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  • Ed Miliband – 2013 Labour Party Conference Speech

    edmiliband

    Below is the text of the speech made by the Leader of the Opposition, Ed Miliband, to the 2013 Labour Party Conference held in Brighton in September 2013.

    It’s great to be in Brighton. And I want to start by thanking somebody from the bottom of my heart for the kindest of words. Not Justine …oh, I would like to thank her, a round of applause for Justine please, ladies and gentlemen. Not my mum … but a woman called Ella Philips. It was local election day, Ella rode past me on her bike, she fell off …it’s not funny! I helped her up and afterwards she called me something I had never been called before: she said I was an “action hero”. Why are you laughing? She said I was an action hero “who mysteriously appeared out of nowhere”. And she said, “What added to all the confusion was that Ed was actually attractive and not geeky at all”. I promise you, she did say that. She said, “Even the way he appeared was suave”. I don’t know why you find this so funny, friends. “He was dressed casually, but he had style”. Sounds quite me, doesn’t it? Now I was pretty pleased with this, as you can tell, until something dawned on me: Ella was concussed. She was badly concussed. In fact, she herself said, “I was seeing things because I was still in quite a daze”. Well, Ella, you are not kidding. But let me say, Ella, if you are watching today, thank you, you have made my year.

    I want to start today with the simplest of thoughts. An idea that has inspired change for generations. The belief that helped drive us out of the Second World War and into that great reforming government of 1945. An ambition that is more important now than it has been for decades. An emotion that is felt across our country at kitchen tables every night. A feeling that is so threatening to those who want to keep things as they are. Words that are so basic and yet so powerful, so modest and yet so hard to believe. Six simple words that say: Britain can do better than this. Britain can do better than this; we are Britain, we are better than this. Are you satisfied with a country where people are working for longer for less, year after year? Are you satisfied with a country divided losing touch with the things we value the most? Are you satisfied with a country that shuts out the voices of millions of ordinary people and listens only to the powerful? Are you satisfied with a country standing apart as two nations? Well I am not satisfied. We are Britain, we are better than this. And we have to rebuild anew One Nation. An economy built on your success, a society based on your values, a politics that hears your voice – rich and poor alike – accepting their responsibilities top each other. One Nation, we are going to make it happen, and today I am going to tell you how.

    I want to start with leadership. Leadership is about risks and difficult decisions. It is about those lonely moments when you have to peer deep into your soul. I ran for the leadership of this party, it was really hard for my family, but I believed that Labour needed to turn the page and I was the best person to do it. I when I became leader I faced a decision about whether we should stand up to Rupert Murdoch. It wasn’t the way things had been done in the past, but it was the right thing to do so I did it. And together we faced them down. And then the other week I faced an even bigger decision about whether the country should go to war. The biggest decision any leader faces, the biggest decision any Parliament faces, the biggest decision any party faces. All of us were horrified by the appalling chemical weapons attacks in Syria, but when I stood on the stage three years ago, when I became your leader, I said we would learn the lessons of Iraq. It would have been a rush to war, it wasn’t the right thing for our country. So I said no. It was the right thing to do.

    You see, the real test of leadership is not whether you stand up to the weak, that’s easy; it’s whether you stand up to the strong and know who to fight for. And you know I am reminded of a story back when I was starting out, standing to be an MP in Doncaster, with a woman called Molly Roberts. Molly was in her seventies, and there I was candidly trying to get her vote, sitting in her front from sipping a mug of tea. And she said to me, “How can you, who weren’t brought up in this area, possibly understand the lives of people here, their hopes and their struggles?” It was the right question, and here is the answer. For me it lies in the values I was brought up with. You see in my house it was my mum that taught me these values. About the importance of reaching out a listening to people, of understanding their hopes and their struggles. She is the most patient, generous person I have met in my whole life. And she taught me never to be contemptuous of others, never to be dismissive of their struggle. Now she was teaching me a lesson of life. And some people will say, ah yeah but you have to leave decency behind when it comes to politics. Well I say they are wrong, because only if you reach out and listen can you do the most important thing a leader can do, the most important qualification in my view for being Prime Minister. Only then will you have the ability to walk in the shoes of others and know who to fight for, whoever your opponent, however powerful they are, guided by the only thing that matters: your sense of what is right. This is what I believe, this is where I stand, this is the leadership Britain needs.

    And when I think about who we need to fight for I think about all the people I have met over the last year. I think of the people Britain and their enormous and extraordinary spirit. I think of our troops, serving so bravely all around the world. Let us pay tribute to them today. You know I have seen in Afghanistan those young men and women, young men and women who are young enough to be my son or daughter serving our country, and it is a truly humbling experience. And the events of the last few days in Kenya remind us of the importance of being ever-vigilant against terrorism at home and around the world. I think of the brave men and women of our police force, who serve with so little credit each and every day for our country. Let us thank them for what they do.

    And then I think of all the people I have met over the last year. During the local election campaign I did something unusual. I went to town centres, market squares and high streets and I stood on a pallet – not a soapbox, but a pallet. And I talked to people about their lives. I remember this town meeting I had in Cleverly. It was just coming to the end of the meeting and this bloke wandered up. He was incredibly angry. It’s a family show so I won’t exactly repeat what he said. He was so angry he wouldn’t give me his name, but he did tell me his story about how he spent the last ten years looking after his disabled wife, and then another four years looking for a job and not finding one. He was angry about immigration and some people in the crowd booed him. But actually he wasn’t prejudiced, he just felt the economy didn’t work for him. And then I think about the two market traders I met in Chesterfield, standing by their stalls, out in all weathers, working all hours, and they said look this country just doesn’t seem to be rewarding our hard work and effort. There seem to be some people getting something for nothing. This society is losing touch with our values. And then I think about this beautiful sunny spring day I spent in Lincoln. And the face in the crowd, this young woman who said she was an ambulance controller. So proud to be working for our National Health Service. And so proud too of her young son. Because she was a single parent, nineteen years old, and what she said to me was, “Why does everybody portray me as a burden on the system? I am not a burden on the system, I am going out, I am doing the right thing for the country, why doesn’t anyone listen to my voice?” And then I think about this scaffolder I met just around the corner from where I live. I was just coming back from a local café I’d been at. He stopped in me the street, he said to me, “Where’s your bodyguard?” I said I don’t have one, but that’s another story. He told me his story. And what he said to me was “look, I go out, I do the work, I go all around the country, again out in all weathers, I earn a decent wage, but I still can’t make ends meet”. A nd he said to me, “Is anyone ever going to do anything about those gas and electric bills that just go up and up, faster than I can earn a living?” He wanted someone to fight for him. Now if you listen to these stories – four of millions of the stories of our country – and you have your own, and your friends and family, what do you learn? All of these people love Britain, they embody its great spirit, but they all believe that Britain can do better than this. Today I say to them and millions of others you’re right, Britain can do better than this, Britain must do better than this, Britain will do better than this with a government that fights for you.

    But for Britain to do better than this we’ve got to understand why we got here, why things are so tough at the moment even while they tell you there is a recovery and why unless we put things right it will only be a recovery for the few. Now what I’m about to tell you is the most important thing I’m going to say today about what needs to change about our country. For generations in Britain when the economy grew the majority got better off. And then somewhere along the way that vital link between the growing wealth of the country and your family finances was broken. This is, this goes beyond one party or one government. It is more important to you than which party is in power, even more important than that. You see, when I was growing up in the 1980s, I saw the benefits of growing prosperity, people able to buy a house, a car, even a second car, go on a foreign holiday their grandparents would never have dreamed of. Not spend all their hours at work, able to spend time with kids, not working all the hours that God sends, have a secure pension in retirement and also believe that their kids would have a better life than them. That feels a long way away from where Britain is today doesn’t it and that is because it is. You see, somewhere along the way that link got broken. They used to say a rising tide lifts all boats, now the rising tide just seems to lift the yachts. Now I say this to the people of Britain. If I were you I wouldn’t even take a second look at a political party unless they make this their central defining purpose because your future depends on it. Your children’s future depends on it. Britain’s future depends on it. I say we are Britain we can do better than this.

    Now I have got a question for you ladies and gentlemen, do the Tories get it?

    Oh come on, I didn’t hear you, do the Tories get it?

    OK that is better. They don’t get it do they. I want to say this. I understand why three and a half years ago some people might have thought that David Cameron did get it and that is why people voted for him at the last general election. But they voted for change and I don’t believe they got the change that they were voting for. Let me just explain it this way: next week we are going to see David Cameron resuming his lap of honour for how brilliantly he’s done as Prime Minister. Claiming credit for his enormous achievements, how he has saved the economy as they put it. No doubt he’ll even be taking off his shirt and flinging it into the crowd expecting adoration from the British people like he did recently on holiday and maybe I should make this promise while I’m about it, if I become Prime Minister I won’t take my shirt off in public, I mean it is just not necessary is it. I’ll try and keep the promise. Anyway, back to David Cameron, so he is going on this lap of honour, everything is brilliant, he’s saved the economy, George Osborne, he deserves the garlands as well, you know, aren’t they brilliant. Come on. The slowest recovery in one hundred years. One million young people looking for work. More people on record working part-time who want full time work. More people than for a generation out of work for longer. The longest fall in living standards since 1870. That is not worthy of a lap of honour. That is worthy of a lap of shame and that is the record of this government.

    He does have one record though but I don’t think it credits a lap of honour. He has been Prime Minister for 39 months and in 38 of those months wages have risen more slowly than prices. That means your living standards falling year, after year, after year. So in 2015 you’ll be asking am I better off now than I was five years ago? And we already know the answer for millions of families will be no. You’ve made the sacrifices, but you haven’t got the rewards. You were the first into the recession but you are the last one out. Now of course it would have taken time to recover from the global financial crisis whoever was in power. But when these Tories tell you that the pain will be worth the gain, don’t believe them. They can’t solve the cost of living crisis and here is why. The cost of living crisis isn’t an accident of David Cameron’s economic policy it is in his economic policy. Let me explain why. You see he believes in this thing called the global race, but what he doesn’t tell you is that he thinks for Britain to win the global race you have to lose, lower wages, worse terms and conditions, fewer rights at work. But Britain can’t win a race for the lowest wages against countries where wages rates are pennies an hour and the more we try the worse things will get for you. Britain can’t win a race for the fewest rights at work against the sweat shops of the world and the more we try the worse things will get for you. And Britain can’t win a race for the lowest skilled jobs against countries where kids leave school at the age of 11. And the more we try the worse things will get for you. It is a race to the bottom. Britain cannot and should not win that race.

    You see it is not the low achievements of these Tories that really gets me. That is bad enough. It is their low aspirations; it is their low aspirations for you. It is their low aspirations for Britain but their high hopes for those at the top. The City bonuses are back. Up 82% in April alone thanks to the millionaire’s tax cut. So when they tell you the economy is healing, that everything is fixed, just remember, they are not talking about your life, they are talking about their friends at the top. That is who they are talking about; it is high hopes for them. And every so often you know the mask slips doesn’t it. The other day a man they call Lord Howell, he was I think their advisor on fracking at one point… There is nothing funny about that. He said it was wrong to frack in some areas but it was ok in others, it was ok in the North East of England because he said, and I quote ‘it was full of desolate and uninhabited areas.’ In one casual aside dismissing one whole region of the country. Let’s tell these Tories about the North East of England and every other part of Britain. People go out to work. They love their kids. They bring up their families. They care for their neighbours. They look out for each other. They are proud of their communities. They are proud of their communities. They hope for the future. The Tories call them inhabitants of desolate areas. We call them our friends, our neighbours, the heroes of our country. They are fed up of a government that doesn’t understand their lives and a Prime Minister who cannot walk in their shoes. We are Britain, we are better than this.

    Now, to make Britain better we have got to win a race to the top, not a race to the bottom. A race to the top which means that other countries will buy our goods the companies will come and invest here and that will create the wealth and jobs we need for the future but we are not going to be able to do it easily. It is going to be tough and let me just say this friends. You think opposition is tough, you should try government. It is going to be tough; it is not going to be easy. And I’m not going to stand here today and pretend to you it is. We are going to have to stick to strict spending limits to get the deficit down. We are not going to be able to spend money we don’t have and frankly if I told you we were going to you wouldn’t believe me, the country wouldn’t believe me and they would be right not to believe me. But we can make a difference. We can win the race to the top and let me tell you how. It is about the jobs we create, it is about the businesses we support, it is about the talents we nurture, it is about the wages we earn and it is about the vested interests that we take on. Let me start with the jobs of the future.

    The environment is a passion of mine because when I think about my two kids who are 2 and 4 at the moment and not talking that much about the environment, more interested in The Octonauts. There’s a plug. In 20 years’ time they’ll say to me ‘were you the last generation not to get climate change or the first generation to get it?’ That is the question they’ll be asking. But it is not just about environmental care. It is also about the jobs we create in the future. You see some people say, including George Osborne, that we can’t afford to have environmental at a time like this. He is dead wrong. We can’t afford not to have an environmental commitment at a time like this. That is why Labour will have a world leading commitment in government to take all of the carbon out of our energy by 2030. A route map to one million new green jobs in our country. That is how we win the race to the top. And to win that race to the top we have also got to do something else, we’ve got to support the businesses of the future. Now many of the new jobs in the future will come from a large number of small businesses not a small number of large businesses. And this is really important. If you think 15 years ahead, the rate of change and dynamism is so great that most of the new jobs that will be being done will be by companies that don’t yet exist. Now that changes the priorities for government.

    When this government came to office, since they came to office they cut taxes for large business by £6 billion but raised taxes on small businesses. Now I don’t think that is the right priority. Yes we need a competitive tax regime for large businesses but frankly they’ve short-changed small business and I’m going to put it right. If Labour wins power in 2015 we will use the money that this government would use to cut taxes for 80,000 large businesses to cut business rates for 1.5 million businesses across our country. That is the way we win the race to the top. One Nation Labour. The party of small business. Cutting small business rates when we come to office in 2015 and freezing them the next year benefitting businesses by at least £450 a year. That is how we win the race for the top friends, and to win that race to the top we’ve also got to nurture the talents of the next generation. The skills of people. There are so many brilliant businesses in our country who provide amazing training for the workforce, but look, we have got to face facts, leading businesses say this to me too which is there aren’t enough of them and we have got to work to change that so we will say if you want a major government contract you must provide apprenticeships for the next generation. And we’ll also say to companies doing the right thing, training their workforce that they will have the power to call time on free-riding by competitors who refuse to do the same. That’s how we win the race to the top friends.

    It’s not just business that has to accept responsibility though, it’s young people. We have a tragedy in this country. Hundreds of thousands of young people who leave school and end up on the dole. We’ve got this word for it haven’t we? NEET: Not in education, employment or training. Behind that short word is a tragedy of hundreds of thousands of wasted lives. If the school system fails our young people they shouldn’t be ending up on benefits. They should be ending up in education or training so they can get back on the road to a proper career. That requires them to accept responsibility but it requires government too to accept our responsibilities for the next generation in Britain, and that’s what we’ll do.

