Summary

  • Transport questions at start of day

  • Business statement next

  • Backbench debates on surgical mesh and cancer treatment

  • Lords questions at 11am

  • Lords debate on national security

  1. MPs speak out against anti-Semitism in Commonspublished at 18:17 British Summer Time 17 April 2018

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  2. 'Anti-Semitism isn't just about the tweet'published at 18:16 British Summer Time 17 April 2018

    Anti-Semitism debate

    House of Commons
    Parliament

    Paul MastertonImage source, HoC

    Conservative Paul Masterton, who represents East Renfrewshire, which has the highest Jewish population in Scotland, says community groups in his constituency have existed since 1914, working to help the community.

    He adds that some have said to him that they felt that "they used to be safe in Scotland as a Jew, but not any more".

    "Anti-Semitism isn't just about the tweet, or the picture on Facebook, or the mural on the side of the London building. It is about the recipient, the innocent family member, the friend, the colleague, targeted, provoked, attacked, for no reason other than being Jewish," he says.

    "Enough is enough," he finishes.

  3. Labour calls for tenants to be given access to rogue landlords listpublished at 18:12 British Summer Time 17 April 2018

    Database of Rogue Landlords - motion to regret

    House of Lords
    Parliament

    KennedyImage source, HoL

    The Haulage Permits and Trailer Registration Bill clears report stage and peers move on to a motion to regret in the name of Labour's Lord Kennedy of Southwark.

    The Housing and Planning Act 2016 (Database of Rogue Landlords and Property Agents) Regulations 2018 brings in a requirement for local authorities to make an entry on the database where a landlord or property agent has received a banning order.

    Lord Kennedy is unhappy the regulations do not allow tenants access to the database of rogue landlords and property agents, arguing this "severely restricts potential tenants’ ability to make informed choices and protect themselves".

  4. 'I have become desensitised to it'published at 18:06 British Summer Time 17 April 2018

    Anti-Semitism debate

    House of Commons
    Parliament

    Ruth SmeethImage source, HoC

    Labour's Ruth Smeeth says that she is "proud to be supported by so many of my friends and colleagues across the House," and says she stands in awe of Louise Ellman and Luciana Berger.

    She clarifies that she is not a lizard, not a CIA operative, not working for MI5 and not working for the people of Tel Aviv.

    "These are just some of the regular anti-Semitic tropes" that have been levelled against her, she says. "Honestly...I have become desensitised to it."

    She says in recent years she has received abuse from people "within my own Labour family".

    "Your fellow traitor Tony Blair abolished hanging for treason, your kind need to leave before we bring it back #smeethisfilth," she quotes, from one of a number of abusive tweets she has received and reads out.

    Referring to those who say that anti-Semitism has been weaponised as a smear against Labour, she says that only her branch of the family, which came to the UK, survived after the 19th century.

    "We are going nowhere, we stand and will keep fighting until the evils of anti-Semitism have been removed from our sovereign land," she finishes, to applause from the chamber.

  5. Government defeated on trailer safetypublished at 17:49 British Summer Time 17 April 2018
    Breaking

    Haulage Permits and Trailer Registration Bill

    House of Lords
    Parliament

    Peers vote 215 to 212 to back the Labour amendment to the Haulage Permits Bill requiring the government to collect statistics on trailer accidents and make a recommendation on mandatory safety testing.

  6. Minister promises report on trailer safetypublished at 17:48 British Summer Time 17 April 2018

    Haulage Permits and Trailer Registration Bill

    House of Lords
    Parliament

    SuggImage source, HoL

    Transport Minister Baroness Sugg tells peers there has been a "significant improvement" in trailer safety and there are "good standards".

    She pays tribute to the campaign by Freddie Hussey's family, stressing that "each death [as a result of trailer accidents] is a tragedy".

    She says it has led to "significant work" by her department and announces a dedicated report on this matter as well as offering a meeting with the roads minister.

    Labour's Lord Tunnicliffe insists that this bill is the right legislation through which to make changes, and forces a vote on his amendment seeking a requirement to collect statistics on trailer accidents and a recommendation on mandatory safety testing.

  7. Momentum are 'explicitly targeting Jewish members from the Parliamentary Labour Party'published at 17:46 British Summer Time 17 April 2018

    Anti-Semitism debate

    House of Commons
    Parliament

    John MannImage source, HoC

    Labour's John Mann says that the group Momentum are "explicitly targeting Jewish members from the Parliamentary Labour Party".

    He says that when he took on his role on the Jewish APPG, he didn't expect his son to open the door to the bomb squad to their family home, or for his wife to be sent a dead bird in the post from a Momentum anti-Semite.

    He says 13 years ago, Parliament identified three types of anti-Semitism: Islamist anti-Semitism, far right anti-Semitism and new left anti-Semitism.

    He says anti-Semitism in his local Labour Party is "constant".

    What Jewish people say to him now is different to what they said ten years ago. He says people of the Jewish faith stop him on the street all the time to say, discreetly, that they are scared.

