The first 100 days of a Conservative majority Government and the choice before the British people
A week ahead of polling day the Conservatives have unveiled their
plan of action for the first 100 days of a majority Government –
contrasting it with the gridlock and uncertainty that would follow
the election of a hung parliament on the 12th December.
The first 100 days of a Conservative majority Government would see
the passing of the Prime Minister’s Brexit deal, a Queen’s Speech
to introduce key domestic legislation covering law and order
and...Request free trial
A week ahead of polling day the Conservatives have unveiled their plan of action for the first 100 days of a majority Government – contrasting it with the gridlock and uncertainty that would follow the election of a hung parliament on the 12th December.
The first 100 days of a Conservative majority Government would see the passing of the Prime Minister’s Brexit deal, a Queen’s Speech to introduce key domestic legislation covering law and order and health and a post Brexit Budget to take advantage of the opportunities before us. But this is all at risk from a hung parliament, which is a very real possibility.
If given a majority, a Boris Johnson Government will, by 22nd March – 100 days after the General Election – have passed the Withdrawal Agreement and delivered Brexit.
Before 100 days are up, a Conservative majority Government would have also taken the following actions:
Before the 100 days are up, we will have introduced legislation to create:
Outlining the plan for the first hundred days the Prime Minister Boris Johnson said:
“This is the most important election in a generation – important because it will define if we go forward as a country or remain stuck, stalled, repeating the same arguments of the last three years with yet more damaging uncertainty.
“In just seven days time the British people will have to choose between a working majority government or yet another gridlocked hung Parliament.
“If there is a Conservative majority next week, we will get Brexit done by the end of January. 2020 will then be the year we finally put behind us the arguments and uncertainty over Brexit. We will get Parliament working on the people’s priorities - delivering 50,000 more nurses and 20,000 more police, creating millions more GP appointments, and taking urgent action on the cost of living.
“But if the Conservatives don’t get a majority, then on Friday 13th we will have the nightmare of a hung Parliament with Jeremy Corbyn as Prime Minister propped up by Nicola Sturgeon’s SNP. Next year will be Groundhog Day in Parliament with MPs arguing every day about the referendum and businesses and families left in limbo, unable to plan their futures.
“With Corbyn, 2020 will be the year of two chaotic referendums on Brexit and Scottish Independence creating more uncertainty. Nothing else will happen. I believe the British people will choose to go forwards and not return to the nightmare of a broken hung Parliament.”
ENDS
THE CHOICE BETWEEN TWO FUTURES FOR BRITAIN
A majority Conservative Government:
Or Jeremy Corbyn’s chaotic coalition:
BORIS JOHNSON’S QUEEN’S SPEECH
For further information, please contact the Press Office on 020 7984 8121.
Notes to Editors
Jeremy Corbyn’s chaotic coalition will waste 2020 with two divisive referendums
· Labour is likely to have to form a coalition or some sort of support agreement with the SNP in order to form a government. Labour are not expected to be able to win a majority outright. In 2010, negotiations took place relatively quickly and a coalition was agreed six days after polling day. If this were to happen this quickly again, we wouldn’t see a government formed until 19 December – too late to hold a Queen’s Speech before Christmas. However, it is likely negotiations could go on for longer (PoliticsHome, 25 November 2019, link).
· The SNP have made it clear that a second Scottish independence referendum would be the price of their support. Nicola Sturgeon said: ‘My position, and the one I would expect Labour to respect if they wanted SNP support, is the question of if there is an independence referendum and the time of that is down to the Scottish parliament to decide, not Westminster’ (The Times, 25 November 2019, link).
· Jeremy Corbyn’s first task as Prime Minister will be to write the ‘letters of last resort’. These letters instruct the UK’s nuclear submarines what to do if the country is attacked. Given Corbyn’s opposition to Trident, he is unlikely to empower our submarines to take action. In fact, Emily Thornberry has suggested Labour would make a ‘collective’ decision – delaying this essential prime ministerial task (The Guardian, 26 May 2017, link; The Telegraph, 11 November 2019, link).
· A Labour government would be likely to request a Brexit extension immediately. In order to enact their plan to renegotiate a Brexit deal and hold a second referendum, Labour would need a lengthy extension.
· The Electoral Commission have admitted they are planning for a second referendum. Politics Home reported that Bob Posner, the Head of the Electoral Commission, ‘confirmed the Electoral Commission is contingency planning for a second referendum’. Posner said ‘So, of course, we always have contingency plans that there could be a snap election and so forth. Again, the European Parliament elections – it is not impossible, though it’s not currently the policy that they’re going to happen, and they may well not happen – of course, we have contingency planning for that. Of course, if Parliament called for it to happen, we would make sure we could deliver it with the returning officers’ (Politics Home, 27 January 2019, link).
· A Labour government would not be able to start renegotiating a Brexit deal until 1 February. The terms of the current Brexit extension prevents any re-opening of the withdrawal agreement, so Corbyn would have to negotiate a further delay and wait until 1 February to start work on a new deal (Independent, 31 October 2019, link).
· They would then spend the remainder of their first 100 days in renegotiations with Brussels. This would prevent them from focussing on other pressing matters. Negotiations would be fraught, with Labour’s plans already being called ‘delusional’ and ‘unrealistic’ by EU officials. Labour would also be campaigning for a deal which many Cabinet members, including the Brexit Secretary have said they would vote against (The Sun, 5 November 2019, link; Express, 5 November 2019, link; PoliticsHome, 12 June 2019, link).
· 189 Labour parliamentary candidates have signed a pledge to campaign to remain in the EU. The pledge reads ‘Labour is committed to a confirmatory referendum, to give you the final say on Brexit. If elected as your Labour MP, I pledge to campaign to Remain in the EU’ (Remain Labour, accessed 4 December 2019, link).
Boris Johnson’s Queen’s Speech on 19th December to unleash Britain’s potential
· On 19th December a majority Conservative Government will have a Queen’s Speech which will include the following bills:
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