December 28, 2024

Tory MP says no massive need for food banks in UK and real problem is people’s cooking skills – live

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Tory MP Lee Anderson says no massive need for food banks in UK, and real problem people not being able to cook properly

In his contribution to the Queen’s speech debate the Conservative MP Lee Anderson said that a food bank in his Ashfield constituency operated a “brilliant scheme” whereby people accepting a donation had to register for a budgeting course and a cooking course. He went on:

We show them how to cook cheap and nutritious meals on a budget. We can make a meal for about 30p a day, and this is cooking from scratch. No ‘massive’ need for food banks, people just can’t cook, claims Tory MP – video

When the Labour MP Alex Cunningham put it to Anderson that food banks should not be needed in 21st century Britain, Anderson agreed. He went on:

This is exactly my point. I’ll invite you personally to come to Ashfield, look at our food bank, how it works. And I’ll think you’ll see first hand that there’s not this massive use for food banks in this country. We’ve got generation after generation who cannot cook properly. They can’t cook a meal from scratch. They cannot budget. The challenge is there.

From the context, it is clear that when he said there was not a “massive use for food banks”, he meant no massive need for them.

Updated at 12.48 EDT

Summary

That’s all for our live coverage for today, but here’s a summary of all the day’s developments in case you missed them.

  • Conservative MP Lee Anderson was criticised after claiming the UK has no “massive use for food banks” and that people use them because they “cannot cook properly [or] budget”
  • Responding to the comments, Labour said: “Out of touch doesn’t even cover it”
  • A number of Tory MPs called on the prime minister to introduce tax cuts to help address the cost of living
  • Boris Johnson visited Finland and Sweden to sign mutual security agreements with both countries
  • At a press conference in Helsinki, he said the invasion of Ukraine would not be the end of Vladimir Putin’s “neo-imperialist ambitions” if he was not resisted
  • DUP leader Sir Jeffrey Robinson indicated his party may refuse to nominate a speaker for the Northern Ireland assembly until the government scraps the Northern Ireland protocol
  • The party had already said it would refuse to nominate a deputy first minister to the power-sharing executive at Stormont
  • Levelling Up Secretary Michael Gove indicated the government was no longer committed to a manifesto target to build 300,000 homes a year
  • He also drew derision after affecting a series of strange voices to parody opponents during an interview with the BBC
  • Only 28% of Britons think Brexit is now “done”, new data from YouGov shows.

    A poll conducted by the firm showed that only 20% of people who supported the Remain campaign agreed that Brexit was done, while 62% said it wasn’t. Among Leave voters, the equivalent figures were 40% and 46%.

    It comes amid renewed tensions with the EU over threats by the UK government to unilaterally scrap the Northern Ireland protocol.

    The prime minister is showing his backbenchers “more than a bit of ankle” on the prospect of introducing tax cuts soon, Conservative MP Jake Berry has said.

    Berry represents Rossendale and Darwen in Lancashire and also chairs the Northern Research Group, a group made up of MPs elected to northerly constituencies in 2019 and formed to pressure the government for greater investment in the north and the so-called “red wall”.

    Speaking to Sky News, Berry said constituents were “feeling the pain” of the cost of living crisis, and that the Conservative party would have to “look after our people” if it wants to hold seats won in 2019.

    “That is why we are working with the PM and other government ministers to find ways we can help alleviate some of these cost pressures,” he said.

    Asked if that meant the government was considering introducing tax cuts soon, Berry said: “I think the prime minister is listening to colleagues, and he’s certainly beginning to show more than a little bit of ankle in this area.”

    But he also added: “We want him to do more, we want him to act now. It’s kind of now or never for the prime minister on the cost of living question.”

    Updated at 15.52 EDT

    More reaction now to those comments on food banks from Tory MP Lee Anderson, this time from Frances O’Grady, general secretary of the Trade Union Congress.

    “Many people who use food banks are in work. These remarks are insulting and show how out of touch Conservative MPs and ministers are with the cost of living emergency,” O’Grady said.

    “While the government sits on its hands, families across Britain are being pushed to the brink by soaring bills and prices.

    “Rather than being condescending, Conservative politicians should be putting pressure on the chancellor to call an emergency budget.”

    Lee Anderson said cooking lessons and not food banks are what Britons need. Photograph: Parliament TV

    Updated at 15.15 EDT

    Footage shows London mayor Sadiq Khan throwing the opening pitch at a baseball game at the San Fransisco Giants’ stadium.

    It comes during a four-day trip to the US by the mayor to promote the UK capital to international investors and help support its recovery from the pandemic.

    Inviting a guest of honour to throw the first pitch at a baseball game is a longstanding tradition in the US, with the country’s presidents going back to the late 19th century often taking part.

    Khan threw the first pitch at a game between the hometown Giants and the Colorado Rockies at the Oracle Park stadium.

    It follows the announcement that Major League Baseball will play regular-season games in London in 2023, 2024 and 2026 as part of a long-term strategic partnership.

    Updated at 15.17 EDT

    Tory MP and chair of the Treasury select committee Mel Stride has said he expects the chancellor, Rishi Sunak, to announce measures to help tackle the cost of living crisis “in a matter of weeks”.

