Improving living standards and economic growth will be the central focus of the King’s Speech at the state opening of Parliament on Wednesday.
The speech, which will be made by King Charles III outlining Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s ambitions for the UK government, will unveil a series of bills that represent the government's manifesto for the year ahead.
The state opening of Parliament – a political event against a backdrop of royal tradition – is held annually to outline the government’s priorities.
New bills will deliver laws on the Labour party’s pledges for better transport, more jobs and the turbocharged building of houses and infrastructure.
What is the State Opening of Parliament?
It is the ceremonial opening of the British Parliament – this time it will usher in the new Labour government after the general election win.
It is usually held on the first day of the new parliamentary session. The last state opening, on November 7, 2023, was King Charles III’s first as monarch.
The ceremony begins with a royal procession from Buckingham Palace to Westminster. King Charles arrives at the Sovereign's Entrance where he leads the Royal Procession through to the chamber of the House of Lords.
From there, Black Rod is sent to summon the Commons. He strikes the door three times and MPs follow Black Rod into the Lords chamber.
What is the King’s Speech?
The King’s Speech is written by the government and outlines the laws it plans to introduce.
The monarch speaks from the throne in the House of Lords. When the king leaves, the new parliamentary session officially starts.
The main events on Wednesday will take place between 11am and 12.30pm.
What is in the King’s Speech?
More than 35 bills are expected to be announced as Labour seeks to maintain momentum and define its first 100 days in office as a period of positive progress.
Transport
New legislation to create a simplified rail system by bringing services into public ownership once their contracts expire or if operators fail to deliver on their commitments.
Building
A bill to speed up and streamline the planning process to build more homes of all tenures and accelerate the delivery of major infrastructure projects.
Fiscal discipline
A new bill to strengthen the role of the economic watchdog, the Office of Budgetary Responsibility, to guarantee that major fiscal decisions are properly scrutinised.
Clean energy
Begin the process of establishing the state-owned GB Energy, which will oversee investment in big projects involved in the decarbonisation of the electricity grid.
Martyn's Law
Labour has promised to bring forward Martyn's Law, which is focused on improving security at public venues and named after Martyn Hett, who died in the Manchester Arena bombing.
Expand devolution
Mayors and councils are expected to be handed more control over skills, energy, planning and transport, including bus routes and fares.
National wealth fund
Legislation to launch the national wealth fund designed to attract billions in private-sector investment to support UK growth.
Workers' rights
Measures are set to include a ban on zero-hour contracts, giving workers' rights immediately on starting a job and a crackdown on the practice of firing and rehiring.
Mental health help
Aiming to provide 8,500 specially trained mental health staff, establish support in all schools and provide access to early intervention services in every community.
What has Keir Starmer said?
Labour has said the package of bills will focus on growing the economy through better transport, more jobs and the rapid building of houses and infrastructure.
The Prime Minister said: “Now is the time to take the brakes off Britain. For too long people have been held back, their paths determined by where they came from, not their talents and hard work.
“I am determined to create wealth for people up and down the country. It is the only way our country can progress and my government is focused on supporting that aspiration.
“Today’s new laws will take back control and lay the foundations of real change that this country is crying out for, creating wealth in every community and making people better off – supporting their ambitions, hopes and dreams.”
Can NRIs vote in the election?
Indians residing overseas cannot cast their ballot abroad
Non-resident Indians or NRIs can vote only by going to a polling booth in their home constituency
There are about 3.1 million NRIs living overseas
Indians have urged political parties to extend the right to vote to citizens residing overseas
A committee of the Election Commission of India approved of proxy voting for non-resident Indians
Proxy voting means that a person can authorise someone residing in the same polling booth area to cast a vote on his behalf.
This option is currently available for the armed forces, police and government officials posted outside India
A bill was passed in the lower house of India’s parliament or the Lok Sabha to extend proxy voting to non-resident Indians
However, this did not come before the upper house or Rajya Sabha and has lapsed
The issue of NRI voting draws a huge amount of interest in India and overseas
Over the past few months, Indians have received messages on mobile phones and on social media claiming that NRIs can cast their votes online
The Election Commission of India then clarified that NRIs could not vote online
The Election Commission lodged a complaint with the Delhi Police asking it to clamp down on the people spreading misinformation
Conservative MPs who have publicly revealed sending letters of no confidence
- Steve Baker
- Peter Bone
- Ben Bradley
- Andrew Bridgen
- Maria Caulfield
- Simon Clarke
- Philip Davies
- Nadine Dorries
- James Duddridge
- Mark Francois
- Chris Green
- Adam Holloway
- Andrea Jenkyns
- Anne-Marie Morris
- Sheryll Murray
- Jacob Rees-Mogg
- Laurence Robertson
- Lee Rowley
- Henry Smith
- Martin Vickers
- John Whittingdale
Opening Premier League fixtures, August 14
- Brentford v Arsenal
- Burnley v Brighton
- Chelsea v Crystal Palace
- Everton v Southampton
- Leicester City v Wolves
- Manchester United v Leeds United
- Newcastle United v West Ham United
- Norwich City v Liverpool
- Tottenham v Manchester City
- Watford v Aston Villa
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Bio
Born in Dibba, Sharjah in 1972.
He is the eldest among 11 brothers and sisters.
He was educated in Sharjah schools and is a graduate of UAE University in Al Ain.
He has written poetry for 30 years and has had work published in local newspapers.
He likes all kinds of adventure movies that relate to his work.
His dream is a safe and preserved environment for all humankind.
His favourite book is The Quran, and 'Maze of Innovation and Creativity', written by his brother.
Killing of Qassem Suleimani
Rock in a Hard Place: Music and Mayhem in the Middle East
Orlando Crowcroft
Zed Books
Evacuations to France hit by controversy
- Over 500 Gazans have been evacuated to France since November 2023
- Evacuations were paused after a student already in France posted anti-Semitic content and was subsequently expelled to Qatar
- The Foreign Ministry launched a review to determine how authorities failed to detect the posts before her entry
- Artists and researchers fall under a programme called Pause that began in 2017
- It has benefited more than 700 people from 44 countries, including Syria, Turkey, Iran, and Sudan
- Since the start of the Gaza war, it has also included 45 Gazan beneficiaries
- Unlike students, they are allowed to bring their families to France
The Byblos iftar in numbers
29 or 30 days – the number of iftar services held during the holy month
50 staff members required to prepare an iftar
200 to 350 the number of people served iftar nightly
160 litres of the traditional Ramadan drink, jalab, is served in total
500 litres of soup is served during the holy month
200 kilograms of meat is used for various dishes
350 kilograms of onion is used in dishes
5 minutes – the average time that staff have to eat
The five pillars of Islam
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