A Labour government would give stronger legal protections for equal pay for black, Asian and minority ethnic workers, according to draft plans for a new race equality act seen by Sky News.
Radical plans enacting protections for those who face “dual discrimination” are also outlined as well as mandatory ethnic minority pay reporting, tackling health disparities and the introduction of a new Windrush commissioner.
But campaigners and some involved in drafting the plans are concerned that immigration is not substantially mentioned.
The taskforce had discussed repealing the Nationality and Borders Act to ensure that anybody who arrives in the UK as a child cannot be deported and to block the government’s ability to revoke citizenship. But this is understood to have been shelved and won’t be part of the plans.
A number of Labour frontbenchers, legal experts and community groups have been discussing ways to deliver a new race equality act since Labour first announced their intention in 2021 on the one-year anniversary of the death of George Floyd. They said they would make the eradication of structural racism a “defining cause for the next Labour government”.
A taskforce was created, led by Baroness Doreen Lawrence, and they consulted on these plans up until last July when subsequent meetings were either delayed or cancelled at the last minute.
Image: Doreen Lawrence, Labour peer and mother of murdered black teenager Stephen Lawrence
Last week some stakeholders have had one-on-one meetings with the shadow equality minister Annalise Dodds in preparation for the launch today, but some are surprised Labour’s plans for the act have progressed without a meeting of the taskforce in over six months.
Some black MPs say they haven’t seen the plans yet including Labour’s first black female MP Diane Abbott, who told The Voice newspaper: “I haven’t actually seen the draft race equality act and no one has.”
Another MP told Sky News that not formally consulting the Black Parliamentary Labour Party had been a “bit of a p***take”.
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Jacqueline McKenzie, a human rights lawyer who is on the taskforce, said Labour’s entire plan is at risk of failing without enforcement – and she’s yet to get any reassurance from the party that these plans have any teeth.
She added at the moment it seems as if the party is “just doing something for the sake of doing something”.
Sky News understands all recommendations in the Lammy review will be included as well as recommendations in Wendy Williams’ Windrush review including one the Home Office has currently tabled – to have a Migrant Tsar. Though Labour will rebrand this as a Windrush commissioner, in what some are seeing as a way for the party to distance itself from immigration issues.
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More eye-catching proposals include race training for police staff, as well as creating a body to collect data to assess ethnic minority health outcomes.
There is also expected to be a drive to eradicate specific health disparities such as maternity deaths which are four times higher for black women than for white women.
Kate Osamor, who was the only black woman MP on the taskforce was suspended last week pending an investigation after saying Gaza should be remembered as genocide in a post about Holocaust Memorial Day. It is unclear whether she will be part of the plans this week.
Nels Abbey, a race equality campaigner, said Labour’s race equality announcements are very welcome. Though he remarked “the problem the Labour Party has is one of credibility”.
“As a result, the announcements risk being dismissed as ‘just words’, at best. And many ethnic minorities are struggling to hear the Labour Party’s words when they can see what they’re doing,” he said.
His thinktank Uppity hosted an event this week entitled “Is Labour working for ethnic minorities?” where he said it was made alarmingly clear that many ethnic minorities have developed a “discernible level of distrust and disdain for Keir Starmer‘s party”.
At the end of the debate roughly 85% of the room disagreed with the statement that “Labour is working for ethnic minorities”, while roughly 65% of the room believed it was time for ethnic minorities to ditch the Labour Party altogether.
Ms Dodds, shadow women and equalities secretary, said: “It has never been more important to deliver race equality. Inequality has soared under the Conservatives and too many black, Asian and ethnic minority families are working harder and harder for less and less. This is holding back their families and holding back the economy.”
It was a prescient and – as it turned out – incredibly optimistic sign off from Peter Mandelson after eight years as Chancellor of Manchester Metropolitan University.
“I hope I survive in my next job for at least half that period”, the Financial Times reported him as saying – with a smile.
As something of a serial sackee from government posts, we know Sir Keir Starmer was, to an extent, aware of the risks of appointing the ‘Prince of Darkness’ as his man in Washington.