    But to win the race to the top we’ve also got to take advantage of the talents of Britain’s 12 million parents. Justine and I had one of the great privileges in any parent’s life this year, which was taking our son Daniel to his first day at school. He was nervous at first, but actually pretty soon he started having fun; it’s a bit like being leader of the Labour Party really. Well it’s not exactly like being leader of the Labour Party. But look, for so many parents in this country the demands of the daily school run, combined with their job are like their very own daily assault course and we’ve got to understand that. Because we can’t win the race to the top with stressed out parents and family life under strain – we’ve got to change that.

    In the last century, schools stayed open till mid-afternoon and that was okay back then because one parent usually stayed at home. But it’s not okay now: that’s why we want every primary school in Britain to have the breakfast clubs and after school care that parents need and that’s what the next Labour government will do.

    To win the race to the top we’ve also got to deal with the issue of low pay. The National Minimum Wage, one of the last Labour government’s proudest achievements, friends. But we have to face facts: there are millions of people in this country going out to work, coming home at night, unable to afford to bring up their families. I just think that’s wrong in one of the richest countries in the world. The next Labour government must write the next chapter in dealing with the scourge of low pay in this country. And to do that though, we’ve got to learn lessons from the way the minimum wage came in, because it was about business and working people, business and unions working together in the right way so we set the minimum wage at the right level and we’ve got to do the same again. The minimum wage has been falling in value and we’ve got to do something about it.

    There are some sectors, and I don’t often say anything nice about the banks but I will today, there are some sectors which actually can afford to pay higher wages, and some of them are – a living wage in some of the banks. So we’ve got to look at whether there are some sectors where we can afford a higher minimum but we’ve got to do it on the right basis – business and working people working together. That’s what we will do: the next Labour government will strengthen the minimum wage to make work pay for millions in our country. That’s how we win the race to the top.

    And to win that race to the top we’ve got to call a halt to the race to the bottom, between workers already here and workers coming here. I’m the son of two immigrant parents. I’m proud of the welcome Britain gave me and my family, and we’ve always welcomed people who work, contribute and are part of our community. Let me say this, if people want a party that will cut itself off from the rest of the world, then let me say squarely: Labour is not your party. But if people want a party that will set the right rules for working people then Labour is your party, the only party that will do it. Employers not paying the minimum wage and government turning a blind eye – it’s a race to the bottom; not under my government. Recruitment agencies hiring only from overseas – it’s a race to the bottom; not under my government. Shady gang masters exploiting people in industries from constructing to food processing – it’s a race to the bottom; not under my government. Rogue landlords, putting 15 people in tied housing – it’s a race to the bottom; not under my government. And our country, sending out a message to the world that if you need to engage in shady employment practices, then Britain is open for businesses? It’s a race to the bottom; not under my government. And in case anyone asks whether this is pandering to prejudice, let’s tell them, it isn’t. It’s where Labour has always stood – countering exploitation, whoever it affects, wherever they come from. We’ve never believed in a race to the bottom, we’ve always believed in a race to the top, that is our party.

    And to win the race to the top we’ve also got to take on the vested interests that hold our economy back. In the 1990s we committed to a dynamic market economy. Think of those words: ‘dynamic, ‘market’, ‘economy’. And then think about this, what happens when competition fails? What happens when it just fails again and again and again? Then government has to act. Train companies that put the daily commute out of reach. Payday lenders who force people into unpayable debt. Gas and electric companies that put prices up and up and up. It’s not good for an economy. It’s not a dynamic market economy when one section of society does so well at the expense of others. It’s bad for families, it’s bad for business and it’s bad for Britain too.

    Now some people will just blame the companies but actually I don’t think that’s where the blame lies. I think it lies with government. I think it lies with government for not having had the strength to take this on. Not having stood up to the powerful interests. Not having the strength to stand up to the strong.

    Take the gas and electricity companies. We need successful energy companies, in Britain. We need them to invest for the future. But you need to get a fair deal and frankly, there will never be public consent for that investment unless you do get a fair deal. And the system is broken and we are going to fix it.

    If we win the election 2015 the next Labour government will freeze gas and electricity prices until the start of 2017. Your bills will not rise. It will benefit millions of families and millions of businesses. That’s what I mean by a government that fights for you. That’s what I mean when I say Britain can do better than this.

    Now the companies aren’t going to like this because it will cost them more but they have been overcharging people for too long because of a market that doesn’t work. It’s time to reset the market. So we will pass legislation in our first year in office to do that, and have a regulator that will genuinely be on the customers’ side but also enable the investment we need. That’s how Britain will do better than this.

    So, making Britain better than this starts with our economy – your economic success as a foundation for Britain’s economic success. But it doesn’t just stop there it goes to our society as well. I told you earlier on about those market traders in Chesterfield and how they felt that society had lost touch with their values. I think what they were really saying was this: that they put in huge hard work and effort, they bring up their kids in the right way and they just feel that their kids are going to have a worse life than them. And nowhere is that more true than when it comes to renting or buying a home.

    There are 9 million people in this country renting a home, many of whom who would want to buy. 9 million people – we don’t just have a cost of living crisis, we have a housing crisis too. In 2010 when we left office there was a problem. There were one million too few homes in Britain. If we carry on as we are, by 2020 there will be two million too few homes in Britain. That is the equivalent of two cities the size of Birmingham. We’ve got to do something about it and the next Labour government will. So we’ll say to private developers, you can’t just sit on land and refuse to build. We will give them a very clear message – either use the land or lose the land, that is what the next Labour government will do.

    We’ll say to local authorities that they have a right to grow, and neighbouring authorities can’t just stop them. We’ll identify new towns and garden cities and we’ll have a clear aim that by the end of the parliament Britain will be building 200,000 homes a year, more than at any time in a generation. That’s how we make Britain better than this.

    And nowhere do we need to put the values of the British people back at the heart of our country more than in our National Health Service, the greatest institution of our country. You know I had a letter a couple of months back from a 17 year old girl. She was suffering from depression and anxiety and she told me a heart-breaking story about how she had ended up in hospital for 10 weeks. Mental health is a truly one nation problem. It covers rich and poor, North and South, young and old alike and let’s be frank friends, in the privacy of this room; we’ve swept it under the carpet for too long. It’s a bit of a British thing isn’t it; we don’t like to talk about it. If you’ve got a bad back or if you’re suffering from cancer you can talk abbot it but if you’ve got depression or anxiety you don’t want to talk about it because somehow it doesn’t seem right – we’ve got to change that. It’s an afterthought in our National Health Service.

    And here’s a really interesting thing – so you might say, it’s going to be really tough times Ed, you told us that before. You said there would be really difficult decisions in government, and that’s true, so how are you going to make it work? Well here’s the thing, the 17-year-old said in that letter, look if someone had actually identified the problem when it started three years earlier I wouldn’t have ended up in hospital. I wouldn’t have ended up costing the state thousands of pounds and the anguish that I had. So it’s about that early identification and talking about this issue.

    And if it’s true of mental health, it’s true in an even bigger way about care for the elderly. There’s so much more our country could be doing for our grandmas and granddads, mum and dads, nuclease and aunts. And it’s the same story. Just putting a £50 grab rail in the home stops somebody falling over, prevents them ending up in hospital with the needless agony, and all of the money that it costs. The 1945 Labour government, in really tough times, raised its sights and created the National Health Service. I want the next Labour government to do the same, even in tough times, to raise our sights about what the health service can achieve, bringing together physical health, mental health, and the care needs of the elderly: a true integrated National Health Service. That’s the business of the future.

    But we don’t just need to improve the health service, friends; we’ve got to rescue it from these Tories.

    And the Liberals too. Now look, before the election, I remember the speeches by David Cameron. I remember one where he said the three most important letters to him were NHS. Well he has got a funny way of showing it, hasn’t he? And when they came to office, they were still saying how brilliant was in the health service, how the health service was doing great things and the doctors and nurses and so on. Now have you noticed they have changed their tune recently? Suddenly they are saying how bad everything is in the NHS. Now the vast majority of doctors and nurses do a fantastic job. Sometimes things go wrong. And when they do, we should be the first people to say so. But hear me on this. The reason David Cameron is running down the NHS is not because the doctors and nurses aren’t doing as good a job as they were before. It is because they have come to a realisation that the health service is getting worse on their watch and they are desperately thrashing around trying to find someone else to blame. Blame the doctors, blame the nurses, blame the last Labour government. That is what they are doing. Well let me tell you about the record of the last Labour government. When we came to office there were waiting time targets of 18 months that were not being met, when we left office there were waiting time targets of 18 weeks that were being met. When we came to office there was an annual winter A&E crisis, when we left office the people had A&E services they could rely on. When we came to office there were fewer doctors and nurses, we when left office more doctors and nurses than ever before. And when we came to office people said well the health service, it was a good idea in previous generations but I don’t really believe it will be there in the next, and we left office with the highest public satisfaction in the history of the health services. Yes friends, we did rescue the National Health Service. So when you hear David Cameron casting around for someone to blame for what is happening in the NHS just remember it is not complicated, it’s simple, it’s as simple as ABC: when it comes to blame, it is ‘Anyone But Cameron’. We know who is responsible, the top-down reorganisation that nobody voted for and nobody wanted, the abolition of NHS Direct, the cuts to social care, the fragmentation of services. We know who is responsible for thousands of fewer nurses, we know who is responsible not just for an annual A&E crisis, but an A&E crisis for all seasons. It is this Prime Minister who is responsible. So friends it is the same old story, we rescue the NHS, they wreck the NHS and we have to rescue it all over again. And that is what the next Labour government will do.

    Right, I have explained to you how we can make Britain better by changing our economy and changing our society, and now I want to talk about how we change our politics. And here is the bit you have all been looking forward to: party reform. Now look let me say to you, change is difficult, change is uncomfortable. And I understand why people are uncomfortable about some of the changes, but I just want to explain to you why I think it is so important. With all of the forces ranged against us, we can’t just be a party of 200,000 people. We have got to be a party of 500,000, 600,000, or many more. And I am optimistic enough – some might say idealistic enough – to believe that is possible. And the reason it is possible in our party is the unique link we have with the trade unions. The unique link. I don’t want to end that link, I want to mend that link. And I want to hear the voices of individual working people in our party, louder than before. Because you see, think about our history. It is many of you who have been telling us that actually we haven’t been rooted enough in the workplaces of our country. And that is what I want to change. And that is the point of my reforms. See my reforms are about hearing the voices of people from call centre workers to construction workers, from people with small businesses to people working in supermarkets at the heart of our party. Because you see it is about my view of politics. Leaders matter, of course they do, leadership matters, but in the end political change happens because people make it happen. And you can’t be a party that properly fights for working people unless you have working people at the core of your party, up and down this country. That is the point of my reforms. And I want to work with you to make them happen so that we can make ourselves a mass-membership party. Friends, let’s make ourselves truly the people’s party once again.

    But to change our politics we have got to a lot more than that. We have got to hear the voices of people that haven’t been heard for a long time. I think about our young people, their talent, their energy, their voices. The voices of young people demanding a job, the voices of young people who demand that we shoulder and don’t shirk our responsibilities to the environment. The voices of gay and lesbian young people who led the fight and won the battle for equal marriage in Britain. And the voices of young people, particularly young women, who say in 2013 the battle for equality is not won. You see they are not satisfied that 33% of Labour MPs are women, they want it to be 50% and they are right. They are not satisfied that 40 years after the Equal Pay Act, we still do not have equal pay for work of equal value in this country. They are not satisfied and they are right. And they are not satisfied that in Britain in 2013, women are still subject to violence, harassment, and everyday sexism. They are not satisfied and they are right. Friends, let’s give a voice to these young people in our party. And let’s give a voice to these young people in our democracy, let’s give the vote to 16 and 17 year olds and make them part of our democracy.

    But you know we have got to win the battle for perhaps the most important institution of all, our United Kingdom. Friends, devolution works. Carwyn Jones, our brilliant First Minister of Wales, he is showing devolution works. And let’s praise the leadership of our Scottish Joanne Lamont for the brilliant job she is doing against Alex Salmond. Now that referendum on September the 18th 2014, it is going to be conducted on the basis of fact and figures and arguments and counterarguments, but I have a story I want to tell you which I think says even more. It’s the story of Cathy Murphy. Cathy Murphy lives in Glasgow, she worked in the local supermarket. In 2010, Cathy was diagnosed with a serious heart problem, but she came to Labour conference nonetheless in 2011 as a delegate. She fell seriously ill. Her family were called down from Glasgow. The doctors said to her that to save her life they’d have to give her a very long and very risky operation. She had that operation a few weeks later at the world-leading Liverpool Broadgreen hospital. Cathy pulled through. She went back to Glasgow some weeks later. She comes back down to Liverpool every six months for her check-up. Now she said to me the nurses and doctors don’t ask whether she is English or Scottish, the hospital doesn’t care where she lives. They care about her because she is Scottish and British, a citizen of our United Kingdom. Friends, Cathy is with us today, back as a delegate. Where is she? Cathy’s here. Friends, I don’t want Cathy to become a foreigner. Let’s win the battle for the United Kingdom.

    So I have talked to you today about policy and what a Labour government would do, how it would make Britain better and win a race to the top in our economy, put our society back in touch with people’s values and change our politics so it lets new voices in. But the next election isn’t just going to be about policy. It is going to be about how we lead and the character we show. I have got a message for the Tories today: if they want to have a debate about leadership and character, be my guest. And if you want to know the difference between me and David Cameron, here’s an easy way to remember it. When it was Murdoch versus the McCanns, he took the side of Murdoch. When it was the tobacco lobby versus the cancer charities, he took the side of the tobacco lobby. When it was the millionaires who wanted a tax cut versus people paying the bedroom tax, he took the side of the millionaires. Come to think of it, here is an even easier way to remember it: David Cameron was the Prime Minister who introduced the bedroom tax, I’ll be the Prime Minister who repeals the bedroom tax.

    You see here is the thing about David Cameron. He may be strong at standing up to the weak, but he is always weak when it comes to standing up against the strong. That is the difference between me and David Cameron, so let’s have that debate about leadership and character, and I relish that debate. And we know what we are going to see from these Tories between now and the general election, it is the lowest form of politics, it is divide and rule. People on benefits versus those in work. People in unions against those outside union. People in the private sector versus those in the public sector. People in the north against those in the south. It is the worst form of politics. Like sending vans into areas of Britain where people’s mums and granddads have lived for years, generations, and telling people to go home. I say we are Britain, we are better than this. Telling anyone who’s looking for a job that they are a scrounger. However hard they are looking, even if the work is not available. I say we are Britain we are better than this. So come on. So David Cameron I have got a message for you. You can tell your Lynton Crosby, it might work elsewhere, it won’t work here. We’re Britain, we’re better than this.

    Friends, the easy path for politics is to divide, that’s the easy part. You need to know this about me, I believe in seeing the best in people, not the worst. That’s what I am about. That’s how we create One Nation. That’s how we make Britain better than this. That’s how we have a government that fights for you.

