July 13, 2022
11:00 am
Prime Ministers Questions
Catch-up
PMQs Live – Scotland can’t afford cost of living with Westminster
PMQs Live – Rowdy scenes as non dom rules questioned
PMQs Live – PM to face humiliating grilling from Sir Keir
Sajid Javid delivers brutal resignation speech in Commons
PMQs Live – ‘Pathetic spectacle’ – Brutal PMQs for Boris as more resignations roll in
PMQs Live – 06/07 – PM faces tough questions over Chris Pincher
PMQs live – PM faces grilling after shock resignations
PMQs Live – Scotland wants independence – Blackford
PMQs live – PM faces grilling after shock resignations
Politics LIVE today – what to watch
Today will be a massive day for the prime minister as he faces a grilling at the dispatch box at midday for PMQs – following the resignations of Rishi Sunak and Sajid Javid and a wave of juniors who have also quit. This morning has seen other Tories quit their roles and several issue letters withdrawing their support of the PM. But PMQs isn’t the only massive political event of today.
- PMQs live at Midday – watch here
- Sajid Javid will give an address in the Commons following PMQs
- 3 pm the PM will be in a committee meeting – the number one subject will be integrity.
PMQs today
PM Boris Johnson will face tough questions from Labour’s Keir Starmer today, in this week’s Prime Minister’s Questions – as pressure mounts on the PM and his government following last night’s shock resignations from health secretary Sajid Javid and chancellor Rishi Sunak and then the flurry of junior ministers and aides who have also quit.
The mass exodus comes following Boris Johnson’s televised interview on Tuesday evening in which he attempted to defuse the pressure around his handling of the Chris Pincher scandal.
MPs in more middle-ranking and lower-ranking Governments followed Sunak and Javid in resigning last night and into this morning, as the PM’s supporters rallied around him as he made a hasty cabinet reshuffle last night to appoint Nadhim Zahawi as the new Chancellor and Steve Barclay has replaced Sajid Javid as health secretary.
What time is PMQs?
The PM will face the Labour leader across the dispatch box at the usual time of 12 midday, and we’ll be live streaming the session here. Or you can follow along with TEXT updates.
What’s expected to be on the agenda? – Sunak and Javid shock resignations
This week’s PMQs are set to be dominated by the current crisis facing the government after the shock resignations of Rishi Sunak and Sajid Javid, and the PM’s handling of the Chris Pincher scandal.
Boris Johnson will not quit despite being urged by MPs at Downing street
Chancellor Rishi Sunak and Health Secretary Sajid Javid quit Boris Johnson’s cabinet, piling pressure on the PM.
Boris Johnson will not quit MPs at Downing street
But the PM is determined to see these resignations off and scrambling to make his cabinet after losing two heavyweights.
Fuelled by the fact the PM won a vote of confidence in his leadership last month and is safe from another vote for a year unless rules are changed.
Chris Pincher: What we know so far, why the PM’s story keeps changing and media reaction!
MPs at Downing Street for a reshuffle
Following the resignation of Rishis Sunak and Sajid Javid the PM frantically reshuffled the cabinet with Steve Barclay said to be in line for health secretary.
Senior cabinet and ministers have been seen in No 10 this evening, including education secretary Nadhim Zahawi and Lizz Truss as well as other MPs at Downing Street for the reshuffle.
Johnson says he’ll miss working with Sunak
In a letter to former chancellor Rishi Sunak, UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson says he is sorry to receive Sunak’s letter resigning from the government.
He says Sunak provided “outstanding service to the country through the most challenging period for our economy in peacetime history”.
He mentions the furlough scheme Sunak coordinated during the height of the Covid pandemic and says Sunak’s efforts “primed the economy for a rapid recovery once the immediate dangers of the pandemic receded”.
Johnson adds “I have enormously valued your advice and deep commitment to public service and will miss working with you in government“.
Starmer says ‘Tory party is corrupted’
Starmer says Tory cabinet ministers have been complicit with Prime Minister Boris Johnson, while he “disgraced his office and let down his country”.
“The Tory party is corrupted, and changing the man at the top won’t fix it. We need a real change of government and a fresh start for Britain”, he says.
The Prime Minister perhaps in hubris will not bow down to public pressure and his close aides have commented ‘Boris Johnson will not quit’.
Nadhim Zahawi appointed chancellor
No 10 confirms Nadhim Zahawi appointed the new chancellor and Steve Barclay will be replacing Sajid Javid, becoming the new secretary of state for health and social care.
Michelle Donelan is the new secretary of education, replacing Nadhim Zahawi’s old role.
PMQs ends
This week’s PMQs ends – the cost of living, Scottish independence and the strikes are the hot topics for this round.
Watch all the action below
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Sexual violence survivors silenced
Lib Dems Layla Moran asks about cases where survivors of sexual violence have been silenced through NDAs and gagging clauses by their universities.
Will the government back her bill to ban the use of NDAs in cases of bulling and misconduct?
Raab says he will look very carefully at her proposals and says “we’ve got to do everything we can to protect woman and girls in this country”.
He says he’s relieved that the volume of rape convictions this year is up two-thirds.
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Women’s rights under attack – Labour
Labour’s Rosie Duffield says British women are under attack – in the form of assaults and participation in elite sport and asks for the government to enshrine “ a women’s right to choose” into law.
Raab says the UK law is that women have a right to choose and he doesn’t want to see the UK follow the USA down the path of litigation in courts.
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Scotland wants independence – Blackford
Ian Blackford starts by stating Nicola Sturgeon has set the date and started the campaign for Scottish Independence.
He says the Westminister govt is breaking international law and dealing poorly with the issues of the day.
Raab says “it’s not the right time for another referendum, given the challenges we face as one United Kingdom”. He says the people of Scotland want “their two governments to work together”.
Blackford says the government doesn’t have the right to stop Scottish democracy.
Raab claims Blackford is “airbrushing history” and that Scots suffer a “huge tax burden” and Scotland has worse-performing schools than England and Wales.