
Agreement on Hillsborough Law could come in weeks, peers told
Labour peer Baroness Chakrabarti said the families of the 97 football fans who died following the 1989 incident feel 'less positive' about its discussions with the Government.
The deadly crush occurred during the FA Cup semi-final between Liverpool and Nottingham Forest at the football ground in Sheffield.
The proposed law would require public bodies to have a duty of candour, meaning they would need to co-operate with official inquiries and tell the truth in the aftermath of major disasters – or face criminal sanctions.
A previous deadline set by Labour, that the Bill would be passed before the anniversary of the Hillsborough disaster in April, has been missed.
The Government had said it needed more time to finalise the Bill.
A draft Bill has been criticised by campaigners, including the Hillsborough Law Now group, for not containing pledges previously made – including the duty of candour.
Lady Chakrabarti told the upper chamber on Thursday: 'I'm grateful to (the minister), as always, for repeating the Government's commitment to introduce Hillsborough Law, but I'm afraid that the families and their representatives feel a little less positive about the engagement they had so far.
'Some worry that they've been briefed against to the newspapers, and generally speaking, they worry about the dilution that … Lord Storey has warned against.'
Lord Ponsonby said he was 'sorry to hear that', adding: 'I am aware of very recent interaction with the families in Liverpool, and what I understand is those talks have been going positively, and it is very much hoped that we able to reach some form of agreement in the coming weeks and months.'
He had earlier said: 'Since March, we have listened to stakeholder feedback to ensure that we deliver the best Bill possible.
'This engagement has been constructive and progress has been made. Engagement is ongoing and will continue over the summer.'
Liberal Democrat peer Lord Storey said: 'Would he give a clear commitment there will be no watering down of that duty of candour intent when the Bill is published?'
Lord Ponsonby replied: 'The Prime Minister has made a personal commitment to the affected families to work with them constructively to come up with an appropriate law.
'Regarding the duty of candour, the Government is clear that what happened following the Hillsborough disaster must never happen again.
'Under the Hillsborough Law, public officials will be bound by duties of candour with criminal and professional consequences.
'We are committed to achieving a true cultural change. The Bill cannot change culture on its own, but it can and should act as a catalyst, and we remain committed to launching a programme to encourage cultural change alongside the Bill.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Leader Live
10 minutes ago
- Leader Live
Long-serving ex-Tory MP Adam Holloway joins Reform
Adam Holloway, who represented Gravesham in Kent between 2005 and 2024, said on Wednesday he had become the latest ex-MP to join Nigel Farage's party. The 59-year-old former Army officer said: 'There comes a moment for many soldiers – and most politicians – when you realise the battle you think you're fighting isn't the one your leaders are waging. 'That moment came for me watching Kemi Badenoch tell Trevor Phillips there are real differences between Reform UK and the Conservatives. She was right. 'The difference is the Reform leadership and voters grasp the scale of our national peril and back a party serious about addressing it.' Mr Holloway is at least the eighth former Tory MP to have joined Reform since the last election, following former party chairman Sir Jake Berry, former Wales secretary David Jones and Dame Andrea Jenkyns, who won the Greater Lincolnshire mayoralty for the party in May. Having served in the Grenadier Guards for five years, including during the Gulf War, Mr Holloway worked as a journalist for ITV and ITN before his election to Parliament in 2005. A strong supporter of Brexit, he was briefly a whip under Boris Johnson and Liz Truss and was one of six Tory MPs to vote against censuring Mr Johnson after he was found to have misled the Commons over the Partygate scandal. He was himself reprimanded by Parliament's standards watchdog after improperly attempting to prevent the release of a character reference he had provided for former Tory colleague Charlie Elphicke, who was jailed for two years in 2020 for sexual assault. He lost his seat in last year's general election, falling 2,712 votes behind Labour's Lauren Sullivan. During the campaign, he told voters that backing Reform was 'effectively taking a vote from me' and 'helping Labour'. Mr Farage said he was 'delighted' to welcome Mr Holloway to the party, saying his parliamentary and military experience would be 'vital' ahead of the next election. He added: 'His bold move shows that we are the only serious option in Kent and is testament to the fantastic work our councillors are delivering across the region.'


