Category: Speeches

  • Dawn Bowden – 2023 Update on the Fusion Programme

    Dawn Bowden – 2023 Update on the Fusion Programme

    The statement made by Dawn Bowden, the Welsh Deputy Minister for Arts and Sport, on 11 January 2023.

    Fusion: Creating Opportunities through Culture programme was established as a key component in the Welsh Government’s response to Baroness Andrew’s Culture and Poverty report published in 2014. Fusion seeks to align and focus resources, services, and programmes from a wide range of sectors and organisations. The programme concentrates on helping those communities experiencing economic disadvantage and who may have traditionally faced barriers to participating in cultural activities.

    Now in its eighth year, the Welsh Government has led Fusion since 2015, in partnership with the cultural and heritage sector, including Amgueddfa Cymru and the Arts Council of Wales as both operational and delivery partners. We are currently working with nine local authorities across Wales to provide cultural opportunities tailored to the needs of local communities, providing training, volunteering, and other opportunities. However, for the programme to become more sustainable it needs to adapt to the new challenges that have arisen since its inception.

    I am pleased to confirm that ARAD has been appointed to carry out an independent study of Fusion’s current delivery model and the extent to which it has supported and enabled the Programme to achieve its overall aims. The review will build on the previous Theory of Change work completed in July 2022 and together they will shape the future aims of the Programme, including the potential to extend the programme across Wales. I will consider the recommendations provided on next steps, including a preferred delivery model to support the Programme in its future direction.

    ARAD will work closely with stakeholders over the coming months before providing officials with recommendations in February 2023. I will provide a further update following the conclusion of the review.

  • Vaughan Gething – 2023 Statement on the Appointment of new Chief Scientific Adviser for Wales

    Vaughan Gething – 2023 Statement on the Appointment of new Chief Scientific Adviser for Wales

    The statement made by Vaughan Gething, the Welsh Minister for the Economy, on 11 January 2023.

    Following a very competitive process, I am very pleased to announce our new Chief Scientific Adviser for Wales, Professor Jas Pal Badyal FRS. He will become Wales’ fourth lead advisor on science.

    Professor Badyal is a distinguished Chemist, currently holding a Chair at the University of Durham. He was elected to Fellowship of the Royal Society in 2016 and enjoys a truly global reputation.

    He is particularly recognised for his work on the functionalisation of solid surfaces and deposition of functional nanolayers. His cutting-edge chemical research has many and varied real-world applications – from antibacterial medical applications to making water-repellent coatings for smart phones – from fog-harvesting to providing clean water in developing countries, to prevention of fouling on buildings and marine surfaces. He has a strong understanding of the challenges surrounding the translation of research discoveries into commercial opportunities. Professor Badyal’s insight and advice will be a welcome addition to strengthening the role R&D can play in taking forward our Programme for Government commitments.

    I look forward to welcoming and working with Professor Badyal who is expected to take up his post early this year.

  • Jane Hutt – 2023 Statement on Meeting with Energy Suppliers

    Jane Hutt – 2023 Statement on Meeting with Energy Suppliers

    The statement made by Jane Hutt, the Welsh Minister for Social Justice, on 4 January 2023.

    People across Wales are facing an unprecedented cost-of-living crisis, fuelled by soaring energy, fuel and food costs The cost-of-living crisis is having a devastating impact, particularly on low-income households. Current estimates suggest up to 45% of all households in Wales could be in fuel poverty following increases to the energy price cap.

    The Welsh Government is doing all it can to support households in Wales, filling the gap left by the UK government. We have allocated £90m to provide support to vulnerable households to meet rising energy costs. This includes a second Welsh Government Fuel Support Scheme in 2022-23 and we are working in partnership with the Fuel Bank Foundation to deliver a £4m fuel voucher scheme aimed at those on prepayment meters and those off the gas grid. The Welsh Government has also made additional funding available to the Discretionary Assistance Fund (DAF) this financial year to help people who are struggling financially with support for off-grid households.

    Free impartial advice is available to all households via our Warm Homes Programme Nest scheme. An enhanced winter fuel campaign commenced on 1 November, targeting a wider audience with much needed energy efficiency advice and guidance. This service is accessible to all. Where eligible, households may be entitled to a package of energy efficiency support.  The Minister for Climate Change has made a number of improvements to the Warm Homes Programme Nest Scheme this year investing in innovation through solar PV and exploration of battery storage enabling homes to use energy at source.

    However, there is a responsibility on the energy suppliers to provide appropriate support for their customers.  I am deeply concerned, as more households fall behind with the payment of their electricity and gas bills, they may be unfairly driven onto pre-payment meters.

    Approximately 200,000 households in Wales use pre-payment meters for their mains gas and electricity. This represents approximately 15% of all households and 24% of tenants in the private rented sector. Almost half of social housing tenants (45%) also use pre-payment meters. Many of these bill payers are on the lowest incomes yet are paying the highest tariffs for their energy.

