Safeguarding minister Jess Phillips urges people to intervene in women being harassed in public
In her interview on the Today programme this morning Jess Phillips, the minister for safeguarding and violence against women and girls, was asked about a call from UN Women UK for bystanders to be more proactive in intervening to protect women being harassed or threatened in public spaces.
Asked if she she would advise people to intervene, Phillips replied:
Yes, I would, but I would say always do it safely.
If you say something in the street that’s really worrying you, you should ring 999.
But what I would say is that you can definitely ask if somebody is all right in the street. There’s no active aggression in that.
Phillips also said she was speaking from a club where staff were trained to intervene in this sort of way if they say men bothering women on the dance floor. She said there was nothing offensive about asking a woman if she was OK.
Key events
CBI chief says tax rises like those in budget should never be imposed on business by surprise again
Rain Newton-Smith, the CBI chief executive, has given the government credit for “drawing the curtain on a near decade of instability at home”.
But, in line with the advance briefing, she also used her speech to the CBI conference this morning to argue that the tax rises in the budget will harm business.
She said:
What really defines growth is the decisions made in boardrooms up and down the country.
It’s CFOs [chief financial officers] asking, ‘can we afford to invest? Can we afford to expand? Can we afford to take a chance on new people?’
Well after the budget, the answer we’re hearing from so many firms is still ‘not yet’.
The rise in national insurance, the stark lowering of the threshold, caught us all off guard.
Along with the expansion and the rise of the national living wage – which everyone wants to accommodate – and the potential cost of the employment rights bill, they put a heavy burden on business.
She also said that tax rises like this should never be imposed on business by surprise again.
From now on, we need to shift from consultation to co-design.
Tax rises like this must never again be simply done to business. That’s the road to unintended consequences.
Instead, we need an elevated partnership for a higher purpose.
There is more coverage of her speech on our business live blog.
Safeguarding minister Jess Phillips urges people to intervene in women being harassed in public
In her interview on the Today programme this morning Jess Phillips, the minister for safeguarding and violence against women and girls, was asked about a call from UN Women UK for bystanders to be more proactive in intervening to protect women being harassed or threatened in public spaces.
Asked if she she would advise people to intervene, Phillips replied:
Yes, I would, but I would say always do it safely.
If you say something in the street that’s really worrying you, you should ring 999.
But what I would say is that you can definitely ask if somebody is all right in the street. There’s no active aggression in that.
Phillips also said she was speaking from a club where staff were trained to intervene in this sort of way if they say men bothering women on the dance floor. She said there was nothing offensive about asking a woman if she was OK.
MPs will have a free vote on assisted dying, the government is neutral, and that means cabinet ministers are on different sides of the argument. But when asked about this on LBC this morning, Jess Phillips, the Home Office minister, denied suggestions that this was causing acrimony. She said:
I actually don’t sense a degree of tension. Those who have now become famous for their opposition to it, the likes of Wes Streeting, for example, I literally just text him and said, ‘Are we going for dinner this week?’, so even though me and him feel differently about this issue, it is a matter of conscience.
The i has splashed today on the cabinet splits over assisted dying. It says 14 cabinet ministers support the bill, but eight are opposed.
More than 20 police forces in England and Wales are sending plainclothes officers into bars to look out for predatory sexual behaviour, Keir Starmer is being told at the meeting in Downing Street he is hosting on spiking this morning.
In a statement released in advance, assistant chief constable Samantha Millar, the National Police Chiefs’ Council violence against women and girls strategic programme director, said:
Spiking is a complex offence to investigate as drugs can pass through the system quickly and there is often a lack of evidential opportunities, which is why quick reporting and early evidence gathering, including forensic testing, is key.
Police forces across the country have been working proactively to stop spiking from happening in the night-time economy and improve feelings of safety for women and girls. This includes regular, targeted patrols of busy town centres and visiting organisations, such as universities, to raise awareness of the symptoms of spiking.
Forces also work closely with bars, pubs and clubs to tackle spiking, and during the first national spiking police week of action in March, forces collectively visited over 1900 licensed venues to ensure that staff understood how to support victims.
To coincide with the meeting, the British Transport Police says it is relaunching text-to-report number, 61016, which “is now free across all major networks, allowing women to discreetly contact British Transport Police for help if they are or someone else is being harassed on the train”.
