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The Queen's Speech

(38 Posts)
grannyonce Thu 28-May-15 18:11:11

for balance
Here are the formal Bills to be brought forward:

Enterprise Bill – reduce red tape on business, create a Small Business Conciliation Service to handle business disputes and reform the appeal process for Business Rates.

Finance Bill – the Personal Tax Allowance will be pegged to the equivalent of 30 hours of work at the National Minimum Wage, removing those workers permanently from Income Tax; a ceiling will be placed on Income Tax, VAT and National Insurance, preventing any rises in those taxes (this will be done with this Bill and a National Insurance Contributions Bill)

Childcare Bill – provide 30 hours a week of free childcare for three- and four-year-olds during the school year, for families where both parents are working.

Housing Bill – extend Right to Buy to Housing Association tenants; require councils to sell vacant, high value council houses; reform planning to improve neighbourhood plans and require councils to support self-builders; introduce a statutory register of brownfield land; and deliver the discount Starter Homes scheme.

Energy Bill – create an Oil and Gas Authority, with the mission of regulating the industry and “maximising the economic recovery of oil and gas from UK waters”; devolve decision-making over onshore wind farms entirely to local level; seek to improve the UK’s energy security.

Immigration Bill – implement the Prime Minister’s speech of last week, by criminalising illegal working, creating a new agency to prevent exploitation of migrant workers, extend “deport first, appeal later” to all immigration cases, and tax businesses importing skilled labour to fund apprenticeships and training in the UK.

Trade Unions Bill – require a 50 per cent turnout for strike ballots, and further require that in essential public services at least 40 per cent of those eligible to vote must support a strike for it to proceed.

Full Employment and Welfare Benefits Bill – freeze a variety of working-age benefits, tax credits and Child Benefit, and reduce the welfare cap.

Education and Adoption Bill – increase powers to intervene in failing schools, and for “coasting” schools to be turned into academies. Create Regional Adoption Agencies to ensure children can be swiftly adopted across local authority boundaries.

Cities and Local Government Devolution Bill – enact DevoManc, and introduce a framework for other cities to benefit from the same devolution process; allow other powers and finances to be devolved to towns and counties; additionally, through a Buses Bill, allow directly elected mayors to control bus franchising.

HS2 Bill – does what it says on the tin, proceeding with the building of Phase 1 of HS2.

Scotland Bill – implement both “the pledge” and the Smith Commission, by devolving various tax and spending powers to Holyrood. This includes retaining but somewhat reducing the Barnett Formula.

Wales Bill – devolve some regulatory powers (including ports, speed limits, sewerage) to Cardiff, and allow the Assembly to decide its own electoral system and voting age.

Northern Ireland Bill – create two new bodies intended to assist with the investigation of unsolved deaths from the Troubles.

EU Referendum Bill – does what it says on the tin, legislating for an in/out referendum on our membership of the EU by the end of 2017.

Extremism Bill – a raft of new powers against extremism in the UK, including: allowing the Home Secretary to ban extremist groups; empowering law enforcement to disrupt extremist activities; allowing police and councils to close down premises being used for extremist purposes; strengthening Ofcom’s powers to punish broadcasters who disseminate extremist content; and allowing employers to check if job applicants are extremists and then forbid them from working with children.

Investigatory Powers Bill – new police and intelligence agency “tools to keep you and your family safe”. (The lack of detail in the accompanying notes to the Queen’s Speech suggests that a) this is what is popularly known as the Snooper’s Charter and b) that the details are set to be debated and hammered out within the Government.)

Policing and Criminal Justice Bill – a radical set of reforms to improve policing and police accountability, including: time limits on police bail; improving the handling of people suffering mental health problems; strengthening Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary; reforming police complaints and disciplinary proceedings, including greater powers for PCCs; extending police misconduct cases to former officers; subjecting the Police Federation to the Freedom of Information Act; and introduce sanctions for professionals who fail to act on child abuse.

*Psychoactive Substance Bill*– ban the production, importation and supply of so-called “legal highs”.

Armed Forces Bill – this is a Bill which must be renewed every five years to continue the existence of the Armed Forces.

Bank of England Bill – the details are as yet unspecified, but this will involve some changes to the governance of the Bank.

Charities (Protection and Social Investment) Bill – strengthen the regulation of charities, including making it easier to ban people from running charities or for the Charities Commission to close charities down. The Bill will also make it easier for charities to undertake social investment.

Votes for Life Bill – abolish the rule that British citizens lose their right to vote after 15 years living abroad.

European Union (Finance) Bill – approve the EU budget agreed in 2013.

Draft Public Service Ombudsman Bill – merge the “Parliamentary Ombudsman, the Health Ombudsman, the Local Government Ombudsman and potentially The Housing Ombudsman” into one service.

no scaremongering but a few disappointments that some things are not included - will have to wait and see.

jinglbellsfrocks Thu 28-May-15 18:30:42

Not all manifesto promises were mentioned. hmm

rosesarered Thu 28-May-15 18:37:37

Thank you grannyonce, for taking the time to put this info on here, sounds like some sensible policies to me.

durhamjen Thu 28-May-15 19:04:27

"The Personal Tax Allowance will be pegged to the equivalent of 30 hours of work at the National Minimum Wage, removing those workers permanently from Income Tax."