    Now, it is going to be a big fight between now and the general election. Prepare yourself for that fight. But when you think about that fight, don’t think about our party, think about our country. I don’t want to win this fight for Labour; I want to win it for Britain. And just remember this, throughout our history, when the voices of hope have been ranged against the voices of fear, the voices of hope have won through. Those who said at the dawn of the industrial revolution that working people needed the vote and they wouldn’t wait – they knew Britain could be better than this, and we were. Those that said, at the birth of a new century, those who said at the birth of a new century that working people needed a party to fight for them and the old order wouldn’t do – they knew Britain could be better than this, and we were. Those who said at our darkest hour in the Second World War that Britain needed to rebuild after the war and said ‘never again’, they knew Bri tain could be better than this, and we did. Those who said, as the 20th Century grew old, that the battle for equality was still young; they knew Britain could do better than this, and we did.

    And so now it falls to us, to build One Nation, a country for all, a Britain we rebuild together. Britain’s best days lie ahead. Britain can do better than this. We’re Britain, we’re better than this. I’ll lead a government that fights for you.

  • Ed Miliband – 2013 Speech to the TUC

    edmiliband

    Below is the text of the speech made by the Leader of the Opposition, Ed Miliband, to the TUC Conference in Bournemouth on 10th September 2013.

    Frances, thank you so much for that introduction.

    And let me pay tribute to you, as the first female General Secretary of the TUC, for the fantastic job that you do.

    But I am sure you would agree that it would be wrong not to also remember those who did so much before you.

    And I want to pick out one particular individual.

    In a speech I remember reading, he argued that the problem of British politics had been that the “voices of Manchester, Birmingham, Leeds, all the other important centres of … industry have been unheard.”

    He went further.

    He praised that trade union march through the centre of London.

    He talked evocatively of its “immense organisation, with marshals and sub-marshals, scarves, banners and an exhibition of almost perfect military discipline.”

    Yes, I am talking, believe it or not, about:

    The Conservative Prime Minister of 1867.

    The Fourteenth Earl of Derby.

    The longest ever serving leader of the Conservative Party.

    The man who first legislated to allow trade unions in this country.

    His real name: Edward Stanley.

    Or as he would be called today:

    Red Ed.

    I tell this story to make a serious point.

    The Earl of Derby and Benjamin Disraeli who succeeded him were One Nation Conservatives.

    They knew the Conservative Party had to represent the whole country.

    They couldn’t write off whole swathes of people if they were to be worthy of governing Britain.

    It seems extraordinary to have to even talk about this historical lesson.

    But I do.

    We have a Prime Minister who writes you and your members off.

    Who doesn’t just write you off, but oozes contempt for you from every pore.

    What does he say about you?

    He says the trade union movement is a “threat to our economy”.

    Back to the enemy within.

    Six and a half million people in Britain.

    Who teach our children.

    Who look after the sick.

    Who care for the elderly.

    Who build our homes.

    Who keep our shops open morning, noon and night.

    They’re not the enemy within.

    They’re the people who make Britain what it is.

    How dare he?

    How dare he insult people – members of trade unions – as he does?

    How dare he write off whole sections of our society?

    The Earl of Derby, Benjamin Disraeli, and other One Nation Conservatives, would be turning in their graves if they could hear the nasty, divisive, small-minded rhetoric of the leader of their once great party.

    But friends, just remember this.

    We know from recent experience what happens to political leaders who write off whole sections of a country.

    That’s what Mitt Romney did when he talked about the 47 per cent of people who would never vote for him.

    And look what happened to him.

    They didn’t.

    Friends, my job is to make sure that’s what happens to David Cameron as well.

    A One Nation Party.

    Unlike Mr Cameron, I am a One Nation politician.

    And One Nation is about governing for the whole country.

    To do this we are going have to build a new kind of Labour Party.

    A new relationship with individual trade union members.

    Some people ask: what’s wrong with the current system?

    Let me tell them: we have three million working men and women affiliated to our party.

    But the vast majority play no role in our party.

    They are affiliated in name only.

    That wasn’t the vision of the founders of our party.

    I don’t think it’s your vision either.

    And it’s certainly not my vision.

    That’s why I want to make each and every affiliated trade union member a real part of their local party.

    Making a real choice to be a part of our party.

    So they can have a real voice in it.

    And why is that such an exciting idea?

    Because it means we could become a Labour party not of 200,000 people, but 500,000 or many more.

    A party rooted every kind of workplace in the country.

    A party rooted in every community in the country.

    A genuine living, breathing movement.

    Of course, it is a massive challenge.

    It will be a massive challenge for the Labour Party to reach out to your members in a way that we have not done for many years and persuade them to be part of what we do.

    And like anything that is hard it is a risk.

    But the bigger risk is just saying let’s do it as we have always done it.

    It is you who have been telling me year after year about a politics that is detached from the lives of working people.

    That’s why we have to have the courage to change.

    I respect those who worry about change.

    I understand.

    But I disagree.

    It is the right thing to do.

    We can change.

    We must change.

    And I am absolutely determined this change will happen.

    It is the only way we can build a One Nation party.

    So we can build a One Nation country.

    And most importantly a One Nation economy, one that works for all working people, not just a few at the top.

    Now at the moment you hear the Tories congratulating themselves on the recovery.

    George Osborne was at it again yesterday.

    And it is welcome that the economy is growing.

    But we have to ask: “whose recovery is it anyway”?

    The million young people looking for work.

    It is not their recovery.

    The long-term unemployed, higher than at any time for a generation.

    It is not their recovery.

    The 1.4 million people, more than ever before, desperate for full-time work but only able to get part-time work.

    It is not their recovery.

    And all the millions of people who are seeing their living standards falling year on year under this government.

    It is not their recovery either.

    Living standards have been falling for longer than at any time since 1870.

    About the time our old friend, the Earl of Derby, left office.

    We know whose recovery it is.

    A recovery for the privileged few in our society.

    The City bonuses are back.

    Up by 82 per cent in April of this year alone.

    Helped along by David Cameron’s millionaire’s tax cut.

    It is a recovery for a few.

    It is an unfair recovery.

    An unequal recovery.

    And an unequal recovery won’t be a stable recovery.

    It won’t be built to last.

    The only way we can have a durable recovery is with an economy that works for all working people.

    Because what makes an economy succeed is not just a few people at the top, but the forgotten wealth creators.

    The people who put in the hours, do the work, do two jobs.

    Who get up before George Osborne’s curtains are open in the morning and come back at night well after they have closed.

    They’re the people who make our economy strong.

    They’re the people we have to support to make a recovery that lasts.

    We know life won’t be easy under a Labour government.

    We’ll have to stick to strict spending limits.

    I know that means you ask:

    What do we have to say to our members about what would be different under a Labour government than a Tory government?

    The answer is we’d make different choices in pursuit of a fundamentally different vision of our economy.

    One that works for all working people, not just a few.

    These different choices start with young people.

    On day one as Prime Minister, I would be mobilising all of Britain’s businesses behind the idea of getting our young people back to work.

    If we were in government now, we would be saying to every young person out of work for more than a year, we will offer a compulsory jobs guarantee, funded by a tax on the bankers’ bonuses, for a job with proper training, paying at least the minimum wage.

    A Labour government would get our young people working again.

    And we need to get the best out of all of our young people.

    It is time to end the snobbery in our country that says that university is always best and apprenticeships second best.

    That’s why the next Labour government will get proper careers and qualifications for that forgotten 50 per cent who don’t go to university.

    And we’ll say to any business: if you want a major government contract, you must provide apprenticeships to the next generation.

    And to get a recovery that works for working people, we need proper investment in the future too.

    Britain is currently 159th in the international league table of investment.

    We’re not going to succeed in the future with a record like that.

    Turning it round means changing our banking system.

    We’ve still got businesses that serve our banks rather than banks that serve our businesses.

    So we would have a new British Investment Bank to get finance to small businesses.

    And regional banks too.

    Banks that are legally obliged to invest in their region of the country and their region alone.

    Not chasing a quick profit in the City of London.

    But investment in the future doesn’t just come from our banks.

    It needs to come from the government too.

    I believe the way we get the best companies to come here is not on the basis of low skills and low wages.

    But high skills and a decent infrastructure.

    So we’d be doing something that hasn’t been done for decades.

    Investing properly in housing in this country.

    So, building a recovery that can last, one that works for working people and not just a few at the top, needs different choices on young people, on jobs, on skills, on investment and on infrastructure.

    But it means something else too.

    The Tories really do believe we get success through a few at the top.

    So they say to get more out of the very wealthiest, you give them a tax cut.

    But you get more out of working people, if you make them feel more insecure.

    I disagree.

    We can never build a recovery works for all, unless working people feel confident and secure at work.

    That’s what other countries know.

    And I think that’s what the British people know too.

    Now I recognise, as do you, that both workers and businesses need flexibility.

    It is how you unions and employers worked together to keep people working even during the most difficult moments of the recession.

    Putting jobs above pay rises.

    Working fewer hours in order to protect employment.

    Flexibility yes.

    Exploitation no.

    And nowhere is that more true than when it comes to zero hours contracts.

    Of course, there are some kinds of these contracts which are useful.

    For locum doctors.

    Or supply teachers at schools.

    Or sometimes, young people working in bars.

    But you and I know that zero hours contracts have been terribly misused.

    I had the privilege last week of speaking to some people working on zero hours contracts.

    One in particular in the care sector who said “You can’t build your life on what you get from a zero hours contract”.

    Another told me of her experience: 23 years on a proper, regular contract and now had the nightmare of 2 years on a zero hours contract.

    As she said, just imagine if you didn’t know from one week to the next whether your wages were going to halve.

    That is the reality for so many people on zero hours contracts.

    They don’t know how many hours they’re going to do from one week to the next.

    They don’t know how much they’re going to be paid.

    They have no security.

    All of the risks in the economy which we used to believe should be fairly shared between employers and working people.

    Now placed on the individual worker alone.

    That’s why the worst of these practices owe more to the Victorian era than they do to the kind of workplace we should have in the 21st century.

    It’s wrong.

    And the next Labour government will put things right.

    We’ll ban zero hours contracts which require workers to work exclusively for one business.

    We’ll stop zero hours contracts which require workers to be on call all day without any guarantee of work.

    And we’ll end zero hours contracts where workers are working regular hours but are denied a regular contract.

    Because I am determined to build an economy that works for working people.

    And that means security, not insecurity at work.

    Because that is how our country will succeed.

    Let me end by saying this.

    The next election is a high stakes election.

    High stakes for your members.

    High stakes for working people.

    High stakes for our country.

    We’re in the fourth year of this government.

    We know who they stand for.

    A privileged few at the top.

    We know that they will never create an economy that works for working people.

    It is not what they believe.

    We know how they’ll try to divide our country.

    For political advantage.

    I stand for a different and better way forward for our country.

    A vision that draws on the best of our traditions.

    I think about the 1945 government.

    We didn’t lower our sights in the face of difficulty.

    We raised them.

    That government was a One Nation government.

    It listened to the voices of all.

    Used the talents of all.

    Built a country fit for all.

    My vision: a One Nation Britain.

    Let’s rebuild that country together.

  • Ed Miliband – 2013 Speech to Women in Advertising and Communications Conference

    edmiliband

    Below is the text of the speech made by the Leader of the Opposition, Ed Miliband, to the Women in Advertising and Communications Conference in London on 28th June 2013.

    I am delighted to be here tonight.

    I am hugely proud to join the illustrious list of politicians who have spoken to you during your extraordinary history.

    David Lloyd George

    Jennie Lee

    Stanley Baldwin

    And it is an extraordinary tribute to the history and influence of your organisation that you are still going strong in your 90th year.

    Nine months ago at the Labour party Conference I set out the idea of One Nation.

    Not a Labour vision or a Conservative one.

    But a British one.

    Benjamin Disraeli, the great Conservative Prime Minister, was probably first to use the idea in the 19th century.

    But it was also used by Labour after 1945 as Britain rebuilt after the War.

    Its essence is that the way a country succeeds is by everyone playing their part.

    For me, it is rooted in something that drives my politics: the cause of equality.

    Not mathematical equality for every person.

    But a passionate belief in equal opportunity for all.

    And in the dangers of a society becoming too unequal.

    About citizens living separate lives from one another.

    Tonight I want to talk—appropriately I hope to this group— about the equality of women and men.

    We have some of the most senior people in advertising and communications here.

    And I believe there are urgent issues we need to address together.

    First, at the heart of a One Nation idea is that we must drive further and faster towards equality for men and women from the shop floor to the boardroom to the cabinet room.

    Second, if we are truly to become a more equal society — not just in numbers but in reality — we must change the structures of our society.

    Third, I want to address a subject which a growing number of people, especially young women, are talking about: the representation of women in our culture, in our national life.

    I want to do that as a Dad, the father of two boys, and not just as a politician.

    Let me start with representation in its most formal sense.

    We should celebrate progress but note how far we have to go.

    When Harriet Harman, my Deputy, entered Parliament, just 3% of Labour MPs were women.

    Today it is 33%.

    And my Shadow Cabinet is now 40% women.

    That has changed politics.

    From childcare to parental leave to women’s employment – women MPs have put these issues centre stage.

    Indeed, there are women MPs in Parliament now who would not have been there but for the trail that people like Harriet blazed.

    But I don’t need to remind this audience that there are still enormous problems in the representation of women.

    Even now, all these years after women got the vote, still over three quarters of MPs are men.

    More than four fifths of the Cabinet.

    And as our shadow equalities minister Yvette Cooper has exposed, this government’s chosen cuts have affected women at least three times as hard as men.

    I strongly believe that wouldn’t have happened in a Cabinet with equal female representation.

    And I know we have the same problems in business, the law and other areas too.

    Being here tonight celebrating women in business, it is simply wrong that just 17% of FTSE 100 Directorships are held by women.

    Just 14% of senior judges.

    Just 5% of national newspaper editors.

    Now I know that people have campaigned for decades to put this right.

    But let me be clear: my goal is to get to a Labour cabinet that is 50% women and a Parliament that is like that, and boardrooms and everywhere major decisions are made.

    We can’t be One Nation if the majority of the population is under-represented in every area of public life.

    My second point tonight is that it is not enough to think about how we change representation but leave everything else unchanged.

    The reality is that women are so often at the sharp end of the injustices in our society.

    They are more likely to be carers for the elderly and disabled.

    More likely to have primary responsibility for looking after the children.

    More likely to be low paid, finding that their husbands or partners are working the longest hours in Western Europe.

    Tonight as we enjoy this dinner, there are women all over this city, working as cleaners and carers, doing two jobs or sometimes three, travelling late into the night to get there, and still not earning a living wage.

    And finding themselves working for their poverty.

    So the call of economic and social change is urgent.

    It is what I call a more “responsible capitalism”.

    Because I think our country faces a choice in the years ahead:

    A nasty, brutish, more insecure country.

    Or a country where we recognise that to get the best out of workforce we need big change.

    Reforming our workplace to make it less exploitative.

    Taking further steps to make it more supportive of those who have families.

     

    Dealing with all the many other issues we face: zero hours contracts, exploitation of agency workers, and shockingly low pay.

    These are vital for the cause of equality.

    And for the cause of equality between women and men.

    So if we are truly to be One Nation where everyone can play their part we need change in formal representation, change in the way our economy works, but I believe we need something else.

    We need cultural change if women and men are to realise their full potential.

