Backing Business to Create Economic Growth Debate
Full Debate: Read Full DebateSteve Witherden
Main Page: Steve Witherden (Labour - Montgomeryshire and Glyndwr)Department Debates - View all Steve Witherden's debates with the Department for Business and Trade
(3 weeks, 6 days ago)
Commons Chamber
Steve Witherden (Montgomeryshire and Glyndŵr) (Lab)
Since the last King’s Speech, we have seen great steps forward under this Labour Government in their first parliamentary Session: the Employment Rights Act 2025, the biggest upgrade to workers’ rights in a generation; the Passenger Railway Services (Public Ownership) Act 2024, establishing Great British Rail to improve services and keep fares down; the Renters’ Rights Act 2025, providing security and dignity by ending no-fault evictions; and the Universal Credit (Removal of Two Child Limit) Act 2026, lifting 450,000 children out of poverty. So it is welcome that in this King’s Speech further steps are being taken to support our country, at a time when so many are struggling with the cost of living, when our ties with Europe desperately need strengthening, and when global uncertainty weighs heavily on us all. I particularly welcome the measures to strengthen economic security, namely the Steel Industry (Nationalisation) Bill and the European partnership Bill.
British Steel is an industry that supports 37,000 direct jobs, and supports many thousands more through its supply chains. It is vital to our economic resilience and our industrial future, but for decades it has been in private hands. I welcome the Government’s willingness to bring in new legislation to renationalise British Steel, and our commitment of up to £2.5 billion to modernise and decarbonise the sector in the face of the climate crisis. However, I do wish to press the Government on a key point: the public interest test in the steel industry Bill. While it is right that such powers are exercised responsibly, I urge Ministers to ensure that the test is applied in a way that genuinely puts the public before private profit, rather than being constrained by a desire to reassure investors above all else. Furthermore, if we accept the principle that steel is too important to fail, why should we stop there? Across the country, people see the consequences of privatisation every day: sewage in our rivers, spiralling energy bills, and unreliable postal services. Let us bring all essential services back into public ownership and ensure that the wealth they generate benefits the public, not private shareholders.
I very much welcome the European partnership Bill, which seeks to strengthen our trade and investment relationship with the European Union, building on the important work begun last May when the Government and the EU held their first joint summit since we left. The EU is, of course, not without its flaws, but given the uncertain and unstable times that we face, particularly as Trump continues to prove himself unpredictable and unreliable over and over again, partnership with our closest neighbours will provide security. This is essential for farmers in my constituency of Montgomeryshire and Glyndŵr.
Some 75% of Welsh food and drink exports go directly to the European Union and the livelihoods of many of my constituents depend on reliable access to those markets. It is for that reason that the proposed food and drink agreement is so vital. It is a deal that could add up to £5.1 billion a year to our economy, boost agricultural exports to the EU by 16%, and reduce delays at the border. This was a manifesto commitment, and fulfilling it will provide much-needed certainty for our farming and wider communities. If we are serious about tackling the cost of living crisis and supporting long-term economic growth, a key part of this will be deepening our relationship with Europe—strengthening trade, enhancing collective security, and building a future based on reliable partnerships.
I also welcome the Public Office (Accountability) Bill, commonly known as the Hillsborough law. My hon. Friend the Member for Liverpool West Derby (Ian Byrne) has worked tirelessly on this legislation. It is essential that it is passed in full as one of the first Acts of the new parliamentary Session, with the proposed duty of candour applying to all public authorities, including the intelligence and security services. The bereaved families and survivors affected by state failure and cover-ups deserve nothing less.
Finally, I welcome the commitment to ending new coal licences in the coal licences Bill. While Wales’s coalfield communities can rightly be proud of their heritage, it is vital that we now protect them from the environmental and social harms of further extraction. That is essential for those living near the Bersham colliery spoil tip in Rhostyllen, in my constituency. Given that private companies are now seeking to mine coal tips, which would inflict the same issues on communities, this type of extraction should also be prohibited.