  8. 'Just one instance of racism can have a devastating impact on an individual's life'published at 17:29 British Summer Time 17 April 2018

    Anti-Semitism debate

    House of Commons
    Parliament

    Luciana BergerImage source, HoC

    Labour's Luciana Berger says that while Jews are "small in number" they have made "many great contributions" to British society. She tells MPs that she can trace her family back to those Jews expelled by Spain in the 15th Century.

    "On my mum's side alone, we know that over 100 members of her family, aged from four to 83, were sent by the Nazis to their death in the gas chambers," she says.

    She says she was 19 years when she first received an anti-Semitic attack, and has since received them from the far right and far left.

    She says that when she was selected for a candidate in 2009, people questioned how she could represent the Bengali community in her constituency. Four people have attacked her repeatedly on Twitter as part of anti-Semitic attacks. Three of those - who were from the far right - are now in prison, she says.

    "Just one instance of racism can have a devastating impact on an individual's life," she says. She adds that it pains her to say that in 2018 the Labour Party anti-Semitism has risen.

  9. Air 'tightening' for the Jewish community in the UKpublished at 17:25 British Summer Time 17 April 2018

    Anti-Semitism debate

    House of Commons
    Parliament

    Robert HalfonImage source, HoC

    Robert Halfon says that recently he was the subject of an anti-Semitic attack in his constituency, from someone who claimed to be from "the left".

    He says his father was an immigrant to the UK from Poland, and he never expected that the "air would be tightening" for Jewish people in the UK.

    He says there has been the three "unwise monkeys" in the Labour Party, "see no anti-Semitism, hear no anti-Semitism, and do not speak out about anti-Semitism".

    "The internet has become a sewer for anti-Semitism," he states, saying that people worry so much about data collection by Facebook that we forget of the anti-Semitic material on the social network.

    "Let's go forward, let leadership of all political parties unite," he says.

  10. Labour seeks new safety measures for trailerspublished at 17:21 British Summer Time 17 April 2018

    Haulage Permits and Trailer Registration Bill

    House of Lords
    Parliament

    TrailerImage source, Getty Images

    Labour spokesman Lord Tunnicliffe is introducing an amendment to the bill which would require ministers to:

    • collect comprehensive data on the number and nature of trailer-related road accidents
    • make a recommendation on whether there should be a mandatory safety standard testing scheme for all trailers weighing more than 750kg.

    He raises the case of three-year-old Freddie Hussey from Bristol, who was killed in 2014 when a trailer towed by a Land Rover came loose and hit him, leading his parents to campaign for better trailer safety.

    He says the current safety standards for certain trailers are "shocking".

  11. A 'depressing' topic - SNPpublished at 17:13 British Summer Time 17 April 2018

    Anti-Semitism debate

    House of Commons
    Parliament

    Stewart M. McDonaldImage source, HoC

    SNP MP Stewart M. McDonald says that this is a "depressing" topic but one that he hopes will be enlightening for members of the Commons.

    He says his constituency of Glasgow South, has the second highest Jewish population, second only to East Renfrewshire.

    He states that Scotland is the only country in the world which has never had an anti-Semitic text on the statute book.

    "Scotland's Jewish community have been a precious part of our community," and are a "precious part of our future". He says that Jewish people have been "hunted" to "all four corners of the world".

    He says the only museums he has ever had "airport style security" in museums were Jewish museums in Berlin, New York and other places, "such is the fear and anxiety amongst the Jewish population".

    He says he does not hold Muslim governments responsible for the actions of Muslims across the world, so he does not criticise people of Jewish faith for the actions of the Israeli government.

    "Hamas would have me hanging off a lamppost if they could get their hands on me," he states, citing the fact that he is openly gay.

  12. 'Boot him out'published at 16:53 British Summer Time 17 April 2018

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  13. Labour Party needs to be 'better at policing our own borders' - Gwynnepublished at 16:45 British Summer Time 17 April 2018

    Anti-Semitism debate

    House of Commons
    Parliament

    Andrew GwynneImage source, HoC

    The Shadow Housing, Communities and Local Government Secretary, Andrew Gwynne, says that this week, the UK was reminded of the impact of anti-Semitism with the 73rd anniversary of the liberation of Bergen-Belsen.

    He says that recent events shows that the Labour Party needs to be "better at policing our own borders," he says that the Labour Party was founded on the need to address defects in UK society.

    "There is no place for anti-Semitism in the Labour Party, in the left of British politics, in the UK society in general," he states.

    Mr Gwynne says that allegations of anti-Semitism must "not be kept on the back burner," it is important that when allegations are made, it is "rooted out".

    The Labour Party has written its own rules on zero tolerance to anti-Semitism within the Party, he says. Anyone who does spread anti-Semitic sentiment is not a representative of the Labour Party, or its leader, he states.

    "No political party has the political monopoly on vice or virtue," but the Labour Party will get its "house in order," he adds.

  14. Commons debates anti-Semitismpublished at 16:29 British Summer Time 17 April 2018

    Anti-Semitism debate

    House of Commons
    Parliament

    #LabourAntisemitism campaign van in WestminsterImage source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    There have been protests in Westminster ahead of today's debate.