    Let me read you something that a 15 year old wrote to the Everyday Sexism project.

    She said:

    “I am 15 and I feel that girls my age are under pressure that boys of my age aren’t under … I always feel like if I don’t look a certain way, if boys don’t think I’m sexy or hot then I’ve failed and it doesn’t even matter if I am a doctor or writer, I’ll still feel like nothing.”

    Friends, I think of my two sons, Daniel and Sam.

    They are 4 and 2 years old.

    And I think about the world that they are set to grow up in.

    I think forward a decade, to their teenage years.

    And thinking that decade ahead, I want different messages going out to them than too often go out to teenage boys and girls today.

    Representation is not just about the jobs that people do, it also about how people are seen.

    About the images we have of each other.

    Now, we all know the changes our culture has gone through in recent years.

    But I still believe we face a crisis of representation of women and men in our culture today.

    Greater prominence is given to fantastic role models for women and girls than was true in the past.

    Clare Balding, Doreen Lawrence, J.K. Rowling, Jocelyn Bell Burnell.

    As well as some of you present tonight.

    My kids will grow up with Dora the Explorer as much as my generation did with Dennis the Menace, and that matters.

    The success of Jessica Ennis inspired a generation, just as much as Mo Farah.

    And we are supporting Laura Robson just as much as Andy Murray at Wimbledon.

    And if they both win, they will finally now be rewarded to the same extent too.

    But we would be fooling ourselves if we deny the problems.

    There is a culture of increasingly sexualised images among young people.

    The culture that says that girls will only get on in life, if they live up to the crudest of stereotypes, as that 15 year old wrote.

    The culture where pornographic images, some violent, are available to children at a click on a smartphone or a laptop.

    Like any parent, I worry about this.

    There are things that can be done about that, like safer default settings on our computers.

    But my point tonight is different.

    It puts a greater responsibility on all of us to do what we can to counter these images.

    Schools should offer proper relationship education at all stages to ensure all our children have a proper chance to understand what good loving relationships are about.

    And Schools should always encourage the aspirations of girls and boys.

    And our society should always be promoting real role models of heroic women and their achievements.

    That applies to everything from banknotes to statues around our great city of London.

    When Winston Churchill replaces Elizabeth Fry, everyone who will appear on our banknotes will be a man apart from the Queen, our Head of State.

    What kind of signal does that send?

    I read this week that Jane Austen is “quietly waiting in the wings” to appear on a banknote one day.

    But 100 years on from the great struggle to give women the right to vote, women shouldn’t be “waiting quietly in the wings” for anything.

    This is a small but important symbol of the kind of country we are.

    Why don’t we have one of our great women scientists, like Elizabeth Garrett Anderson, and a suffragette like Emmeline Pankhurst on our banknotes?

    And it applies to the school curriculum too.

    We all know the trouble Michael Gove has had writing a History curriculum.

    He’s on his third go now.

    But he still can’t get it right when it comes to women.

    It seems as if he thinks it is alright to talk about women when you are specifically teaching Women’s History.

    But then to talk almost exclusively about men when you are teaching the rest of History.

    Well I don’t think that’s right.

    The role of women should be taught throughout the History curriculum in our schools.

    And, if I may say so, responsibility applies to broadcasting and communications.

    In broadcasting, it is just wrong that older male broadcasters are seen as distinguished, and older female broadcasters are not seen at all.

    What greater example could there be of double standards.

    And it applies to your world, to advertising.

    That same young woman I talked about earlier, also wrote: “I wish people would think about what pressures they are putting on everyone, not just teenage girls … I wish the people who had real power and control of the images and messages we get fed all day actually thought about what they did for once.”

    Now, of course, you do think about these issues.

    There are great examples where the advertising industry has led the way in displaying 21st century images of men and women.

    Including people in this room.

    And I applaud the creativity, the freshness, the innovation that your industry displays.

    But it does not always do so.

    We all know there are still too many images in our advertising that reflect outdated ideas about the role of men and women, boys and girls.

    There are still too many adverts which do not show the modern world as it is – let alone as it should be.

    Of course, there are limits to what government can do about this.

    But it is something we must to talk about.

    And something which advertisers have a responsibility to address.

    Conclusion

    Let me end with this thought.

    Ninety years ago WACL was founded.

    Just five years after women had got the vote.

    In the 1924 Parliament, there were just eight woman MPs.

    There had never been a woman Cabinet Minister.

    And no thought that there could ever be a woman Prime Minister.

    Mary Wollstonecraft, one of the founders of feminism right back in the eighteenth century, said:

    “In every age there has been a stream of popular opinion that has carried all before it.”

    And what she meant is this:

    If we change the way we think, then we can change the way we are.

    Change has happened not because politicians wanted it to happen.

    But because people made it happen.

    There needs to be political leadership, but as I always say politics is too important simply to be left to politicians.

    What excites me about this debate, about the equality between men and women, is that there is a new wave of young women, with high expectations of what this society should offer.

    They are not impressed that we have a Parliament of 25% women, they expect it to be 50%.

    They are not impressed that there are some women business leaders, they expect there to be half of business leaders to be women.

    They are not impressed that there is a law on equal pay, they expect pay actually to be equal.

    They are not impressed that we have some positive female role models in advertising, they expect to see them every day.

    They are not impressed that women can be doctors and writers, they expect all women to be respected for who they are.

    We should listen to their voices.

    All of us.

    Politicians.

    Advertisers.

    Business leaders.

    Newspaper editors.

    Because they are right.

    We can only be One Nation if we have true equality for men and women.

    This is one of the biggest causes of our century.

    To complete the work of the last century.

    To turn a formal commitment to equality in to real equality.

    I know that it is your cause.

    And this will be my cause, as part of the next Labour government.

  • Ed Miliband – 2013 Speech in Response to Budget

    edmiliband

    Below is the text of the speech made by Ed Miliband, the Leader of the Opposition, in response to the Budget on 21st March 2013.

    Mr Deputy Speaker.

    This is the Chancellor’s fourth Budget, but one thing unites them all.

    Every Budget he comes to this house and things are worse not better for the country.

    Compared to last year’s Budget

    Growth last year, down.

    Growth this year, down.

    Growth next year, down.

    They don’t think growth matters, but people in this country do.

    And all he offers is more of the same.

    A more of the same Budget from a downgraded Chancellor.

    Britain deserves better than this.

    I do have to say to the Chancellor of the Exchequer, he almost need not have bother coming to the House because the whole Budget, including the market-sensitive fiscal forecast was in the Standard before he rose to his feet.

    To be fair to the Chancellor of the Exchequer, I sure he didn’t intend the whole of the Budget to be in the Standard before he rose to his feet and I hope he will investigate and report back to the House.

    Now, what did the Prime Minister declare late last year, and I quote:

    “The good news will keep coming”.

    And what did the Chancellor tell us today?

    Under this Government the bad news just doesn’t stop.

    Back in June 2010 the Chancellor promised:

    “a steady and sustained recovery…”

    He was wrong.

    We’ve had the slowest recovery for 100 years.

    Last year he said in the Budget there would be no double dip recession.

    He was wrong, there was.

    He told us a year ago that growth would be 2% this year.

    He was wrong.

    Now he says it will be just 0.6%.

    He told us that next year, growth would be 2.7%.

    Wrong again.

    Now just 1.8%.

    Wait for tomorrow the Chancellor says, and I will be vindicated.

    But with this Chancellor tomorrow never comes.

    He’s the wrong man.

    In the wrong place.

    At the worst possible time for the country.

    It’s a downgraded budget from a downgraded Chancellor.

    He has secured one upgrade this year.

    Travelling first class on a second class ticket from Crewe to London.

    And the only time the country’s felt all in it together, was when he got booed by 80,000 people at the Paralympics.

    Mr Deputy Speaker, I’ve got some advice for the Chancellor.

    Stay away from the cup final, even if Chelsea get there.

    And, who is paying the price for the Chancellor’s failure?

    Britain’s families.

    In his first Budget he predicted that living standards would rise over the Parliament.

    But wages are flat.

    Prices are rising.

    And Britain’s families are squeezed.

    And what the Chancellor didn’t tell us, is that the Office for Budget Responsibility has confirmed the British people will be worse off in 2015 than they were in 2010.

    It’s official: you’re worse off under the Tories.

    Worse off, year after year after year. And wasn’t there an extraordinary omission from his speech, no mention of the AAA rating.

    What the Prime Minister called the “mark of trust”.

    Which he told us had been “secured”.

    The Chancellor said it would be a humiliation for Britain to be downgraded.

    So not just a downgraded Chancellor.

    A humiliated Chancellor too.

    And what about borrowing?

    The Chancellor made the extraordinary claim in his speech that he was “on course”.

    Mr Deputy Speaker, even he can’t believe this nonsense.

    Debt is higher in every year of this Parliament than he forecast at the last Budget.

    He is going to borrow £200 billion more than he planned.

    And what did he say in his June 2010 Budget:

    He set two very clear benchmarks, and I quote, “We are on track to have debt falling and a balanced structural current budget” by 2014/15.

    Or as he called it “our four-year plan”.

    This was the deal he offered the British people.

    These were the terms.

    Four years of pain, tax rises ….

    The Prime Minister says from a sedentary position, borrow more, you are borrowing more.

    And he just needs to look down the road, because the Business Secretary was asked and he said: “We are borrowing more”. From his own Business Secretary.

    So these were the terms: four years, tax rises, and spending cuts, and the public finances would be sorted.

    So today he should have been telling us:

    Just one more year of sacrifice.

    In twelve months the good times will roll.

    Job done.

    Mission accomplished.

    Election plan underway.

    But three years on, what does he say?

    Exactly what he said three years ago.

    We still need four more years of pain, tax rises and spending cuts.

    In other words, after all the misery, all the harsh medicine, all the suffering by the British people:

    Three years.

    No progress.

    Deal broken.

    Same old Tories.

    And all he offers is more of the same.

    It’s as if they really do believe their own propaganda.

    That the failure is nothing to do with them.

    We’ve heard all the excuses:

    The snow, the royal wedding, the Jubilee, the eurozone.

    And now they’re turning on each other.

    The Prime Minister said last weekend, and I quote:

    “Let the message go out from this hall and this party: We are here to fight”.

    Mr Deputy Speaker, they’re certainly doing that.

    The Business Secretary’s turned on the Chancellor.

    The Home Secretary’s turned on the Prime Minister.

    And the Education Secretary’s turned on her.

    The whole country can see that’s what’s going on.

    The blame game has begun in the Cabinet.

    The truth is the Chancellor is lashed to the mast, not because of his judgement, but because of pride.

    Not because of the facts, but because of ideology.

    And why does he stay in his job?

    Not because the country want him.

    Not because his party want him.

    But because he is the Prime Minister’s last line of defence.

    The Bullingdon boys really are both in it together.

    And they don’t understand, you need a recovery made by the many not just a few at the top.

    It’s a year now since the omnishambles Budget.

    We’ve had u-turns on charities, on churches, on caravans.

    And yes, on pasties.

    But there is one policy they are absolutely committed to.

    The top rate tax cut.

    John the banker, remember him?

    He’s had a tough year, earning just £1m.

    What does he get? He gets a tax cut of £42,500 next year.

    £42,500, double the average wage.

    His colleague, let’s call him George, his colleague has done a little better, bringing home £5 million. What does he get in a tax cut?

    I know the Prime Minister doesn’t like to hear what he agreed to, what does he get? A tax cut of nearly £250,000.

    And at the same time everyone else is paying the price.

    The Chancellor is giving with one hand, and taking far more away with the other.

    Hard working families hit by the strivers tax.

    Pensioners hit by the granny tax.

    Disabled people hit by the bedroom tax.

    Millions paying more so millionaires can pay less.

    Now the Chancellor mentioned childcare.

    He wants a round of applause for cutting £7bn in help for families this Parliament, and offering £700m of help in the next.

    But what are the families who are waiting for that childcare help told? They’ve got to wait over two years for help to arrive.

    But for the richest in society, they just have to wait two weeks for the millionaires tax cut to kick in.

    This is David Cameron’s Britain.

    And still the Prime Minister refuses to tell us – despite repeated questions – whether he is getting the 50p tax cut.

    Oh he’s getting embarrassed now, you can see.

    He’s had a year to think about it.

    He must have done the maths.

    Even he should have worked it out by now.

    So come on.

    Nod your head if you are getting the 50p tax rate.

    They ask am I?

    No I am not getting the 50p tax rate, I am asking whether the PM is.

    Come on answer.

    After all, he is the person that said sunlight is the best disinfectant, let transparency win the day.

    Now let’s try something else. What about the rest of the Cabinet, are they getting the 50p tax rate?

    OK, hands up if you are not getting the 50p tax cut?

    Come on, hands up.

    Just put your hand up if you are not getting the 50p tax cut. They are obviously … they don’t like it do they?

    At last the Cabinet are united, with a simple message:

    Thanks George.

    He’s cutting taxes for them, while raising them for everyone else.

    Now the Chancellor announced some measures today that he said would boost growth.

    Just like he does every year.

    And every year they fail.

    I could mention the “national loan guarantee scheme”, he trumpeted that last year.

    And then he abolished just four months later.

    The Funding for Lending scheme, that he said would transform the prospects for small business.

    The work programme that is worse than doing nothing.

    And today he talked a lot about housing.

    And the Prime Minister said this in 2011. He launched his so-called housing strategy, and in his own understated way he labelled it “a radical and unashamedly ambitious strategy”. He said it would give the housing industry a shot in the arm, enable 100,000 people to buy their own home.

    18 months later, how many families have been helped?

    Not 100,000.

    Not even 10,000.

    Just fifteen hundred out of 100,000 promised

    That’s 98,500 broken promises.

    For all the launches, strategies and plans, housing completions are now at the lowest level since the 1920s.

    And 130,000 jobs lost in construction because of their failing economic plan.

    It’s a failing economic plan from a failing Chancellor.

    The Chancellor has failed the tests of the British people:

    Growth, living standards and hope.

    But he has not just failed their tests. He has failed on his own as well.

    All he has to offer is this more of the same Budget.

    Today the Chancellor joined twitter.

    He could have got it all into 140 characters.

    Growth down. Borrowing up. Families hit. And millionaires laughing all the way to the bank. #downgradedChancellor.

    Mr Deputy Speaker, more of the same is not the answer to the last three years.

    More of the same is the answer of a downgraded Chancellor, in a downgraded Government.

    Britain deserves better than this.

  • Ed Miliband – 2013 Speech on Welfare Reform

    edmiliband

    Below is the text of the speech made by the Leader of the Opposition, Ed Miliband, on welfare reform. The speech was made in Newham, in London, on 6th June 2013.

    It is great to be here in Newham.

    Where a Labour Mayor and council are doing so many great things to help get local people back into work.

    On Monday, Ed Balls gave a speech about how the next Labour government would control public spending.

    The biggest item of expenditure alongside the NHS, is the social security budget.

    The next Labour government will have less money to spend.

    If we are going to turn our economy round, protect our NHS, and build a stronger country we will have to be laser focused on how we spend every single pound.

    Social security spending, vital as it is, cannot be exempt from that discipline.

