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 -‘Champagne socialism back in Labour’
PM’s plans to stick around until 2030
Rayner quotes a Tory MP who said the PM has ‘lost the plot’ over the PM’s comments that he planned to stick around until 2030. Another Tory MP said the country would be better off under new leadership.
Now the PM is at war with his own defence secretary after confirming he will break his manifesto pledge in increasing defence spending, she says.
She says under this govt the country will have less troops, less planes, less ships.
Raab hits back saying spending on defence is rising to the highest levels in Europe and won’t take lessons from Rayner on this issue.
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UK protest laws ‘militant’
Rayner says the government is “acting in a militant way” and “while they should have been at the negotiating table, they were at the banqueting table squeezing hundreds of thousands out of their donors”.
She highlights the changes in protests laws and how it shows that the government “don’t like it when the public say what they think of them”.
She quotes Tory MPs who have been critical of Boris Johnson’s leadership, saying the PM just wants to save his job.
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‘Champagne socialism back in Labour’
Dominic Raab says if Labour wants to help working people they should stand up against the strikes.
Raab accuses Rayer of flip-flopping on the rail strikes and points out that during the first strike Rayner was attending the opera.
“Champagne socialism is back in the Labour party,” the deputy prime minister says.
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Private jets and foodbanks
Rayner says Raab pretends to emphasise those struggling but he spent over £1m in 12 months on private jets.
At this rate, by 2030, a million people will be using food banks, and asks how many people will be pushed into poverty by the PM before he says enough is enough.
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Taxes rising for how long – Rayner
Labour’s Rayner says she’d “revel in the opportunity” to allow the British public to decide what they think of the current government, urging for a general election.
Rayner says working people will pay £500bn in tax hikes by 2030 and asks how long this can go on.
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Labour has no plan – Raab
Rabb defends the government’s record in response to Rayner’s comments, saying they will cut taxes next month.
“Their plan is no plan,” he says, referring to Starmer reviewing Labour’s policy and quoting Tony Blair who said there is a “gaping hole in Labour’s policy offer” and says Rayner is “playing political games.”
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By election wins show PM losing the country – Rayner
Labour’s Rayner references the winners of the two by-elections the Lib Dems and Labour won last Friday.
“The prime minister isn’t just losing the room, Mr Speaker, he’s losing the country,” she states.
She asks if Raab thinks the cabinet will “prop up” Boris Johnson into the 2030s.
Dominic Raab moves away from rail strikes to highlight Labour divisions.
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Tributes to Dame Deborah James
Dominic Rabb has kicked off PMQs by paying tribute to Dame Deborah James – he says the thoughts of the whole house are with her friends and family.
Angela Rayner echoes Raab’s tribute to Dame Debs and offers up condolences to the family of the Zara Aleena – the young woman killed on the streets of London.
PMQs Live – Rayner to face Raab
This week’s PMQs will see Labour’s Angela Rayner face off against Tories Dominic Raab as the PM is in Madrid for the Nato summit, meaning Rayner will step in for Sir Keir Starmer.
The PM left for Madrid from the G7 in Germany. He is under pressure to announce an increase to the UK’s military spending after he called on fellow Nato members to meet their own defence targets.
What time is PMQs today?
PMQs kicks off at its usual midday slot and will last around 30 minutes.
How can I watch PMQs live?
You can watch all the action via a WTX News live stream.
Or follow along with TEXT updates.
What’s on the agenda for this week’s PMQs?
This week’s PMQs is set to be dominated by the controversial Northern Ireland Bill.
MPs voted 295 to 221 on Monday to give the bill a second reading, but there was a significant Tory rebellion led by former prime minister Theresa May.
The proposed legislation will hand the Government sweeping new powers to overrule an international treaty it signed with the EU in 2019.
Deputy Labour leader Rayner is likely to bring up the “summer of strikes” which has led to travel chaos across the country.
She supported the rail workers’ strike, tweeting: “No one takes strike action lightly. Workers have been left with no choice. I will always defend their absolute right to do so for fairness at work. The PM needs to do his own job. His Government caused this. Now they must solve it.”