    On 22 November, Ofgem published their own findings into how energy suppliers are helping customers through this period of high energy prices. In their deep dive, Ofgem explored how suppliers treat ‘Customers in a Vulnerable Situation’.

    Findings showed that, although some good practice was identified, all suppliers need to make further improvements. Severe weaknesses were found in five suppliers, moderate weaknesses were found in another five suppliers and minor weaknesses were found in seven suppliers.

    On 21 and 29 November and 7 December, I met with representatives from a number of energy suppliers to discuss the issues surrounding pre-payment meters and the cost-of-living crisis.

    I was told by the suppliers that moving householders onto pre-payments meters was seen as a last resort, and whilst there was a perception pre-payment meters are linked to debt, some suppliers stated the majority of their pre-payment customers used the meters as a tool to control usage.

    Suppliers confirmed to me they try to actively engage with their customers before a pre-payment meter is considered and, in most cases, there is a lengthy process to follow before one is installed, in agreement with the householder. There are measures in place to determine who is considered to be appropriate for a pre-payment meter

    Energy suppliers agreed to share with the Welsh Government data on the number of households being supported with their energy bills and/or being transferred onto pre-payments meters, and the reason for doing so, in order for my officials to assess the situation. They also agreed to provide information on ‘self-disconnection’. This is vitally important to allow us to understand the nature of self-disconnection, and to design policy responses.

    Not all energy suppliers have standing charges for pre-payment meters. Some of those who currently apply a standing charge agreed to hold further discussions regarding the removal of standing charges. The removal of standing charges was also something I raised again with Ofgem in a meeting on 29 November.

    We have made it clear that energy companies should absorb the cost of standing charges for pre-payment customers who are particularly at risk of disconnection as a result of the rising cost of fuel. This should not be a cost for the Government to take on.

    It is important we identify and support customers who are starting to struggle as early as possible. Energy suppliers have advised they can provide their customers along with other support mechanisms, such as funds set aside to help those who are struggling the most to pay their bills and flexible payment plans.

    Following a meeting with Ofgem on 29 November, I remain concerned that a worryingly large number of householders on a traditional pre-payment meter have not used their vouchers as these have a 90-day expiry date. It is important these householders use their vouchers. I would also encourage customers in vulnerable situations to contact their energy supplier to register themselves as vulnerable.

    Welsh Government has consistently called on the UK Government and Ofgem to introduce a social tariff to protect the most vulnerable householders and there was broad support for this from energy suppliers.

    I will be holding a follow up meeting with energy suppliers in the new year, followed by quarterly meetings. I will seek further assurances that the weaknesses identified by Ofgem are being addressed and continue to push for the greatest levels of support for the most vulnerable in our society.

    This statement is being issued during recess in order to keep members informed. Should members wish me to make a further statement or to answer questions on this when the Senedd returns I would be happy to do so.

  • James Cleverly – 2023 Keynote Speech at the UK-Italy Pontignano Forum

    James Cleverly – 2023 Keynote Speech at the UK-Italy Pontignano Forum

    The speech made by James Cleverly, the Foreign Secretary, in Rome, Italy on 8 February 2023.

    Buonasera a tutti.

    We meet sadly at the time when Turkey and north Syria are responding to a series of huge earthquakes that have so far claimed over ten thousand lives and left many thousand homeless.

    I know Italy and the United Kingdom have expert teams on the ground, demonstrating our work together to respond with help and common humanity to this appalling situation.

    But as the ambassador just said, three members of the British cabinet are in Rome today.

    And we are here with one overarching purpose: to demonstrate Britain’s commitment to Italy and to take our bilateral relationship to a new, higher level.

    Because, as my colleague, Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani puts it, we are at a turning point in our relationship.

    And this is a world that we must face together.

    Because galvanised by the war in Ukraine, we have, I am pleased to say, already started to do just that.

    But we can invest even further in our relationship. And I will say more about that in a moment.

    I want to begin, however, with a thank you.

    A thank you to the Pontignano conference and to our chair today, Lord Willetts, for advocating the strongest possible relationship between our two countries.

    And I hope that we can use this special 30th anniversary to launch a new era in British-Italian cooperation.

    Now, the ties between Britain and Italy go back a very long way.

    Just a few metres from here in the garden of this residence runs a Roman aqueduct.

    The construction was begun early in the reign of Emperor Claudius, who in his spare time, when not building major Roman infrastructure, was invading Britain.

    And it was nearing completion in AD61 under the then-Emperor Nero.

    Just as a particular feisty young woman from my part of Britain, from East Anglia, was launching a rebellion and Queen Boudica was attacking the Roman garrisons in East Anglia in and around Essex, including, of course, Colchester.

    And after her defeat, it was decided to build a fortified settlement.

    And after a number of name changes, that settlement is now Braintree, the main town in my constituency.

    So I am very glad to be here, although I suspect Boudica might have been less enthusiastic taking part in this bilateral conference.

