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PRIVACY
Manufacturing

Labour bids to block removal of steel safeguards on cheap imports

Commons debate and vote secured on Trade Remedies Authority recommedations that have left industry and unions angry and disappointed

Labour Party leader Sir Keir Starmer at Liberty Steel's Pipe Mill in Hartlepool last month.(Image: Getty Images)

Labour MPs will try to kill off the threat of more cheap steel imports entering Britain in a Commons debate and vote later today.

Anger and disappointment at a recommendation from the Trade Remedies Authority to drop almost half of the safeguards put in place to protect domestic production has led to an attempt at urgent action in Westminster.

Leading figures will use today’s Opposition Day to make government legislate to allow ministers to overrule the TRA without losing all protections - as could happen should it be allowed to run its course.

It sits on International Trade Secretary Liz Truss’s desk, with current powers to expire on June 30.

They were brought in by the EU after US tariffs were imposed to head off Chinese imports that could have been diverted, but expire every three years.

As the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ opted to drop nine of the 19 categories, Brussels renewed all for a further three years - making Britain more of a dumping target in the eyes of industry.

Under the banner ‘Protecting Britain’s steel industry’ led by Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer and key figures from his shadow team - Angela Rayner (deputy leader), Emily Thornberry (Shadow International Trade Secretary) and Ed Miliband (Shadow Business Secretary), as well as chief whip Sir Alan Campbell and Shadow Leader of the House, Thangam Debbonaire - they will put forward: “That this House believes the British steel industry, and the livelihoods and communities it supports, should not be undermined by unfair competition from overseas; regrets that the Trade Remedies Authority has not accounted for the interconnectedness of the British steel industry, nor the impact of safeguard tariffs being maintained in the US and EU, when recommending the abolition of nine of the 19 existing safeguards on steel products; accordingly requires the Government to take urgent action by legislating to allow ministers to reject the Trade Remedies Authority’s recommendation and temporarily extend the current safeguards”.

It calls for it to be given precedence in the House next Monday “to make provision for urgent legislative action to protect the vital interests of the British steel industry”.