“Get Britain Working” White Paper Debate

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Department: Department for Work and Pensions

“Get Britain Working” White Paper

Blair McDougall Excerpts
Tuesday 26th November 2024

(1 day, 14 hours ago)

Commons Chamber
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Liz Kendall Portrait Liz Kendall
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We will certainly speak to the RNIB to ensure that those points are included as we take our “Get Britain Working” White Paper forward.

Blair McDougall Portrait Blair McDougall (East Renfrewshire) (Lab)
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If we search the record of this place, we see the phrase “no child left behind” mentioned over and over again, but during the pandemic, children were left behind. They have been washing up on the shores of social work, of the police sometimes, and of childhood mental health services, and I know from visiting my jobcentre in Barrhead that they are now washing up on its shores as well. What will this White Paper do to help that covid generation who were left behind?

Liz Kendall Portrait Liz Kendall
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When I visited my jobcentre in Leicester after being appointed to the work and pensions role in opposition, the very first thing its manager said to me was that the big problem was young people and mental health—the covid generation. They deserve more opportunities to earn and to learn. The country must do this. For me, the most concerning problem that we face is the rapid increase in young people not in education, training or employment. We know that we can deliver the youth guarantee, as we did the new deal for young people and the future jobs fund when we were last in government. This is a version of that, facing the problems of today and tomorrow to give that pandemic generation the chances and choices they need to build a better life.