Key events
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Victims of NHS maternity failings received “unacceptable care”, leading to “tragic consequences”, Lady Amos, the head of an investigation into maternity care in England, has said. Jamie Grierson has the story.
When Angela Rayner told MPs last night that the government should not “blink or buckle” on workers’ rights (see 8.58am), she was referring to the fact that, even when the employment rights bill becomes law, there are many areas where how it gets implemented remains to be decided by minister.
The Telegraph has a good example today. On its front page it has a story about the bill headlined (on its website) “Take a week off work if your distant cousin dies, says Labour”.
The government isn’t quite saying that. The bill will introduce a new right to statutory bereavement leave, which currently is only available to employees who lose a child. The government is going to extend that, and it is consulting on who might have to have died for a worker to qualify for bereavement leave. One option would cover wider family including uncles. The Telegraph story quotes business groups and a rightwing thinktank expressing concerns about the impact of the plan.
Good morning. Last night the employment rights bill became closer to becoming law. MPs voted out the anti-government amendments passed by the House of Lords. But they also voted to include the compromise deal negotiated in talks involving unions and business: protection from unfair dismissal starting after six months, not from day one as originally planned, and alongside that the cap lifted on compensation payments for unfair dismissal. These concessions are expected to result in peers approving the bill when they next debate it tomorrow, clearing the way for royal assent soon afterwards.
The legislation will significantly strengthen workers’ rights, particularly by giving people the right to sick pay from day one and giving workers on zero-hour contract the right to guaranteed hours.
The debate in the Commons was short and straightforward, but it included a speech from Angela Rayner, the former deputy PM. Rayner championed the bill when she was in government and, when the government announced its surprise U-turn a week and a half ago, dropping the manifesto commitment to protection from unfair dismissal from day one, it was not entirely clear how she would react. Unlike some Labour MPs, she did not denounce the climbdown in public.
Instead, she focused on getting the government to agree that the new unfair dismissal law would come into effect earlier than expected – from January 2027 instead of October 2027.
In the Commons last night, some Labour MPs criticised the compromise. Andy McDonald said that the government was making a “profound mistake”, and John McDonnell said that the government was “breaking a promise” and that it should face down the Lords instead.
But, in her speech, Rayner defended the compromises, saying that there was a need “a fair balance” and that the government had “struck the right deal”.
She said she hoped the law would now be implemented.
We have a mandate for a new deal for working people, and we must and will deliver it. That includes replacing exploitative zero-hour contracts with an offer of guaranteed hours. For low-paid workers, the security of knowing what they will earn is not just a “nice to have”; it is the basis on which they can plan their lives.
But she ended her speech hinted that any further compromise would be unacceptable.
It has been a battle to pass this bill, but progress is always a struggle that we fight for. Its passage will be a historic achievement for this Labour government. It will benefit working people now and in the future. Now is not the time to blink or buckle. Let us not waste a minute more. It is time to deliver.
Here is the agenda for the day.
9.30am: Keir Starmer chairs cabinet.
10am: Kemi Badenoch gives a speech on the economy.
10am: Sir Olly Robbins, permanent secretary at the Foreign Office, gives evidence to the Commons foreign affairs committee.
11.30am: Rachel Reeves, the chancellor, takes questions in the Commons.
Noon: Downing Street holds a lobby briefing.
After 12.30pm: The Lib Dem MP Al Pinkerton uses the 10-minute rule procedure to propose a bill for Britain to join a customs union with the EU.
4pm: Yvette Cooper, the foreign secretary, gives a speech at the Foreign Office to mark the 100th anniversary of the signing of the Locarno treaties.
Also, at some point today, the government is publishing the report from the review carried out by the Covid fraud commissioner.
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