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MPs urge rightward shift from Sunak

16 Oct 2023 3 minute read
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and Home Secretary Suella Braverman. Photo Phil Noble/PA Wire

Rishi Sunak has come under pressure from Conservative MPs to embrace proposals from the right wing of the party, ahead of the King’s Speech.

As MPs return to Westminster on Monday fresh from party conference season, Mr Sunak is being urged to use the King’s Speech to “shape the political agenda” with potentially only a year to go until the next general election.

Senior Tory MPs have thrown their weight behind new proposals from right-wing think tank Policy Exchange on housing, crime and sex education in schools.

The King’s Speech, to open the next session of Parliament, will take place in November and sees the Government set out its proposed policies and planned legislation.

Former Cabinet minister Sir Brandon Lewis has called on Mr Sunak to reform the planning process to speed up the building of homes, as well as to push again to end nutrient neutrality rules.

Government plans to relax the environmental rules to boost housebuilding were blocked by peers last month.

The Policy Exchange also wants to see changes to allow “greater public and community participation” in the planning process.

Sir Brandon said the proposals would “expedite the delivery of badly needed housing and infrastructure in a material way”.

He added: “Adopting it would get the Government back on the front foot when it comes to perhaps the most significant public policy challenge facing our country today.”

Reform

Sir Simon Clarke, a close ally of former prime minister Liz Truss, also gave his backing to proposals to reform the planning rules for electricity networks to speed up the building of grid infrastructure.

He also endorsed calls for market-based reforms of the energy sector, which Policy Exchange said would improve affordability for customers.

The proposals include shifting from the current energy price cap model to a more targeted cap for the most vulnerable customers.

The former chief secretary to the Treasury said: “UK businesses from the smallest to the largest are constantly telling policy makers that energy costs and the burden of regulation is inhibiting their ability to grow.

“Policy Exchange’s proposals for the King’s Speech will not only materially address both these growth barriers, but ease the cost of living for households up and down the country.”

Backbench MP Miriam Cates also backed calls to give parents an “absolute right” to know what children are being taught in schools, as well as a proposal to give parents the right to seek a court injunction to stop schools teaching “age-inappropriate or politicised materials”.

She said: “No child should be socially transitioned behind their parents’ back.”


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Fi yn unig
Fi yn unig
9 months ago

Apart from reminding us of yet more inappropriate, worthless and undeserved knighthoods, this article also shows that this already extremist party intends to keep turning right and if it keeps moving ever further in that one direction, it will hit a dead end, drop off a cliff or disappear up its’ own backside. I’ll take any or all of them.

Jeff
Jeff
9 months ago

Who funds the far right think tank. Look at Open Democracy reports on their influence and UK politics, not good.
https://www.opendemocracy.net/en/tagged/policy-exchange/
Should be top of the list of think tanks to be tackled at the next press conference, particularly who funds them. BBC want touch it. who will.

Ap Kenneth
9 months ago
Reply to  Jeff

BBC seems to love them, forever guesting on programmes or being quoted and rarely questioned. They have had a free ride these last two decades.

Jeff
Jeff
9 months ago
Reply to  Ap Kenneth

And the IEA, they put them up as experts with no provenance.

Steve Woods
Steve Woods
9 months ago

If the likes of Mariam Cates get their way, get ready for books being banned in school libraries and curricula being changed to pander to right-wing views, as is already happening across the Atlantic in the United States.

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