ITV News
10 minutes ago
- ITV News
Son of MP who first highlighted Bradford grooming gangs accuses council of 'cover up'
The son of a former MP who first raised concerns about Pakistani grooming gangs in West Yorkshire more than 20 years ago has accused Bradford Council of a "cover up" over the issue. John Cryer, an ex-MP who now sits in the House of Lords, said the authorities dismissed his mother Ann Cryer when she raised claims of child sexual exploitation in Keighley as early as 2002. Ms Cryer was Labour MP for Keighley when she was approached by seven mothers who said their daughters were being systematically exploited, drugged and raped by men in the town. But when she raised the issue with West Yorkshire Police and Bradford Council, Mr Cryer said her concerns were disputed. "The council just wanted to ignore it, pretend that it wasn't happening," he said. "Their reaction was this was a myth she shouldn't have been perpetuating. "With the police, they took the view that because they couldn't get the girls to testify, they didn't have the evidence. So their position is more of a sustainable one." He added: "There has never been an independent inquiry into Bradford and I am absolutely certain there has been a cover up on a local level." Despite complaints about grooming in the Bradford area, neighbouring Rotherham became the focus of the debate about child sexual exploitation after the first convictions in 2010. An inquiry into grooming in the South Yorkshire town revealed an estimated 1,400 girls were exploited by gangs of predominantly British-Pakistani men. Mr Cryer said the inquiry, by Prof Alexis Jay, left his mother feeling "vindicated". "The victims were always the first thing in her mind," he said. "And this was first and foremost for them. But I remember having conversations with her in the years after and she would say things like 'the people who were slagging me off, who were having a go at me about this, funny how they've all gone quiet'." In recent years, dozens of men in Bradford have been convicted of child sex offences. There are now calls for the city to face similar scrutiny to Rotherham as part of a nationwide inquiry into grooming gangs announced by the prime minister in June. In a report published last month, Baroness Casey said the ethnicity of perpetrators had been "shied away from", with data not recorded for two-thirds of offenders. Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said officials had dodged the issue of sex offenders' ethnicity for fear of being called racist. Mr Cryer said: "That inquiry needs to get underway. This has been in gestation for quite a few weeks and they need to get on with it. "It wouldn't surprise me if one of the worst places turns out to be Bradford and it needs to be examined as part of this inquiry." There have been claims that the number of victims in Bradford could turn out to be several thousand. The current Keighley MP, Conservative Robbie Moore, said he believed the scale of the issue would "dwarf" that of Rotherham as well as other towns like Rochdale, Telford and Oldham where there have been inquiries. "Indeed when you look at those inquiries they reference young children being trafficked through Bradford," he said. "This is about right and wrong. We need to make sure survivors and victims and their families are reassured that the state... is doing their job as they should be and at the moment there is a huge degree of uncertainty around that." In a statement Bradford Council leader Susan Hinchcliffe said more than 50 offenders had been jailed in Bradford over grooming. She added: 'John refers to a time before the great majority of councillors in Bradford district were elected. We will ask John if he is willing to be connected with the authorities so that he can relate his longer memory of events to them directly. "We've already said to the current Home Secretary that Bradford is willing to participate in the national inquiry. We await the terms of that inquiry and have asked for an early meeting with the Commissioner once appointed.' A West Yorkshire Police spokesperson admitted there had been "failings in the past". They added: 'Since the publication of the Jay report in 2014, West Yorkshire Police has taken a proactive stance in exploring previous incidents and disclosures relating to non-recent group-based child sexual exploitation and abuse. 'This work has been underway over the past decade, resulting in hundreds of perpetrators now serving lengthy prison sentences totalling thousands of years. Many investigations are still underway, with trials scheduled throughout 2025 and 2026. "


The Guardian
11 minutes ago
- The Guardian
An ethics record that this Labour government can be proud of
Re your editorial (The Guardian view on standards in politics: a golden reform opportunity squandered, 25 July), before being elected to parliament for the first time last year, I dedicated nearly 15 years of my life to tackling bribery and corruption. And I am pleased that the government is implementing its manifesto commitments to improve standards. Let us not forget the steady work of Margaret Hodge, who is progressing a comprehensive, cross-government anti-corruption strategy to be published later this year, and the Covid counter-fraud commissioner, Tom Hayhoe, whose work is so vital to restoring trust in government. And let us not forget what the government has already committed to in its first 12 months: replacing the Advisory Committee on Business Appointments, increasing the frequency of ministerial hospitality disclosures, scrapping hereditary peers, votes at 16, rolling out automatic voter registration, tightening up political party financing and empowering the Electoral Commission. That's a track record to be proud of and a clear change of course from the political indifference to ethics, integrity and democratic participation exhibited by recent Conservative governments. Is there more to be done? Yes, but talk of squandering opportunities is far wide of the mark. Phil Brickell MPLabour, Bolton West Have an opinion on anything you've read in the Guardian today? Please email us your letter and it will be considered for publication in our letters section.