    But much more recently, British forces played a central role in the liberation of this country.

    And as we approach the 80th anniversary of the landings in Sicily this summer and at Anzio or the Battle of Monte Cassino next year, I want to tell you how touched I am by the regard paid by Italians to commemorating our fallen across the length and breadth of this country.

    Today our ties are modern.

    They are strong and they are vibrant. Weaving a rich tapestry between our countries and our people.

    Born of one simple fact: we Brits and Italians rather like each other.

    And wherever you look, you can see evidence of that.

    And you can see those ties in the here and now, whether it be through fashion, or culture, or cooking or sport.

    Indeed, legend has it that football was imported to Italy by a British expat living in Genoa.

    Cricket, however, has still yet to make the international transfer. I’d rather like to keep it that way, so at least there’s one sport where we have a fighting chance of beating Italy at.

    But I think that it is family ties and the ties of deep friendship between our peoples that count the most.

    And we are very proud that the UK is home to around 600,000 Italians and the contribution that they make every day to British life and to British economy is something that we should celebrate.

    Now, over 30,000 Brits call Italy their home and we are very grateful for the warm welcome that you give to them.

    And nowhere was our mutual affection summed up better than in Italy’s reaction to the death of our late Queen in September of last year.

    We will never forget how the President came straight from the airport, from a foreign visit to sign the condolence book here in the residence, or how many Italians queued to sign the condolence book at our embassy.

    And we thank you deeply for that.

    Now, rooted in those strong foundations, we must look to the future.

    And as we do so, we must equip ourselves to deal with the world as it is, not as we would wish it to be.

    Because as we sit here tonight, in the warmth and in the light, tens, perhaps hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians are sheltering in cellars in the cold, in the dark, wondering what horrors the night or the morning may bring.

    In a little over two weeks, we will mark with our Ukrainian friends the solemn anniversary of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on the 24th of February, a date which, to echo President Roosevelt, will live on in infamy.

    On that date, everything changed.

    Our security as freedom-loving European nations changed because we recognised we had an aggressor in our midst.

    The security of our energy supplies changed.

    The security of our economies changed.

    The security of global food supplies, particularly those to poorer countries, changed.

    But some things did not change at all.

    The need for allies and democracies to protect each other, the need for strong defence to deter war, the need for common sense to diversify our supply chains and to protect those supply chains.

    The need for unity. For friends to come together. And to stick together as allies in times of danger.

    And above all, the need to stand up for what we believe in.

    To stand up for democracy, for justice, for liberty, for freedom, for the rule of law, and for the international order.

    Because I know that these are Italian values and these are British values.

    These are our values, and they deserve to be protected.

    Looking ahead, I see five areas where the UK and Italy need to work far more closely together.

    The first, of course, is on Ukraine and the consequences of Russia’s invasion.

    We need to do everything in our power to make sure that Ukraine prevails in this struggle between might and right.

    A message heard loud and clear in Westminster today when we heard from President Zelensky in a personal, powerful speech to parliamentarians in Westminster Hall on his visit to Britain today.

    From day one, Italy’s response to that invasion has been robust on sanctions, on seizing assets, on delivering humanitarian aid, on supplying weapons, on welcoming refugees or making plans to support Ukraine’s rebuilding. Italy has at every stage done the right thing.

    And let me pay tribute to Prime Minister Maloney and to PM Draghi before her.

    Mr Tajani said to me in our first phone call, and he was right.

    He said, you can count on Italy.

    And I’ve seen that repeatedly, and I can assure you, so have our mutual friends in Ukraine.

    And to anybody who harboured doubts about the United Kingdom’s ironclad commitment to European security after our exit from the European Union, every day since Russia invaded, Ukraine has given you your answer.

    I am proud that our total military assistance last year to Ukraine was second only to the United States of America.

    And I am glad he is in the audience here this evening because I would also like to pay tribute to my friend and colleague Ben Wallace, the Defence Secretary, for having the foresight and confidence to help equip and train the Ukrainians before the most recent invasion in February.

    And in doing so, perhaps help them defend their capital city in that initial wave of the conflict.

    But we must keep up the pressure. Indeed, we must do more, we must do it better and we must do it faster.

    The second area where we need to work even more closely is on defence and foreign policy.

    Now we are already doing a lot together.

    Typhoon aircraft of the Royal Air Force and the Italian Air Force built in the UK and in Italy with Germany and Spain are patrolling the skies on NATO’s northern and eastern flanks.

    Italy is commanding NATO’s mission in Kosovo and its mission in Iraq and the EU missions in Somalia and maritime missions in the Mediterranean and the Straits of Hormuz, where nearly 11,000 personnel are deployed in 37 international missions in 25 countries.

    Italy is very much doing its bit.

    You play a vital role in hosting key NATO bases, including the Joint Force Command in Naples, where many British personnel are stationed.

