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Corbyn Demands New Election in UK after Queen's Speech


Mon 14 Oct 2019 | 08:50 PM
Ahmed Moamar

Labour leader suggests his party is ready to back election once no-deal Brexit danger is over

Jeremy Corbyn has condemned the government’s planned legislative programme outlined in the Queen’s speech as “a farce”, as he signaled that he would back a general election that could deliver a Labour government within weeks, according to the Guardian .

https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/oct/14/jeremy-corbyn-hits-out-at-farcical-queens-speech

The Labour leader dismissed Boris Johnson’s programme for government as hollow, after the monarch read out a list of 26 bills and other ideas mainly related to Brexit, crime and the NHS.

“The prime minister promised that this Queen’s speech would dazzle us,” Corbyn said. “On closer inspection, it turns out to be nothing more than fool’s gold."

https://see.news/queen-elizabeth-ii-inquires-experts-about-sacking-uk-prime-minister/

“There has never been such a farce as a government with a majority of minus 45 and a 100% record of defeat in the Commons setting out a legislative agenda they know cannot be delivered in this parliament.”

He signaled Labour was still prepared to vote for a general election as soon as the threat of a no-deal Brexit was off the table, potentially meaning it could be held in early December. Corbyn is coming under pressure from many in the party, including his own shadow cabinet, to press for a second referendum before an election.

Heckled that he had not voted for an election when Johnson tried to call one twice this autumn, he said it was essential for Johnson to “get an extension … take us away from the dangers of no deal, then we’re in a position to do that”.

He added: “We may only be just weeks away from the first Queen’s speech of a Labour government. In that Queen’s speech, Labour will put forward the most radical and people-focused programme in modern times, a once-in-a-generation chance to rebuild and transform our country.”

Responding for the government, Johnson said Corbyn could not make up his mind on whether to back an election and criticised him for changing his position on Brexit.

“His policy on cake is neither having it, nor eating it,” Johnson said. “First he was opposed to no deal, now he seems to be opposed to any deal. First he was in favour of delivering Brexit, now he wants a second referendum. First he wanted an election – actually he wanted an election for quite a long time – now he’d much rather not.

“He resembles a Janus. A push-me-pull-you facing both directions at once and yet unable to decide for either.”

Johnson dismissed criticism of his Queen’s speech, saying it was a programme for “an open, global, free-trading United Kingdom”.

More than a third of the new bills announced by the Queen relate to arrangements to be made after Britain’s departure from the EU.

Other key elements of a speech widely trailed in advance included plans for tougher jail sentences – one of seven bills devoted to law and order, a direction that has prompted alarm from prison reform charities – and proposals to oblige people to show photographic ID before they are allowed to vote.

On Brexit, Corbyn said the government had had “three and a half years to get Brexit done and they’ve failed”.

He said the prime minister’s speech “was supposed to herald an end to austerity and a new vision. Instead it barely begins to unpick the devastating cuts to public services.”

Corbyn condemned plans to increase sentences for violent offenders, saying judges already had the necessary powers.