    Speaking to Times Radio, Stride said: “There is an absolute urgency to this. And there will be lots of thinking going on in the Treasury.

    “And I suspect, the chancellor – whether we call it an emergency budget, or just a statement of the House, or whatever it’s dressed up as – I think the chancellor will be, I suspect, having more to say in a matter of weeks, or a month or so, rather than waiting right until the autumn of this year.”

    Speaking last month, Sunak said it would be “silly” to announce more measures to help with energy bills before it was known how much prices would rise in the coming months, though pledged to look again at more support in the autumn.

    Stride continued: “My bet, for what it’s worth, is that I think the pressure will be such that he will be appearing before the House well before the autumn, laying out various things. He might wait for some of the stuff around energy to see where that energy cap is going to be raised in the autumn. So he might leave that a little bit later.

    “But I think in the meantime, I suspect there will be various things wheeled out not just by the chancellor, but other ministers as well, all of them focused on this burning issue of the cost of living challenge.”

    Updated at 15.16 EDT

    Karen Buck MP, Labour’s shadow work and pensions minister, has responded to a claim by Conservative MP Lee Anderson that people use food banks because they “cannot cook properly [or] budget” (see the pinned post at the top of the blog for the clip).

    Buck said: “In the world where people actually live we now hear daily stories of families going without food and others unable to turn their ovens on in fear of rising energy bills.

    “The idea that the problem is cooking skills and not 12 years of government decisions that are pushing people into extreme poverty is beyond belief.

    “Out of touch doesn’t even cover it.”

    Updated at 14.35 EDT

    The UK’s three human rights commissions have expressed concern about plans to scrap the Human Rights Act (HRA) and replace it with a British bill of rights, as announced in Tuesday’s Queen’s speech.

    In evidence before parliament’s joint committee on human rights, senior figures from all three commissions (for England and Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland respectively) highlighted the achievements of the HRA and said there was no case for it to be replaced.

    Alyson Kilpatrick, chief executive at the Northern Ireland Human Rights Commission, said: “We would certainly want to see the Human Rights Act strengthened, not diminished.

    “We don’t recognise the basis upon which these proposals have been put forward, certainly not in Northern Ireland, and we think it has paid scant regard, in fact, to the impact that has been seen in Northern Ireland of stronger human rights and protection. So we would be very concerned to see any weakening of the Human Rights Act by replacement or amended bill of rights.”

    She said the HRA was central to the peace process and that the police in Northern Ireland had been “transformed beyond recognition” as a result of having to comply with the European Convention of Human Rights, which was given effect in UK law by the HRA.

    Barbara Bolton, head of legal and policy at the Scottish Human Rights Commission, said: “The Scottish Human Rights Commission is extremely concerned about the proposals and the severe negative impact that those proposals would have on access to justice and access to a remedy for individuals across society and the potential that this would leave the UK in breach in particular, of Article 13 (right to remedy) of the European Convention (of Human Rights).”

    She also said repealing the HRA had “potential for unsettling devolution” because it is embedded in the Scotland Act, which provides for the establishment of a Scottish Parliament and administration.

    Baroness Falkner, chair of the Equality and Human Rights Commission (which covers England and Wales), said the HRA “has played and continues to play a vital role in strengthening the protection of human rights in the United Kingdom”.

    She recognised that the government has specific concerns “but that doesn’t to us build a convincing case for an overall deep and substantive review of the act of this point”.

    Updated at 14.39 EDT

    Boris Johnson has also commented on the cost of living crisis at the press conference in Helsinki. It was put to him by LBC’s Nick Ferrari that he was “very good at supporting Ukraine, but … lamentably poor at supporting your own people”.

    He responded: “What we’ve got to do right now is help people through the aftershocks of the Covid pandemic just as we helped people through Covid, and we will. Everybody knows how tough it can be right now, but we’re going to get through it.

    “You know all the money we’re already spending. There will be more. Of course there will be more support in the months ahead as things continue to be tough with the increase in the energy prices.”

    He then added: “But I just want to explain to people why it is so important that we stand strong against aggression in Ukraine at the same time.

    “Because there is no doubt at all, looking at what Vladimir Putin has done, that if he were not to be resisted … this would not be the end of his neo-imperialist, revanchist ambitions.

    “And just imagine the consequences, not just military or political, but economic, of further Russian aggression against any of the other former parts of the Soviet Union. And it’s to prevent that further catastrophe that it’s so important that we are together strong now.”

    Updated at 14.39 EDT

    A press conference held jointly by the prime minister, Boris Johnson, and the Finnish president, Sauli Niinistö, is getting under way in Helsinki. The prime minister has visited both Sweden and Finland today to sign mutual security declarations with both countries.

    Asked by a journalist from Sweden’s public broadcaster, Svenska Yle, whether the declaration would mean British boots on the ground on Finnish territory in the event of a conflict with Russia, he says: “Let me be clear, because I think the solemn declaration is itself clear.

