Key events
Miliband accuses Tories of ‘sore loser syndrome’ in response to Biden’s huge green energy subsidy programme
Ed Miliband, the shadow secretary for climate change and net zero, is speaking at a Green Alliance event this morning. According to an extract from the speech released in advance, he will accuse the government of “sore loser syndrome” because of its scepticism about Joe Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), which gives massive subsidies to US companies producing clean energy.
Some British ministers have complained that this is protectionist, and unfair on British competitors.
But Miliband is saying:
What we have seen from the UK government is the actions of a group of people caught in the headlights. Kemi Badenoch dismisses the Inflation Reduction Act as “protectionist”. Our current energy secretary Grant Shapps calls it “dangerous”. The chancellor dismisses it too.
I profoundly disagree with this approach. As the US and Europe speed off into the distance in the global race for green industry, we are sitting back in the changing rooms moaning about the rules. Sore loser syndrome won’t win any jobs for Britain.
We need to stop moaning about the Inflation Reduction Act and start matching its ambition.
Of course, we must remain an open economy, welcoming foreign investment and goods. Not everything in the green economy could or should be produced here. But we are not neutral about where things are built.
Joe Biden wants the future Made in America. We want the future Made in Britain.
Miliband says geography gives Britain a unique advantage in renewable energy.
In the world which is coming, it is no exaggeration to say wind power will be what coal was for previous generations.
Our island status and the North and Celtic Seas give us a unique position therefore.
And he defends Labour’s plan to set up Great British Energy, a state-run renewable energy company. He explains:
Every real leader in zero carbon power has a national champion: EDF in France, Statkfraft in Norway, Orsted in Denmark, Vattenfall in Sweden.
It’s time we had ours.
In years to come, it will seem absurd that Britain had no public clean energy champion to deliver jobs and wealth as so many of our competitors do. A Labour government will and it will have a clear mission: to build clean energy and do it in Britain.
![Ed Miliband.](https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/14b406a3aa08e79bc0ec6547d8a72f0b1ea93150/0_0_6000_4000/master/6000.jpg?width=465&quality=85&dpr=1&s=none)
Andrew Bailey, governor of the Bank of England, is giving evidence to the Commons Treasury committee. My colleague Graeme Wearden is covering the hearing here.
The Scottish Greens have confirmed that they will be voting for Humza Yousaf as Scotland’s first minister. The Scottish Greens have a power-sharing agreement with the SNP, and two ministerial posts in the government. If Kate Forbes or Ash Regan had won the SNP leadership, this arrangment would have been in jeopardy, but Yousaf is committed to continuing it.
Lorna Slater, co-leader of the Scottish Greens, told the BBC’s Good Morning Scotland:
We will be supporting Humza Yousaf today so we can carry on with the Bute House agreement [the power-sharing agreement]…
The Scottish Greens are very glad that we are able to continue to work in a progressive agenda within the Scottish government.
Equalities matters are very important to the Scottish Greens. We will always stand up for LGBTQ+ rights, we will always stand up for the environment, for fairness, for tackling inequalities in our society so that everybody can thrive, and I think that the Scottish Greens and the SNP working together, the Greens and the Scottish Government working together is that kind of collaborative, co-operative politics based on discussion and consensus-building and negotiation that people want to see.
The Scottish Greens have seven MSPs.
NEU leader denies her potential successor ‘extremist’ and accuses BBC presenter of ‘outrageous slur’
In her interview on the Today programme this morning (see 9.19am), Mary Bousted, the joint general secretary of the National Education Union, criticised the presenter, Nick Robinson, for suggesting that one of the candidates in the election for the next NEU general secretary is an extremist.
Robinson said that Bousted was not right when she said not teacher wanted to disrupt exams, that some extremists in the union did favour these tactics, and that one of them was the man likely to succeed her as general secretary. Robinson did not name him, but he was referring to Daniel Kebede.
