Business secretary says all would have been lost without emergency legislation to save British Steel – UK politics live | British Steel

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Business secretary says all would have been lost without emergency legislation to save British Steel – UK politics live | British Steel

All would have been lost without emergency legislation being passed – business secretary

Business secretary Jonathan Reynolds is being questioned by the BBC’s Laura Kuenssberg on her Sunday politics programme.

He said the intervention yesterday was “dramatic” but was needed to secure Britain’s “economic security” . He said if nothing was done the blast furnaces and steel production in the UK “would have gone”. His officials are on site right now, the business secretary added.

Kuenssberg pressed the minister, asking him if he was sure if he would have the supplies he needed to keep the furnaces at the plant burning. Reynolds refused to be drawn on the commercial specifics.

“Without the decisive action by the government yesterday all was lost,” Reynolds insisted.

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Key events

Laura Kuenssberg asks Jonathan Reynolds why the government was so slow in passing the emergency laws to save British Steel (when weeks ago – on 25 March – British Steel said it might have to close the furnaces).

Q:“Why did you let it get to this Thursday when the coal is about to run out that you actually made this decision?”

A:

Because I don’t think in any job, in any role in government, you take emergency powers of the scale that happened yesterday until you have that emergency situation.

We have been negotiating in good faith. We have been expecting, as I think is reasonable, an economically rational partner on the other side.

When that became evident that that was not possible that required the kind of significant, dramatic emergency action which was taken yesterday.

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