Culture secretary Lucy Frazer says she’s ‘pleased’ BBC will be speaking to Gary Lineker about asylum policy tweet
Lucy Frazer, the culture secretary, has told MPs that she is “pleased” the BBC seems minded to reprimand Gary Lineker for a tweet saying language used by the government about asylum seekers is “not dissimilar to that used by Germany in the 30s”.
The Match of the Day presenter’s tweet triggered fierce criticism from Tory MPs, and BBC sources say the corporation intends to have a “frank conversation” with Lineker about his impartiality obligations under its social media guidelines.
Asked about the row during culture questions, Frazer said:
As somebody whose grandmother escaped Nazi Germany in the 1930s, I think it’s really disappointing and inappropriate to compare Government policy on immigration to events in Germany in the 1930s.
It’s important for the BBC to maintain impartiality, if it is to retain the trust of the public who pay the licence fee.
The BBC is operationally independent and I’m pleased that the BBC will be speaking to Gary Lineker, to remind him of his responsibilities in relation to social media.
Frazer was responding to a question from Sir John Whittingdale, the former culture secretary, who said said “the requirement to be politically impartial must cover all those who are presenters on the BBC, including the highest paid”.
Key events
Visa rules will be relaxed to make it easier for foreign workers to come to the UK to take up jobs in the construction sector, the Financial Times reports. It says:
In the week that Rishi Sunak, prime minister, announced a crackdown on migration by illegal routes, the government has quietly been clearing the way for more overseas workers to come to the UK as it searches for ways to boost growth.
The process will start in the construction sector, with the adding of key jobs to the government’s “shortage occupation list”, people close to the discussions say.
The government’s migration advisory committee (MAC) has recommended that bricklayers, roofers, carpenters, plasterers and people working in the construction trade generally should be among those added to the list.
Being on the “shortage occupation list” means foreign construction workers will be able to come to the UK to take up jobs paying a minimum of £20,480 a year, instead of £25,600 a year, the current minimum threshold for a skilled worker needing a visa.
Boris Johnson criticised for making millions while rarely appearing in Commons
Boris Johnson has been urged to stick to his job as an MP and save the speeches he charges private companies millions of pounds to hear for the House of Commons, my colleague Aubrey Allegretti reports.
Culture secretary Lucy Frazer says she’s ‘pleased’ BBC will be speaking to Gary Lineker about asylum policy tweet
Lucy Frazer, the culture secretary, has told MPs that she is “pleased” the BBC seems minded to reprimand Gary Lineker for a tweet saying language used by the government about asylum seekers is “not dissimilar to that used by Germany in the 30s”.
The Match of the Day presenter’s tweet triggered fierce criticism from Tory MPs, and BBC sources say the corporation intends to have a “frank conversation” with Lineker about his impartiality obligations under its social media guidelines.
Asked about the row during culture questions, Frazer said:
As somebody whose grandmother escaped Nazi Germany in the 1930s, I think it’s really disappointing and inappropriate to compare Government policy on immigration to events in Germany in the 1930s.
It’s important for the BBC to maintain impartiality, if it is to retain the trust of the public who pay the licence fee.
The BBC is operationally independent and I’m pleased that the BBC will be speaking to Gary Lineker, to remind him of his responsibilities in relation to social media.
Frazer was responding to a question from Sir John Whittingdale, the former culture secretary, who said said “the requirement to be politically impartial must cover all those who are presenters on the BBC, including the highest paid”.
MPs to vote on illegal migration bill on Monday, Penny Mordaunt tells Commons
Penny Mordaunt, the leader of the Commons, has just told MPs that the second reading debate and vote on the illegal migration bill will take place on Monday next week.
The Conservative MP Pauline Latham, who represents Mid Derbyshire, has announced she will stand down at the next election, the BBC reports. Latham, 75, is the 24th Tory to say they will quit at the election, according to this Daily Mirror tally.
Bridget Phillipson, the shadow education secretary, has been giving interviews this morning ahead of her speech later. On Sky News, in response to a question about Boris Johnson’s outside earnings (which account for 85% of the total outside earnings declared by all MPs, according to Sky News), she said the Conservative party was “rotten from top to bottom”.
As well as citing Johnson neglecting parliament, she also mentioned the Dominic Raab bullying allegations, argued that Rishi Sunak must have known about them when he appointed Raab to cabinet, and referred to Suella Braverman being reappointed home secretary despite having broken the ministerial code.
The second reading of the illegal migration bill will be on Monday next week, Christopher Hope from the Telegraph reports. We should get the formal confirmation from Penny Mordaunt, leader of the Commons, at 10.30am.
Rishi Sunak is not hanging around with his illegal immigration crackdown.
I am told the second reading – when Labour MP will vote against the plans – is on Monday.— Christopher Hope📝 (@christopherhope) March 9, 2023
Labour says government’s childcare policy ‘fails everyone’ as reports highlight ‘affordability blackspots’
Good morning. One of the arguments being used by the Tories against Labour in recent days is that Keir Starmer did not make stopping small boats one of his top five priorities (or “missions”). It’s true; he didn’t. But Starmer has included childcare in his five missions (it is part of breaking down the barriers to opportunity), and this topic, which does not feature on Rishi Sunak’s list of five pledges, is top of the news agenda today.
There are two reports out essentially saying the same thing; provision in England is dreadful.
A report by Nesta, a social policy thinktank, identifies “affordability blackspots” for childcare. It says:
The median pre-tax cost of an hour of childcare in England is just under a third of the average hourly wage. London is England’s affordability blackspot where an hour of childcare in some London boroughs costs nearly half the average hourly wage. Pressure from the cost of childcare is not restricted to London, however. An hour of childcare in Manchester, Leicester and Herefordshire costs significantly less than an hour of childcare in London, but the median wage is also lower. As a result, childcare in these areas is as expensive relative to income as some of the most affluent parts of the capital.
And a report by Coram, the children’s charity, says there has been “a sharp drop in childcare availability across England over the past year, with only half of local areas reporting sufficient childcare for children under two”.
There is more on both studies here.
Later this morning Bridget Phillipson, the shadow education secretary, will deliver a speech on childcare. The government offers 30 hours of free childcare in England for children aged three and four, but Phillipson will say that, because the government subsidy does not cover the actual cost to providers, the policy has actually pushed up prices, because providers have to recover their costs by charging more for paid-for hours. She will say the Tory policy “fails everyone” and promise reform.
According to an extract released in advance, she will say:
The childcare model the Conservatives have built fails everyone, denying parents the ability to work the jobs they’d like, to give their children the opportunities they’d like, and is not of the quality that staff want to provide.
In the Britain the Conservatives will leave behind, tweaking the system we have will not deliver the ambition or scale of reform we are going to need.
Labour’s missions must be central to breaking down the barriers to opportunity in this country. To breakdown those barriers, our Mission commits to reforming the childcare system: that will be my first priority.
Here is the agenda for the day.
10.30am: Penny Mordaunt, the leader of the Commons, makes a statement to MPs on next week’s business.
11am: Bridget Phillipson, the shadow education secretary, gives a speech on childcare. She will say Labour will overhaul the government’s flagship childcare scheme, promising parents of young children 30 hours of free childcare a week if the party is elected at the next election.
11.30am: Downing Street holds a lobby briefing.
After 11.30am: MPs hold a debate to mark international women’s day (which was yesterday).
12pm: Nicola Sturgeon takes first minister’s questions at Holyrood.
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