Category: Speeches

  • Ed Miliband – 2020 Comments on Help for the Self-Employed

    Ed Miliband – 2020 Comments on Help for the Self-Employed

    The comments made by Ed Miliband, the Shadow Business Secretary, on 23 October 2020.

    The promise of doing ‘whatever it takes’ to protect workers is a distant memory. Despite public health restrictions tightening and many sectors being shut, Ministers are leaving self-employed people in the lurch.

    Almost half a million self-employed people work in industries either partially or fully closed. They’re in desperately choppy waters with many deeply worried about their future.

    Yet Ministers are taking away their life raft and leaving them to sink or swim. That’s not just callous, but economically wrong. These are our country’s artists and performers, and people in our vibrant tourism, sports, cultural and hospitality sectors.

    The Business Secretary must stand up for them and ensure they are given a fair deal.

  • Alister Jack – 2020 Statement on August GDP Figures

    Alister Jack – 2020 Statement on August GDP Figures

    The statement made by Alister Jack, the Secretary of State for Scotland, on 21 October 2020.

    The UK Government is doing everything possible to keep people safe and protect the Scottish economy from the shock of the pandemic.

    We will continue to support jobs and businesses in Scotland through the difficult months ahead. We have expanded our Job Support Scheme, extended our scheme for self-employed people and provided additional support for business.

    This direct support to people in Scotland is on top of an £7.2 billion in additional funding to the Scottish Government.

  • Dominic Raab – 2020 Statement on Violence in Nigeria

    Dominic Raab – 2020 Statement on Violence in Nigeria

    The statement made by Dominic Raab, the Foreign Secretary, on 21 October 2020.

    I am deeply concerned by the recent violence and continued clashes in Nigeria, and am alarmed by widespread reports of civilian deaths.

    We call for an end to violence. The Nigerian government must urgently investigate reports of brutality at the hands of the security forces and hold those responsible to account.

  • Robert Jenrick – 2020 Comments on Funding for Local Councils

    Robert Jenrick – 2020 Comments on Funding for Local Councils

    The comments made by Robert Jenrick, the Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government, on 22 October 2020.

    Since the start of the pandemic, we have backed local councils with the funding they need to support their communities, protect vital services and recover lost income.

    This extra £1 billion funding will ensure that councils have the resources that they need over the winter and continue to play an essential role on the front line of our response to the virus while protecting the most vulnerable and supporting local businesses.

  • Dominic Raab – 2020 Comments on Rohingya

    Dominic Raab – 2020 Comments on Rohingya

    The comments made by Dominic Raab, the Foreign Secretary, on 22 October 2020.

    The people living in Cox’s Bazar face unimaginable hardship and many have been victims of violence. We have imposed sanctions on the perpetrators of this brutality, and this new funding will save lives in the camp and help Bangladesh become more resilient to disasters such as coronavirus.

    Today I urge the world not to turn away from the Rohingya’s suffering and to take the action necessary to allow them to safely return to the homes they fled in terror.

  • Ben Wallace – 2020 Comments on Afghan Interpreters

    Ben Wallace – 2020 Comments on Afghan Interpreters

    The comments made by Ben Wallace, the Secretary of State for Defence, on 22 October 2020.

    Interpreters played a vital role in supporting our Armed Forces in Afghanistan and we owe it to them to make sure their sacrifice is properly rewarded.

    For the first time, today’s legislation puts in place similar requirements for those who resigned and were made redundant, recognising the unique pressures and circumstances faced by locally employed Afghans.

    This fair and simple system will offer dozens more courageous individuals who served alongside British troops the chance to build a new life in the UK.

  • Amanda Solloway – 2020 Comments on Shetland Spaceport

    Amanda Solloway – 2020 Comments on Shetland Spaceport

    The comments made by Amanda Solloway, the Science Minister, on 22 October 2020.

    We want the UK to be the best place in Europe to launch satellites, attracting innovative businesses from all over the world and creating hundreds of high-skilled jobs.

    The potential to have multiple spaceports in Scotland demonstrates the scale of our ambition, and I want to support industry by pressing ahead with our plans during this challenging time.

    This government is committed to backing our growing space sector, developing a comprehensive space strategy and supporting transformative technologies that will benefit people and businesses across the country.