Russia plotting to use AI to enhance cyber-attacks against UK, Pat McFadden will warn
Russia and other adversaries of the UK are trying to use artificial intelligence to enhance cyber-attacks against the nation’s infrastructure, Pat McFadden, the Cabinet Office minister, will warn at a Nato conference in London later today. Dan Sabbagh has the story.
Vote on assisted dying bill impossible to predict, says minister
Good morning. There is plenty happening today. Rachel Reeves, the chancellor, and Kemi Badenoch, the Conservative leader, are both speaking at the CBI conference, where the CBI chief executive Rain Newton-Smith is warning about the impact of the budget on business. Keir Starmer is hosting a meeting at Downing Street about plans to protect women from spiking. “My government was elected on a pledge to take back our streets, and we will never achieve this if women and girls do not feel safe at night,” he says. There will be tributes to John Prescott in the Commons this afternoon. But one issue is going to dominate the week, the vote on the assisted dying bill on Friday, and already that is a big topic of discussion.
Jess Phillips, the minister for safeguarding and violence against women and girls, has been giving interviews this morning and she told the Today programme she is finding it impossible to predict if the bill will pass the second reading vote. She said:
We do not know how this vote is going to go. I literally couldn’t call it for you at the moment …
Each week I think a different thing. Last week I thought it wouldn’t [pass]. This week I think it might. Honestly, I’ve learned over the years not to try and second guess parliament.
Phillips is not the only person finding the vote hard to call. Eleanor Langford from the i has been keeping a tally of how MPs intend to vote and last night she published her figures on social media.
Since the assisted dying bill was announced, I’ve been keeping a close eye on MP views
I’ve found 207 supportive and 141 opposed… but there are still 291 we don’t know about
(N.B. Can’t share full spreadsheet due to anon declarations. Total excludes Sinn Fein and Speakers.)
I should underline that these figures are *not* a prediction of the vote, but an interesting look at the direction MPs are leaning
With 291 MPs not stating a view at the time of writing, the vote very easily could go either way
We’ll know the actual result on Friday afternoon
According to Janet Eastham’s story in the Daily Telegraph today, supporters of the bill think it will pass – provided MPs who have said they support it are willing to vote for it.
A source close to the MPs campaigning in favour of legalisation told The Telegraph: “If all the MPs who have said they support the Bill turn out and vote for it, then it will pass.”
When MPs last voted on assisted dying, in 2015, the bill was easily defeated by 330 votes to 118. After the election many people assumed that the Labour landslide, and the drastic change in the composition of parliament, meant that there is now a majority for assisted dying. But in recent weeks there have been indications that opponents of the bill are gaining ground, in part because Wes Streeting, the health secretary, and Shabana Mahmood, the justice secretary (the two cabinet ministers who would have most responsibility for implementing assisted dying) have come out against it forcefully.
In interviews this morning Phillips said she would be voting for assisted dying, as she did in 2015. She also rejected the suggestion that Mahmood’s criticism of the bill could be disregarded because it was motivated by religion (something Charlie Falconer, the former Labour lord chancellor, suggested yesterday). Asked if it was wrong for Mahmood to impose her faith on others, Phillips said:
She will make the decision about how she votes on assisted dying on a matter of conscience, just exactly like I will. How she comes to that and what moral code she uses to come to that will be exactly the same as the moral code that I use to come to that decision as well …
I think that Shabana is making a decision on what she thinks is best for her constituents, like every constituency MP.
Here is the agenda for the day.
Morning: Keir Starmer hosts a meeting in Downing Streeting on measures to protect women from spiking.
10.05am: Rain Newton-Smith, the CBI chief executive, speaks at the start of the CBI’s annual conference.
After 11am: Keir Starmer is due to be interviewed on ITV’s This Morning.
11.30am: Downing Street holds a lobby briefing.
1.30pm: Kemi Badenoch, the Conservative leaders, speaks at the CBI conference.
1.40pm: Pat McFadden, the Cabinet Office minister, speaks at the Nato cyber defence conference.
2.30pm: Yvette Cooper, the home secretary, takes questions in the Commons.
3.30pm: Amanda Pritchard, the NHS England chief executive, and Chris Wormald, permanent secretary at the Department of Health and Social Care, give evidence to the Commons public acccounts committee about NHS finances.
After 3.30pm: MPs are expected to pay tribute to John Prescott in the Commons following his death last week.
4.10pm: Rachel Reeves, the chancellor, takes part in a Q&A at the CBI conference.
5pm (UK time): John Healey, the defence secretary, speaks at a press conference with his German, French, Polish and Italian counterparts after they hold a meeting in Berlin.
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