    The UK leads NATO’s enhanced forward presence in Estonia while Italian soldiers are guarding NATO’s southeastern flank in Bulgaria.

    Just a few weeks ago, our two prime ministers and the Prime Minister of Japan announced the launch of our new global combat air programme.

    This multi-billion pound programme will be at the heart of our cooperation for many, many years to come.

    It is the most powerful example of the growing partnership between Britain and Italy.

    It underscores our determination to work together to keep our nations and our allies safe.

    Not just here in Europe, but also on the other side of the world.

    And that growing partnership must extend to foreign policy, too.

    As likeminded countries with many similar interests but different regions of geographical expertise, we have much to learn from each other.

    We have mutually reinforcing strengths in the Western Balkans, across the Mediterranean to the south and to the east and in Africa as we work to stop the hunger that Putin’s aggression against Ukraine has unleashed.

    And further afield, as strategic partners, we must address together the dangers posed by Iran and the challenges that go hand-in-hand with the rise of China.

    The third area where we must work together is energy security.

    Russia’s invasion of Ukraine may have exposed our vulnerabilities, but it has also galvanised a joint determination to address them.

    The speed with which Italy has moved to do so, including with Prime Minister Maloney’s recent visit to Algeria, has impressed us all.

    As has Pierre Maloney’s ambition to turn southern Italy into a regional energy hub.

    An island surrounded by windy seas and a sun drenched peninsula have obvious advantages when it comes to renewable energy.

    If you are unsure which is which, the cold, windy weathers blow on our coasts rather than yours. If at any point you want to swap, talk to me afterwards.

    But both our countries will suffer from the effects of climate change.

    But here again, our engineering and financial knowhow are mutually reinforcing.

    So when we work together, we are more than the sum of our parts.

    Our experience at COP26 and our presidency of COP26 demonstrated that.

    Now, the fourth area is in trade and commerce, the lifeblood of our economies.

    We are both trading nations and we have traded together for centuries.

    However, as the CEO forum highlighted, we want and need to deepen our business and commercial contacts.

    And I’m delighted that an Exports and Investment agreement, which my Cabinet colleague Kemi Badenoch signed with Minister Tajani this morning, will help us achieve just that.

    But once again, good though that is, we must do more.

    And lastly, of course, we need to work more closely together to tackle illegal migration, especially by sea.

    Both our countries have received huge numbers of illegal arrivals by sea: over 105,000 in Italy last year and over 45,000 in the UK.

    It is an enormous challenge: humanitarian, social, criminal, political.

    And our voters rightly demand that we get on top of it.

    And indeed we must. Italy’s government, more than any other, I think, shares our sense of urgency on the need to address illegal migration.

    You have years of experience dealing with these issues across the Mediterranean and before that across the Adriatic Sea as well.

    One of the main departure countries, Libya, is a country that you know well.

    So let us work more closely together and learn from each other on this and on things more broadly.

    We are, of course, starting that work with Home Office officials meeting their Italian colleagues in London today.

    So on Ukraine, defence, foreign policy, on trade, on dealing with illegal migrations, there is a lot of work to do and it is a big agenda.

    This is indeed, as Minister Tajani says, a turning point in our relations.

    A time for ambition.

    A time for opportunity.

    And we should seize that opportunity.

    We both have new young prime ministers, fresh young leaders with energy and dynamism and enthusiasm.

    Leaders who believe in the nation state, who are committed to working with allies and partners, leaders who believe in freedom and a need to defend it.

    Leaders inspired by the example of Margaret Thatcher and the ideas of Robert Scruton.

    We look forward very much to welcoming Prime Minister Meloni to London and also to Italy’s presidency of the G7 next year, when you can expect to see even more of us visiting your great country with even greater frequency.

    So it is time to put this burgeoning relationship between the UK and Italy onto a new, strong footing to cement this renewed alliance between London and Rome.

    And I hope that we can swiftly conclude the work on our Bilateral Cooperation Agreement to provide an enduring framework for our cooperation in years to come.

    It’s time to make a leap, as Minister Tajani put it, to this conference organised by the Italian Embassy for the British media in Venice ten days ago, in the quality of our relationship.

    That is what I want.

    That is what the UK wants.

    That is what our Italian friends want.

    My Italian, is poor and limited, but my message is heartfelt.

    Andiamo avanti.

    Insieme.

    Grazie.

  • Lee Anderson – 2023 Comments on Capital Punishment

    Lee Anderson – 2023 Comments on Capital Punishment

    The comments made by Lee Anderson, the Conservative MP for Ashfield, in the Spectator on 9 February 2023.

    Another topic of concern is crime: would Anderson support the return of the death penalty? ‘Yes. Nobody has ever committed a crime after being executed. You know that, don’t you? 100 per cent success rate.’ He pauses. ‘Now I’d be very careful on that one because you’ll get the certain groups saying: “You can never prove it.” Well, you can prove it if they have videoed it and are on camera – like the Lee Rigby killers. I mean: they should have gone, same week. I don’t want to pay for these people.’ He has his own experiences with crime to share, having received ‘a couple of death threats’ which are being investigated by the police, and an attempt at blackmail, too. ‘I don’t know what they’re blackmailing me over, I just passed it straight to the police.’

