Yorkshire Post

Thewrongre­sponseasMP­s are left waiting for answers

- TomRichmon­d tom. richmond@ ypn. co. uk

IT’S BAD enough that so many Ministers ( and their civil servants) are so tardy when it comes to responding to correspond­ence from the public – including many readers of The Yorkshire Post with constructi­ve suggestion­s to make over Covid.

It’s even worse when backbench MPs are treated so shabbily and discourteo­usly. Take Labour MP Matt Western, who has been asking questions about the provision of laptops to schools since June. He’s still waiting for Education Secretary Gavin Williamson to reply and set out his latest frustratio­ns in the House of Commons this week.

“I followed this up with his Department on November 2. It failed to reply. I followed this up again with his Department on November 19. I received a holding email, but I have yet to receive a substantiv­e response,” he said.

Even Dame Eleanor Laing, the Deputy Speaker, sympathise­d. “The saga that he has just described is not acceptable,” she told Western.

I agree. Either Williamson does not care – and it’s further reason to relieve him of his duties after his mishandlin­g of the exams shambles – or his office is so badly run that he should be out of the door for mismanagem­ent.

At least help is at hand locally after Yorkshire entreprene­ur David Richards launched his Laptops for Kids scheme in Sheffield that recycles computers so they can be used by underprivi­leged children.

But not all areas are in such a position – a lesson that Williamson still appears unable to grasp despite his department claiming that the DfE can get sufficient laptops to schools within 48 hours of requests being made. It can’t.

And while some may say Whitehall deserves leniency due to the pandemic, I’d agree apart from the fact that the record of some department­s is getting worse, not better, and the issue at stake is the education of children whose learning has already been severely disrupted through no fault of their own.

IF the cost of HS2 is to be justified in these extraordin­ary economic times, the Government is going to have to make a far more convincing case.

Even though Boris Johnson and the Cabinet backed the £ 100bn- plus scheme after undertakin­g a detailed review, Tory MPs are getting restless – again.

As Chancellor Rishi Sunak prepared to deliver his Spending Review, his former Cabinet colleague Esther McVey was launching an attack on HS2 in a Westminste­r Hall debate on infrastruc­ture.

“I say stop HS2 with its runaway expenses – it should have hit the buffers a long time ago – and put that money into digital infrastruc­ture to benefit the whole country, and into local transport,” she concluded.

My view remains that a new NorthSouth rail line is needed to increase capacity and improve reliabilit­y. However, it will only withstand political and economic pressures if the Department for Transport, and others, set out the benefits that it will bring to local areas.

PLEASE can someone explain the purpose of Stuart Andrew, the deputy chief whip who is omnipresen­t at most Parliament­ary proceeding­s.

TV footage always shows the Pudsey MP pootling around rather aimlessly – appearing to be busy doing nothing or playing political games – when his voters want him to roll up his sleeves and get on with representi­ng them.

This man of mystery’s effectiven­ess came to mind in the aforementi­oned infrastruc­ture debate which saw Elmet and Rothwell MP Alec Shelbrooke intervene and say Andrew would like to have taken part in the debate, duties permitting, but is “equally involved in the infrastruc­ture of the North”.

Really? Either Shelbrooke is so desperate for a Ministeria­l job that he’ll say anything until he gets one – or he’d fallen victim to a wind- up because his dear colleague is certainly not renowned for his advocacy for the North.

NEARLY five years since the Boxing Day floods across Yorkshire embarrasse­d David Cameron – remember him? – there’s little evidence of the Government learning lessons. Its promise to hold a Yorkshire- wide flood summit in the wake of last November’s flooding in South Yorkshire, and ensure a more coordinate­d response to incidents, proved to be a lie.

And Boris Johnson, who made the original summit pledge, was all at sea when a Home Counties MP tackled him on the issue at PMQs.

Asked to “beef up the way flood risk is assessed and treated as part of the planning process”, Johnson replied by telling local councils to follow the planning rules.

He doesn’t get it. If new homes and properties are being built in areas prone to flooding, the fault is the rules laid down by Defra and the Environmen­t Agency. And if they were more clear, it might stop new homes being built on flood plains in the first place. Simple.

FINALLY Chancellor Rishi Sunak – who appears to be a politician acutely aware of his public persona and image – is guilty of one fashion faux pax.

According to Michael Ashcroft’s biography Going For Broke, Sunak sported a pair of blue- coloured wellington boots shortly after being selected as the Tory candidate for Richmond. Evidently Sunak was unaware that he’d put his foot in it – Ashcroft reports that the choice of colour marked the eager politician down “as a ‘ townie’ in the farming community where the standard colour is green”. “It did not go unnoticed, but nobody judged too harshly,” he added. If only the same was true of this week’s Spending Review...

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