  • Mike Weir – 2008 Comments on Government’s Energy Proposals

    Mike Weir – 2008 Comments on Government’s Energy Proposals

    The comments made by Mike Weir, the then SNP MP for Angus, on 9 November 2008.

    After hinting all summer that immediate help was on the way, Gordon Brown has delivered a chilly response to the one million Scots in fuel poverty.

    By failing to impose a windfall tax on energy companies, the Prime Minister has ruled out immediate help for the thousands of Scottish families facing a bleak winter.

    The increase in insulation and other fuel efficiency measures are welcome for the longer term, but will do nothing to deal with the immediate problem. Very few households will benefit in time to reduce bills this coming winter.

    This whole package is far too little, far too late and shows that the energy companies have won the battle with the UK government. Mr Brown failed to clarify how he will ensure that costs are not passed back to the consumer.

    A government with any ounce of sense would impose more measures now, for example ensure a mandatory minimum tariff, real transparency in social tariffs, a speedy roll out of smart meters and introduction of social tariffs into the home fuel market, as well as ensuring that there is immediate help for those facing a tough winter.

    Disconnections are rising rapidly, and many on pre payment meter users may self disconnect over the winter as they will be unable to pay escalating costs. Mr Brown suggests customers cut their bills with direct debit but fails to realise many of the poorest energy users cannot pay their bills in this way.

    Gordon Brown has yet again proved he is completely out of touch with the concerns of ordinary Scots. Perhaps voters in Glenrothes will remind him before the winter really starts to bite.

  • John Swinney – 2001 Speech for Election as First Minister

    John Swinney – 2001 Speech for Election as First Minister

    The speech made by John Swinney in the Scottish Parliament on 22 November 2001.

    We meet this afternoon to elect a new first Minister, for the third time in the short life of this Parliament.

    The first occasion was a credit to Scotland – an exchange of ideas that resulted, perhaps in the expected – but which also enhanced our fledgling democracy.

    The second occasion was a result of a tragedy – the untimely death of Donald Dewar – who, with others from his party, from ours, from the Liberal Democrats and from wider Scottish life, had worked to establish this Parliament and give our nation a fresh start.

    This third occasion is the result of a farce – a farce inflicted upon Scotland and its Parliament by the Labour party and by nobody else – the party that now, without any democratic process, seeks to foist its unelected leader upon our country. The party that promotes its own, by making cronyism a way of life, and which always lets Scotland down.

    This afternoon that farce may be carried to its illogical conclusion. The Liberal Democrats, in their usual Pavlovian response to their Labour masters, apparently intend to dutifully bring into office a Labour machine politician who represents everything the Liberals claim not to represent.

    Labour has failed the democratic test. The Scottish Parliament must now do what Labour has failed to do.

    This Parliament must exercise democratic scrutiny – and I am proud to set out my candidacy on behalf of a party committed to a democratic, fair and prosperous Scotland.

    A party that always puts the interests of the Scottish people first.

    A party that can comfortably shelter those who are disgusted by the institutional cronyism of the Labour Party and ashamed at what it has become.

    And I am proud to represent a party that recognises that if we want to create that democratic, fair and prosperous Scotland we must have the normal powers of a normal Independent Parliament.

    Presiding Officer, this Parliament is a stepping stone to freedom. And this party will help our nation cross over the murky swamp of Labour Scotland, into the bright and clear air of an independent Scotland.

    There is a job of work to be done to start that process. Let me tell this chamber how I will go about doing that job.

    Scotland needs reform of its public services as well as reform of its public servants.

    Those two reforms are clearly linked. We must reform the whole system of public appointments, and the bill brought forward by my colleague Alex Neil is the key that will unlock the door to openness and accountability. I challenge each candidate for the post of First Minister to echo my support for that bill. Whilst reducing the power of Labour’s quango state we will also improve the calibre of those that serve the public. These appointments should be made on behalf of the public by a Scottish government – not appointments made on behalf of Labour, by Labour.

    And I also challenge each candidate to echo my party’s support for root and branch reform of local government.

