Ministers consider next steps after damning end to Grenfell inquiry

The Government is examining the recommendations of the seven-year probe into the Grenfell Tower fire, following its damning conclusion.

Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner is expected to face questions from broadcasters on Thursday morning about the next steps ministers will take following the end of the inquiry into the 2017 tower block fire.

The Housing Secretary’s appearance on the airwaves comes after Sir Keir Starmer issued a state apology for a disaster he said should never have happened.

Ministers will respond in full within six months, and will provide regular updates to Parliament on any commitments made, Sir Keir added.

The deaths of all 72 people in the 2017 blaze in west London were avoidable and had been preceded by “decades of failure” by government, other authorities and the building industry, inquiry chairman Sir Martin Moore-Bick’s report concluded.

The tower block was covered in combustible products because of the “systematic dishonesty” of firms who made and sold the cladding and insulation, he added, with cladding company Arconic and insulation firms Kingspan and Celotex coming in for particularly heavy criticism.

Though he acknowledged failures stretching back to the 1990s, Sir Martin took aim at the drive for deregulation by the coalition and Conservative governments since 2010, which meant concerns about the safety of life had been “ignored, delayed or disregarded” despite the deadly Lakanal House fire which killed six people in 2009.

Sir Keir Starmer delivering a statement to the House of Commons
Sir Keir Starmer said regular updates will be provided to Parliament (House of Commons/UK Parliament/PA)

Sir Keir told Parliament all firms found by the inquiry to be part of the “horrific failings” will be written to “as the first step” to stopping them being awarded such contracts.

The Prime Minister has also said it is “imperative that there is full accountability” for what happened “including through the criminal justice process”.

The Metropolitan Police has said it will need an estimated 12 to 18 months to pore over the report “line by line” before any criminal charges are brought.

Inquiry chairman Sir Martin Moore-Bick reading a statement
Inquiry chairman Sir Martin Moore-Bick reading a statement following the publication of the final report (PA)

Potential offences under consideration included corporate manslaughter, gross negligence manslaughter, perverting the course of justice, misconduct in public office, health and safety offences, fraud, and offences under the fire safety and building regulations.

Sir Martin’s report recommended creating a new single regulator for the construction industry, which has become “too complex and fragmented”.

The Prime Minister said the inquiry’s conclusion should be a “moment of change” and vowed to take measures to step up remediation of buildings still covered in dangerous cladding.

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