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Barnhill, Jura. June 2015. (Thanks to the kindness of the Fletcher family).

Help me Rhondda?

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Chris Bryant, Labour MP for the picturesque Welsh constituency Rhondda, appeared on BBC's Daily Politics today discussing the Bill he introduced (on 17th July 2017) as a Private Member.  

MP Chris Bryant in his picturesque Westminster constituency of Rhondda

http://www.chrisbryantmp.org.uk/about-chris/

His Bill is aimed at protecting emergency workers from assault in the course of their work.

https://services.parliament.uk/bills/2017-19/assaultsonemergencyworkersoffences.html

The Bill starts its Second Reading tomorrow.

The MP said he needs to tweak the definition of emergency worker which he drew too narrowly.

He wants to amend that definition, at Committee Stage, to encompass GPs and nurses.

With EU withdrawal leaving both a gap in Westminster's legislative calendar and creating a stretched out two-year parliamentary session - which has elongated the usual Private Members' Bill process - there may be scope for Chris Bryant's Bill to make some progress before Christmas if it can be slotted into the parliamentary timetable for debate.

The point was made that the Private Members' Bill process very rarely sees a Bill make it to the Statute Book when it comes from an opposition MP.

However it appears that the Westminster MP for Rhondda's Bill has Government support and so, unusually, a Private Members' Bill from the opposition benches could well make it through the parliamentary process.

Chris Bryant (a font of interesting parliamentary facts) said that a successful Private Members' Bill will usually come from a Government backbencher. Indeed the Government can handover a Bill to a Government backbencher and these are known as 'handover bills'.

There could still be some scheduling impact resulting from the elongated session impacting on Private Members' Bills (the two year current session giving rise to some unusual scheduling consequences.

 


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Barnhill, Jura. June 2015. (Thanks to the kindness of the Fletcher family).

"Please, sir, I want some more." (Charles Dickens, Oliver Twist)

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The master was a fat, healthy man; but he turned very pale. He gazed in stupefied astonishment on the small rebel for some seconds, and then clung for support to the copper…

'For MORE!' said Mr. Limbkins. 'Compose yourself, Bumble, and answer me distinctly. Do I understand that he asked for more, after he had eaten the supper allotted by the dietary?'

Mr. Bumble

Mr. Bumble

There is an interesting debate this evening in the House of Commons as a consequence of the current parliamentary session being scheduled to last longer than usual.

The Labour MP for Walsall South, Valerie Vaz, has tabled a motion to consider some difficulties resulting from the Government’s decision to hold a two-year parliamentary session.

Usually a parliamentary session only lasts one year.

Will one year’s worth of Opposition days now have to stretch across the two-year session?

Will the usual 13 private Members’ bills be doubled in this extended session?

The matter brings to mind a remark by Bilbo Baggins in J.R.R. Tolkien’s Fellowship of the Ring:

“I feel thin, sort of stretched, like butter scraped over too much bread.”


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