    Now, some people argue that if we want to control social security we have to leave our values at the door.

    But today I want to argue the opposite.

    Controlling social security spending and putting decent values at the heart of the system are not conflicting priorities.

    It is only by reforming social security with the right values that we’ll be able to control costs.

    And the system does need reform.

    And it is only by controlling costs that we can sustain a decent system for the next generation.

    In every generation the world has changed and Britain’s welfare state has to change with it.

    We’re no different.

    Today we have women at work, not the male world of work that William Beveridge envisaged in the 1940s.

    We have persistent worklessness, not the full-employment of the past.

    So jobs for everyone who can work and help to make that happen, must be the starting point for social security reform: cutting the costs of worklessness.

    Today, people often don’t get paid enough in work to make ends meet.

    And the taxpayer is left picking up the bill for low pay.

    We must change our economy, so that welfare is not a substitute for good employment and decent jobs.

    Today the welfare state, through housing benefit, bears the cost for our failure to build enough homes.

    We have to start investing in homes again, not paying for failure.

    And, today, people’s faith in social security has been shaken when it appears that some people get something for nothing and other people get nothing for something – no reward for the years of contribution they make.

    We have to tackle this too.

    Overcoming worklessness, rewarding work and tackling low pay, investing in the future and recognising contribution: these are the Labour ways to reform our social security system.

    And what I want to talk to you about today.

    And it is very important I do, because there is an extra responsibility on those who believe in the role of social security to show real determination to reform it.

    Real long-term reform not the short-term, failing approach of this government.

    Which leaves hundreds of thousands of people in long-term idleness.

    Hits the low-paid in work and pretends they are skivers.

    Forces families into homelessness, driving up bills.

    Never truly getting to grips with the root causes of social security spending.

    So here is the choice:

    Remake social security to make it work better for our country and pass on a fair and sustainable system to the next generation, with the Labour Party.

    Or

    Take the Conservative way: taking support away from working families and those who need it most, always seeking to divide our country and not tackling the deep causes of rising costs.

    Work

    Let me start with the importance of work.

    As I have said before:

    Labour – the party of work – the clue is in the name.

    Our party was founded on the principles of work.

    We have always been against the denial of opportunity that comes from not having work.

    And against the denial of responsibility by those who could work and don’t do so.

    This country needs to be a nation where people who can work, do.

    Not a country where people who can work are on benefits.

    That’s about values.

    And it’s also about making social security sustainable for the future.

    History teaches us this.

    The growth rate of social security spending was higher under the Thatcher and Major governments of 1979 – 1997 than under the New Labour governments of 1997 – 2010.

    How can this be?

    Given the Conservative governments pared back benefits, year after year.

    Whereas the Labour government took action, of which I am proud, to increase tax credits to help make work pay and to address pensioner poverty in a way no previous government had done since the War.

    The reason is this:

    Because among the biggest drivers of social security spending are the costs of unemployment.

    That’s what happened under those Tory governments.

    Unemployment went up.

    Now we have heard so much from this government, and from Iain Duncan-Smith, about the importance of work.

    So surely they’ve promoted it?

    The answer is they haven’t.

    After only three years, just like the Thatcher government, they have a dirty secret about social security.

    Something they don’t want you to know.

    Long-term worklessness is now at its highest level for a generation.

    From this government, that preaches to us about work.

    About people not being on benefits.

    Today, there are more men and women – half a million – who have been out of work for over two years than at any time for sixteen years, in fact since the Labour government took office in May 1997.

    This worklessness, this waste, under these Tories, is totally at odds with the values of the British people.

    In 2012 youth unemployment alone cost Britain £5 billion.

    And long periods of unemployment store up costs for the future.

    This level of unemployment among young men and women means further costs of at least £3 billion per year in the long term in further worklessness and lost tax revenue.

    Billions of pounds that could be put to far better use.

    There’s nothing in Labour values that says that this is a good way to spend tax-payers’ money.

    Britain just can’t afford millions of people out of work.

    Now just as there is a minority who should be working and don’t want to, there is a majority who are desperate for work and can’t find it.

    I think of the young man I met in Long Eaton recently, out of work for four years, desperate for a job.

    The problem is this government’s Work Programme can leave people like him unemployed year after year after year.

    We would put a limit on how long anyone who can work, can stay unemployed, without getting and taking a job.

    For every young man and woman who has been out of work for more than a year, we would say to every business in the country, we will pay the wages for 25 hours a week, on at least the minimum wage.

    Fully funded by a tax on bankers’ bonuses.

    The business would provide the training of at least 10 hours a week.

    And because it is a compulsory jobs guarantee, young people will have an obligation to take a job after a year or lose their benefits.

    And we will do the same for everyone over 25 unemployed for more than two years.

    And to those who say the work simply isn’t there, I say with a national mission, led from the top of government, we can get thousands of businesses, tens of thousands, in the country behind the idea.

    Businesses and social enterprises that are desperate to give people a chance.

    And while the jobs guarantee is national we will make it happen through local action.

    The kind of local action I’ve seen here in Newham.

    Devolving power and resources to local communities so there can be advice and support suitable for the individual who is looking for work and tailored to the particular needs of businesses in the area.

    But we need to go further.

    Parents need choices, particularly when their children are very young.

    We know the difference stay-at-home mums and dads can make in the earliest period of a child’s life.

    But we also know that the ethic of work is an important one to encourage in a household.

    We do not want worklessness passed down from one generation to another.

    The last Labour government made significant progress in getting parents in workless households back into work.

    But the truth is there is still more we can do.

    Too many children still live in families without work.

    And under the current government too little is being done about this.

    At the moment, if both partners in a couple are out of a job, or a lone parent is out of work, they risk completely losing touch with the world of work when their child is under 5.

    But all of the evidence is that the longer anyone remains disconnected from the workplace, the more likely they are to stay unemployed for a long period.

    Bad for them and bad for the country.

    And there is something we can do.

    Thanks to the last Labour government, we now have nursery education available for all 3 and 4 year olds, for 15 hours a week.

    The very least we should offer and demand is that while their children are at nursery, both partners in a workless household, as well as single parents who aren’t working, should use some of the time to undertake some preparations to help them get ready to go back to work.

    Attending regular interviews in the Job Centre, undertaking training, finding out what opportunities exist.

    To be clear, under this policy there would be no requirement to go back to work until their youngest child is 5.

    But there would be a pathway back into work for them.

    We should also support disabled people.

    Those who cannot work.

    And those who want to work and need help finding it.

    Successive governments did not do enough to deal with the rise in people on Incapacity Benefit.

    It was a legacy of unemployment from the years Mrs Thatcher was in power.

    But the last Labour government should have acted on it sooner.

    Towards the end of our time in government, we did introduce tests for the Employment and Support Allowance.

    That was the right thing to do.

    And we continue to support tests today.

    But when over 40% of people win their appeals, it tells you the system isn’t working as it should.

    And too often people’s experience of the tests is degrading.

    So this test needs to change.

    It needs reform so that it can really distinguish between different situations.

    Disabled people who cannot work.

    Disabled people who need help to get into work.

    And people who can work without support.

    The test should also be properly focused on helping to identify the real skills of each disabled person and the opportunities they could take up.

    I meet so many disabled people desperate to work but who say that the demand that they work is not accompanied by the support they need.

    So these tests should be connected to a Work Programme that itself is tested on its ability to get disabled people jobs that work for them.

    So the first piece of a One Nation social security system that controls costs begins with the responsibility to work and the responsibility of government to help make it possible.

    Rewarding Work

    But it is not just about work.

    It is also about the kind of work that can properly support people and their families.

    Today in Britain almost three million men and women and almost one and half million children live in families that are going to work and are still not able to escape poverty.

    People doing the right thing, trying to support themselves and their children.

    The last Labour government took action on this, and was right to provide tax credits for those in work.

    But we didn’t do enough to tackle Britain’s low wage economy, a low wage economy that just leaves the taxpayer facing greater and greater costs subsidising employers.

    To tackle the problem of poverty at work and to control costs we need to create an economy that genuinely works for working people.

    I want to teach my kids that it is wrong to be idle on benefits, when you can work.

    But I also want to teach them that the people in this country who work 40 or 50 or 60 hours a week, do two or even three jobs, should be able to bring up their families without fear of where the next pound is coming from.

    That’s as much an issue as the responsibility to work.

    Of course, this government has nothing to say about this.

    Worse than that, they are taking our country in the wrong direction.

    Their failure on the economy means that real wages have fallen £1,900 since this government came to office.

    We know that this government will never stand up for low and middle-income working people.

    But our approach for the future needs to make good on what the last Labour government did not achieve.

    As William Beveridge envisaged seventy years ago when he founded the social security system we need to understand that there are three sets of people with responsibilities:

    Government.

    Individuals.

    And the private sector, including employers.

    That’s what One Nation is all about.

    Responsibility being borne by all.

    For too many people in Britain the workplace is nasty, brutish and unfair.

    The exploitation of zero hours contracts to keep people insecure.

    Using agency workers to unfairly avoid giving people the pay and conditions offered to permanent staff.

    Recruitment agencies hiring just from overseas.

    And some employers not paying the minimum wage.

    These issues too are about our responsibilities to each other.

    About the failure of government to set the right rules and the failure of a minority of employers.

    Be in no doubt: all of this is on the agenda of the next Labour government.

    So, for example, we will change the law to stop employment agencies using loopholes to undermine the pay of what are effectively full-time employees.

    And we will do everything in our power to promote the living wage.

    If local councils can say if you want a contract with the council then you need to pay the living wage, then central government should look at doing that too.

    And for every pound that employers pay above the minimum wage towards a living wage, government would save 50 pence in lower tax credits and benefits and higher revenues.

    We should look at offering some of these savings back to those employers to persuade them to do the right thing and pay the living wage.

    It will be tougher to tackle big issues facing our society like child poverty in the next Parliament.

    But I still think we can make progress if everyone pulls their weight.

    And it starts with tackling child poverty among families in work, as part of a long-term goal that no-one should have to work for their poverty.

    So the second plank of our approach is about an economy that works for working people so that we can both keep social security costs under control and work towards a fairer society.

    Investing for the Future

    The third plank of our approach is wherever possible we should be investing for the future, not paying for the costs of failure.

    It is why it is far better to be investing in putting people back to work than paying for them to be idle.

    It is why it is so important to invest in childcare so we support families as they struggle to balance work and the needs of family life.

    And the same is true when it comes to one of the biggest drivers of the growth of social security spending in recent decades: housing benefit.

    We can’t afford to pay billions on ever-rising rents, when we should be building homes to bring down the bill.

    Thirty years ago for every £100 we spent on housing, £80 was invested in bricks and mortar and £20 was spent on housing benefit.

    Today, for every £100 we spend on housing, just £5 is invested in bricks and mortar and £95 goes on housing benefit.

    There’s nothing to be celebrated in that.

    And as a consequence we are left with a housing benefit bill that goes up higher and higher.

    For the simple reason, that we have built too few homes in this country and therefore we see higher and higher prices, particularly in the private sector.

    Now, this government talks a lot about getting housing benefit under control.

    But let me be clear: any attempt to control housing benefit costs which fails to build more homes is destined to fail.

    For all the cuts this government has made to housing benefit, it is still rising and it is forecast to carry on rising too.

    Of course, there is an issue of values here too.

    In 2011, there were 10 cases where £100,000 a year was spent on housing benefit for individual families.

    That’s 10 too many.

    And it is one of the reasons why Labour has said we would support a cap on overall benefits.

    As Ed Balls said on Monday, an independent body should advise government on how best to design this cap to avoid it pushing people into homelssness and costing more.

    But the real, long-term solution is clear: we have to do what hasn’t been done for three decades and to move from benefits to building.

    Currently Britain is building fewer new homes than at any time since the 1920s.

    Ed Balls talked on Monday about how we invest for the future of our country.

    Clearly, the building of homes is high on that list.

    This will be a priority of the next Labour government.

    But just like tackling worklessness, we can’t do it from central government alone.

    We will need every local authority in Britain to be part of this effort.

    At the moment, we expect individual families to negotiate with their landlords.

    In these circumstances, it is almost inevitable that tenants end up paying over the odds.

    And so does the taxpayer, in the housing benefit bill.

    It’s time to tackle this problem at source.

    So a Labour government would seek a radical devolution to local authorities.

    And Labour councils in Lewisham, Liverpool, Leeds, Manchester, Sheffield and Birmingham have all come to us and said that if they had power to negotiate on behalf of tenants on housing benefit, they could get far greater savings than the individual on their own.

    So a Labour government would give councils this power.

    Bringing the cost of housing benefit down.

    And what is more, we would let them keep some of the savings they make on the condition that they invested that money in helping build new homes.

    This is the way we can start to bring about the shift from benefits to building.

    Bringing the housing benefit bill down for the long-term too.

    And it is a One Nation solution: enforcing the responsibilities of government and private landlords.

    So the third plank of a One Nation social security system is to invest in the future, not to pay for failure.

    Recognising Contribution

    The fourth and final plank is around recognising contribution.

    We do that by recognising the importance of supporting families, through maternity and paternity leave and pay, child benefit and child tax credit.

    We do that by providing support to people with disabilities, both those who cannot work and also to those who can work, but whose extra needs it is right to recognise.

    Of course, it is right to make sure that we have the right tests in this area too.

    Which is why we support tests for Personal Independence Payments, but again they must be done in the right way.

    We also recognise contribution by supporting elderly women and men who have contributed to our country throughout their lives.

    On pensions, we know we have a rising elderly population and a rising budget.

    The way to make this sustainable is to ensure that we increase the number of people in the working population supporting our elderly.

    And therefore to show a willingness to adjust the retirement age.

    Of course, there needs to be proper notice, but as people live longer, the age at which people retire will have to increase.

    All of Britain’s elderly men and women deserve dignity in retirement, after a lifetime of contribution to our country.

    That’s why there will always be a place for universal support at the heart of our welfare system.

    Like an NHS for all.

    A proper basic state pension for all those who’ve paid in.

    But whether it is relation to pensioners or children there is always a balance that has to be struck between universal, contributory and means-tested benefits.

    With so many difficult choices facing the next Labour government, we have to be realistic about what we can afford.

    So it doesn’t make sense to continue sending a cheque every year for Winter Fuel Allowance to the richest pensioners in the country.

    Equally, when it comes to the decisions of the next Labour government it won’t be our biggest priority to overturn the decisions this government has made on taking child benefit away from families earning over £50,000 a year.

    But in one important respect our social security system fails to recognise contribution: the service of those currently of working age.

    Last week, I met somebody who had worked all his life, for 40 years, in the scaffolding business.

    What does the social security system offer him if he falls out of work?

    It’s the same as someone who has been working for just a couple of years.

    That can’t be right.

    I can’t promise to turn the clock back to Beveridge and nor do I want to.

    Our society isn’t the same as it was back then, with most men at work and women at home.

    But the idea that people should get something back for all they’ve put in is a value deeply felt by the British people.

    So I believe we should look at the support that is offered to those who fall out of work and the contribution on which it is based.

    Currently, after two years of work, someone is entitled to “Contributory Jobseeker’s Allowance” without a means test for six months.

    They get £72 per week.

