Coventry Telegraph

School places crisis

- Frank Field at Westminste­r after resigning

ENGLAND is facing a secondary school places “emergency” with more than 130,000 children at risk of missing out on places over the next five years, town hall bosses have warned.

In 2023/24, over half of councils in England may be struggling to keep up with demand in their area, according to the Local Government Associatio­n.

The school system has been put under pressure in recent years due to a rise in the school-age population after an early 2000s birth rate spike. VETERAN MP Frank Field has resigned the Labour whip, describing the party as a “force for antisemiti­sm”.

Field, who has represente­d Birkenhead for almost 40 years, said in a letter to party chief whip Nick Brown that he could no longer serve the party as the leadership was overseeing an “erosion of our core values”.

The one-time minister for welfare reform, who was charged by Tony Blair to reform the welfare state by “thinking the unthinkabl­e”, also rounded on his local party. In the one-page letter he said the Birkenhead Constituen­cy Labour Party was now governed by “a culture of intoleranc­e, nastiness and intimidati­on”.

Field has faced criticism from party members for his voting record on key Government Brexit legislatio­n.

Earlier this year he was one of four Labour MPs who voted with the Government to prevent Britain joining a post-EU customs union, on the grounds that working-class voters “gave politician­s a clear instructio­n to take the country out of the EU”.

In his letter Mr Field said: “I am resigning the whip for two principal reasons.

“The first centres on the latest example of Labour’s leadership becoming a force for antisemiti­sm in British politics.

“The latest example, from last week, comes after a series of attempts by Jeremy to deny the past statements and actions by him were antisemiti­c.

“Britain fought the Second World War to banish these views from our politics, but that superhuman effort and success is now under huge and sustained internal attack.

“The leadership is doing nothing substantiv­e to address this erosion of our core values. It saddens me to say that we are increasing­ly seen as a racist party. This issue alone compels me to resign the whip.”

Field also raised concern about the “thuggish conduct” of some members in his local party and the lack of action against them.

He said the party’s actions served to “legitimise appalling levels of bullying and intimidati­on”.

Field said that he intended to continue representi­ng Birkenhead in Westminste­r as an Independen­t.

But Labour’s shadow justice secretary Richard Burgon called on Mr Field to fight a by-election, tweeting: “Politician­s who are elected as Labour MPs by their constituen­ts and who then leave the Labour Party should do the right and respectful thing and call a by-election straight away.

“They should ask for their constituen­ts’ consent to continue to represent them on a different basis.”

Labour sources have since said that Field’s wish to serve as an Independen­t MP while remaining a member of the party is “not possible”.

Under the Parliament­ary Labour Party standing orders, which governs MPs, anyone who takes such action will usually get a letter asking them to retake the party whip within 14 days or face expulsion.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom