(8 years, 7 months ago)
Commons ChamberI beg to move amendment (b), in paragraph (2), after “tax”, insert—
“(except in relation to value added tax on insulation, solar panels and any other category of energy-saving material or their installation)”.
I and my party share the sentiments expressed by the Chancellor and those across the House in condemnation of what happened in Brussels today. Our thoughts and prayers are with the victims and their families. We support the security measures, of course, taken by the Government and say to the people of Belgium that we stand with them.
I am glad to see the Chancellor has at least turned up today. Let me make it clear from the outset that, in my view, and I believe the view of many others, the behaviour of the Chancellor over the last 11 days calls into question his fitness for the office he now holds. I also believe that it certainly calls into question his fitness for any leading office in government. What we have seen is not the actions of a Chancellor, a senior Government Minister, but the grubby, incompetent manipulations of a political chancer.
For the record, let us go back to last Friday week. The Chancellor personally forced through cuts in personal independence payments. The statement issued by the Government that Friday on PIPs was not a consultation and not a suggestion; it was a statement of policy. Personal independence payments are the benefits that, for many disabled people, make life worth living. They help them get to work. They help them have some normality in their lives. Often, they keep people out of residential care. The Chancellor was willing to cut away that vital support to some of the poorest and most disadvantaged members of our community. Do not tell us that we are all in this together.
Would it not at the very least help to dispel the impression that the Chancellor is acting in his own political interests, rather than in the national economic interest, if he made it clear today that he was not going to stand for the leadership of the Tory party so that he could concentrate on his job as Chancellor of the Exchequer?
The reason I refer back to fitness for office is because many of us know the distress that has been caused to so many people over the past week.
(10 years, 9 months ago)
Westminster HallWestminster Hall is an alternative Chamber for MPs to hold debates, named after the adjoining Westminster Hall.
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I agree with the right hon. Gentleman that it is important that we get on with it. My point is that, four months after the announcement that the action group would be set up, it has not yet met, and as far as I am aware we do not know who will chair it, unless the Minister can give us more information in his speech.
I want to reflect the concern on both sides of the House about the lack of urgency on the matter. We expected a great deal more progress than has been achieved so far. The sense of urgency comes from our constituents whose families are dependent on remittances. In some instances, it literally is about people’s security as a family in the long term.
My hon. Friend is absolutely right. We need firmer information from the Minister about when he expects that progress will be made, so we look forward to his speech.
For example, will the Minister guarantee that the action group will meet the target date—the deadline—of April 2014 to formulate new official guidance for money services businesses and banks, especially on agreeing how to deal with money laundering and terrorism risks? Does he anticipate that that will make it easier for banks to start providing bank accounts again? Is it his intention that that should happen by April, May, June, the summer, or within the one-year deadline? What estimate has he made of how many money transfer companies have been forced out of business so far, and how many will be forced out of business in the meantime due to the lack of a bank account?
I have paid tribute to my hon. Friend the Member for Bethnal Green and Bow for her leadership on the issue, even though that has not, unfortunately, been able to save the business in my constituency. The Government must get on with finding the solution to the problem. If they do not, many decent, law-abiding small businesses, which are often located in the poorer parts of our country, will be forced out of business by the indifference of the authorities to the actions of the big banks, meaning that the livelihoods and well-being of some of the world’s poorest people in developing countries will be placed in hazard.