    Whether they’ve worked for two years or forty years.

    Two years of work is a short period to gain entitlement to extra help.

    And £72 is in no sense a proper recognition of how much somebody who has worked for many decades has paid into the system.

    As so many people have told me: “I have worked all my life, I have never had a day on benefits, and no real help is there when I needed it.”

    So I have asked our Policy Review to look at whether, without spending extra money, we can change the system.

    Asking people to work longer – say 5 years instead of 2 – before they qualify for extra support.

    But at the same time making that extra support more generous to better reward contribution.

    This is particularly important for older workers who find it harder to get back into work at a level similar to their previous occupation.

    And we will look at accompanying this with extra help back into work for older workers who lose their jobs.

    And as we look to reform this contributory part of our welfare system, we should also examine ways to take account of some of the other kinds of contribution people make, like mums looking after very young children and children looking after their elderly parents.

    Because we want to send a signal about the real importance that the next Labour government attaches to recognising contribution.

    Planning the Budget

    So the four building blocks of a One Nation social security system are: work, rewarding work, investing for the future not paying for failure, and recognising contribution.

    A system that is sustainable.

    And one which reflects the values of the British people.

    But I believe we need to do more in these tough times in how we plan social security spending.

    In Labour’s last period in office we introduced the three-year spending review.

    Enabling Departments, like any business, to properly plan three years ahead.

    Throughout previous generations, there had been an annual spending round, rows between ministers, arguments between Departments, leaks to the newspapers.

    A bit like now really under this government.

    It makes much more sense to plan ahead.

    I believe we should extend this approach from Departmental spending to social security spending.

    So that planning social security over three years should become a central part of each spending review.

    And I also believe that a cap on social security spending should be part of that planning process.

    Because what governments should be doing is looking three years ahead and setting a clear limit within which social security would have to operate.

    Now, clearly there are detailed issues that need to be worked on to make any cap sensible.

    The government has also talked about a cap on social security.

    And we will look at their proposals.

    In particular, they are right we need to be able to separate the short-term costs of social security – those that come from immediate downturns in the economy – from the big, long-term causes of rising spending that should be within a cap, like housing costs and structural unemployment.

    And we need also to consider how to cope year to year with higher than expected inflation and how to treat the impact of an ageing population.

    The starting point for the next Labour government will be that in 2015 – 2016 we would inherit plans for social security spending from this government.

    Any changes from those plans will need to be fully funded.

    For example, if we were in government today we would be reversing the millionaire’s tax cut to help make work pay through tax credits.

    Today I am delivering a clear statement about One Nation Labour’s principles for social security spending:

    The next Labour government will use a 3-year cap on structural welfare spending to help control costs.

    Such a cap will alert the next Labour government to problems coming down the track.

    And ensure that we make policy to keep the social security budget in limits.

    Introducing greater discipline, as ministers from across Departments will be led to control the big drivers of spending.

    Conclusion

    So here is the choice that people will face at the general election.

    I have set out how we can control the social security budget.

    Not in anecdote or as part of a political game or as a way of dividing the country.

    But as a way to reform the system so that it meets the values of the British people.

    I have set out the values that would drive a One Nation social security system in government.

    But there is another choice on offer from David Cameron.

    I will tell you that there is a minority who don’t work but should.

    He will tell you anyone looking for work is a skiver.

    I will tell you that we need to protect the dignity of work and make work pay.

    He will hit the low-paid in work.

    I will tell you that we do need to get the housing benefit bill down with a cap that works, but crucially by investing in homes and tackling private landlords.

    He will make the problem worse by making people homeless and driving up the bill.

    I will tell you that we always need to value contribution in the system

    He will hit people who work hard and do the right thing.

    We will tackle the deep, long-term causes of social security spending and tackle the costs of failure like housing benefit, worklessness and the problem of low pay.

    They will not.

    We must pass on to our children a social security system that is sustainable.

    And a system that works and is supported.

    We can use the talents of everyone.

    Demand responsibility.

    And seek to move forward as a united country.

    Or we can have politicians who seek to use every opportunity to divide this country and set one group of people against another.

    I believe this country is always at its best when it is united.

    One Nation.

    Everyone playing their part.

    That is the social security system I want to build.

    That’s the future I want to build for Britain.

  • Ed Miliband – 2013 Speech to Progress Conference

    edmiliband

    Below is the text of the speech made by the Leader of the Opposition, Ed Miliband, at the Progress Conference on 11th May 2013.

    Thank you for that kind reception.

    But it is great to be here at Progress.

    For nearly 20 years Progress has been an important forum for debate in our party, and it will to continue to provide that in the future.

    That’s why I am proud to be here today.

    We meet – as we always seem to – in the aftermath of the local elections.

    And I want to start by congratulating all of you here who worked so hard for our Party.

    Let’s take this opportunity to applaud the 291 newly-elected Labour councillors.

    And let’s applaud the great success we had in the crucial battlegrounds of the next general election, places from Carlisle to Harlow to Hastings.

    And if you will allow me, let’s applaud a One Nation Labour success: a new councillor in Witney Central, Laura Price, pushing David Cameron’s own Tories into third place.

    This is a party moving forwards.

    But what else did we learn from last week’s elections?

    That the people of Britain have lost any confidence in this government’s ability to turn this country round.

    But also that our Party has more to do to reach out to the people we need to win back.

    That is clear from the results.

    Being a one term opposition is about defying the historical odds.

    But today I stand here convinced that not only can we win the general election.

    If we do the right things and we have the right programme, the right policies, the right organisation – this general election is there to be won.

    And that’s what I want to talk to you about today.

    To win we have to be clear about the ideas that will drive us to victory.

    We will not win the election by saying that we were a good government and we just need to carry on where we left off.

    Because the truth is that things have dramatically changed in the years since Progress was founded in the run up to our victory in 1997.

    Progress helped make possible New Labour’s successes: rebuilding our schools and hospitals; lifting families out of poverty; creating Sure Start to give support to millions of young families; introducing the minimum wage.

    I am proud of those achievements.

    We should always be proud of those achievements.

    But almost two decades on, many of the truths that underpinned that project – truths that appeared to be so self-evident back then – have been undermined.

    That is what I heard as I went round the country during these local elections.

    From Maidstone to Newcastle-Under-Lyme.

    In our economy, our society and our politics the old certainties have broken down.

    There was an old way of running the economy that saw financial services as the bedrock of our prosperity.

    That what was good for the City of London would automatically be good for Britain too, just as long as government was there to redistribute the tax revenues.

    It is no longer true.

    In the way we live together in communities, there was an old certainty that globalisation and economic change would open up aspiration and benefit all.

    For example, that ever-increasing diversity would automatically benefit the whole country and that should shape our view of immigration.

    It no longer holds true.

    And in our politics, there was an old certainty that we were in a world of predictable party politics, where the pendulum and the voters would always swing between Labour and Conservatives.

    None of these certainties any longer hold.

    And that changes what our party needs to do.

    The first of those old certainties was shot to its core by the financial crash in 2008.

    But it had been crumbling before then.

    The reason I take a different view of our economy from the past is simple: it is clear now this economy is not working for most working people.

    And the answer can’t be to go back to the world before the crash.

    In our society, change has brought anxiety, winners and losers, and often people have felt left alone and isolated in the face of change.

    It is not prejudice but real issues that have driven concerns about immigration.

    About the pace of change.

    With worries about jobs and livelihoods.

    And about the integration of our communities.

    If we go out and talk to people, we all hear it on the doorstep.

    And in our politics, more and more people are turning away from the major parties.

    More people who don’t vote.

    And more people eligible to vote who have never voted at all.

    That’s why I say our biggest opponent at the next election is not the Conservatives, Liberal Democrats or UKIP, but the idea that nobody can make a difference.

    These are uncomfortable truths for our Party.

    But we ignore them at our peril.

    Now, in the face of so many deep and profound challenges in our country, it is no wonder that the people of Britain are worried about our future.

    Let me tell you, on the way back from Doncaster last Friday, having celebrated our Party’s victory over an Independent mayor, a construction worker in his forties came up to me on the train.

    He said he had just one thing to say: that the country had no future.

    No future for him.

    No future for his friends.

    No future for his son.

    And that’s what he needed me to know.

    It shows the gravity of people’s concern about what is happening.

    He, and millions of people like him, just don’t believe we have an economy that works for them.

    A society that they feel part of.

    Or a politics that can answer these challenges.

    Now, can the Government turn this around?

    I think we can be pretty clear that the answer is no.

    In this week of the Queen’s Speech, exactly three years after they stood together in the Downing Street Rose Garden, what do David Cameron and Nick Clegg really offer for our country?

    Their economic plan has failed and they have run out of ideas – and the Queen’s Speech shows it.

    They stand up for the wrong people – from the millionaires’ tax cut, to their U-turns on cigarette packaging and lobbying.

    And they are hopelessly divided and cannot offer the leadership our country needs – and Europe shows that more than anything else.

    What an extraordinary spectacle of a government that says it is relaxed about its own MPs voting against their own Queen’s Speech.

    I know David Cameron is a man who likes to be known for a bit of relaxing, even chillaxing, but on this occasion, it beggars belief.

    He’s not lying on the sofa, relaxed.

    He’s hiding behind the sofa, too scared to confront his party and provide the leadership the country needs.

    He’s weak and panicked and flailing around.

    Because on this, as on so many issues, he has no answers to the challenges facing Britain in the future.

    And why is he in this position?

    Because he is being pushed around by his own backbenchers.

    That’s the only reason he changed his mind in January on an in/out referendum.

    It wasn’t about the national interest, it was simply about his party interest.

    And it hasn’t even worked.

    Because those backbenchers will keep coming back for more.

    David Cameron may try to out Farage-Farage on Britain’s membership of the European Union.

    But in all of our decisions we make, we will always stand up for the national interest.

    And our national interest lies in staying in the EU.

    And working for the changes that will make it work better for Britain.

    It is wrong now to commit to an in/out referendum and have four years of uncertainty and a ‘closed for business’ sign above our country.

    Of course people are frustrated about the EU, but in town centres across the country I heard loud and clear where people see the national interest, what people are most worried about: jobs, living standards, the fate of their small businesses.

    One Nation Labour will not put them at risk.

    It is One Nation Labour that will fight for our national interest.

    Of course, we live in anxious times.

    And it is understandable that people are looking for different answers.

    But UKIP doesn’t have them.

    It is a party of protest, not solutions.

    And the Tories are fast turning from a party of government to a party of protest too —protest against each other.

    Labour will succeed as a party of solutions addressing the challenges of 2015.

    In the 1990s, Labour adapted to change.

    So too today.

    The policies for today will not be the same as those we put forward back then, or in 2005, or in 2010.

    We are not going back.

    Nor are we looking for false promises or easy answers.

    We will have to pay the deficit down.

    We cannot promise to reverse every cut.

    And we will not just sit back and wait for the political pendulum to swing.

    We will win by offering Britain a new direction: to rebuild together as a country, not fall apart.

    That is what One Nation Labour is all about.

    That’s why One Nation Labour is the modernising force in the Labour Party and in the country today.

    It means a new economic plan.

    A plan to turn Britain around.

    When there is less money around.

    This is the challenge the British people have set us.

    I think of the young man in Long Eaton I met desperate for work, who couldn’t find work, and who hasn’t be able to for four years.

    I think of the single parent I met in Lincoln.

    She was working as an ambulance controller, desperate not to be stigmatised, struggling to make ends meet.

    She wanted a government that understood.

    I think of the market trader I met in Bristol desperate, as he told me, just for some hope.

    What unites every person I met during the local election campaign is the sense that we are facing an economic crisis without end.

    We will win the next general election by showing people that we have credible, real answers to that crisis.

    And that is the mission we are on as a Party.

    One Nation is not just the country we would like to be.

    It is the only way we can succeed as an economy in the future.

    It is based on this idea: wealth creation does not come simply from a few at the top.

    All the lessons of our history, from the industrial revolution to the post-war reconstruction, are that we need a recovery made by the many.

    The people who do the hours.

    Who put in the shifts.

    The people who are out at work before George Osborne’s curtains are open.

    And come back after those curtains have already closed for the night.

    And we are setting out how we do that.

    Different from this government.

    And different from the last Labour government too.

    Training and apprenticeships for the forgotten 50 per cent of our young people, not just qualifications for those who go to university.

    A banking system that serves the real economy, in particular small business, not businesses serving our banks.

    An industrial policy based on long-term, durable wealth creation and innovation, not on the short-term, fast-buck.

    Homes, schools, transport that we invest in, as the best route to growth, to create jobs and to enable people to play their part.

    And understanding that we cannot have a recovery made by the many when living standards are falling year on year on year.

    That might not keep the people in Downing Street awake at night.

    But we know it is what keeps the people of this country awake at night.

    That’s why we’d make different decisions on the tax system from this government and from our own past, like wanting a mansion tax to fund a 10p starting rate of tax.

    And all this must be underpinned by credibility that we understand the next Labour government will not have money to spend like the last.

    In our society, we are not dazzled by change.

    But nor do we seek to re-create the past.

    Take immigration.

    It was controversial when I started giving speeches on immigration a year ago.

    Immediately, people asked: is this a dog-whistle to prejudice?

    Let me tell you: this Party must never make the mistake that any issue is a no-go area.

    If the British people are talking about it, we must be talking about it too.

    And we’ll always do it in a Labour way.

    On immigration, I bow to no-one in my commitment to a diverse, multi-ethnic Britain.

    It is one of things that makes our country great and more prosperous.

    But immigration doesn’t just work for everyone automatically.

    And we got it wrong in government.

    Not just the policy.

    But our failure to listen.

    The pace of change does matter.

    Integration – including learning English – is important.

    And it’s about our economy too.

    We should stop employers paying less than the minimum wage.

    Crack down on recruitment agencies that only take people from overseas.

    And say no to slum landlords who cram people into houses, leaving neighbours and communities with burdens simply too big to bear.

    An agenda only we can champion.

    Because we’re the party that believes in high standards for working people and not a race to the bottom in wages and conditions.

    And just as we need rights and responsibilities when it comes to immigration, so too in social security.

    Which is the only party in politics today that is actually going to tackle the chronic problem of 70,000 young people languishing on the dole for more than a year and 160,000 older people out of work for more than two years?

    Only the Labour Party.

    I think of the young people I met, like that young man in Long Eaton, desperately looking for work.

    And the older person in Blackpool, who was so turned off politics because he thought no-one could help get him a job.

    Only the Labour Party – with a compulsory jobs guarantee has anything to say to them.

    For all their rhetoric about welfare reform, for all the cuts they’ve made, this government will be spending more on social security at the end of this Parliament than at the beginning.

    Not because they’re generous.

    But because they haven’t taken the action on the economy and they haven’t created the jobs we need to keep the social security bill down.

    Rights and responsibilities are at the core of what we believe for our society.

    Because One Nation is about everybody having opportunity and having a responsibility to play their part.

    And that should go all the way to the top of society too.

    From taxing the bankers’ bonuses for youth jobs to ensuring everyone pays their fair share of tax through the stamping out tax avoidance for individuals and the big corporations too.

