John McDonnell response to the Interim Report of the IPPR Commission on Economic Justice

John McDonnell MP, Labour’s Shadow Chancellor, commenting on the
Interim Report of the IPPR Commission on Economic Justice, said:

“The Commission’s findings drive home the deep problems of the
British economy, which have been gravely worsened by seven years of Tory
failure that has seen average wages fall and debt rise.

“The Tories have given huge tax breaks to the super-rich and giant
corporations, but failed to deliver the investment in infrastructure, skills
and research and development that are needed to create the secure, high-wage
jobs of the future. As the report shows, the result is an economy dominated by
insecurity and falling living standards.

“The Commission’s interim report is yet more evidence in support
of Labour’s transformational economic programme, with high investment across
the whole country supporting an industrial strategy and a wider spread of asset
ownership to build an economy that works for the many, not the few. I welcome
the Commission’s work and I look forward to seeing the final report.”




NHS staff are long overdue a pay rise which matches the compassion & dedication they bring to their working lives – Jonathan Ashworth

Jonathan
Ashworth, Labour’s Shadow Health Secretary,
responding to a pay protest by NHS staff at
Parliament today (Wednesday 6 September 2017), said:

“NHS
staff are long overdue a pay rise which matches the compassion and dedication
which they bring to their working lives. The Tory Government has taken NHS
staff for granted for years and the result is staffing shortages across the
health service and ever longer waits for patients.

“72 per cent of the public now
think that there are too few nurses to provide safe care to patients. This is
totally unsustainable. The Government’s public sector pay cap has created a
workforce crisis in the NHS which is driving trust deficits and causing misery
for patients.

“Some
Tories are hinting the cap will eventually be lifted but they voted
against Labour’s amendment to lift the pay cap earlier in the summer. It’s
simply not good enough. Nurses, midwives and paramedics should be valued and
rewarded for the brilliant work that they do and the Government must make their
plans on NHS pay clear now, before it is too late.”




Diane Abbott comment on the treatment of detainees at Brook House immigration detention centre

Diane
Abbott MP, Labour’s Shadow Home Secretary
, commenting on the treatment of detainees at Brook
House immigration detention centre, said:

“Sadly
this is not an isolated incident. Under this Tory Government, Britain’s
detentions centres have developed a reputation for inhumane treatment.

“It’s no
wonder that the Home Office have repeatedly blocked my own attempts, as Shadow
Home Secretary, to visit Yarl’s Wood and that that the UN’s rapporteur on
violence against women was denied access to inspect conditions at this
controversial facility.

“There
have been numerous reports of improper conduct in G4S-run institutions, but the
Tories seem content to continuing paying this company millions in taxpayers’
money without holding them to account for their failures.

“Theresa
May’s “hostile environment” for immigrants has gone too far. The Government has
a duty to ensure that detainees are treated with basic dignity and in
accordance with their Human Rights.

“We
cannot seek to promote human rights around the world, while holding detainees
indefinitely and treating them in this despicable manner.”




Priti Patel’s response to the floods in South Asia has been slow and insufficient – Kate Osamor

Kate
Osamor MP, Shadow Secretary of State for International Development,
commenting
on Priti Patel’s announcement on the UK response to the South Asia floods,
said:

“Priti
Patel’s response to the floods in South Asia has been slow and insufficient.

“It has
now been more than two weeks since the floods struck and Priti Patel’s
announcement last Friday that the UK will contribute just £400,000 of new
funding in Nepal, from an annual aid budget of over £13 billion is not good
enough.

“Priti
Patel must now urgently come before Parliament this week and make a statement
that keeps the world’s eyes on South Asia and shows that this government is
serious about tackling the unfolding catastrophe.

“Tropical
Storm Harvey’s recovery effort in Houston may be grabbing mainstream media
headlines, but we must not ignore the millions suffering across South Asia.
British humanitarian responses must be driven by need – not the column inches a
disaster receives in the mainstream media.”




Once the cessation of violence and humanitarian access has been achieved, the work of building a lasting peace must begin – Emily Thornberry on Myanmar

Emily
Thornberry MP, Shadow Foreign Secretary,
responding to the worsening humanitarian crisis in
Myanmar’s Rakhine State, said:

 

“In
the last month, tens of thousands of men, women and children have been
displaced from their homes as a result of the violence in Rakhine State, and
thousands more are joining them with every passing day, all desperately in need
of shelter, medical help, food and clean water.

 

"As
well as a complete end to all further violence and burning of villages, we need
to ensure that the thousands of people who have already lost their homes
urgently receive the food, water and medicine they need to survive. If the
authorities on the ground in Myanmar are deliberately preventing UN bodies and
international aid agencies from reaching those displaced families, that
decision must be immediately reversed.

 

"And once the cessation of violence and humanitarian access
has been achieved, the work of building a lasting peace must begin, building on
the recommendations of Kofi Annan’s Advisory Commission on Rakhine State,
including a recognition of the rights and freedoms of the Rohingya people, and
an end to restrictions on their movement.

 

"Britain
and the rest of the world community must stand ready to support that process,
but it will firstly rely on the civilian and military authorities in Myanmar
living up to their responsibilities within a modern democratic government. As a
long-standing, critical friend, we should expect and demand nothing less.”

 

Ends