Daily Mail

Labour ‘siding with thugs’ on eco protest vote

- By Claire Ellicott Political Correspond­ent

PRITI Patel has accused Labour of siding with ‘vandals and thugs’ after the party voted down legislatio­n to stop ecoprotest­ers disrupting the country.

The Home Secretary said opposition peers were not on the side of the ‘law-abiding majority’ and had backed groups which ‘bring our country to a standstill’.

Measures to prevent activists from movements such as Extinction Rebellion (XR) and Insulate Britain from shutting roads were voted down by the unelected House of Lords on Monday night.

Downing Street said it was ‘disappoint­ed’ by the move, which would prevent it from tackling ‘guerrilla tactics’ used by protesters.

Miss Patel added: ‘Labour blocked the Government from introducin­g new measures to stop Insulate Britain and XR bringing our country to a standstill. Once again Labour’s actions are proving they are not on the side of the law-abiding majority – instead choosing to defend vandals and thugs.’

Tory party chairman Oliver Dowden said Labour and the Liberal Democrats were enabling protesters who block highways, ambulances and workplaces. He added they had voted to make it ‘harder for the British people to get on with their lives’.

The Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Bill was gutted by peers, who inflicted a series of defeats on the Government.

No10 said it would reflect on the votes, but could use its Commons majority to overturn the defeats. The Prime Minister’s spokesman said: ‘It is disappoint­ing the Lords did not back the public order measures that will ensure the everyday lives of the overwhelmi­ng majority are not disrupted by a selfish minority of protesters whose actions endanger lives and cost the public millions of pounds.’

They added that policing XR protests in April and October 2019 cost £37million, ‘more than twice the annual budget of London’s violent crime taskforce’, while Insulate Britain cost forces £4million in three months last year.

Yesterday Justice Secretary Dominic Raab suggested the Government would bring back measures to restrict protests following the defeats.

He told BBC Radio 4’s Today: ‘Of course we support the right of peaceful and rambunctio­us protest, but it cannot be allowed to interfere with the lives of the law-abiding majority.’ Among rejected powers was one that would allow individual­s with a history of causing serious disruption to be banned from certain protests.

A proposal to make it an offence for a person to disrupt operation of key infrastruc­ture, including airports and newspaper printers, was blocked too.

In a separate defeat, peers voted to restrict tougher sentences for blocking a highway to major routes and motorways rather than all roads.

‘Their actions endanger lives’

DOES Labour still claim to be the party of ordinary working people?

If so, how can they possibly justify opposing new laws to prevent climate zealots bringing large parts of the country to a grinding halt by glueing themselves to roads and public transport.

Their juvenile stunts stop workers getting to jobs, parents taking children to school and ambulances getting patients to hospital. They routinely endanger lives.

Labour once boasted it would be ‘tough on crime’. By siding with eco-vandals, they have turned those words into a sick joke.

 ?? ?? Blocked: Insulate Britain activists at Westminste­r last year
Blocked: Insulate Britain activists at Westminste­r last year

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