Difference between revisions of "Dominic Raab"
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==Free market think tank links== | ==Free market think tank links== | ||
Raab has published a number of reports with the right wing think tank, the [[Centre for Policy Studies]], including:<br><br> | Raab has published a number of reports with the right wing think tank, the [[Centre for Policy Studies]], including:<br><br> | ||
− | February 2013: 'Capitalism for the Little Guy: 10 ways to extend competition and strengthen consumer clout. | + | February 2013: ''Capitalism for the Little Guy: 10 ways to extend competition and strengthen consumer clout''. among the policy proposals in this paper were: |
*Phase out state-backed subsidies for renewable energy technologies; | *Phase out state-backed subsidies for renewable energy technologies; | ||
*Government should lift the bar on profit-making companies running academies and free schools; | *Government should lift the bar on profit-making companies running academies and free schools; | ||
*Level the playing field between public and private sector service providers.<ref>[https://www.cps.org.uk/publications/capitalism-for-the-little-guy/ Capitalism for the Little Guy], CPS website, Feb 2013</ref><br><br> | *Level the playing field between public and private sector service providers.<ref>[https://www.cps.org.uk/publications/capitalism-for-the-little-guy/ Capitalism for the Little Guy], CPS website, Feb 2013</ref><br><br> | ||
− | July 2012: 'Unleashing the British Underdog: 10 bets on the little guy.' This included an array of policy proposals, including: *Opening up the scheme that sponsors children from all backgrounds to go to private schools; | + | July 2012: ''Unleashing the British Underdog: 10 bets on the little guy.'' This included an array of policy proposals, including: *Opening up the scheme that sponsors children from all backgrounds to go to private schools; |
*Fast-tracking 'Troops to Teachers', a scheme that encouraged more schools staffed by veterans to be set up in areas of deprivation (which, when later implemented, attracted very few applicants); | *Fast-tracking 'Troops to Teachers', a scheme that encouraged more schools staffed by veterans to be set up in areas of deprivation (which, when later implemented, attracted very few applicants); | ||
*Teaching refugees English on arrival; and | *Teaching refugees English on arrival; and | ||
*Tax breaks for start-ups and micro-businesses, such as exemptions on employers’ NI contributions and cuts in business rates<ref>[http://www.cps.org.uk/publications/unleashing-the-british-underdog/ Unleashing the British Underdog], CPS, July 2012</ref><br><br> | *Tax breaks for start-ups and micro-businesses, such as exemptions on employers’ NI contributions and cuts in business rates<ref>[http://www.cps.org.uk/publications/unleashing-the-british-underdog/ Unleashing the British Underdog], CPS, July 2012</ref><br><br> | ||
− | November 2011: 'Escaping the straight jacket: 10 regulatory reforms to create jobs'. This proposes 'seven changes to domestic legislation and regulations, and three changes to EU agreements, which could stimulate job creation'. These included: | + | November 2011: ''Escaping the straight jacket: 10 regulatory reforms to create jobs''. This proposes 'seven changes to domestic legislation and regulations, and three changes to EU agreements, which could stimulate job creation'. These included: |
*Introducing no fault dismissal for underperforming employees; | *Introducing no fault dismissal for underperforming employees; | ||
*Requiring a majority of support from balloted members for any strike in the emergency and transport sectors; | *Requiring a majority of support from balloted members for any strike in the emergency and transport sectors; |
Revision as of 10:04, 9 July 2018
Dominic Raab was appointed Housing Minister in January 2018.
Raab was previously parliamentary under secretary at the Ministry of Justice (from 2015), where he worked under Michael Gove. [1]
He has been the Conservative Party MP for Esher and Walton since the 2010 general election.[2] In the 2015 election, Raab was re-elected with a majority of 28,616. [3]
Free market think tank links
Raab has published a number of reports with the right wing think tank, the Centre for Policy Studies, including:
February 2013: Capitalism for the Little Guy: 10 ways to extend competition and strengthen consumer clout. among the policy proposals in this paper were:
- Phase out state-backed subsidies for renewable energy technologies;
- Government should lift the bar on profit-making companies running academies and free schools;
- Level the playing field between public and private sector service providers.[4]
July 2012: Unleashing the British Underdog: 10 bets on the little guy. This included an array of policy proposals, including: *Opening up the scheme that sponsors children from all backgrounds to go to private schools;
- Fast-tracking 'Troops to Teachers', a scheme that encouraged more schools staffed by veterans to be set up in areas of deprivation (which, when later implemented, attracted very few applicants);
- Teaching refugees English on arrival; and
- Tax breaks for start-ups and micro-businesses, such as exemptions on employers’ NI contributions and cuts in business rates[5]
November 2011: Escaping the straight jacket: 10 regulatory reforms to create jobs. This proposes 'seven changes to domestic legislation and regulations, and three changes to EU agreements, which could stimulate job creation'. These included:
- Introducing no fault dismissal for underperforming employees;
- Requiring a majority of support from balloted members for any strike in the emergency and transport sectors;
- Abolishing the Working Time Regulations, which transpose the EU Working Time Directive into UK law;
- Abolishing the Agency Workers Regulations 2010 (which gives agency workers the right to the same basic employment and working conditions as full-time staff and gives effect in UK law to the EU's Temporary and Agency Workers Directive); and
- The reform of TUPE regulations, another EU regulation that preserves employees' terms and conditions when a business is transferred to a new employer.[6]
Notes
- ↑ David Cameron hands junior jobs to his harshest critics in ministerial reshuffle The Telegraph, 12 May 2015, accessed 13 May 2015
- ↑ Dominic Raab, www.parliament.uk, accessed 5 November 2012.
- ↑ Esher & Walton Parliamentary constituency BBC News, accessed 21 May 2015
- ↑ Capitalism for the Little Guy, CPS website, Feb 2013
- ↑ Unleashing the British Underdog, CPS, July 2012
- ↑ ESCAPING THE STRAIT JACKET, CPS website, 16 November 2011