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Scotland plagued by Victorian diseases and rat problems, says Penny Mordaunt

The Commons Leader expressed her shock at the reappearance of rickets.

Martina Bet
Thursday 07 September 2023 07:08 EDT
Leader of the House of Commons Penny Mordaunt (James Manning/PA)
Leader of the House of Commons Penny Mordaunt (James Manning/PA) (PA Wire)

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Penny Mordaunt has raised concerns about the resurgence of Victorian diseases in ā€œcertain citiesā€ in Scotland and a rat infestation.

Sharing her insights from her visits to Scotland over the summer, the Commons Leader expressed her shock at the reappearance of rickets, a disease often associated with Victorian slums.

She also told MPs the rat infestation in Glasgow has become so severe that binmen struggle to access certain streets.

Her comments were in response to SNP Commons leader Deidre Brock, who questioned the frequency of Ms Mordauntā€™s visits to Scotland, humorously noting: ā€œTwo visits in one year, it must be a record for a Tory ministerā€.

Ms Mordaunt spoke at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe last month.

Ms Brock said during business questions: ā€œThe Leader of the House called me delusional when I pointed out to her previously Scotlandā€™s faster economic growth, lower unemployment and lower rates of child poverty than the rest of the UK, when I told her that not a single day in the Scottish NHS has been lost to industrial dispute, and that we have the best paid teachers in the UK.

ā€œSo can I ask her the next time she comes back from a day trip to Scotland, can we have a debate on what she learned from us?ā€

Ms Mordaunt replied: ā€œShe invites me to tell this House what Iā€™ve learned in my very pleasant trips to Scotland over the summer.

ā€œI did learn that Scotland has slower economic growth than England.

ā€œI was shocked to learn that Victorian diseases have actually returned to certain cities in Scotland such as rickets.

ā€œThat Glasgowā€™s rat problem is now so bad, it is precluding binmen actually accessing certain streets because itā€™s too dangerous for them.

ā€œI discovered that the bill to Scottish taxpayers of the smelting business debacle stands at Ā£32 million.

ā€œI discovered that Ā£33 million that was ringfenced for Scottish farmers has gone Awolā€¦ā€

The Commons Leader accused the SNP of being ā€œnever short of a grievanceā€, noting: ā€œIt is now running out of excuses.ā€

She went on: ā€œI look forward to next week what those excuses might be, the execution of Mary Queen of Scots, the Highland Clearances, the 100 Years War.

ā€œThe grotesque chaos and appalling public services her constituents are suffering from and the rest of the Scottish people are entirely down to the SNP alone.

ā€œThey are now a sad, spent force and no longer the UK separatist party.

ā€œThat dubious honour now goes to the Labour Party in Wales.ā€

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