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tv   The Week in Parliament  BBC News  February 15, 2020 2:30am-3:01am GMT

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chinese authorites say they're not overreacting by ordering everybody returning to beijing after extended lunar new year holidays to quarantine themselves for two weeks. people who ignore the advice, a bid to combat the coronavirus, have been told they will be punished. a top us official says a seven—day truce between the us and the taliban in afghanistan will begin soon — and could lead to american troop withdrawals. the official said an initial agreement on reducting violence would be followed by all—afg han peace talks. manchester city football club says it will appeal against a two—year ban from the champions league, for breaching uefa's financial fair play rules. the club has been banned from europe's biggest football competition from next season and is facing a fine of more than $30 million. now it's time for a look back at the week in parliament.
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hello and welcome to the week in parliament. as the reshuffle derails some cabinet careers, it's full steam ahead for the h52 express. and a sign to the world that in the 21st century, this united kingdom still has the vision to dream big dreams and the courage to bring those dreams about. will new rules on bullying stop mps treating commons staff like this? that member then found me in a remote corridor in the house of commons later that day, shouted at me, sort of basically pinned me against the wall, did the whole, you know, don't you know who i am, how long have i been here, what do you think you're doing? and a new play explores
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the political deals behind britain's abolition of slavery. and i think it is about time that the public really knew what went into the abolition act and what wasn't really delivered. but first, let's be honest, some people thought westminster life would be a bit dull after borisjohnson‘s crushing election victory and mps voting to get brexit done. how wrong they — we — were. it's true we no longer have the knife—edge votes of the may years or the serial government defeats and ministerial resignations, but there's no shortage of political drama at the moment. the new cabinet met on friday. many of those faces around the table were familiar, some less so. more striking were the absentees, chief among them the former chancellor. on thursday, sajid javid quit afterjust seven months in the job. he refused to accept borisjohnson‘s terms for staying on — to fire his advisers. several other cabinet ministers also lost theirjobs, including julian smith — only weeks after the northern ireland secretary played a key role
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in restoring devolution to stormont. questions for the minister from the department for digital media, culture and sport, robert courts. as the drama unfolded, parliamentary life continued as usual. there was culture questions — minus the outgoing culture secretary, lady morgan, who's now a peer. oral questions, attorney general, alex norris. and attorney general questions — without the attorney general. geoffrey cox was among the reshuffle casualties. others were not taking their survival chances for granted. i look forward to working with him and his committee, i hope, in this... ..in this important... i'll put my phone on speaker on the dispatch box! mps — well, some of them — finally caught up with the news during questions to the leader of the commons. given the events of the day,
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i suppose we should congratulate the leader of the house for surviving the current cabinet cull that is under way, at least thus far. we should be grateful that our business is led by someone who has proven his indispensability to the prime minister. mr speaker, i am most grateful to the honourable gentleman for his gracious welcome on my continuing presence here. if i am suddenly called away, i am sure my honourable friend will be more than able to take over throughout the rest of the session. can we have a statement on the surprising news that the chancellor of the exchequer has been sacked? mr speaker, madam deputy speaker, the honourable gentleman is ahead of me on the news cycle. later, a government whip — in a rare speaking role — tried to lower the tension among his ambitious colleagues. we've had this debate today with a little bit of news going on in the background in the reshuffle. i am sure that many of my honourable and right honourable friends have been waiting eagerly by their phones for that call.
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ilike to... i want to make sure that people don't have that impression of me so i'lljust leave that there. laughter. the only thing i can see at the moment is a missed call from my mother. i suspect the call from your mother was asking "has boris rung yet?" sorry, mrs andrew, no, he hasn't. not yet. but fret not, mrs andrew, the call finally came and stuart andrew was promoted to become the new government deputy chief whip. one of the reshuffle changes will see a new full—time minister for the controversial high—speed hs2 rail link. it's already years late, billions over budget and rather unpopular with more than a few conservative mps. but borisjohnson says
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it will now go ahead. the prime minister said it had been a difficult decision but he would draw a line under poor management of the scheme so far. the first phase of the route will travel between london and birmingham, with a second phase going to manchester and leeds. before donning the obligatory hi—vis jacket, he presented the package to mps as part of a "public transport revolution", with £5 billion promised over five years to improve bus and cycling services in england. on high—speed rail, he said his generation faced a choice. we can try to get by with the existing routes from north to south, we can consign the next generation to overcrowding, standing up in the carriageways, or we can have the guts to take a decision. no matter how difficult. unlike the party opposite, by the way, mr speaker. no matter how difficult and how controversial, that will deliver prosperity to every part of the country.