    Now, there is no greater challenge to the old certainties than when it comes to our politics.

    Here, the only way forward for us is to understand why people have turned away from politics and seek to change it.

    Power in Britain is far too centralised.

    Local people don’t feel they have a say in the decisions that shape their lives.

    That is why, as part of our Policy Review, we are absolutely committed to devolving power down.

    Because the only way we can restore faith in politics is from the ground up.

    And if you want to see what difference that can make, look at the fantastic 29 Labour councils committed to paying a living wage.

    We need to devolve power not just in the country but in our party as well.

    You know, the best campaigns I saw across Britain were the ones based on an open manifesto process, talking to people about their lives and about what they wanted to see, as we did in Lancashire.

    Our pledges in that election were made by the many.

    Based on 150,000 conversations on doorstep across all of Lancashire.

    And, finally, the lesson for politicians is always we need to open up our politics.

    In this campaign, as you know, I went to town centres across the country and stood on a pallet.

    Reinventing the old-fashioned town meeting.

    The way politics used to be done.

    Not seeking the easy questions but answering the hard ones.

    In a small way, it is a symbol of the need for us to open up our politics.

    And it is a lesson for our party.

    That we need to reach out to people.

    Including people who are completely turned off politics.

    In every area, the only way forward is use the talents of every person in the country.

    A recovery made by the many.

    A society in which everyone plays their part and accepts their responsibilities, all the way to the top.

    And a politics to match.

    But there’s one other thing that will win us the next general election.

    And it’s not about policy.

    It is what I used to say on that pallet in every town centre I went to.

    We don’t just offer a different style of management.

    We offer a different vision of the country.

    Think about UKIP and what it is offering.

    It is seeking to offer a patriotic story about Britain.

    But it is not my patriotic story.

    And it is not yours either.

    Because it is insular.

    Backward looking.

    And it won’t meet the challenges of our age.

    Just look what they say about rights for women and maternity leave.

    They say employers shouldn’t hire women who want to have a child.

    They are campaigning to scrap maternity pay.

    And are against parental leave for working families.

    We don’t like their story about our country.

    And we have a much better one ourselves.

    A sense of mission for the country.

    Inclusive.

    Not exclusive.

    Outward looking.

    Not inward looking.

    Optimistic about our future.

    Not simply hankering back to the past.

    There will be some people who say that a UKIP strategy or a Lynton Crosby strategy may just work.

    Set one group of people against another.

    Those in work against those out of work.

    Those in the public sector against the private sector.

    North against South.

    I say it’s our job to show a different way forward.

    Because we believe it.

    And it is the only way our country can succeed.

    One Nation is not just a slogan.

    It is not a Labour idea or a Conservative idea.

    It is a British idea.

    A country that acknowledges the difficulties, accepts the anxieties, knows that times are going to be hard, but that is confident that change can come.

    A country that knows that we work best when we work together.

    That knows that we won the War and rebuilt after the War because of that vision.

    A country where everybody is given the chance to play their part.

    And everybody is expected to do so.

    That’s what One Nation Labour stands for.

    That’s the future I offer our country.

    That’s the Britain we will rebuild together.

  • Ed Miliband – 2013 Speech to Scottish Labour Conference

    edmiliband

    Below is the text of the speech made by the Leader of the Opposition, Ed Miliband, to the 2013 Scottish Labour Party conference, held on 19th April 2013.

    Thank you so much for that incredibly kind reception.

    It is great to be with you here in Inverness today.

    I want to start by thanking the work you do for Scotland, our party and Britain.

    Since we last met you’ve had those fantastic local election results in Glasgow, Aberdeen, South Lanarkshire.

    Let’s applaud everyone who was part of that.

    And let’s applaud Johann Lamont for the excellent work she is doing as the first leader of the Scottish Labour Party.

    Anas Sarwar her deputy.

    And Margaret Curran, our great Shadow Secretary of State for Scotland.

    And let us also pay a special thank you to Alistair Darling for leading the Better Together campaign to keep Scotland in the United Kingdom.

    Friends, this is a party on its way back.

    And I want to talk to you today about two very important moments of decision.

    The referendum.

    And the general election.

    Big choices that Scotland has to make.

    The last ten days have been dominated by memories of Lady Thatcher and the 1980s.

    I know how much pain the Conservative governments of that time caused to communities in Scotland and across the whole of the United Kingdom.

    Areas that felt angry and abandoned.

    Social division.

    And the injustices of the poll tax.

    And the reason the Tories were able to do this because they won election after election.

    If we learn one thing from this history, it is that we must never allow a Tory government in Westminster to do what was done over eighteen years after 1979.

    It was a Labour government that stopped them in 1997.

    And I have news for the SNP:

    By making David Cameron’s government a one-term government, it will be Labour that does it again in 2015.

    And let me talk to you today about the scale of challenge that we face.

    You know the similarities between what is happening under this Tory-led government in Scotland now and what happened under the Tory governments in the 1980s.

    But the parallels don’t end there.

    What ushered in that Tory government, was the failure of the old order in 1970s.

    So too today.

    Five years on from the financial crisis of 2008.

    Our banks still failing, our living standards still falling, the people of Britain, of Scotland, paying the price.

    The old order breaking down again.

    And just like back then, it is because the old way of running our economy just doesn’t work any more.

    This time:

    Deregulation.

    The dominance of finance over industry.

    Allowing unaccountable vested interests in the private sector to have free rein.

    Government just getting out the way.

    The old in-it-for-yourself, laissez faire, deregulated economy just isn’t working for working people.

    So when David Cameron says “we’re all Thatcherites now”, I have news for him: we’re not.

    And when Alex Salmond says Scotland “didn’t mind” Margaret Thatcher’s economics, I have news for him, you did.

    And you do.

    The reality is this, only Labour can build a new settlement.

    The answer lies not in going back.

    Not in taking the Gleneagles hotel back into public ownership.

    Going back to penal tax rates of the 1970s.

    We need the benefits of a dynamic market economy.

    But we do need a new settlement, appropriate for new times.

    And here’s the difference with us and our opponents.

    We know countries succeed by uniting and not disagreeing.

    Despite my deep disagreements with what Lady Thatcher did, I showed respect, because you can’t preach the principle of One Nation, and then fail to uphold it in practice.

    That is who I am.

    I want to be a Prime Minister of the whole country.

    Britain will succeed when everyone feels part of Britain and can contribute to our country.

    That’s what One Nation Labour is all about.

    One Nation Labour a party of the south as well as north, the private sector and the public sector, the person who owns the small business as much as the person who works for it.

    A party of every part of the whole country.

    We know that Britain’s best days lie ahead if we unite our country and not divide it.

    That’s how we will succeed as an economy and a society.

    The Need for a New Beginning

    Some people used to believe, three years ago, David Cameron could change our economy for the better.

    The slowest recovery for 100 years.

    Wages falling.

    Prices rising.

    Unemployment increasing.

    Borrowing going up, despite all the cuts, all the tax rises, because of their economic failure.

    Their plan has completely and utterly failed the people of Scotland and the people of the United Kingdom.

    How do they offer to turn our economy around?

    The same old answers.

    Tax cuts for millionaires.

    They don’t want you to know the truth.

    They are giving 13,000 millionaires an average £100,000 tax cut each this year and every year.

    Same old Tories.

    The same old way of doing things that says wealth trickles down from those at the top to everyone else.

    That just doesn’t work.

    And what else do they propose?

    Fewer rights at work for everyone else.

    Parliament recently debated the government’s plans to swap shares for your employment rights.

    It was described as a “positively dreadful” idea and an “ill thought through attack on employment rights”.

    Who do you think used the words?

    It wasn’t Len McCluskey.

    Not Margaret Curran.

    Not even Vince Cable.

    But Michael Forsyth.

    These Tories are too right wing even for Michael Forsyth.

    Now even the Tories don’t trust the Tories on employment rights.

    We could have told them that a long time ago.

    And from the people who brought you what they called the community charge, or what we know as the poll tax, comes a new idea.

    Because he’s a PR guy, David Cameron calls it the “spare room subsidy”.

    But let’s call it what it is: it is the iniquitous bedroom tax.

    The bedroom tax forcing people out of their homes.

    Driving up costs as they force people into the private sector.

    What kind of government thinks that is the way to turn our economy around?

    Let me tell you:

    A heartless government.

    And a hopeless one too.

    This Tory-led government.

    And all the time, what do they do?

    They just seek to divide not unite our country.

    Trying to pretend we have a good government being let down by bad people when the reality is that this is a country of good people being let down by an appalling, hopeless government.

    There is a different way.

    One Nation Labour: Vision

    It’s not going to be easy.

    But there is a different future.

    It’s not just a question of waiting for a little bit of growth.

    It’s not about the old problems of the 1970s, 1980s or 1990s, but the problems of today.

    Like the living standards crisis that blights so many people’s lives.

    The reality that you know in your own communities that this economy dosen’t work only for a few at the top.

    How we pay our way in a world with new trading powers, like China, India and Brazil.

    We have a huge challenge to rise to.

    And we will have to solve these in more difficult times too when there is less money around.

    That’s why we need to rebuild our economy from its foundations.

    We do that with a simple idea, idea that expresses who we are as a party: that we need a recovery made by the many and not just a few at the top.

    When you back the people who do the hours, put in the shifts.

    Who get up in the morning before George Osborne’s curtains are open.

    And get back after they have closed for the night.

    So we must challenge what has been happening in our banks for decades, so that we have banks that serve our businesses not businesses serving our banks.

    Let’s establish regional banks to serve small businesses in every part of Britain.

    That backs those communities.

    Getting back to those old principles.

    Principles we should be proud of.

    And principles we should restore in our banking system.

    We must challenge the decades-long culture of short-termism that’s held back British firms.

    Let’s abolish quarterly reporting rules and, we should do something, let’s change the takeover rules for companies to stop the hedge funds and the speculators swooping in for a quick profit.

    We must challenge the decades-long problems in our vocational education system in all parts of the United Kingdom, working with a Scottish Labour government led by Johann Lamont.

    We know there is a huge challenge.

    Let’s reject the culture that says university is always best and vocational education second best.

    And let’s have proper high quality, real apprenticeships for our young people to aspire to in this country.

    And we must challenge the decades-long problem of not building enough homes in this country that has put the dream of home ownership and fair rents further and further out of reach.

    That’s why we would have used the money from the 4G auction to start building homes again and put construction workers back to work.

    That is what the government should be doing.

    And building a recovery made by the many needs every person who can to play their part.

    You know what’s really interesting for all this government’s rhetoric about welfare reform, and despite all their cuts, the costs of economic failure goes up and up under this government.

    There is only party in British politics that will actually tackle the scourge of long-term unemployment.

    It is the Labour Party.

    With a compulsory jobs guarantee for the 7,000 Scottish young people unemployed for more than a year and the 15,000 over 25s unemployed for more than two years.

    Real jobs, with real rights to work, with a real responsibility to do so.

    Friends, let me say this, you know there is a minority in our communities who can work and should be doing so.

    But you also know there is a majority desperate for work.

    And, let me be clear, what I am never going to as leader of the Labour Party will never seek to divide our country and say to young person in Inverness or the older worker laid off in Ipswich desperately looking for work, that they are scroungers, skivers or somehow cheating the system.

    We know we will succeed by uniting our country, not dividing it.

    And we won’t have a recovery made by the many if family budgets are just squeezed year on year on year.

    That’s why if we were in government now we would cancel the millionaires’ tax cut, and protect the tax credits that make work pay.

    That’s why we want to introduce a 10p starting rate for income tax.

    And we’d be taking on the energy company rip-offs and breaking the stranglehold of the big energy companies.

    That’s how we begin to win the people’s trust once again.

    That’s how we will start to build a different economic future for Britain.

    Independence is Not the Answer

    And so what about Alex Salmond?

    While we present a plan for our economic future, Alex Salmond spends his time trying to draw a line through the country.

    It’s the same divisive politics that we’ve seen from the Tories, just a different form of division.

    The Tories divide between those in work and those out of work, those in the private sector and those in the public sector, those in the trade unions and those outside them.

    Alex Salmond wants to divide between the people of Scotland and the rest of the United Kingdom.

    It’s wrong.

    He has no focus on the issues that really shape people’s lives.

    What has he said about Lady Thatcher’s legacy?

    Not just that Scotland didn’t mind her economics.

    He said thanks to Lady Thatcher we got a Scottish Parliament.

    Well I’ve got a message for him.

    Margaret Thatcher didn’t deliver a Scottish Parliament.

    The Labour Party and the people of Scotland did.

    And he doesn’t understand the need for a new settlement, despite all his rhetoric, he defends the old order.

    His is a narrow nationalism that thinks the way Scotland prospers is in a race to the bottom across the UK in corporation tax while doing nothing for working people.

    His is a narrow nationalism that says if it is in the interest of the SNP then it is OK to do cosy deals with Rupert Murdoch.

    His is a narrow nationalism that prays for Tory success so that he can convince people that the only way to get rid of the Tories is to get out of the UK.

    He claims he opposes the Tories but he wants them to succeed.

    We are going to stop them in their tracks.

    Have you ever heard such a selfish, self-serving, narrow-minded, blinkered, in it for yourself, divide and rule piece of nonsense?

    We know we need to celebrate our shared history.

    Build our shared future.

    And elect a Labour government.

    Conclusion

    Our country has been here before.

    Huge challenges our country faces.

    Dark and difficult times.

    But every time we have come through the storm, it is because we have come together, joined together, worked together: the people of Scotland, the people of Britain.

    So here is my message to you.

    Let us do that again.

    We offer something our opponents cannot.

    The power of a people coming together.

    Let the Tories try to divide our society.

    Let the SNP try to divide our country.

    We are a one One Nation party.

    We are the unifiers.

    We are the ones who can turn Scotland round.

    And with your help, we are the ones who can turn Britain too.

  • Ed Miliband – 2013 Speech to the People’s Policy Forum

    edmiliband

    Below is the text of the speech made by the Leader of the Opposition, Ed Miliband, to the People’s Policy Forum in Birmingham on 23rd March 2013.

    I am delighted to be here today.

    This is a very special event.

    What today is about is doing politics in a different way.

    And doesn’t politics need it?

    Because I think we have to do politics in a different way.

    You can watch politicians trading blows in the House of Commons each week.

    Sometimes I enjoy it and sometimes I don’t.

    But it’s not necessarily very enlightening.

    We’ve got to take politics back to where it belongs: to you.

    So that’s why we’ve said: you set the agenda.

    You can ask anything you want.

    And we will have a conversation.

    But first let me say a few things about where the country is and where the country needs to go.

    Since I became Labour leader, I have tried to understand what we got wrong on issues like banking regulation, immigration and Iraq, I have sought to understand why people left Labour.

    But as I go around Britain I also sense an increasing disappointment and disillusionment with this Government.

    They don’t believe David Cameron can turn Britain around.

    But let me be clear with you.

    I know that however discredited, divided and damaging this Government becomes, it doesn’t necessarily translate into support for us.

    We have to earn your trust.

    Indeed, many people will believe that the failure of this Government means they should give up on politics altogether.

    That nobody can turn round the problems of the country and nobody deserves their vote. That is a terrible thing for our democracy.