  • Peter Aldous – 2023 Parliamentary Question on National Resilience

    Peter Aldous – 2023 Parliamentary Question on National Resilience

    The parliamentary question asked by Peter Aldous, the Conservative MP for Waveney, in the House of Commons on 2 February 2023.

    Peter Aldous (Waveney) (Con)

    What progress his Department has made in strengthening national resilience.

    The Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster (Oliver Dowden)

    Resilience is a key priority across Government. My Department has already published the resilience framework, refreshed the national security risk assessment and established a risk sub-committee of the National Security Council, which I chair. We will soon publish a new national risk register, and this afternoon I will chair the UK resilience forum, which strengthens our links with partners across the country in collectively tackling the risks we face.

    Peter Aldous

    I draw attention to my entry in the Register of Members’ Financial Interests, as I am involved in family farms.

    As the breadbasket of Britain and home to the all-energy coast, East Anglia has a key role to play in strengthening national resilience on food and energy security. Can my right hon. Friend outline the co-ordinating work his Department is doing with other Departments to ensure the east of England realises its full potential in both feeding the nation and keeping the lights on?

    Oliver Dowden

    My hon. Friend is right to highlight East Anglia’s increasing role in providing energy security through its massive offshore wind developments, which are helping to provide secure renewable energy. In addition, the Government food strategy, which was published last year, sets out plans to boost domestic production in sectors with the biggest opportunities, which will of course include East Anglia.

  • Elliot Colburn – 2023 Parliamentary Question on Operation of Public Services During Industrial Action

    Elliot Colburn – 2023 Parliamentary Question on Operation of Public Services During Industrial Action

    The parliamentary question asked by Elliot Colburn, the Conservative MP for Carshalton and Wallington, in the House of Commons on 2 February 2023.

    Elliot Colburn (Carshalton and Wallington) (Con)

    What steps his Department is taking to support the operation of public services during industrial action.

    Edward Timpson (Eddisbury) (Con)

    What steps his Department is taking to support the operation of public services during industrial action.

    The Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster (Oliver Dowden)

    All Departments are responsible for their own business continuity plans and have well-established contingency arrangements. The Cabinet Office’s Cobra unit has supported Departments to develop those arrangements to minimise the impact on public services. Yesterday, for example, more than 600 military personnel undertook action to support a smooth flow at the border. I pay tribute to the work that they and others did.

    Elliot Colburn

    As if the ultra low emission zone were not bad enough, Carshalton and Wallington residents have had to deal with strikes affecting the transport network, despite the Mayor’s promise of zero strikes. There is a very important point to be made about safety as a result of the ongoing impact on the transport network. Bus stops and railway stations in London face dangerous overcrowding when strikes are on. Can my right hon. Friend assure me that the safety of the remainder of the transport network will be a key factor when minimum service levels are set?

    Oliver Dowden

    As a Member of Parliament whose constituency borders London, I share my hon. Friend’s deep frustration with the conduct of the Mayor and with the ULEZ, which is a tax on hard-working commuters and citizens in London. My hon. Friend rightly raises a point about minimum service levels, which are at the root of the Government’s legislation—the Strikes (Minimum Service Levels) Bill, which passed through this House in the face of opposition from the Labour party—to protect standards of service and safety on our transport network.

    Edward Timpson

    Ambulance response times, particularly in rural areas such as Eddisbury, are one of those issues on which I seem to have been campaigning since I first came to Parliament. Like others, I am perplexed by the contrarian and regressive turn that has been taken in the policy area by unions representing ambulance workers, which are refusing to agree to minimum service and safety levels during industrial action. Does my right hon. Friend agree that they should embrace those common- sense measures? Perhaps the public would then be more sympathetic in the subsequent collective bargaining.

    Oliver Dowden

    As ever, I agree with my hon. and learned Friend. The public expect a minimum safety level in core public services such as ambulance provision, as exists in comparable European countries. This is a sensible, straightforward measure to ensure patient safety at a time of most desperate need, which is why the Government are bringing it forward—again, in the teeth of opposition from the Labour party.

  • Rishi Sunak – 2023 Press Conference with Volodymyr Zelenskyy

    Rishi Sunak – 2023 Press Conference with Volodymyr Zelenskyy

    The press conference with Rishi Sunak and Volodymyr Zelenskyy in Dorset on 8 February 2023.

    Volodymyr, it’s a privilege to stand here with you today, and to have you here in the United Kingdom.

    The path from Ukraine to the UK has been well trodden over the past six months, with 10,000 of your soldiers making the journey for military training, and more arriving every week.