    “And what it says is that in the event of a disaster or in the event of an attack on either of us, then yes we will come to each other’s assistance, including with military assistance. But the nature of that assistance will of course depend upon the request of the other party.

    “But it’s also intended to be the foundation of an intensification of our security and our defence relationship in other ways as well.”

    Updated at 14.40 EDT

    Tory MP Lee Anderson accused of ‘insulting’ parents who rely on food banks

    The Child Poverty Action Group has accused the Tory MP Lee Anderson of “insulting” people who rely on food banks in the Commons earlier. (See 3.21pm.) Alison Garnham, its chief executive, said:

    Four million children are living in poverty in the UK, and it’s not because their parents can’t cook.

    There are few households better at budgeting than those on a low income, they have to do it every single day.

    Rather than insulting parents who have no option but to use foodbanks in the face of soaring costs and real terms income cuts, politicians would do better to back real-world solutions, like bringing benefits in line with inflation this autumn.

    That is all from me for today. My colleague Christy Cooney is now taking over.

    Updated at 12.38 EDT

    UK faces at least mild recession before inflation curbed, MPs told

    The UK will probably have to go through a “mild recession” if not worse before inflation comes back to a more manageable level, top economists have warned MPs. PA Media reports:

    London School of Economics professor Charles Goodhart said that wages and prices were feeding off each other to push up inflation, and this could not be weakened without the labour market weakening.

    “The likelihood is that we’re going to have to have at the very least a mild recession and unemployment rising,” he told MPs on the Treasury select committee.

    His comments were echoed by Adam Posen, the president of the Peterson Institute for International Economics.

    “The sad reality is there is going to have to be an economic slowdown in the UK beyond what is already on the cards in order to get inflation sustainably back to target,” he said.

    Posen said that the UK was facing problems that are more like those seen in the US, despite pursuing a more European approach to stimulating the economy during Brexit.

    “To me this tells you that this is something idiosyncratic to the UK about how the same inflation shock of Covid reopening, of energy prices, of Ukraine, is being transmitted to the UK,” he said.

    “I think a large part of this is Brexit, because what has happened is you don’t have the flexible labour supply of migrants coming from Europe, who can both add to the labour supply, but also go in and out of work as needed.”

    Last week the Bank of England raised interest rates to 1%, the highest for 13 years, in a bid to combat soaring inflation.

    It predicts that inflation could rise to above 10% later this year.

    Boris Johnson has also restated the government’s intention to do more to help people with the cost of living, the Sun’s Kate Ferguson reports.

    For some time now the government has been saying further help for people with the cost of living will come later this year. What is uncertain is when this might arrive (originally the plan was to wait until late summer for the next massive intervention, but the government is under pressure to bring that forward), and what form it will take (tax cuts, grants or welfare payments?).

    In an interview with ITV, Boris Johnson was asked again whether he would resgin over Partygate, in the light of Keir Starmer’s announcement that he will resign if he is fined. Johnson ignored the question completely and just spoke about Ukraine, and the new security assurances.

    Stephen Crabb, the former work and pensions secretary, has posted this on Twitter explaining why he thinks the government needs to do more to address the cost of living crisis.

    Crabb is on the one nation, left of the Conservative party. David Davis is on the Thatcherite right. If both of them (see 2.41pm), are demanding some sort of significant, cost of living bailout, then there are probably few MPs in the party who aren’t.

    Tories can no longer claim to be party of home ownership, says Lisa Nandy

    Lisa Nandy, the shadow levelling up secretary, says the Tories can no longer claim to be the party of home ownership. In a statement commenting on Michael Gove’s admission this morning that the Conservatives are no longer committed to the manifesto target of building 300,000 homes a year by the mid-2020s (see 9.35am), she said:

    Under the Conservatives housing has become less affordable, spending on rent has skyrocketed, and home ownership has gone down. All this puts more pressure on families facing a cost of living crisis.

    The Conservatives can no longer claim to be the party of home ownership. We need a government that will take action now to help people who are struggling with rising bills and prices, and that will invest to give them the long-term security of owning their own home.

    According to Labour, average house prices in England rose by 56% between 2010 and 2021, while average wages went up by just 20%. The party also says that in England there were 211,000 fewer working-age homeowners in 2020-21 than in 2009-10.

    Lisa Nandy. Photograph: Tayfun Salcı/Zuma Press Wire/Rex/Shutterstock

    Updated at 11.49 EDT

    A reader BTL (below the line) has been in touch to say that taking visiting dignitaries out in the rowing boat is a tradition for Swedish prime ministers when they have visitors at their country retreat.

    Updated at 11.23 EDT

    Boris Johnson has entered the caption competition. (See 2.27pm.)

    Johnson personally involved in decision to exempt grouse shooting from Covid rules, says Cummings

    In the course of a Twitter exchange with Adam Wagner, the barrister and Covid regulations specialist, Dominic Cummings, Boris Johnson’s former chief adviser, says Johnson was personally involved in the government’s decision in 2020 to exempt grouse shooting from Covid rules.

    By “chief”, Cummings is referring to the chief whip – at the time Mark Spencer.

    Updated at 11.22 EDT

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