The Herald

Mcdonnell: Virus must not be used to avoid Budget pledges

- By Hannah Rodger Westminste­r Correspond­ent

LABOUR has urged the Government not to exploit the coronaviru­s outbreak as an opportunit­y to renege on its promises around climate change, infrastruc­ture and levelling up investment­s.

Speaking ahead of the new Chancellor’s first Budget tomorrow, shadow chancellor John Mcdonnell said there was an urgent need to to provide extra help to the NHS and care services to tackle coronaviru­s , but warned that other areas must not be forgotten.

Mcdonnell said: “I can’t overstate the significan­ce of this Budget. Of course course the immediate and pressing challenge of this Budget is to ensure the resources are delivered to our NHS and social care services to meet this risk head on, to contain it and defeat it.

“Resources are needed to ensure people are protected from the medical and financial harm of this outbreak.

“However the natural focus on the coronaviru­s should not be a reason, or an excuse, for not addressing equally serious and dangerous threats from the social emergency created by a decade of decline.”

The MP, who will leave his post when Labour elects a new leader and deputy leader next month, said he would return to the back benches as an “elder statesman”.

He added that the response to the virus outbreak by Chancellor Rishi Sunak has been a concern, saying: “Just as the Chief Medical Officer has been able to reassure people with his openness in reporting, so the Chancellor should also be on the economic progress of this situation.

“The Treasury should also take responsibi­lity for coordinati­ng department­al impact assessment­s and resource planning in order to prepare a funding plan for increased resourcing for agencies and department­s, using a variety of scenarios reflecting different possible levels of the severity of the outbreak.

“What concerned me and still does, is the tardiness by the Chancellor in seeking to reassure the public and markets more comprehens­ively that the Government stands ready to intervene in the economy.”

Mcdonnell said the Government must also take action on climate change, and make this a stand-out feature of the budget tomorrow. adding: “I hope the fires in Australia, the burning of the Amazon forest and the flooding in our own country has chastened the Government.”

Alan Brown MP, the SNP’S shadow spokespers­on for Energy and Climate Change, also called for climate change action to be part of the budget plans.

He said that Sunak must commit to ensuring that the UK remains aligned with the high EU environmen­tal regulation­s after the Brexit transition period. The MP also added that Government ministers must make sure that green energy schemes have longterm certainty, to enable them to secure funding and if investment.

He said: “The upcoming Budget must not be yet another squandered opportunit­y for the UK Government to take action to tackle the climate emergency. In Scotland, the SNP is leading the way with the world’s most ambitious emissions reductions targets in law, and tougher, faster interim targets – with Glasgow also set to host COP26 later this year.

“The UK Government must use its Budget this week to set out a package of measures to tackle climate change and to play its part.

“The SNP will continue to challenge the Westminste­r Tory Government to commit to redoubling its efforts, and it is why we have set out a package of measures it must implement if it is serious about climate change.

“Those measures include following the Scottish Government’s lead and targets, stepping back from its efforts to roll back on high EU environmen­tal regulation­s, improving corporate responsibi­lity in tackling the climate emergency, reforming the UK tax system to support greener choices, securing a Green Energy Deal, and creating a Net Zero Fund.”

Sunak announced last night, ahead of the Budget speech tomorrow, that he would be unveiling £70m of “toughening up” measures to crack down on criminals on probation.

Downing Street said it was part of the Government’s plan to ‘make Britain’s streets safer’. Among the measures expected include giving prisoners on probation tags to monitor whether they have drunk alcohol.

The natural focus on the coronaviru­s should not be an excuse for not addressing equally serious threats

 ??  ?? Shadow chancellor John Mcdonnell says the Government must stick to its election pledges despite the challenges of the coronaviru­s outbreak
Shadow chancellor John Mcdonnell says the Government must stick to its election pledges despite the challenges of the coronaviru­s outbreak

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