    And just a few days ago, dozens arrived to learn how to operate our Challenger 2 tanks.

    I am told they are already mastering the art of driving these sophisticated 62-ton weapons, which will soon be making a difference on the battlefields of your country.

    All over the UK, Ukrainian men and women are learning how to command and control NATO-standard weapons, whether that is in drone warfare, tank operations or basic training. Their dedication, courage and determination is a credit to you and your country.

    Volodymyr, now your visit here today underlines our two countries’ close and enduring friendship – we will always be by your side, our staunch and unwavering friends.

    We both know the people of Ukraine’s incredible strength and inspiring bravery will ultimately defeat tyranny. That is why we are training and arming them with the equipment they need to push back Russian forces.

    And as I said to you earlier today, we are also accelerating the delivery of our equipment, and the equipment of our allies, to ensure it reaches your frontline in the coming days and weeks, not months or years.

    The Ukrainian crews who arrived last week will be using Challenger 2 tanks to defend Ukraine’s sovereign territory next month.

    And I am pleased that today we have agreed that we will expand our training programme – a programme that has trained 10,000 troops in the last six months alone – to your marines and fighter jet pilots, ensuring the Armed Forces of Ukraine are able to defend their country for generations to come.

    We must arm Ukraine in the short term, but we must bolster Ukraine for the long term. Your country cannot be left vulnerable to attack ever again.

    Today we have signed the London Declaration, further deepening our cooperation, and in the coming days, we mark a year since the needless and unprovoked invasion, and Russia will see – more than ever – that their tactics are only solidifying western resolve. Only convincing us to go further, and faster, to help you, Volodymyr. And we will.

    After all, you told me last week that collective, international unity is your greatest weapon, and you can be sure that we will deliver on that, not just now, but long into the future.

  • Volodymyr Zelenskyy – 2023 Speech to the UK Houses of Parliament

    Volodymyr Zelenskyy – 2023 Speech to the UK Houses of Parliament

    The speech made by Volodymyr Zelenskyy, the President of Ukraine, at the Houses of Parliament on 8 February 2023.

    The people of the United Kingdom and their honorable representatives!

    All the people of England and Scotland, of Wales and Northern Ireland!

    Of all the lands which have been home to brave souls since Europe came into existence!

    I have come here and stand before you on behalf of the Brave. On behalf of our warriors who are now in the trenches under enemy artillery fire. On behalf of our air gunners and every defender of the sky who protects Ukraine against enemy aircrafts and missiles. On behalf of our tank-men who fight to restore our Ukrainian border. On behalf of our conscripts who are being trained now, including here in Britain. Thank you, Britain! And who will be then deployed to the frontline – skilled, equipped and eager to win.

    On behalf of every father and every mother who are waiting for their brave sons and brave daughters back home from the war.

    Mister Speaker!

    You may well remember as roughly more than two years ago we met with you here in the Parliament. It was a great honor for me. We enjoyed tea, we talked a lot about our people, our countries, the British and Ukrainian political traditions.

    Mister Prime Minister! Rishi!

    When we had our meeting earlier today, I said to you I would tell a story in my address to the Parliament. A story about my feelings on my first visit to London as president in autumn 2020.

    The programme was packed. Royal Highnesses William and Catherine. Buckingham Palace. The aircraft carrier of the Royal Navy. Westminster. Downing Street. And, of course, the War Rooms.

    There is an armchair in the war room. The famous Churchill’s armchair. A guide smiled and offered me to sit down on the armchair from which war orders had been given. He asked me – how did I feel? And I said that I certainly felt something.

    But it is only now that I know what the feeling was. And all Ukrainians know it perfectly well, too. It is the feeling of how bravery takes-you-through the most unimaginable hardships – to finally reward you with Victory.

    Ladies and Gentlemen!

    I thank you for your bravery. Thank you very much from all of us! This applause is for you!

    London has stood with Kyiv since day one. From the first seconds and minutes of the full scale war.

    Great Britain, you extended your helping-hand when the world had not yet come to understand how to react. Boris, you got others united when it seemed absolutely impossible. Thank you!

    You all showed your grit and character back then. Strong British character.

    You didn’t compromise Ukraine. And hence you didn’t compromise your ideals. And thus you didn’t compromise the spirit of these great Islands. Thank you very much!

    Our countries knew different times. Our nations defended freedom in the Second World War. The iron curtain divided us. Our people went through crises and growth, inflation, and periods of social losses and social gains.

    It was tough but we always found strength and stamina to move ahead and achieve results.

    This is the bedrock of our and your traditions.

    Ukrainians and Brits defeated the fear of war and had the time to enjoy peace.

    No matter what we encountered on different stages of our and your formidable history, you and us and the whole mankind achieved similar result – evil lost.

    We will always come out on top of evil. This lies at the core of our – but also your – traditions.

    However, the horizon never stays clear for a while. Once the old evil is defeated, the new one is attempting to rise its head.

