Source - Alliance News

The UK parliament returns on Tuesday with Labour ministers on the government frontbench for the first time in more than a decade.

A new cohort of 643 MPs is expected to gather on the green benches at 1430 BST, when they will elect a Speaker who is responsible for the House of Commons and the debates which take place inside the chamber.

Keir Starmer is also set to say his first words at the despatch box as prime minister, having secured the keys to Number 10 Downing Street after last Thursday’s general election.

The 643 members must then swear an oath ahead of Parliament’s State Opening on Wednesday July 17, promising to ‘be faithful and bear true allegiance to His Majesty King Charles, his heirs and successors, according to law’.

Sinn Fein which won seven seats across Northern Ireland, including two in Belfast, have a long-standing policy of abstentionism so do not take their seats in Westminster.

Before they elect a Speaker, Black Rod Sarah Clarke must summon MPs to the House of Lords.

She will cross through Central Lobby to fetch Father of the House Edward Leigh, and walk him to the Lords, where a Royal Commission will be read directing MPs to choose their speaker.

Leigh is the longest continuously serving MP, having had a seat in the Commons since 1983 – the year when Margaret Thatcher won a 144-seat majority and when Jeremy Corbyn, Tony Blair and Gordon Brown first became MPs.

He must preside over the selection.

Lindsay Hoyle is expected to put himself forward as Speaker, having served in the role since 2019 and contested the Chorley, Lancashire, without a party affiliation.

It is up to MPs to decide whether he will stay on in the role.

If Hoyle is allowed to remain in post, MPs will drag him to the Speaker’s Chair to serve in the once-perilous role, seven speakers were executed by beheading between 1394 and 1535, according to Parliament records.

Hoyle is expected to thank his colleagues, and senior politicians may also speak to congratulate him, including Starmer.

Swearing in begins the same afternoon, led by the Speaker, Father of the House Leigh, then members of the Starmer’s Cabinet and Leader of the Opposition Rishi Sunak’s shadow cabinet.

Lawmaking and debates in the House of Commons remain on hold until after the formal State Opening of Parliament, a ceremony at 1125 BST next Wednesday, where the King will read a speech from the Sovereign’s Throne in the House of Lords, setting out the government’s agenda.

While MPs wait for the Labour Government’s plans in full, opposition parties have already begun setting out their priorities.

Liberal Democrat leader Ed Davey has accused the Conservatives of leaving the NHS ‘at crisis point’.

His party has called for an emergency budget to pump more money into health and social care.

‘Patients cannot wait any longer after years of Conservative chaos which has left NHS and social care services at crisis point,’ Davey said.

‘As I travelled the country in recent weeks, I heard devastating stories of pensioners waiting hours for ambulances, young parents waiting weeks for a GP appointment, too many left with anxious waits for cancer care.

‘We need an emergency Health & Social Care budget to get the NHS back on its feet after the Conservative party brought it to its knees. Patients and their loved ones need to get the care and the fair deal that they deserve.

‘New Liberal Democrat local champions will fight in Westminster to restore local health and care services after years of neglect.’

The Green Party has made a series of demands – among them to ‘settle a pay deal with junior doctors’, ‘prosecute major water companies’ which discharge sewage into rivers and seas, develop a ‘local rail link plan’, ‘recognise the state of Palestine’ and ‘introduce a Natural History GCSE’.

Adrian Ramsay, the party’s co-leader, said: ‘These are not lofty ideals but practical actions that can be implemented quickly.

‘They will have a real, positive impact on people’s lives and the environment.

‘I am delighted that as we meet to enter parliament Labour have already committed to reversing the de facto ban on onshore wind. Now they must go further and faster still and make solar power mandatory on all suitable new build homes.

‘They can, and they must do this in their first 100 days.’

By Will Durrant, PA Political Staff

Press Association: News

source: PA

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