Queen to set out deficit promise

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  • mayavi
    • Nov 2009
    • 14

    Queen to set out deficit promise

    The government will promise a bill obliging it to halve its budget deficit within four years when it announces its planned new laws in the Queen's Speech.

    Ministers are also likely to pledge to prevent bankers who take "reckless" risks from getting bonuses.

    Other measures are set to include free social care for the most needy, which Gordon Brown has said is a "priority".

    The Tories and Lib Dems say most pledges in the speech will not become law, with an election due by June 2010.

    This, they argue, make it little more than an early Labour manifesto.

    Lord Strathclyde, the shadow leader of the House of Lords, told the Guardian that the opposition was prepared to obstruct many of the proposals to stop them becoming law before the election.

    But Commons leader Harriet Harman has said "most" of the proposed bills will be passed before the next election.

    Elderly care

    The Queen's Speech, written by the government but delivered by the monarch, accompanied by much pomp and ceremony, is part of the State Opening of Parliament - the beginning of the parliamentary year.

    It outlines the legislative programme for the next 12 months - or, in this case, until Parliament dissolves for the next general election.

    The government is expected to announce a Fiscal Responsibility Bill, which would enshrine in law its promise to halve its budget deficit within four years.
    The UK, which now has overall debt of ?825bn, is set to borrow a record ?175bn over the next two years.

    The Queen's Speech is also set to include a Financial Services and Business Bill, which would give the Financial Services Authority more power to ban the bonuses of bankers who take "reckless" and "excessive" risks.

    The Flood and Water Management Bill, following the disasters of summer 2007, would give local authorities the lead responsibility for managing the risk of future flooding.

    Meanwhile, elderly people with the most desperate needs are likely to be promised free care in their own homes, as part of the Social Care Bill
    In an interview with the Daily Mail, the prime minister said the social care system was not "fit for purpose" and must be reformed to give people more security and dignity in old age.

    There is also expected to be a Policing, Crime and Private Security Bill, requiring sexual or serious offenders convicted before 2004 or convicted abroad to add their details to the DNA database.

    An Improving Schools and Safeguarding Children Bill would replace school league tables in England with school report cards and end national literacy and numeracy strategies.

    'Short-termist'

    Meanwhile, an Energy Bill is expected to give the regulator Ofgem more power to intervene to force down utility prices.

    A maximum of 70 to 80 days of parliamentary business are expected before Prime Minister Gordon Brown calls the next general election.

    The election must take place by 3 June but many pundits say 6 May, when local elections are held in England, is the most likely date.

    Tory leader David Cameron called it the "most divisive, short-termist, shamelessly self-serving" Queen's Speech "in living memory".

    It would focus on "dividing lines between Gordon Brown and the Conservatives", rather than attempting to end the recession and reform MPs' expenses, he added.

    Lib Dem leader Nick Clegg has accused ministers of "hijacking" the Queen's Speech for explicitly "political ends" in the lead-up to the election.

    He said the remaining business days of the current Parliament should be used to bring in measures to reform politics and to "hand on a legacy to the next Parliament".

    But Ms Harman, who as Commons leader helps decide which bills are given parliamentary priority, said most of the measures in the Queen's Speech had time to become law.

    She told the BBC: "I don't think it is right that we should be clocking-off now before a general election, which probably won't be until next year."

    Source:http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/politics/8364858.stm
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