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so, today, mr speaker, the cabinet has given high—speed rail the green signal. we are going to get this done. and to ensure that we do so without further blow outs on cost or schedule, we are today taking the decisive action to restore discipline to the programme. besides hs2, he said railways in the north of england would be improved, part of a wider transport revolution featuring electric buses, driverless cars and new networks of cycle paths. this government will deliver a new anatomy of british transport, a revolution in this nation's public transport provision, and a sign to the world that in the 21st century, this united kingdom still has the vision to dream big dreams and the courage to bring those dreams about, and i commend this statement to the house.
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the labour leader supported rail and bus improvements but questioned whether boris johnson's government could deliver. it is a government that has proved itself unable to manage infrastructure projects properly and incapable of keeping a lid on the costs. today's piecemeal announcements don't add up to a serious plan to rebalance the economy or to tackle the serious climate emergency that we all face. and he looked at boris johnson's own record. mr speaker, the prime minister is clearly fond of announcing big shiny projects. like the scheme to build a bridge over the irish sea. why not go the whole hog and make it a garden bridge? connect it to an airport in the sea. it stands as much chance of actually being built as any of those failed projects by the former mayor of london put forward.
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the saddest thing, mr speaker, about today's announcement is the high likelihood that so much of it won't be delivered. hs2 is a dire reflection on this government's environmental credentials, with the destruction of 100 ancient woodlands and a miserably small modal shift ofjust 5% of passengers who would otherwise fly or drive. many conservative mps are unhappy with the plan but the opposition in the commons was muted. would my right honourable friend agree with me that it is very, very important that as hs2 is now going ahead that we also compensate well those people in my constituency and his, and his who will be affected by hs2. mr speaker, the short answer to that is of course. hs2 is unloved, unwanted, and has been grossly mismanaged. it very adversely affects my constituents.
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does the prime minister appreciate my and my constituents' concerns that this could well be an albatross around this government's and the country's neck moving forward, and doesn't it set the bar very low for the future delivery of infrastructure projects on—time and on budget by future governments? mr speaker, every great infrastructure project is opposed by the people at this stage. the m25 had 39 separate planning... the treasury, i seem to remember delivering the olympics and the problems with crossrail. every single infrastructure project is opposed at this critical moment. we've got to have the guts and the foresight to drive it through. the prime minister, who says the first hs2 trains could be running within 10 years. complaints about bullying and sexual harassment by mps are to be handled differently, in what's been described as a "seismic shift" for staff. the new system will be completely independent of mps, with an expert panel replacing the committee of mps that currently
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has the final say on action taken. the plan follows the recommendations of the retired high courtjudge, dame laura cox whose report on bullying in parliament was published in 2018. i asked dr hannah white of the institute for government, who's a former commons clerk, how the system works at the moment. there is a new system which has been in place for a couple of years now and fundamentally what happens is there is an independent officer called the parliamentary commissioner for standards. she oversees an investigation of a complaint that is made and she can determine some lower—level sanctions against an mp if it is something that is not deemed to be very serious but if there is a more serious complaint, that will go to the committee on standards, which is a committee made up half of mps and half lay members, and they get to decide what the sanction should be against an mp.
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so, what is the big difference the new system will make? the new system, which is out for consultation, would find that you have an independent panel of experts and the most serious complaints, the most serious allegations where the commissioner does an investigation and says, i think there would be as a serious sanction for this, so either suspension of an mp from the house, or possibly their expulsion from the house, then, that would go to that expert committee and that committee would be completely independent, it wouldn't involve any mp5, and there is a question about whether it might involve a former mp, but it would be distinct so people could have confidence that mps weren't involved. everybody says this is long overdue, why hasn't it been done before? i think it has been very slow, since the sort of me too scandal, the bullying scandal first hit westminster. a number of different enquiries took place, there have been three big enquiries that have all found problems. the first one to report more than 15 months ago recommended something like this, recommended we needed an independent process for investigating complaints and sanctioning mps. it has been slow.
