Labour

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Theresa May’s refusal to commit the Tories to maintaining the pensions triple lock only further proves the Tories are abandoning older people – John McDonnell

John McDonnell MP, Labour’s Shadow Chancellor, responding to Theresa May failing to commit the Tories to maintaining the pensions triple lock if she wins the general election, said:

“Only four days into the Tory campaign and Theresa May has refused to commit to maintaining the pensions triple lock, just as Philip Hammond refused to commit to it on Tuesday.

“Theresa May’s refusal to commit the Tories to maintaining the pensions triple lock only further proves the Tories are abandoning older people. It’s now clear pensions protections are now in jeopardy.

“Labour will stand up for older people by maintaining the pensions triple lock and by keeping the winter fuel allowance and free bus passes so that the elderly can go about their lives with the dignity they deserve.”

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Jeremy Corbyn first speech of the 2017 General Election campaign

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Jeremy Corbyn MP, Leader of the Labour Party, will today deliver his first speech of the 2017 General Election campaign at Church House, saying:

The dividing lines in this election could not be clearer from the outset. It is the Conservatives, the party of privilege and the richest, versus the Labour Party, the party that is standing up for working people to improve the lives of all. 

It is the establishment versus the people  and it is our historic duty to make sure that the people prevail.  A duty for all of us here today, the duty of every Labour MP, a duty for our half a million members – including the 2,500 who have joined in the last 24 hours.

Much of the media and establishment are saying that this election is a foregone conclusion.

They think there are rules in politics, which if you don’t follow by doffing your cap to powerful people, accepting that things can’t really change, then you can’t win.

But of course, they do not want us to win. Because when we win it is the people, not the powerful, who win.

The nurse, the teacher, the small trader, the carer, the builder, the office worker, the student, the carer win. We all win.

It is the establishment that complains I don’t play the rules: by which they mean their rules. We can’t win, they say, because we don’t play their game.

We don’t fit in their cosy club. We ‘re not obsessed with the tittle-tattle of Westminster or Brussels. We don’t accept that it is natural for Britain to be governed by a ruling elite, the City and the tax-dodgers, and we don’t accept that the British people just have to take what they’re given, that they don’t deserve better.

And in a sense, the establishment and their followers in the media are quite right. I don’t play by their rules. And if a Labour Government is elected on 8 June, then we won’t play by their rules either. 

They are yesterday’s rules, set by failed political and corporate elites we should be consigning to the past.

It is these rules that have allowed a cosy cartel to rig the system in favour of a few powerful and wealthy individuals and corporations.

It is a rigged system set up by the wealth extractors, for the wealth extractors. 

But things can, and they will, change.

Britain needs a Labour government that is prepared to fight for people in every part of the country, our towns, villages, as well as big cities.

A Labour government that isn’t scared to take on the cosy cartels that are hoarding this country’s wealth for themselves. It needs a government that will use that wealth to invest in people’s lives in every community to build a better future for every person who lives here.

Because the Conservatives, drunk on a failed ideology, are hell bent on cutting every public service they get their hands on, and they will use all of the divide-and-rule tricks of the Lynton Crosby trade to keep their rigged system intact.

Don’t be angry at the privatisers profiting from our public services, they whisper, be angry instead at the migrant worker just trying to make a better life.

Don’t be angry at the government ministers running down our schools and hospitals, they tell us, be angry instead at the disabled woman or the unemployed man.

It is the rigged economy the Tories are protecting that Labour is committed to challenging. We will not let the elite extract wealth from the pockets of ordinary working people any longer.

So many people in modern Britain do what seems like the right thing to do. They get jobs, they spend all day working hard, they save to buy their own home, they raise children, they look after elderly or sick relatives. And yet, at the end of it, they get almost nothing left over as a reward.

Compare their lives with the multinational corporations and the gilded elite who hide their money in the Cayman Islands because the Conservatives are too morally bankrupt to take them on.

Labour in power will end this racket and make sure that everybody pays their taxes which fund our public services.

We will overturn this rigged system. For all Theresa May’s warm words on the steps of Downing Street the Conservatives will never do any such thing. 

 Seven years of broken promises show us that on pay, the deficit, the NHS, our schools, our environment.

It was their wealthy friends in the City who crashed our economy. How dare they ruin the economy with their recklessness and greed and then punish those who had nothing to do with it? It was not pensioners, nurses, the low or averaged paid workers or carers who crashed the economy.

The Conservatives boast of record numbers of jobs. But what good is that if people in work are getting poorer and don’t share in the profits of that economy while the Conservatives look after the wealthy few?  Our offer is to tackle elderly poverty and loneliness, invest in our economy, NHS and schools, to improve rights at work and the ten pound living wage. 

Britain is the sixth richest economy in the world. The people of Britain must share in that wealth.

If I were Southern Rail or Philip Green, I’d be worried about a Labour Government.

