19th May has often been a day for momentous political events. On this day in 1536, Ann Boleyn met her fate and the executioner’s axe. In 1649, England became a commonwealth on this day and stayed that way for eleven years.
On 19th May 1921, the U.S. Congress passed the Emergency Quota Act. It limited the number of immigrants who could enter the US from any one European country to 3% of the total number already in the US, in an atmosphere of post-war isolationism and worries about high immigration. That it didn’t apply to Latin American countries may have set the foundations for a radical change in the ethnic make-up of the USA.
2 Big stories
All change in the chamber
MPs took their seats in the House of Commons for the first time since the General Election, with Lib Dems and Tories mingling on the Government benches and Labour sharing the opposition benches with the smaller parties.
The Guardian had a minute-by-minute account, including reports of tweets:
From Lib Dem MP Jo Swinson:
rather disorientating sitting on the other side of the house – where @tomharrismp used to sit
From Labour MP Tom Watson:
In the house of commons, looking at these new MPs and feeling like a gnarled up old veteran at the age of 43.
From Paul Waugh:
The story of the opening day? The strange silence of the Lib Dem benches. Speeches from Tories, Labour, even SNP, but no LDs