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the house of commons is slow about some of these things sometimes but also there have been vested interests involved, who it hasn't been in their interests to move much faster. does the fact that the speaker has changed make a difference? it has certainly made a difference to the atmosphere around this question in westminster. it was fundamentally really difficult while john bercow was speaker of the house of commons, and there are these outstanding allegations of bullying against him which haven't been investigated because the committee for standards which i mentioned had decided the complains were too old so they shouldn't be investigated and i think that was really problematic because it meant he couldn't defend himself against these allegations which he denies, and the people making these allegations couldn't see them investigated, and that really undermined everybody‘s confidence that this system was being the change that needed to happen. you were a commons clerk for a long time, did you experience this bullying culture? i certainly experienced
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inappropriate workplace behaviour. i once had a situation when i was a new clerk, clerking a committee, i gave advice to the chair that a member should bring his remarks to a close because they were irrelevant, that member then found me in a remote corridor in the house of commons later that day, shouted at me, basically pinned me against the wall, did the whole, don't you know who i am? how long have i been here? what do you think you are doing? and i was really shaken by that. i was lucky i was never sort of subject to any campaign of bullying like some of my colleagues were but i certainly saw inappropriate behaviour. and if something like that happened in the future, are you more confident that somebody in your position would be able to deal with it, to get it sorted? i think there are two things. yes, i think people will feel more confident that they can take a complaint like that and have it taken seriously, but also there are definite efforts
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being made now to track these complaints being made. if something looks like a pattern of behaviour, then the parliamentary commissioner can take account of that when she is looking into and investigating bullying complaints. hannah white. emergency legislation designed to end the release of people convicted of terrorism offences halfway through their sentence has been backed by mps. the new law was drawn up after the knife attack at streatham in south london earlier this month. the perpetrator, sudesh amman, had been freed from prison 10 days earlier. the measures will apply in england, scotland and wales. the justice secretary explained how terrorist prisoners would be affected. there are two main elements to this. first, to standardise the earliest point of which they may be considered for released at two thirds of the sentence imposed and secondly, to require that the parole board assess whether they are safe to release between that point and the end of their sentence. this will apply to all terrorists and terrorist related offences with a maximum penalty above two years, including those offences for which sudesh amman was sentenced.
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the issue of rehabilitation, the work that is done both in prison and out of prison, is so important. there has been many efforts of this over the years, but as recent incidents have seen, that has not always been with success. does my right honourable friend agree that actually, we will never deal with this issue of terrorism until we deal with the ideology that drives it, and will he reassure me that the government is taking extra efforts to find new paths to ensure that we can turn people away from the extremism and the terrorism that takes other people's lives? there is a constant, if you like, a self questioning amongst those responsible for these particular programmes, to make sure they are properly calibrated, that they understand the particular drivers that mean people are compelled to commit these acts.
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labour supported the measure in principle. i do think the house today is entitled to ask the question as to why we have ended up requiring this law to be made via emergency legislation. automatic early release is hardly new. it's been part of our system for many years and could have already been dealt with by a government that took a more strategic approach. the snp had a warning. because i'm always conscious of the analogy of wasps in a jar. if you shake them all about and then you let them out, then you're going to get stung. and the bill now goes to the lords when parliament returns from its half term break the week after next. ministers hope it will become law by the end of the month. time now for a look at what else has been happening around westminster. and the health secretary, matt hancock, has issued new powers in england to keep people in quarantine to stop the cororonavirus spreading. the department of health has described the virus as a "serious
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and imminent threat" to public health. i've laid an instrument before the house to confirm the power we've taken to isolate those at risk of spreading the virus and if necessary, to keep them isolated as part of our belts and braces approach to protecting the public. the powers are proportionate and will help us slow down transmission of the virus and make it easier for nhs and public health staff to do theirjobs. a gp practice in brighton was temporarily closed after a staff member tested positive for coronavirus. people want and need more timely and accurate information, not just about washing hands and tissue use, vital though that is, but about things like what does self isolation actually look like? i think we need a much higher profile public health campaign. helen mccourt‘s killing thirty two years ago is to lead to a new law making it harderfor murderers to be released from prison if they refuse to reveal the whereabouts
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of their victim's body. helen's killer, ian simms, has been released despite never revealing where he hid the remains of the 22—year—old. the legislation, the prisoners disclosure of information about victims bill, is known as helen's law. it follows a long campaign from her mother, marie. her mp paid tribute. i want to acknowledge her because it might seem a strange thing to say, madam deputy speaker, when we are discussing what i feel is a technical bill, but the genesis of us being here today and to hear the second reading is in love. it is in love of marie mccourt for her daughter helen. i am so proud and pleased to see her and her husband john and their close family friend fiona was on so much to see this come to fruition today. the home secretary priti patel apologised to yvette cooper after a conservative activist was jailed for sending threatening messages to the senior labour mp who shared details of them in the commons.
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i'm organising, amazing what crackheads will do for £100. i'm going to get her beat up. the chair of the local association has today written to me expressing regrets and apologies for what he describes as the grave and unacceptable actions of the member who has since been expelled. i welcome that letter and that support. but it is a concern to me that there has been thus far, no similar combination or sense of regret for expressed by the national party. let me say this right now before the house, that is categorically unacceptable and wrong. there is no place for intimidation at all. she can take it from me right now, i am hugely apologetic for what she has had to endure. the former commons speaker john bercow has said there is a "conspiracy" to keep him out of the house of lords. he named no names, but said
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it was "blindingly obvious" that there was a "concerted campaign" to prevent him from being given a peerage. it means he'll miss out on a rise in their lordships' daily allowance. the new deliverance for unaccountable peers being stuffed into the house of lords by the prime minister are set to rise to £323. the monthly allowance for a single person over 25 on universal credit is £370. is that the leveling up the prime minister keeps talking about? -- £317.82. i hate agreeing with these people. i do find that it is odd that house of lords has chosen to do that. but it is a decision for them. borisjohnson and the snp finding something to agree on.
