Queen’s speech: EU referendum, enhanced relationship with India

The Queen’s Speech mentioned India, along with China, as a country with which the UK will seek an "enhanced relationship."

May 27, 2015 08:41 pm | Updated November 16, 2021 05:04 pm IST - London

Queen Elizabeth II delivering her speech to the House of Lords in the Palace of Westminster in London.

Queen Elizabeth II delivering her speech to the House of Lords in the Palace of Westminster in London.

The newly elected David Cameron has promised to hold an in-out referendum on Britain’s membership of the European Union; a five-year freeze on income-tax, VAT and national insurance payments; and the right-to-buy for tenants of housing associations.

These are among the 26 new bills that the Conservative Party will introduce in fulfilment of their election pledges. The party, which was elected with an absolute majority, is free to implement measures that it could not do in the last government when it was in coalition with the Liberal Democratic Party.

The mission statement of the Cameron government was presented on Wednesday in the Queen’s Speech, an occasion of much pomp and pageantry that marks the beginning of the parliamentary year in Britain, and where by convention the British sovereign reads out the government’s plans and priorities in the House of Lords to the assembled members of parliament, peers and dignitaries.

The government has decided not to legislate on a controversial British Bill of Rights, which was to replace the current Human Rights Act. Although this had been part of Mr. Cameron’s campaign promise, he decided not to hurry with the legislation owing to mounting opposition to the bill – even from his own party backbenchers.

The Queen’s Speech mentioned India, along with China, as a country with which the UK will seek an “enhanced relationship.”

An Investigatory Powers Bill, branded the “snooper’s charter” by human rights groups, will give intelligence agencies the right to intercept communications data. Defended by the government as necessary for intercepting terror-linked digital communication, the Bill, its critics allege, will also be used to monitor the actions and activities of ordinary citizens, and critics and opponents of the government. As expected, Mr. Cameron’s package envisages significant cuts in benefits and welfare.

With a promise to reduce the deficit by £12 billion, and a commitment that he will not increase income taxes, Mr. Cameron must find other ways of keeping that promise. The full Employment and Welfare Benefits Bill will see a reduction in the welfare cap from £26,000 to £23,000, and freeze working-age benefits, tax credit and child benefit for two years.

The government will bring in an Immigration Bill to clamp down on illegal immigration and give it the right to seize wages of illegal workers. It will also bring in legislation to reform trade unions and protect essential public services against strikes, a move the Trade Union Conference was quick to condemn. Legislation that will devolve more powers to Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland is part of the package.

The Conservative Party has a majority of 12 in the parliament, Labour 232 and the Scottish National Party 56. With the Labour Party in disarray following its electoral defeat, the SNP is likely to act as the most trenchant critics of the government. By branding this parliament Britain’s “austerity parliament” the SNP has made its priorities clear.

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