I’m proud of the positive, straight campaign I ran. I’ve had a few weeks to reflect on what our country needs now. And after a busy week travelling to Israel & Turkey with Home Office responsibilities, I’ve come back home to my own ballot paper. I will be voting for Boris. (1/6)
I made the case for being a party that unites our country, protects our precious Union, embraces modern Britain, and brings Conservative values to new audiences. I’ve spoken to Boris and believe he shares this vision wholeheartedly. (2/6)
I have huge respect for Jeremy, but I believe Boris is better placed to deliver what we need to do at this critical time. (3/6)
The first and foremost challenge is of course delivering Brexit. Trust in our democracy will be at stake if we don’t make October 31st a ‘deal or no deal’ deadline. (4/6)
Like Boris, I’m also very optimistic about our future. Britain’s fundamental social and economic strengths have not changed. We really can and will make a success of the coming years. (5/6)
I believe that Boris will deliver Brexit, can unite the country and defeat Jeremy Corbyn. That’s why I #BackBoris. (6/6)
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
It was an incredible honour to lead the Holocaust Memorial Day debate in Parliament today.
Extremely thoughtful contributions from Members across the House in our united call to never forget the victims of persecution @HMD_UK 1/5
Education will be essential in the work to tackle hatred and prejudice. We have so many fantastic organisations doing just this, including @AnneFrankTrust@HolocaustUK 3/5
It was also an honour for me to lead this debate as the first Muslim to do so from the backbenches. Our strength as a country comes from having open communities 4/5
Following the identification of the Omicron variant in the UK we are introducing new measures to ensure we maintain the excellent progress we have made against this virus. /1
We need to slow down the seeding of this variant in our country and we need to buy time for our scientists to understand exactly what we are dealing with. /2
On testing - all international arrivals entering England must take a day 2 PCR test and self-isolate until they receive a negative result. /3
Very pleased to hear PM’s new skills initiative today, as part of our levelling up agenda.
There’s never been a more important time to invest in people & prepare our workforce for the economy of the future – particularly in left-behind regions. 1/5
Businesses are held back by an acute skills shortage, and our education system leaves too many people without the skills they need to get ahead.
The problem is regional as well as national. If the skills mix in the North was same as London wages would be >10% higher. 2/5
At the same time, the global economy is going through a period of significant structural change.
Advances in tech will open up new sectors and transform existing ones. The pandemic has only served to accelerate adjustments in our labour market. 3/5
The UK has a long-standing reputation for keeping our word & a deep-seated respect for the rule of law.
That’s why I concluded last week that I couldn't support the UK Internal Market Bill unamended.
I'm pleased that since then the Govt has made several public commitments: 1/5
First, that Ministers will only seek to use the Bill’s ‘notwithstanding’ provisions if the EU decides to materially breach their duty of good faith - or other obligations - as set out in the Withdrawal Agreement. 2/5
Second, that in such a case the Govt will activate appropriate formal dispute settlement mechanisms within the WA with the intent of finding a solution - and that the UK’s first recourse will be arbitration. 3/5
This week the Bank of England suggested the UK economy could suffer its deepest recession in 300-years. The possibility of a V-shaped recovery is encouraging, but will be incredibly challenging.
Just as with the public health crisis, we need to hope for the best, plan for the worst.
The PM is right to put public health first. He'll also be conscious that the longer a full lockdown is maintained, the more businesses will collapse. 2/
Small businesses, and 16M livelihoods that depend on them, are particularly vulnerable. The accumulation of longer-term damage to the economy will accelerate in coming weeks. A 4-month lockdown is not twice as bad as a 2-month lockdown. The impact will be many times more. 3/