    The present state of local government in Scotland is a monument to Labour institutional cronyism. Any system that rewards a party with less than half the vote with 90% of the seats – and all of the power – is a system whose time has passed in this democratic age. To defend it is to defend the indefensible, but Labour members here and at Westminster are lining up to defend it.

    We could change that system today. My election as First Minster would usher in immediate legislation to ensure that the local elections in 2003 were held under a new system. That legislation is already being drafted in the name of my colleague Tricia Marwick. All it needs now is the votes of this chamber.

    That promise should attract Liberal votes – but of course the Liberals have deserted the principle of fair votes in favour of the patronage exercised by means of unfair elections. No wonder they do not even have the courage to put up a candidate today.

    They are no longer a party in this parliament – they are a wholly owned subsidiary of whoever can give them the most jobs and the best promises.

    But I warn the Liberals today – you need a long spoon to sup with New Labour. You are in for a disappointing journey to PR in local government: a long, tortuous journey in which meetings to arrange timetables to arrange meetings will be the order of the day!

    We need reform of our public servants. And with it we need reform of our public services.

    Delivering public services and building public trust: those are my priorities.

    A society shorn of cronyism will be a society that can focus on the real needs of Scotland.

    It will be a society in which we can prioritise public investment in our struggling health and education services. We will do so by using not for profit trusts. We reject the discredited and expensive Tory-inspired Private Finance Initiative that puts money from our classrooms and hospitals into the pockets of private financiers.

    We shall do so by a radical programme of reform in Education, reducing class sizes and freeing up teachers to teach.

    We shall do so by investing in health so that our cancer services are the best in the world, not the worst in Europe.

    We shall do so by protecting our environment by never, ever allowing a London government to foist nuclear power stations on Scotland.

    And we shall do so by giving this Parliament the financial independence it needs to deliver the quality public services the people of Scotland rightfully expect.

    We cannot allow free personal care for Scotland’s elderly people to be held-up because of a backroom rammy over cash between Labour ministers in London and Labour ministers in Edinburgh.

    Presiding Officer,

    If the Chamber today selects the Labour nominee for this post, then those who vote in that way will be condoning massive abuses of power over generations. They will be wiping from their memories the images of Monklands, of Glasgow City Council, of Govan, of Paisley and Renfrew, of scandal after scandal and deceit after deceit. They will be accepting that the leadership of our nation is something to be traded behind closed doors within a party bloated with arrogance and power and forgetful of where it has come from.

    It is time for this Parliament to assert itself.

    It is time for Scotland to assert itself. To look to its future – a future that demands a government and a First Minister standing up for Scotland, not fighting for themselves.

    I ask the Chamber today to support my nomination.

    But more importantly, Presiding Officer, I ask Scotland to support a vision of bright dreams for the future, not the old nightmares of the past.

  • Guy Opperman – 2020 Statement on Private Pensions and Annual Benefit Statements

    Guy Opperman – 2020 Statement on Private Pensions and Annual Benefit Statements

    The statement made by Guy Opperman, the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, in the House of Commons on 19 October 2020.

    The Government have published their response to the consultation on the approach to delivering simpler annual pension benefit statements.

    Participation in pension saving has been transformed through the success of automatic enrolment. However, there is a growing likelihood that people will have a number of different jobs in their lifetime, and therefore multiple pension pots and annual pension statements.​
    This is why the Government’s ambition is for pension benefit statements to be simpler, more consistent and jargon free. Consistency across pension benefit statements will help savers better understand their pensions and effectively plan for retirement. A standardised template will be more accessible, drive member engagement and signpost members to detailed information on costs and charges and investment strategy. It will also complement the work Government are doing with the pensions dashboard to bring pensions online to your phone or laptop.

    We will focus first on defined contribution schemes used for automatic enrolment, but it remains the long-term ambition to improve consistency across all schemes. We will consult later this year on draft regulations for a ​mandated approach to simpler statements, working with industry on the detailed design of the regulations and associated statutory guidance.

    In addition, the Government will work with the pensions industry to introduce a statement season, building on the success of pensions awareness month. It will support the normalisation of workplace pension saving, provoke debate among the public and enable easier comparison between statements and providers.

    These measures will help individuals engage with their workplace pension savings, and enable savers to achieve greater financial security in retirement.