But in his first interview since he gave the ambassador his marching orders, the prime minister said if he had “known then what I know now” then he would not have given him the job.
For many Labour MPs, this will do little to answer questions about the slips in political judgement that led Downing Street down this disastrous alleyway.
Like the rest of the world, Sir Keir Starmer did know of Lord Mandelson’s friendship with the paedophile Jeffrey Epstein when he sent him to Washington.
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The business secretary spelt out the reasoning for that over the weekend saying that the government judged it “worth the risk”.
Image: Keir Starmer welcomes Nato Secretary General Mark Rutte to Downing Street.
Pic: PA
This is somewhat problematic.
As you now have a government which – after being elected on the promise to restore high standards – appears to be admitting that previous indiscretions can be overlooked if the cause is important enough.
Package that up with other scandals that have resulted in departures – Louise Haigh, Tulip Siddiq, Angela Rayner – and you start to get a stink that becomes hard to shift.
But more than that, the events of the last week again demonstrate an apparent lack of ability in government to see round corners and deal with crises before they start knocking lumps out of the Prime Minister.
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4:02
‘Had I known then, what I know now, I’d have never appointed him’ Starmer said.
Remember, for many the cardinal sin here was not necessarily the original appointment of Mandelson (while eyebrows were raised at the time, there was nowhere near the scale of outrage we’ve had in the last week with many career diplomats even agreeing the with logic of the choice) but the fact that Sir Keir walked into PMQs and gave the ambassador his full throated backing when it was becoming clear to many around Westminster that he simply wouldn’t be able to stay in post.
The explanation from Downing Street is essentially that a process was playing out, and you shouldn’t sack an ambassador based on a media enquiry alone.
But good process doesn’t always align with good politics.
Something this barrister-turned-politician may now be finding out the hard way.
Sir Keir Starmer will be “completely exonerated” over the scandal around Peter Mandelson’s relationship with disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein, Gordon Brown has told Sky News.
The prime minister was forced to sack Lord Mandelson as the UK’s ambassador to the US last Thursday after details of the peer’s relationship with Epstein emerged in the media.
Emails between Lord Mandelson, a minister under Tony Blair and Mr Brown, and the convicted sex offender revealed that the ex-minister sent messages of support to Epstein even as the US financier faced jail for soliciting prostitution from a minor in 2008.
But Mr Brown told Sky News’ Darren McCaffreythat he believes the prime minister will be “completely exonerated” once “the record is out” on the matter.
The former prime minister said: “I don’t want to criticise Sir Keir Starmer’s judgement, because he faces very difficult decisions and we’re talking about a very narrow area for timing between a Tuesday and Thursday.
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Image: Sir Keir Starmer with Lord Peter Mandelson
“I think once the record is out, Sir Keir Starmer will be completely exonerated.”
However, Mr Brown did admit that the situation “calls somewhat into his judgement”.
He said: “I think every government goes through difficulties. Probably 15 years ago, when I was in government, you’d be asking me questions about what had happened on a particular day.
“But this is not really in the end about personalities. In the end, it’s about the policies.
“If you ask people in the street, they might say, well, interesting story, terrible thing that happened to these girls, but also they will say, look what’s happening to my life at the moment, what’s happening to my community, what’s happening to my industry, what’s happening to the whole region.
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1:48
The Prime Minister is facing serious questions over his appointment of Peter Mandelson as the US ambassador.
“I think we’ve got to think that politics is about changing people’s lives and making a difference in those areas where they want to do things.”
Sir Keir has insisted that Lord Mandelson went through a proper due diligence process before his appointment.
However, speaking publicly for the first time since he sacked Lord Mandelson on Thursday night, he said: “Had I known then what I know now, I’d have never appointed him.”
Sir Keir said he knew before Prime Minister’s Questions on Wednesday afternoon that Lord Mandelson had not yet answered questions from government officials, but was unaware of the contents of the messages that led to his sacking.
He said Lord Mandelson did not provide answers until “very late” on Wednesday, which was when he decided he had to be “removed”.