Extracts from Parliamentary proceedings - Jan 13
Extracts from second reading debate (Lords) of the European Union
(Withdrawal Agreement) Bill Baroness Hayter of Kentish Town (Lab):
My Lords, today will be a bit like a wedding, where brides are
encouraged to wear something old and something new for luck. Today
we have the return of that old double act, the noble Lord, Lord
Callanan, and the noble and learned Lord, Lord Keen, so no change
there, but appropriately perhaps, with brides in mind, we have two
maiden speeches. The first is...Request free trial
Extracts from second
reading debate (Lords) of the European Union (Withdrawal
Agreement) Bill Baroness Hayter of Kentish Town (Lab): My
Lords, today will be a bit like a wedding, where brides are
encouraged to wear something old and something new for luck. Today
we have the return of that old double act, the noble Lord,
Lord Callanan, and the noble and learned
Lord, Lord Keen, so no change there, but appropriately perhaps,
with brides in mind, we have two maiden speeches. The first is from
someone I have known and worked alongside for 30 or even 40 years:
the former MP and my noble friend Lord Mann, whose work on tackling
anti-semitism has rightly brought him to this House. The other is
from the new noble Lord, Lord Barwell. I have great hopes of him,
given how well he responded as Housing Minister to my pleas and
those of this House to make client-money protection compulsory for
letting agents. He heard the arguments, made a decision and made it
happen. If only the current Government were as good.Lord Mann (Non-Afl) (Maiden Speech): My Lords, it is a privilege to contribute for the first time. I thank the staff of the House for their kindness, wisdom and wit in recent weeks, and my introducers, the noble Lords, Lord Sacks and Lord Clarke of Hampstead. The rabbi and the postman; how my parents would have smiled. I suspect that all of you will have heard much of the Battle of Cable Street, but not of the Battle of Holbeck Moor. Two weeks before Cable Street, Mosley and 1,000 Blackshirts assembled on Holbeck Moor in Leeds. Some 30,000 local people turned out, and the fascists were promptly removed from the city. There is no written testimony, and there are no photographs or artists’ drawings; it is a silent history. For 70 years my family lived alongside Holbeck Moor in those two-up, two-down, back-to-back terraces and cobbled streets. I cannot claim with certainty that one of them threw the cobble that put Mosley in hospital, but there were 30,000 heroes yet nothing recorded. The true face of this country and the true story of the election is this: in Derby North, Christopher Williamson got 635 votes and lost his deposit. In West Bromwich East, George Galloway got 489 votes and lost his deposit. This is the innate decency of the British people yet again. Across the entirety of the country, people are saying, very vocally and unequivocally, “We reject the extremism of anti-Semitism.” I wish to pay tribute to Theresa May. Three people have gone to prison in the last two and half years who targeted, among others, me, my family and my staff. She stood by me and my family at that time when some others did not. I salute the integrity and courage she displayed in setting up the Hillsborough inquiry and the national child abuse inquiry when she did not have to. I represented 30 survivors of child abuse—I advise some still—and I thank my staff who assisted in empowering those 30 people; they had to go to hell and back in learning their testimony. So thank you, Theresa May, for that. We have power: the question is what we choose to do with it. I look at this curious place today. I shall hold my peace for the moment, but now is the time for an era of enlightenment. The northern working-class communities where I come from expect the dignity of being heard. Are their views, their visions, their votes not as valuable as the next person’s? There is no greater poverty than that of being discounted. Imagine retired coal miners who spent 12 months on strike and the women who stood tall alongside them while their children went without. Their anguish at this last election is incalculable, but their determination to see through their democratic decision is not. But that is not for me the defining image of the election, so let me conclude on what is. In north London on election day an elderly Jewish couple, who had voted Labour their entire lives, wept as they went into the polling station, sobbed as they voted and cried as they left it.
I have a role now on anti-Semitism. I am rightly independent and,
as ever, I shall work cross-party, but I will be no bystander in
driving out the stench of intolerance from the party that in 1906
my family helped to create in the city of Leeds, in the streets
around Holbeck Moor.
Extracts from
Communities, Housing and Local Government Topical Questions
(Commons)
The Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local
Government (Robert Jenrick): On 23 January, I will
accompany His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales to the holocaust
forum at Yad Vashem, Jerusalem, to mark the 75th anniversary of
the liberation of the concentration camps, which brought an end
to the murder of 6 million Jewish men, women and children, but as
we know, did not bring an end to the cancer of antisemitism. The
Government have provided an additional £2.2 million for schools
to teach lessons from Auschwitz and £1.7 million for visits to
Bergen-Belsen, the camp liberated by British troops. I will
continue to champion the International Holocaust Remembrance
Alliance definition of antisemitism including requiring all
councils to adopt it forthwith. Robert Jenrick: My hon. Friend, who has campaigned on this issue for many years, speaks for the whole House. I will of course be signing the book. I am informed by the Leader of the House that there will be a debate in the House on or around Holocaust Memorial Day in the usual way. We must all continue to fight the cancer of antisemitism in all its forms, on every occasion, and this Government will always do that...
Extract from Commons
debate on the Queen's Speech Emily Thornberry (Islington South and Finsbury) (Lab):...I have made it perfectly clear that it is my belief that our party has not dealt with antisemitism in the way that it should have, but I know my right hon. Friend the Member for Islington North (Jeremy Corbyn) and he is not antisemitic. |