#OTD in 1909 Alice Bacon, the first woman MP to represent a Leeds constituency, was born in Normanton. She was a miner’s daughter rooted in West Yorkshire. When she joined the Labour Party aged 16, she said it was “as natural as breathing”. (1/5)
First elected in the 1945 Labour landslide, Alice Bacon was one of 21 Labour women elected as MPs. In total 24 women MPs were elected in that year. (2/5)
When Labour came to govt under Harold Wilson in 1964, Bacon became a Home Office Minister. She worked to get many liberalising reforms on the statute books, including legalising abortion, decriminalising homosexuality, and abolishing capital punishment. (3/5)
In 1967, Bacon moved to Tony Crosland's Dept of Education. Here, she pushed for more comprehensive schools – her political passion. Alice also worked closely with her Leeds colleagues Hugh Gaitskell, Denis Healey & Charlie Pannell, who called themselves “Leeds United”. (4/5)
As only the second woman MP to represent a Leeds constituency, I am in awe of what Alice Bacon achieved. She was an inspiring & groundbreaking woman of Westminster and of Leeds politics. In 2019, I unveiled a blue plaque for her at @leedscornex where she held her surgeries. (5/5)
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The Prime Minister’s radio interviews this morning have made the disastrous situation our economy faces even worse.
Her failure to answer questions about what will happen with people’s pensions and mortgages will leave families across the country facing huge worry. 1/4
It is disgraceful that the family finances of people across the country are being put on the line simply so the Government can give huge unfunded tax cuts to those earning hundreds of thousands of pounds a year. 2/4
This is a serious situation made in Downing Street and is the direct result of the Conservative Government's reckless actions. 3/4
How does this deeply unfair loophole work at the moment?
Firstly, the same rules have applied since 1987, despite huge economic changes.
Since then, the income fund managers receive in carried interest has been taxed at the rate of Capital Gains Tax, rather than Income Tax.
That means an additional rate taxpayer (someone earning over £150,000) is paying 28% on carried interest - rather than 45% if it was treated as regular income.
The supply chain crisis is the result of the Tories' Brexit deal and their failure to plan - together with the neglect of vital jobs and ministers' refusal to listen to those working in industry. 1/8 theguardian.com/politics/2021/…
HGV drivers are some of the many overlooked and undervalued workers who are vital to keep our economy moving. @RHANews estimate it could take up to 18 months to tackle the shortfall of HGV drivers. 2/8 rha.uk.net/News/News-Blog…
The shortages we’re seeing in our supermarkets now are only set to escalate in the run up to Christmas. The Tories have no plan to address the issues that are causing these problems - in either the short or the longer-term. 3/8