The Japan Times - King Charles III to set out UK govt to-do list

EUR -
AED 3.80597
AFN 78.367435
ALL 99.666738
AMD 414.886421
ANG 1.869939
AOA 472.514437
ARS 1090.728201
AUD 1.67484
AWG 1.867779
AZN 1.758731
BAM 1.955736
BBD 2.094931
BDT 126.525859
BGN 1.955736
BHD 0.391187
BIF 3071.19948
BMD 1.036216
BND 1.408054
BOB 7.169765
BRL 6.053537
BSD 1.037566
BTN 89.82806
BWP 14.451527
BYN 3.395489
BYR 20309.835263
BZD 2.084132
CAD 1.520643
CDF 2956.3242
CHF 0.944371
CLF 0.037078
CLP 1023.106514
CNY 7.447077
CNH 7.611157
COP 4309.558949
CRC 523.38287
CUC 1.036216
CUP 27.459726
CVE 110.261391
CZK 25.198858
DJF 184.763953
DKK 7.462796
DOP 64.097902
DZD 140.180412
EGP 52.046297
ERN 15.543241
ETB 132.90715
FJD 2.407078
FKP 0.853414
GBP 0.836177
GEL 2.963526
GGP 0.853414
GHS 15.87448
GIP 0.853414
GMD 75.126075
GNF 8968.706456
GTQ 8.025737
GYD 217.072895
HKD 8.075802
HNL 26.431135
HRK 7.646806
HTG 135.715558
HUF 410.403933
IDR 16947.573122
ILS 3.711617
IMP 0.853414
INR 89.696417
IQD 1359.155515
IRR 43624.69708
ISK 146.686282
JEP 0.853414
JMD 163.634644
JOD 0.734885
JPY 160.64044
KES 133.845619
KGS 90.617169
KHR 4174.863358
KMF 489.974689
KPW 932.594592
KRW 1510.575296
KWD 0.319652
KYD 0.864672
KZT 537.642403
LAK 22573.261182
LBP 92912.958979
LKR 309.19988
LRD 206.473242
LSL 19.366666
LTL 3.059677
LVL 0.626797
LYD 5.093833
MAD 10.414759
MDL 19.371366
MGA 4824.842084
MKD 61.527986
MMK 3365.589423
MNT 3521.062368
MOP 8.328627
MRU 41.56464
MUR 48.339561
MVR 15.967932
MWK 1799.141114
MXN 21.743746
MYR 4.616325
MZN 66.224362
NAD 19.366666
NGN 1557.43294
NIO 38.17875
NOK 11.736743
NPR 143.725296
NZD 1.846232
OMR 0.398917
PAB 1.037566
PEN 3.859774
PGK 4.224862
PHP 60.536789
PKR 289.399628
PLN 4.242227
PYG 8183.732148
QAR 3.782076
RON 4.960066
RSD 117.126166
RUB 102.196655
RWF 1472.751797
SAR 3.886533
SBD 8.759849
SCR 14.861514
SDG 622.766103
SEK 11.581601
SGD 1.408017
SHP 0.853414
SLE 23.703442
SLL 21728.933109
SOS 592.980592
SRD 36.370664
STD 21447.580845
SVC 9.078703
SYP 13472.88152
SZL 19.354367
THB 34.847696
TJS 11.345629
TMT 3.637118
TND 3.313892
TOP 2.426925
TRY 37.13669
TTD 7.03777
TWD 34.13817
TZS 2645.713406
UAH 43.270984
UGX 3819.874976
USD 1.036216
UYU 44.89853
UZS 13462.559373
VES 60.484555
VND 25988.299409
VUV 123.021654
WST 2.902262
XAF 655.935531
XAG 0.0331
XAU 0.00037
XCD 2.800426
XDR 0.793174
XOF 655.935531
XPF 119.331742
YER 257.888254
ZAR 19.42272
ZMK 9327.187522
ZMW 29.02605
ZWL 333.661157
  • CMSC

    -0.2100

    23.47

    -0.89%

  • CMSD

    -0.3800

    23.84

    -1.59%

  • BCC

    -2.5000

    126.16

    -1.98%

  • SCS

    -0.1600

    11.48

    -1.39%

  • NGG

    -0.3400

    61.4

    -0.55%

  • BCE

    -0.1100

    23.79

    -0.46%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0600

    7.43

    -0.81%

  • JRI

    -0.0400

    12.53

    -0.32%

  • RIO

    -0.5000

    60.41

    -0.83%

  • RBGPF

    67.2700

    67.27

    +100%

  • RELX

    -0.4600

    49.89

    -0.92%

  • GSK

    -0.0900

    35.27

    -0.26%

  • VOD

    -0.0700

    8.54

    -0.82%

  • BTI

    -0.0400

    39.64

    -0.1%

  • BP

    -0.5500

    31.06

    -1.77%

  • AZN

    -0.4800

    70.76

    -0.68%

King Charles III to set out UK govt to-do list
King Charles III to set out UK govt to-do list / Photo: Kirsty Wigglesworth - POOL/AFP

King Charles III to set out UK govt to-do list

King Charles III will read out Labour's first programme for government in a decade and half on Wednesday when the UK parliament formally reopens following the July 4 election.

Text size:

Prime Minister Keir Starmer will put turbocharging economic growth at the heart of his legislative plans as Labour runs the UK for the first time in 14 years.

"The legislation set out at the King's Speech will build on the momentum of our first days in office and make a difference to the lives of working people," said Starmer, who led his party to landslide win over the Conservatives.

Despite its name, the address is not written by the monarch but by the government, which uses it to detail the laws it proposes to make over the next 12 months.

Wearing the diamond-studded Imperial State Crown and a long crimson robe, King Charles will deliver the proposals from a golden throne in the House of Lords upper chamber during a lavish ceremony.

The speech is expected to include more than 35 bills, including measures to enforce public spending rules and others to prevent a repeat of the utility bill price hikes that triggered the UK's recent cost-of-living crisis.

The legislation will also flesh out announcements already made, such as the launching of a fund to draw investment into the UK and of a publicly owned body tasked with boosting clean power by 2030.

Labour is also likely to announce the restoration of mandatory housebuilding targets, plans to renationalise Britain's much-maligned rail services, as well as the opening of recruitment for a new border security command.

A bill to boost workers' rights, including a ban on zero-hour contracts, and strengthened protections for renters are also expected to be included in what will be centre-left Labour's first such speech since it was ousted from power in 2010.

"This is a hungry party," former Labour minister Tony McNulty told AFP.

"They are chomping at the bit to show that they can get back to being what they see as the natural party of government."

- Ceremonial 'hostage' -

The day's proceedings will start at 9:30 am (0830 GMT) when royal bodyguards ritually search the basement of the Palace of Westminster for explosives -- a legacy of the failed attempt by Catholics to blow up parliament in 1605.

The sovereign will then travel to the Houses of Parliament by carriage from Buckingham Palace, escorted by mounted cavalry.

Tradition dictates that an MP is ceremonially held "hostage" in the palace to ensure the king's safe return.

A parliamentary official known as Black Rod will have the door of the lower chamber House of Commons slammed in their face, a tradition that symbolises parliament's independence from the monarchy.

MPs will follow Black Rod to the upper chamber, where King Charles, as head of state, will give the speech to assembled lords and ladies in red and ermine robes, plus invited members of the elected Commons shortly after 11:30 am.

In keeping with the convention that monarch is above politics, keen environmentalist King Charles remained expressionless during the last address in November when then Prime Minister Rishi Sunak's government announced new oil and gas licences.

"There's probably much in this King's Speech that he will favour rather than the other one he had to read out," said McNulty, a British politics lecturer at Queen Mary University of London.

"But he'll play it with a straight face. That's the job."

T.Ueda--JT