    Do you have a feeling that the evil will crumble once again? I can see it in your eyes now. We think the same way as you do. We know freedom will win. We know Russia will lose. We know the Victory will change the world! And this will be a change that the world has long needed.

    The United Kingdom is marching with us towards the most important victory of our lifetime. It will be a victory over the very idea of the war.

    After we win together, any aggressor – big or small – will know what awaits him if he attacks international order.

    Any aggressor who will try to push the boundaries by force. Who will inflict destruction and death on other peoples. Who will try to endure his dictatorship at the expense of other people’s blood in criminal and unprovoked wars, as the Kremlin does. Any aggressor is going to lose.

    Ladies and Gentlemen!

    We have already achieved remarkable results. And we must make every effort to turn our achievements into the foundations of the future global security architecture.

    The world needs your leadership, Britain, just as it needs Ukrainian bravery.

    When the full-scale invasion began, we, together with you and the US and other allies, formed a true coalition of friends. This is very important.

    You were among those very few who had helped before the large-scale invasion began – exactly as it will be necessary every time in the future to prevent aggression from happening.

    Your help was preventive.

    We must take these principles of preventive aid to those, who are threatened with aggression, and preventive sanctions – against those, who threaten aggression – as basic principles of the world anti-war policy.

    We created a coalition of NLAW and Javelin that stopped the advance of the Russian army from the first day of the invasion.

    We built a coalition of artillery rounds and a coalition of air defense, which allow us to save the lives of civilians, our women, children and elderly, in our cities from Russian atrocious occupation and missile terror.

    We put together a powerful sanctions coalition. Your leadership in protecting international legal order through sanctions against a terrorist state – cannot be questioned. And we have to steadily continue along this way until Russia is deprived of any possibility to finance the war.

    Most importantly, together with the G7 we brought about a coalition of values. A coalition that protects the rule-based world order and human rights.

    A coalition that will work in such a way, that over time there will simply be no gray areas in the world in which human life does not matter.

    In order for it to be so, there must be justice. Anyone who invests in terror must be held accountable. Anyone who invests in violence must compensate those who have suffered from terror, aggression or other forms of state violence.

    Our proposals for the creation of a Special Tribunal for the crime of Russian aggression against Ukraine and a Special Compensation Mechanism, which will compensate war losses at the expense of Russian assets, are based on such principles.

    Justice is one of the ten elements of the Peace Formula proposed by Ukraine and supported by Britain. I thank you for your readiness to invoke the Formula!

    As I already mentioned, Ukrainian soldiers are being trained in Britain. In particular, to operate “Challengers”, your main battle tanks. It’s a tank coalition in action, and I thank you, Rishi, for this powerful defensive step – for tank assistance.

    The coalition of long-range missiles is the latest of all. It will allow us to make the evil completely retreat from our country by destroying its hideaways deep in the occupied territories.

    And it’s not just about weapons. We proved together that the world truly helps those who are brave in defending freedom. And thus, paves the way for a new history. A history of a world that knows how to be quick in help. Who knows how to be effective in defense. Who knows how to remain principled in dark hours. Who implements its treaties and arrangements in good faith. Who does not allow perpetrators to enjoy impunity. Who knows how to overcome veto when it is abused. Who knows no fear. And who knows how to win.

    This shall be the new reality of the free world! I’m sure of that.

    However, evil is still around today and the battle continues. Yes, we know how it is going to end and how we are going to feel on the day victory comes.

    Everyday we continue to pay with lives, pain and tears for bringing the victory closer. With the lives of our heroes, whom we lose in battles. With the lives of our heroes who take life and death risks every day to save as many of our soldiers and civilians as possible.

    Today, I will have the honor to be received by His Majesty the King. It will be a truly special moment for me. In particular, because I will convey to him from all the Ukrainians the words of gratitude for the support His Majesty showed to them when he was still the Prince of Wales.

    I also intend to tell him something that is very important not only for the future of Ukraine but also for the future of Europe. In Britain, the King is an air force pilot. And in Ukraine today, every air force pilot is the king for us, for our families.

    Because they are so few, they are so precious that we, the servants of our kings, do everything possible and impossible to make the world provide us with modern planes to empower and protect pilots who will be protecting us.

    I am proud of our air force. And I brought a present from them to you, Great Britain. Open, please. I will explain. It’s the helmet of a real Ukrainian pilot. He is one of our most successful aces. He is one of our kings. And the writing on the helmet reads: “We have freedom. Give us wings to protect it.”

    I trust this symbol will help us form our next coalition – coalition of the planes.

    I appeal to you and the world with simple and yet most important words: Combat aircrafts – for Ukraine! Wings – for freedom!

    Great Britain!

    You and us both struggle for peace, but instead we are forced to face the rage that seeks to deprive us of peace and everything else that is valuable in life.

    Unfortunately, it is in human nature to allow evil mature. It then stands up against humanity. It then destroys and kills. It launches aggressions and breaks people’s lives.