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let's look back now at some stories from the wider world of politics. gary connor has our countdown. he's out. sajid javid resigns. he's become the first chancellor for 50 yea rs never to he's become the first chancellor for 50 years never to do a budget, the last was ian mcleod in ted heath's government, although his excuse was he died only a month into thejob. how does the prime minister's top adviser cummings answer a difficult question? the night time is the) the night time is the ) to fight crime, i can't think of a rhyme. with lyrics from a children's tv show. at three, good news in northern ireland with the first same—sex marriage taking place this week. more than five years after it became legal in england and wales. at two, going up, the price forfixing big ben. coming in at almost £80 million.
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repairs turned out to be more tricky than they thought. at one, want to get rid of furry little visitors? the earl of hume has a culinary solution to pest control. it might be helpful that grey squirrels are extremely good to eat! gary connor. now, in 1833, parliament passed an act to abolish slavery in britain's colonies. a new play for the royal shakespeare company, based on research in the parliamentary archives, depicts the political deals behind a measure which proved to have a long—term cost. gabrielle o'neill reports. the factory bell is the culmination of my parliamentary career to date. —— factory bill. isn't that what we were fighting for?
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he expects the general public to give us money to overfed west indian planters. in orderto end in order to end slavery, a most abominable trade, an embarrassment to empire, don't you agree? that's far from the point! i've always wanted to write about slavery and i like to find stories that fall between the cracks of history, those stories that need to be uncovered. and those that are often buried for political expediency. the whip is partly inspired by a tweet. it revealed the scale of compensation paid to slaveowners. 40% of the national budget at the time, 20 million at the time, which are about now is about 20 billion. it's a lot of money and they could have encrypted the country but they essentially mortgaged the future of generations to come in order to pay this off —— bankrupted.
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generations to come in order to pay this off -- bankrupted. the web is the chief whip fast with getting the abolition bill through parliament and the brutality of slavery. when i was five i was sold. mr beaumont put me to work, cutting sugarcane mr beaumont put me to work, cutting sugarcane day and night. he was a man who worshipped profit and enjoyed the use of his whip. the character of mercy price is based on a runaway slave and abolisionist campaigner mary prince. she used the fact that she was a slave to tell her story and that's why she wrote her autobiography and also i'm sure carried the burdens, the scars, and i'm sure she uses that. the role of women in the anti—slavery campaigns are often overlooked. forcing slaves to work as unpaid apprentices to their former masters. that was like slavery
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through another name. i write about that. and again, i didn't learn about this at school. its a no school textbook i've ever seen. “— its a no school textbook i've ever seen. —— it's in no school textbook i've ever seen. it's about time the public knew what went into the abolition act and what wasn't really delivered. may god be with you. i have the law to thank for my life. left to my master, i would be quite dead. debbie korley. and the whip is at the swan theatre in stratford—upon—avon until the 21st of march. well worth the trip for mps and peers during their half—term break. that's it for the week in parliament. thank you for watching. from me, david cornock, bye for now.
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hello. storm dennis is fast sending its wind and rain our way. a prolonged spell of strong destructive wind this weekend and for some a prolonged spell of heavy rain, some start dry but then saturday turns wetter from the west. still some drier interludes across some eastern parts and the heaviest rain northern and western england through wales and into the afternoon. northern ireland brightens a bit and clear spells developing eventually in scotland overnight into sunday with heavy showers but a further spell of heavy, even torrential rain and places affecting parts of england and wales on saturday night. very squally winds with the heaviest of the rain that does eventually push south on sunday. brighter skies and further heavy showers following on behind. hail and thunder with these and again got all the wind. the met office has a number of warnings in force for the weather
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this weekend including amber warnings for rain in places, particularly southern and western, northern england, southern scotland and wales. check out the warnings online.
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welcome to bbc news — i'm simon pusey. our top stories: china defends its response to the spread of the coronavirus as people returning to beijing are ordered to put themselves in quarantine. a temporary truce and a pathway to peace — the us and the taliban move closer to an historic agreement over afghanistan. the legal limbo's over for a top target of the president — the usjustice department says former fbi deputy andrew mccabe will not face charges over claims he lied about leaks. the english premier league side manchester city are banned from european football for two seasons for breaking financial rules.

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