The personal tax allowance at the moment is £10,600.
30 hours minimum wage is £10,400.

Does anyone else think this idea is silly?
Does that mean the personal tax allowance is going to be lower than it would have been from now on?

FarNorth Thu 28-May-15 19:07:15

Thank you, grannyonce.
Sounds like some sensible policies and some alarming ones, to me.

durhamjen Thu 28-May-15 19:59:13

Anyone who works with children already has to have an enhanced CRB check. Who decides what extremism is?

Ana Thu 28-May-15 20:10:30

There wasn't anything we didn't already know about in the QS, so no wonder not much of a response on other threads. Not quite sure what people were expecting? grin

loopylou Thu 28-May-15 20:12:22

Opportunity for a ding dong I suspect Ana ..........

hmm

Ana Thu 28-May-15 20:15:02

We seem to have had that anyway, but only because of the HOC intrusion thread-within-a-thread introduced by GNHQ!

durhamjen Thu 28-May-15 20:29:59

Why does the government need another trade union bill? This country has the worst workers rights in the EU as it is.

www.politics.co.uk/blogs/2015/05/27/tory-anti-strike-laws-are-just-the-first-attack-on-workers-r

durhamjen Fri 29-May-15 10:44:36

Didn't see anything in the list about stopping this.

www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-32914372

This is accountants and tax advisers laughing at the government scheme.

jinglbellsfrocks Fri 29-May-15 12:17:36

I was just glad to see fox-hunting wasn't mentioned. Phew! Won't need the spray paint just yet.

durhamjen Fri 29-May-15 15:25:12

Same here, jingl. Does make you wonder why, but I suppose we could just be thankful.

grannyonce Sat 30-May-15 07:01:28

bump as thread is informative and seems to be disappearing hmm

durhamjen Sat 30-May-15 11:43:11

The result of the reduction of the welfare cap was known to the government before the Queen's speech.
Who wants another 40,000 children in poverty on top of the 50,000 already there?

www.theguardian.com/politics/2015/may/29/household-benefit-cap-plunge-40000-kids-poverty-memo

IDS says it incentivises parents to go out and get more work. However, the last figures I saw there were 1.9 million people after 700,000 jobs. However you look at it, that does not work out.

Who will admit to voting for this?

Ana Sat 30-May-15 11:58:21

As you say on another thread, durhamjen, Labour is now supporting the benefits cap, so trying to blame tory voters for putting children in poverty is ridiculous.

loopylou Sat 30-May-15 13:14:21

Yep, Labour and Tories in agreement!

Glad that's clear now dj smile

whitewave Sat 30-May-15 13:16:27

We knew before we voted that there was going to be a huge increase in welfare cuts that the Tory party was suggesting in it's manifesto - so assuming that children would not be affected by these cuts was not facing up to reality. I am alarmed at the Labour support for the cap and will be letting my MP know, however those who voted against the Tory party to the tune of 62% of the population did not vote for this policy.

whitewave Sat 30-May-15 13:29:21

I have posted this on another thread but really it should have been put on here

Here it is in brief

Housing Charities being forced to sell Housing Association Stock.

Houses in Brighton
1 bed flat 210K - salary needed 48K -deposit needed 50K
3 bed house 372K salary needed 88K deposit needed 93K

Average salary 25K

This is undoubtedly to be repeated throughout the UK to a lesser or greater extent.

Result our grandchildren desperate for a house of their own with no chance to buy or rent at a reasonable cost as social housing will be in very short supply.

Not sure who would have voted for this

Ana Sat 30-May-15 13:48:23

I thought most people voted for the party of their choice, not against other parties.

whitewave Sat 30-May-15 14:09:22

Yep! they do Ana but it still doesn't detract from the argument that 62% of the electorate did not vote for Tory policies, and therefore against the welfare cuts.

Ana Sat 30-May-15 14:13:16

I don't see the logic in that argument. Many labour voters were actually supportive of the £23,000 benefits cap in the run-up to the election.

whitewave Sat 30-May-15 14:15:50

All Labour voters voted against the Tories, which will of course included their manifesto. How many Labour voters and Liberal voters and SNP voters are supportive of cuts to the poorest in our society?

whitewave Sat 30-May-15 14:26:07

HS2 is nowhere near even the starting block and certainly stage 1 won't be begun in this parliament

whitewave Sat 30-May-15 14:30:09

Investigatory Powers - a huge can of worms which will be lucky to get through as it is suggested. Been tried before and failed. The point is that there is sufficient powers to do what the Home office wants at the moment but May has been cack-handed at dealing with some of the potential terrorists.