If I were Mike Ashley or the CEO of a tax avoiding multinational corporation, I’d want to see a Tory victory.

Why? Because those are the people who are monopolising the wealth that should be shared by each and every one of us in this country.  Everyone, and I mean everyone, has a contribution to make and a life to lead. Poverty and homelessness are a disaster for the individual and a loss to all of us. 

It is wealth that should belong to the majority and not a tiny minority.

Labour is the party that will put the interests of the majority first, while the Tories only really care about those who already have so much.  

That is why we will prove the establishment experts wrong and change the direction of this election. Because the British people know that they are the true wealth creators, held back by a system rigged for the wealth extractors.

Theresa May will insist that this is an election about Brexit. She will try to downplay the issues that affect people’s lives every day and instead turn the election into an ego trip about her own failing leadership and the machinations of the coming negotiations in Brussels.

It is only Labour that will focus on what kind of country we want to have after Brexit.

In the coming weeks Labour will lay out our policies to unlock opportunities for every single person in this country.

We will focus on giving people real control over their own lives  and make sure that everybody reaps a just reward for the work that they do.

We will no longer allow those at the top to leach off of those who bust their guts on zero hours contracts or those forced to make sacrifices to pay their mortgage or their rent.

Instead of the country’s wealth being hidden in tax havens  we will put it in the hands of the people of Britain as they are the ones who earned it.

In this election Labour will lead the movement to make that change. 

We will build a new economy, worthy of the 21st century and we will build a country for the many not the few.

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If Theresa May is so proud of her record, why won’t she debate it? – Jeremy Corbyn

Jeremy Corbyn MP, Leader of the Labour Party, commenting on the news ITV are to host a pre-election debate, said:

“I welcome ITV’s decision to attempt to hold a TV debate with the Prime Minister. If Theresa May is so proud of her record, why won’t she debate it?

“She cannot be allowed to run away from her duty to democracy and refuse to let the British people hear the arguments directly.”

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Labour Pledges to Defend International Development

Labour Pledges to Defend International Development

Shadow Secretary of State for International Development Kate Osamor will today say a Labour Government would defend international development, clampdown on tax havens and end the self-regulation of DFID private contractors.

In a passionate defence of international development, Kate Osamor will say: “Development aid is not a dirty word… it is not a blank cheque. It is a question of social justice and human rights.”

Speaking to an audience at Chatham House, in London, Kate Osamor will say a Labour Government would:

  • ‘Remain profoundly committed’ to spending 0.7% of Gross National Income on international development

  • Take decisive action on tax havens. All territories which enjoy the protection of the UK for their financial stability, foreign policy and/or security policy must adhere to a minimum standard of transparency in relation to company and trust ownership

  • End the self-regulation of DFID private contractors

  • Reinstate the Civil Society Challenge Fund, abolished by the Tories. This fund supported trade unions, women’s associations and other civil society organisations in the Global South to mounting their own advocacy challenges in defence of human rights, including workers’ rights

  • Pledge to put conflict resolution, human rights and social justice at the heart of British Foreign Policy

Kate Osamor will tell the audience:

Labour and the UK have a proud record on International Development. But I’ve seen the Tory approach to international development and it’s not Priti. 

“This Tory Government has turned aid into a dirty word. Its agenda is to politicise, privatise and securitise development aid.

“The Tories and their friends in the right wing press are doing to development aid what they did to welfare. They highlight isolated case studies of bad practise to whip up public anger against the poor. These countries are not ‘benefit cheats.’ They’re our partners and friends.

“Development aid has become a punch bag for the conservative media and Brexiteer Tory MPs. The same people who campaigned to take us out of the EU now want us to exit out of our commitment to the developing world.

“Labour made meeting the UK’s aid obligations a permanent feature of British politics, and the development and improvements in hundreds of millions of peoples’ lives has been a credit to humanity.

“But for an incoming Labour Government, under Jeremy Corbyn we will go further and have pledged to put conflict resolution, human rights and social justice at the heart of British Foreign Policy.

“So there is a stark choice at this imminent general election for the direction of development and Britain’s role on the global stage.

“Labour’s approach to international development is the same as our approach to economic development at home. Tackle poverty, uphold human rights and deliver social justice.

“Labour will not only defend development aid… but our approach will advance development assistance. Because poverty is political. Human rights are political and must be fought for.

“Development aid is not a dirty word… it is not a blank cheque. It is a question of social justice and human rights.”

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Let’s have the TV debates. It’s what democracy needs and what the British people deserve – Corbyn

Jeremy Corbyn MP, Leader of the Labour Party, responding to reports that the Prime Minister will reject any TV debates, said:

“Elections and democracy are about public debate. So it’s rather strange that only a couple of hours after calling for a General Election, the Prime Minister is saying she’s not going to take part in TV debates. 

“I say to Theresa May, who said this election was about leadership: come on and show some. Let’s have the debates. It’s what democracy needs and what the British people deserve.”

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