    You and us have already fought together against such evil. You and us already have the experience of defeating the evil that is generated by human nature.

    I am not saying there will be no more wars after this war ends. It is impossible to completely erase evil from human nature. Yet, it is in our power to guarantee with words and deeds that the light side of human nature will prevail. The side you and us share. And this stands above anything else.

    Thank you for your attention! Thank you for your support!

    Leaving the British Parliament two years ago, I thanked you for delicious English tea. I will be leaving the parliament today thanking all of you in advance – for powerful English planes.

    By the way, it’s almost five o’clock.

    God bless Great Britain and long live the King!

    Слава Україні!

  • Robert Key – 1983 Maiden Speech in the House of Commons

    Robert Key – 1983 Maiden Speech in the House of Commons

    The maiden speech made by Robert Key, the then Conservative MP for Salisbury, in the House of Commons on 30 June 1983.

    In the year 1275, Salisbury first sent Members to Parliament. Thus, 708 years on, it is with some humility that I address the House for the first time.

    It is not irrelevant that in this debate on high technology wideband cablecasting we should glance back in time for a moment. Those first Members of Parliament were, like us, concerned with communication between people. As a former schoolmaster, I might even be allowed to indulge my belief that the written word has lost some of its beauty and authority in the age of electronic communication.

    During the recent general election, I dare say that many prospective hon. Members, like me, were occasionally assassinated in the press. In just a couple of sentences of election fever my personal history was rewritten on the back page of The Times. My origins were removed from Wiltshire to the home counties, by some journalistic miracle my profession changed from teacher to chartered accountant, and I was remarried to someone called Fiona. It was perhaps not surprising that the same newspaper claimed in its first list of new Members of Parliament that I had “no biography available”. I know not why, but, as I learnt subsequently, the South China Morning Post carried a more accurate account of the goings on in Salisbury than The Times.

    So it is with relief that I can now rely on the unerring accuracy of Hansard and my local newspapers to report my efforts on behalf of the electors of Salisbury. I thank them for their confidence, and, even though I received an absolute majority of the votes cast, I consider it my duty and a privilege to represent also the interests of the minorities who did not vote for me, or who chose, sadly, not to vote for anyone.

    To my 1,100 or so active workers who on polling day turned the wheels of democracy on my behalf, I express my heartfelt thanks. I salute my immediate predecessor, Sir Michael Hamilton. A man of the greatest courtesy and sensibility, he will be hard to follow and he is much missed by his many friends here and in Salisbury.

    The people of Salisbury have always been stouthearted and forward-looking. They have always understood the meaning of good communications, and taken advantage of it. The Romans focused a network of roads on Old Sarum, but the Norman bishops moved away and founded the city of New Sarum on the valley trade routes. Grateful, of course, for its episcopal innovators, Salisbury also has a long tradition of disagreement with its bishops, usually over local taxation, but more recently over the defence of the realm. But I would not wish on our current gentle pastor the fate of his predecessor, who in 1450 was pursued by a mob and murdered on Salisbury plain. Nor would I wish on the gentle vet who is our mayor the fate of his predecessor, John Halle, who was committed to the Tower of London for using violent language.

    That we know such facts is a tribute to the accuracy of language and records. In Salisbury, education and the enriching of our cultural life are taken very seriously indeed. Our citizens may be employed in agriculture, engineering—much of it based on high technology—and the commercial and professional services on which they depend, or in tourism, transport, the armed services, defence establishments and our over-criticised, often under-valued Civil Service, but what they all have in common is the will and the skill to seize on new technology and use it sensibly.

    Salisbury is not particularly well served by local radio or television—it is peripheral to many stations. There must be many towns and cities in a similar position—dwarfed numerically by larger neighbours, but founts of unique benefit to the life of wider regions.

    In supporting the introduction of cable systems, I should like to draw to the attention of the House paragraph 58 of the White Paper, which deals with franchise areas. The Government must be held to their proposal to give the cable authority the duty to take into account natural community groupings. Cable operators should do more than cream profits from limited services in densely populated areas. They should assume wider responsibilities in developing all the opportunities offered by inter-active systems, both geographically and in the variety of services offered. Local business and industry should benefit, but so should our schools, colleges, theatres, concert halls and sports facilities and last, but by no means least, our families in their homes.

    In a recent survey, 71 per cent. of people said that they wanted more choice on television and 59 per cent. wanted channels for local news and local features. The demand is there and should be met. The White Paper strikes the right balance between over-regulation, which would kill the project, and a free-for-all, which would damage the high quality of much of the existing BBC and ITV output.

    British television, both technically and artistically, enjoys an unrivalled international reputation for creativity and we are poised to capture a world lead in a new generation of direct broadcasting by satellite and interactive wideband cable systems. We must not miss our chance. Whatever else my constituents may or may not wish me to say on their behalf, they did not send me to this place to impede progress. Nor will I.