Translation: posh totty* and not obviously crackers.
*Yes, yes, I know, but this is the RW media who are mainly writing for an imagined male audience.
Tubby Isaacs wrote: ↑Sun Oct 19, 2025 8:31 pm More publicity for racist crank Katie Lam.
James O'Brien was berating the media for the lack of coverage of her remarks which O'Brien reckons are worse than the Rivers of Blood speech.
The funds that have been committed to projects via the Church of England’s reparations project are in fact for the upkeep of parish churches and the provision of salaries for the clergy. I know that the Second Church Estates Commissioner is dedicated to our parish churches and would not support anything unlawful, so will the hon. Lady please provide the grounds on which the Church Commissioners are authorised to allocate this money to aims for which it was not intended? What details can she share of the conversations that she has had with the Charity Commission to determine whether they can do this, as it seems to be unlawful?I thought the Tories were the anti-bureaucracy, get the lawyers out of the way party? Funny how the Church looks at some reparations and suddenly Katie and all purport to spot these legal problems. Perhaps these lawyers are the same ones who don't like solar farms and railway lines in Tory constituencies. "In fact", eh?
Conservative MP Katie Lam insists the assisted dying bill proposed by fellow MP Kim Leadbeater has been “weakened” by changes. Lam suggests a clause in the bill which says it has to come into force in four years’ time is “very dangerous".Four years sounds like a long enough time to me. And there's zero to stop the government later saying it needs more time. I thought people on the Kipper right were big on "Parliament can't bind its successors" (usually when they're trying to pretend that they can unilaterally withdraw from the Good Friday Agreement or whatever.
Many of the steps taken in the Bill will be welcomed on both sides of the House and by victims across our country. It is right, for example, that we restrict convicted sex offenders’ access to their children, and it is right that we give victims more information about their offenders’ release. However, the calls for justice for the victims of grooming and rape gangs grow only louder. Across this country, people are rightly horrified by these crimes and the subsequent cover-up, which represents the biggest national scandal in our history, yet the Government have failed to use this opportunity to deliver real justice for those victims and survivors.Am I missing something but have lots of these cases been investigated and prosecuted a decade or more ago or more? What can a bill in 2025 do about that? She seems to be talking about historic cases specifically.
Just last week, the Court of Appeal revisited the case of three men who were convicted of raping a teenage girl in Yorkshire. Ibrar Hussain and brothers Imtiaz and Fayaz Ahmed were convicted in January for committing unspeakably evil crimes against a 13-year-old girl. In the first instance, they each received sentences of less than 10 years. As my right hon. Friend the Member for Newark mentioned, he and my hon. Friend the Member for Keighley and Ilkley (Robbie Moore) referred this case to the Attorney General. In this instance, the court rightly ruled that these sentences were far too short. This Bill should have made it easier for victims to seek such redress. It does not.Who knew the MPs for Newark and Keighley and Ilkley had the right to do this? It's the Solicitor General who did it. And the sentences were increased. Isn't that the system working already?
I know that we are short on time, but I want to turn to the comments made by the hon. Member for Weald of Kent (Katie Lam) about the IICSA. I will put it on the record again—I think it needs to be said—that the Government are absolutely focused on delivering meaningful change for victims impacted by these horrendous crimes. Earlier this year, we published our plan for responding to the recommendations of the independent inquiry into child sexual abuse through the Crime and Policing Bill, on which I am proud also to be a Minister. We are strengthening the law by introducing a mandatory reporting duty to make it an offence to fail to report or to cover up child sexual abuse. We are also legislating in that Bill to make grooming a statutory aggravating factor in the sentencing of child sexual offences to ensure that that behaviour is reflected in the sentencing of perpetrators.I'm sure she'll take these on board next time she launches into "Labour covering up and not doing anything".
We also plan to legislate to remove the three-year limit for compensation claims and shift the burden of proof from victims to defendants in the civil courts, as well as amend the law of apologies to encourage employers to apologise to people wronged by their employees. A legislative vehicle is currently being identified for that measure. I stress again that the Government are getting on with the job of delivering for those victims and survivors. We are not delaying; we are actively working at pace to ensure that justice will be served and support is available.