    MPs move to a general debate on anti-Semitism. There has been a rise in accusations of anti-Semitism in the Labour Party and this debate has been tabled by the government.

    The Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government, Sajid Javid, starts the debate by saying that anti-Semitism is a prejudice that has a "long past". It is an issue that has "come to a head now, and we must deal with it now", he states.

    He says the UK Parliament needs to show all those watching in the UK and around the world that the UK does "get it" in relation to anti-Semitism.

    He says there has been a "lack of leadership or moral clarity" from Jeremy Corbyn on the matter. He adds that "tropes" about Jews being in charge of the world have been around "for a very, very long time".

    He says that the UK's peaceful attitude towards Jews in the UK is under threat of changing, from the rise of the far right in Europe and the US. He says the "current wave of concern has coincided" with Jeremy Corbyn being the leader of the Labour Party.

  15. MPs back motion on military actionpublished at 16:26 British Summer Time 17 April 2018

    Military action emergency debate

    House of Commons
    Parliament

    Party whips announce the resultImage source, HoC
    Image caption,

    Party whips announce the result

    By 317 votes to 256, MPs back Jeremy Corbyn's motion to "consider Parliament's rights in relation to the approval of military action by British Forces overseas".

    Unusually, Labour MPs were whipped to vote against their own motion in protest at a lack of parliamentary consultation before the air strikes last weekend.

    Emergency debate motions are supposed to be uncontentious, and would not usually be voted on.

    Conservative backbencher Nick Boles intervenes to ask the Speaker if it's allowed for an MP, in this case Jeremy Corbyn, to vote against a motion they have proposed.

    John Bercow says this is "entirely orderly". The only voting condition in Parliament is that "voting must follow voices" - meaning MPs must vote for the side they shout for when a vote is called, he says.

    He says that MPs are entirely free to "move motions to facilitate debate" that they do not agree with or want to vote for.

  16. Assert authority, Corbyn urges MPspublished at 16:15 British Summer Time 17 April 2018

    The Labour leader says the PM showed "disregard" for convention when she authorised Syria air strikes.

    Read More
  17. MPs vote on military action motionpublished at 15:59 British Summer Time 17 April 2018

    Military action emergency debate

    House of Commons
    Parliament

    Leader of the Oppositon Jeremy Corbyn has a few minutes to wind the debate up.

    He says it has been a "debate about the rights of Parliament and the role of Parliament" and that the UK's unwritten constitution means that the UK need a war powers act to formalise the process of engaging in military action.

    He calls on MPs to vote against the motion, which is in his name, to "express our dissatisfaction with the government's response and to asset the rights of Parliament".

    The motion states that "this House has considered Parliament's rights in relation to the approval of military action by British Forces overseas".

  18. Post-Brexit customs plans in the spotlightpublished at 15:44 British Summer Time 17 April 2018

    Haulage Permits and Trailer Registration Bill

    House of Lords
    Parliament

    Lorries

    Peers are now carrying out report-stage scrutiny of the Haulage Permits and Trailer Registration Bill, external, which sets up a framework to allow UK hauliers to continue to operate internationally after the UK leaves the EU.

    The bill creates powers to introduce administrative systems for haulage permits, which may be needed once the UK has left the EU, and a trailer registration scheme.

    Labour's Lord Whitty introduces an amendment which would place a requirement on the government to seek continued UK participation in the EU’s Community Licence arrangements.

    Transport Minister Baroness Suggs says she can't accept his proposal as it would prevent the government having the flexibility it needs in Brexit negotiations.

    Report stage is when changes discussed earlier in the bill's passage are usually made - either through amendments brought forward by the government or forced on them through a vote.

  19. Labour MP: 'plenty of time' for a debate last weekpublished at 15:21 British Summer Time 17 April 2018

    Military action emergency debate

    House of Commons
    Parliament

    Labour's Catherine West says the job of Parliament is to "persuade not just one another, but hopefully the country".

    She says that there was "plenty of time last week to recall Parliament, I wish that we had had that debate".

    She says MPs would have "done what we always do, which is debate" and "produce a result for the people we represent".

    Catherine WestImage source, HoC
  20. Peers call for tighter control of data held by Facebookpublished at 15:21 British Summer Time 17 April 2018

    Oral questions

    House of Lords
    Parliament

    Clement-JonesImage source, HoL

    Labour's Lord Kennedy of Southwark asks what action the government proposes to take to regulate platforms that hold personal data.

    He points out that Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg has accepted "some form of regulation is now inevitable" and asks if it will take the form of regulating people who work in the industry.

    Lib Dem Lord Clement-Jones raises concerns over "the inability of the Information Commissioner to access the office of Cambridge Analytica", calling it "quite ridiculous" and arguing for the ICO to be given powers similar to those of the competition authorities.

    Culture Minister Lord Ashton of Hyde highlights the introduction of the General Data Protection Rule which comes into force in May, and the Data Protection Bill.

    He says the bill will make sure people are "empowered to take control of personal data" and "will make a real difference".

    He adds the ICO's powers will be considered as the bill progresses.