper

Julie
Cooper MP
, Labour’s Shadow
Health Minister,

commenting on the Government’s announcement of a new compliance scheme for
social care providers who may have underpaid workers for sleep-in shifts, said:

“Today’s
announcement is a betrayal of low-paid care staff by the Conservative Government
which also continues to ignore the crisis they’ve created in social care.

“It
is an outrage that care staff, who are some of the lowest paid in the country,
may now have to wait until March 2019 to get the pay they have earned. It
shows Theresa May’s pledge on becoming Prime Minister to help the lowest paid
and those, like care staff, working round the clock to be utterly hollow.

“The
Tory Government must ensure that care staff receive the money to which they’re
entitled and ensure providers can continue to operate so that vulnerable people
can continue to receive vital social care services.”




Liam Fox’s comments expose the Tories’ cavalier approach to Brexit negotiations – Matthew Pennycook

Matthew
Pennycook MP, Shadow Brexit Minister
, responding to Liam
Fox’s comments to the House of Commons International Trade Committee, saying he is
“not afraid” of ending up with no deal, said:

“Liam
Fox’s comments expose the cavalier approach the Tories are taking to the Brexit
negotiations.

“Senior
Tories seem blind to the realities of what crashing out of Europe without an
agreement would mean. It would mean higher prices in the shops, longer queues
at the airport and potentially a significant risk for major parts of the economy. 

“Theresa
May should call out the fantasy Brexiteers in her own Cabinet and guarantee
that an agreement with Europe is reached.”




Commenting on the Government blocking Labour’s anti-tax avoidance amendments to the third reading of the Finance Bill – Dowd

Peter Dowd MP,
Shadow Chief Secretary to the Treasury
,
speaking after the report stage and third reading of the Finance Bill, in which
the Government blocked Labour’s anti-tax avoidance amendments to the bill,
said:

“Today we have seen another example of the
Government’s desire to be seen to be doing something on tax avoidance, when in
fact the changes proposed are artificial and amount to little while the
exemption for offshore trusts remains intact.

“In the past month
alone, we have seen the government face a barrage of criticism from the
European Union for its poor record on tackling tax avoidance.”




Tories have repeatedly tried to privatise student loan book only to abandon the idea when it became clear it was a bad deal for taxpayers & students – Angela Rayner

Angela Rayner MP, Labour’s Shadow
Secretary of State for Education,
responding to the Government’s announcement they
will resume plans to sell off the student loan book, said

“Time and again, this Government is
returning to the same failed policies. They have repeatedly tried to privatise
the student loan book, only to abandon the idea when it became clear that it
was a bad deal for taxpayers and a bad deal for students.

“This new attempt at privatisation is typical of the short-sighted
approach to financial management we have seen under the Tories, desperately
swapping future income for a one-off boost to flatter their terrible record on
our national debt, which has almost doubled since 2010.                                                                                                                                                                                           “The next Labour Government will
address the real issues in student finance, by scrapping tuition fees and
bringing back maintenance grants as we build a National Education Service that
will transform Britain into a country for the many, and not the few.”