Bousted said that was a “outrageous slur” and she said that she would not describe either of the two candidates (Kebede and Niamh Sweeney, the current deputy general secretary) as extremist. She claimed general secretaries did not decide union policy anyway, because they were answerable to an executive. She then criticised Robinson for raising the issue. She said:
I think this is quite outrageous, actually. You’re you’re bringing what is a really serious issue about the future of teachers, about the current state of teachers in the classroom, down to personalities. I think that is really base and it demeans the programme. I’m really sorry. you’ve done that, Nick.
The NEU currently has joint general secretaries because it was formed by a merger of two unions in 2017. But Bousted and the other joint general secretary, Kevin Courtney, are standing down. Members have been voting in the election to choose their successor, with the ballot closing at the end of this month. Sweeney is seen as the more moderate of the two candidates, while Kebede has the backing of the left
A former NEU president, Kebede is a former national officer for the People’s Assembly Against Austerity. He has been described as a Corbynite. In an election message he said that, although the country needed a change of government, the NEU could not just expect a Labour government to give it what it wanted. He went on:
We need a strong and united union that can make that case, one that fights and wins on the issues that matter to our members, one that boosts pay, reduces workload, wins on funding and one that reclaims education for educators and for our children.
Education is in crisis.
Vote Daniel Kebede [1] for NEU General Secretary.
We need a STRONG and UNITED union that fights and wins on the issues that matter to our members and children.
Voting opens 6th February! pic.twitter.com/s32ueS1icx
— Daniel Kebede (@DanielKebedeNEU) January 22, 2023
Teaching union says it hopes future strikes won’t disrupt exams but won’t rule it out
Good morning. There are signs that the public sector strikes that have disrupted many services over the last few months, particularly in England, are coming to an end. The Royal College of Nursing is starting to ballot its members in England on whether they should accept a pay off, and RMT members recently voted to accept a pay deal from Network Rail. But last night it emerged that the National Education Union, the biggest teaching union in England, is urging its members to reject the latest pay offer from ministers.
In an interview this morning Mary Bousted, the NEU joint general secretary, would not rule out future strikes disrupting exams. Asked if that could happen, she told Radio 4’s Today programme:
We really hope that that doesn’t take place.
What we hope is that if the members do reject the offer, we want to go back to the government and say: ‘you have to do better’, reopen negotiations, and let’s see if we can get an offer that members will find respectable.
Asked again about whether strikes would disrupt exams, Bousted replied:
We will plan more strike dates. We don’t want to disrupt exams and we will try to ensure that we do reopen negotiations.
Nick Robinson, the presenter, pressed Bousted on this a third time. He invited her, if she did not want to interrupt exams, to say clearly ‘We will have strike dates, they will not interrupt exams’. Bousted replied:
We have conference next week, and conference will decide the plan of action, but no teacher wants to disrupt exam dates at all, so it’s up to the government.
Here is the agenda for the day.
10.30am: Ed Miliband, the shadow secretary for climate change and net zero, speaks at a Green Alliance event. As my colleague Pippa Crerar reports, Miliband will present Labour’s green growth plan as the British version of the US’s Inflation Reduction Act.
Morning: Rishi Sunak chairs cabinet.
11.30am: Downing Street holds a lobby briefing.
11.30am: David Lammy, the shadow foreign secretary, speaks at the launch of a pamphlet setting out his plans for Labour’s foreign policy.
12pm: Labour’s national executive committee meets.
After 12.30pm: Johnny Mercer, the veterans ministers, is expected to make a statement to MPs about housing Afghan refugees.
After 1.30pm: MPs will resume their debate on the illegal migration bill.
After 2pm: MSPs vote to elect the new first minister, with Humza Yousaf, the new SNP leader, certain to be chosen. After the vote, party leaders will make short speeches.
3pm: Rishi Sunak gives evidence to the Commons liaison committee.
Afternoon: Peers debate Commons amendments to the public order bill.
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