    I understand that some people think the problems are so great that no no one can fix them.

    But I passionately believe that Labour can. That we can turn round the problems of the country.

    Let’s start with the economy.

    Three days after George Osborne’s Budget, the fog is clearing.

    It’s five years since the financial crisis of 2008.

    But what’s happening now?

    We are in the slowest recovery for 100 years.

    Wages are flat.

    Prices are rising.

    Living standards falling.

    Yet here’s the really depressing thing. What the Government offered this week was no change, just more of the same.

    A penny off a pint – buy 320 pints of beer and you get one free. I don’t know about you but I don’t think that’s going to turn around the living standards crisis and it’s not going to convince anyone.

    All they offer is more of the same and that’s not enough.

    Can you imagine another five years of this?

    Low growth.

    Living standards squeezed further.

    You paying the price.

    They are resigned to a lost decade.

    A lost decade Britain cannot afford.

    A lost decade of national decline.

    Not a decade where we make sacrifices now to build a better future, but where things get worse not better.

    But I know what some of you are thinking.

    “It’s true things look grim. But there’s nothing we can do.”

    Well, I don’t believe it is inevitable.

    And it is One Nation Labour’s task to show you we can stop this slide into a lost decade.

    To show people it doesn’t have to be this way.

    Not promising overnight answers.

    Not promising that things will be easy

    But showing there is a different direction for the country.

    And that is what I want to do today.

    I start from a simple idea:

    We succeed as a country not by leaving things to a few people at the top.

    We need an economic recovery made by the many.

    Our economy is always more successful when it works for all working people.

    When everyone can play their part.

    We can learn from Birmingham’s history.

    Over 150 years ago, a man called George Cadbury opened a factory just down the road from here.

    He had a simple idea: his business would be more successful if his workforce was well-motivated and lived in decent homes with decent conditions.

    That is the idea that should guide us to the change we need today.

    But it hasn’t been the way our economy has been run for a long time.

    And it certainly isn’t the direction offered by this Government.

    They think wealth comes from a few at the top.

    I know wealth comes from the forgotten wealth creators.

    The people that work in the supermarkets, the factories, in small businesses on your high street, doing the shifts, putting in the hours.

    It’s them who have got to be rewarded and supported in this country.

    So what should we be doing differently?

    Let’s start with our young people.

    Long-term youth unemployment here in Birmingham went up 46 per cent last year.

    On Wednesday, we learnt that 50,000 more young people across the country were looking for work.

    After all the rhetoric we’ve heard from the Government, that is the reality.

    On the same day, we learnt that Barclays were paying out £39 million in bonuses to just 9 people who work there.

    And that’s two weeks before they get the millionaires’ tax cut from this Government.

    This is not an economy being run for the many.

    But for the few.

    So five years on from the financial crisis, the banks carry on with business as usual and our young people find themselves without work.

    We can’t afford another five years of this.

    A lost decade for our young people.

    So as a start, I say tax the bankers’ bonuses and use the money to put our young people back to work.

    Guarantee every young person out of work for more than a year a job.

    And as Prime Minister I would get every business and charity behind this idea.

    And let’s get our young people working again with a proper career and future.

    All of them.

    Particularly the 50 per cent of young people who don’t go to university.

    We’ve got to have a revolution in the way we do things for them.

    So the focus of the next Labour government would be on getting those young people proper qualifications and apprenticeships.

    And because we want businesses to get the young people they need, we will give them more control over the money spent on training.

    But in return if firms want a major government contract they would have to provide apprenticeships for the next generation.

    That would mean 32,000 apprenticeships for High Speed 2.

    Not just a route of travel from Birmingham to London, but a route to a proper career.

    Ensuring rights and responsibilities for young people and businesses.

    So young people is where I would start in building a recovery made by the many.

    But that recovery also needs to include the millions of businesses in this country that are the backbone of our economy.

    You know that better than anyone here in the West Midlands.

    For so many businesses, this looks more and more like a lost decade.

    And nowhere is that more true than when it comes to our banks.

    Change has been promised time and again but change never comes.

    I am not just talking about bonuses.

    But about lending to Britain’s businesses.

    That is falling at the moment.

    Can we turn this round?

    Yes.

    Instead of businesses serving our banks, we need banks serving our businesses.

    As part of a new British Investment Bank, let’s have a regional banking system, serving each and every region including here in the West Midlands.

    The world’s first building society was founded in Birmingham.

    And we should build a system with the same ethic today.

    The purpose of regional banks should be to support businesses in their region, not to gamble the money in the City of London.

    Giving small businesses, the life blood of our economy, the priority they deserve.

    The lost decade also threatens the infrastructure of the country.

    Schools, transport, housing.

    It wastes talent today and stores up problems for the future.

    Across the West Midlands you’ve seen 18,000 construction workers’ jobs have been lost since 2010.

    And housing starts are at the lowest levels since the 1920s.

    Yet the Government are borrowing £245 billion more than they planned to pay their own failure. It just doesn’t make any sense.

    And we’ve now got schemes which seem about making it easier for people to buy second homes.

    But they are not willing to invest that same money in the actual bricks and mortar.

    We all know that we can’t solve the housing crisis without investing in the homes people need to live in.

    A Labour budget would invest in our infrastructure.

    It’s right for our economy and it’s right for people who can’t afford to buy or rent their home.

    These are just three ways in which we can start to turn round the direction of the country.

    For young people, for small businesses and for our infrastructure.

    But we can’t create a recovery made by the many if family budgets are being squeezed year after year after year.

    And the reality for so many families in Britain is a living standards crisis.

    Which leaves people without confidence in the future.

    Now, you know better than anyone that no politician can transform people’s living standards overnight.

    But we can make the right choices.

    That’s why if there had been a Labour Budget a few days ago, we would have reversed the millionaires’ tax cut.

    And protected the tax credits that help work pay for millions.

    Reintroduced a 10p tax rate paid for by a new tax on houses worth over £2 million.

    And we would have had a temporary cut in VAT.

    And that’s not all.

    We would tackle rip-off prices.

    Starting by reforming the energy markets to get a better deal for consumers.

    And do everything we could to encourage a living wage, as Labour is doing here in Birmingham.

    All these policies would make a difference. And that’s how you start a recovery made by the many.

    These are just some of the changes we would make in government to avoid a lost decade.

    Despite all our problems our country faces, I am an optimist about Britain not a pessimist.

    The Government somehow wants you to believe that we have bad people who are letting down a good government.

    Actually we have good people who are being let down by a bad government.

    A bad government that stands up for the wrong things.

    A government that cut taxes for millionaires.

    And disgracefully throws people out of their homes with the bedroom tax.

    This country can achieve anything when it puts its mind to it and when we have the right spirit.

    And that means we need to unite as a country.

    I am reminded of the stories my dad told me when I was a boy.

    He came to this country in the Second World War.

    As a refugee from the Nazis.

    He joined the Royal Navy.

    The Navy brought people of all backgrounds, all classes, all talents coming together for Britain.

    Because they knew that Britain could only win the war if everyone made their contribution.

    That’s what I mean by “One Nation”.

    It’s not a Labour idea.

    Or a Conservative idea.

    But a British idea about how much we can achieve as a country if we come together.

    We saw the same spirit when it came to the Olympic games.

    Pulling together.

    Coming together.

    Working together.

    For the good of ourselves.

    And the good of our country.

    That’s what makes anything possible.

    That’s how we avoid the lost decade.

    That’s how we can get our country moving again.

    And that’s how we can meet our challenge to change Britain.

    I look forward to working together.

  • Ed Miliband – 2013 Speech to the British Chambers of Commerce

    edmiliband

    Below is the text of a speech made by the Leader of the Opposition, Ed Miliband, to the British Chambers of Commerce annual conference in London on 14th March 2013.

    It is excellent to be with you here today.

    Let me start by saying how much I admire the work of the British Chambers of Commerce.

    Because of the 100,000 businesses, rooted in every community in the country.

    Knowing what is happening at the sharp end.

    And you are always willing to speak truth to power.

    And I want to pay particular tribute to John Longworth for the work he does as your Director-General for the voice he provides for the BCC.

    I was very struck by something John Longworth said the other day.

    He said: “Firms across Britain know they can drive growth…but they also know that they can’t do it alone…”

    John is so right about this.

    You create the wealth, make the profits, employ the people.

    But you need a country that gets behind you.

    To get the recovery we need it must be made by the many, the small and medium sized firms like yours that are the backbone of the British economy.

    Now there is a Budget in six days time.

    And as the BCC has said, urgent action is needed to help your businesses to succeed.

    To help our economy grow.

    And to help reduce the deficit on a sustainable basis.

    That starts with the confidence and security of your customers.

    That’s why we’ve called, for example, for a temporary cut in VAT.

    And for the reintroduction of a 10p tax rate.

    And any government preparing for a Budget in the current climate should be looking at the burden of business rates, especially as they fall on small businesses on this country.

    Measures like these will help us take the first steps towards a recovery made by the many.

    But they are not enough.

    Because the Budget also needs to raise our sights to the big challenges that our country faces.

    And we need to confront them, head on, right now.

    Because the old ways just won’t do any more.

    We need to build new institutions out of the rubble of the old.

    And I want to propose today radical new approaches to banking, skills, the British firm and infrastructure, all underpinned by confidence and clarity about our place in the world.

    That’s the way we truly get a recovery that is built to last.

    A recovery made by the many.

    Our approach for the future of the British economy has to start with our banks.

    I start from a simple proposition: we need banks that serve our businesses, not businesses that serve our banks.

    I hear it so often from businesses like yours that you just can’t get the finance that you need.

    Turned down by banks that don’t know your businesses or who don’t seem to care.

    And the government’s measures are just failing.

    Net lending fell by £4.5 billion last quarter.

    While too many of the big banks appear to carry on with a bonus as usual culture.

    It is time to recognise that tinkering will not sort this out.

    Britain needs a wholly new banking system.

    And to understand how to build one, we need to understand the root of the problem.

    Because these problems are decades old.

    In the ten years before the financial crash, 84% of the money lent by British banks went into property and financial services.

    As an example, just think about the transformation of Northern Rock.

    Founded as a proud mutual, with a clear mission to serve the people and businesses of the North East of England.

    A century of success.

    Ending in an ignominious collapse.

    Caused by its gambling in the City and in the property markets, rather than its old commitment in the real economy.

    We have to learn the lessons.

    It’s why we need tough regulation of our banking system.

    That’s why we want new challenger banks to create real competition on the high street.

    And why we are working with the BCC to design a proper British Investment Bank.

    Such a Bank would provide long-term and patient capital for British businesses, especially those just starting up.

    But today I want to say that we need to go further.

    Because we need to make sure that the British Investment Bank serves the whole country.

    So as part of that idea, I believe we need a regional banking system, reaching out to each and every region of the country.

    Regional banks, with a mission to serve that region and that region alone.

    Not banks that like to say “no”.

    But banks that know your region and your business.

    Not banks that you mistrust.

    But banks you can come to trust.

    Today we are publishing the report of our independent Small Business Taskforce I commissioned, chaired by Bill Thomas.

    It calls for Britain to have its own version of the German “Sparkassen”: local banks that are run to support the local economy.

    I am committed to turning the idea of regional banks into reality during the next government.

    Because I am determined that One Nation Labour becomes the party of the small business and the entrepreneur as together we create a recovery made by the many.

    And just like we need a new banking system to provide you with the finance you need, so we need a new skills system to provide you with the workforce you need.

    Again I start from a simple proposition: every young person should have a pathway to good qualifications, a job and a career.

    For so many young people that doesn’t happen.

    And at the same time, you have been telling us for so long that you don’t get the young people with the skills and training they need.

    That sometimes you have the vacancies but just can’t find skilled young people to fill them.

    We need a transformation of education, opportunities and our culture for the forgotten 50% of young people who don’t go to University.

    I think about a fourteen year old at school today.

    If it is university that excites them, then they know the path forward, even as that path has got so much harder recently.

    Work hard at GCSEs, then at A-levels and then move on to a degree and out to the world of work.

    But what about those young people who want a different route?

    Those who want to learn a skill or a craft.

    Or want an apprenticeship.

    Britain offers those young people very little at the moment.

    This is another decades-long problem and we need to turn it around.

    There is an alphabet soup of vocational qualifications on offer to young people.

    We need to give young people a clear sense in each area of what qualification they should be aiming at.

    That’s why the next Labour government proposes to accredit a new gold-standard technical baccalaureate so that our young people know where they are heading.

    But it’s not just about a clear set of qualifications, it is about qualifications that are relevant to you as businesses.

    Far too often, you tell us money spent on training is not well spent.

    So we propose for the first time to put the public money spent on training and apprenticeships directly in the hands of employers.

    And as well as changing qualifications, and making them relevant, we also need to inspire our young people.

    Building up real work experience in school, not taking it away.

    Creating new elite technical colleges for young people to which they can aspire, like they aspire to Oxford and Cambridge.

    And we need to challenge the culture that says university is always best and vocational training is second-best.

    Other countries don’t have this culture and Britain can’t afford it either.

    Part of that change of culture we need is to celebrate and nurture the British firm.

    We shouldn’t be ashamed to be patriotic about supporting our businesses.

    Other countries do it, so should we.

    You have been telling us for a long time how particularly difficult it is in Britain for a small firm to become a medium sized firm and a medium sized firm to become a world-beating corporation.

    The way we change that is by addressing the short-term culture imposed on British business.

    Sir George Cox, former Head of the Institute of Directors, recently reported to us on how to make this happen.

    For that to happen we need to make changes.

    Like abolishing quarterly reporting rules that lead listed firms constantly to think next month’s returns are more important than planning for the next five or ten years.

    Like changing takeover rules, so great British firms aren’t at the mercy of the hedge funds and speculators who can swoop in after a takeover has been launched in the hunt for a quick buck.

    And like changing rules on executive pay so that Britain’s best talent is incentivized to take the longer view.

    Just some changes we need to enable British firms to take the long view.

    And for smaller firms we should make changes too.

    I hope you will engage with our Small Business Taskforce.

    It has a whole set of ideas about how to help small businesses.

    One of those calls on us to create new hubs of enterprise across the country.

    Places where firms can share the costs of premises, back office services and other business advice.

    This is something which government should be doing more to enable.

    We’re determined to help small firms: invent, invest, train and prosper.

    Because we know that so many jobs in the future are not going to come from a small number of large firms but a large number of small firms.

    But the culture of the short-term isn’t just bad for business.

    You know better than anybody that it holds back our government too.

    If we are going to have a recovery made by the many, our country needs infrastructure as good as anywhere in the world.

    That’s true of transport, energy and communications.

    You’ve been telling us for so long that the way we resource and plan our infrastructure in Britain is not good enough.

    And I agree.

    That’s why at a time when our construction sector is still flat on its back, in this Budget One Nation Labour would be advancing investment in infrastructure.

    But you know also it isn’t just about the resources, it is about the way decisions are made.

    Sometimes we get it right.

    As we did with the Olympic Games.

    But so often we don’t.

    That’s why Labour has asked Sir John Armitt, former chair of the Olympic Delivery Authority, to see how we can do better.

    He will be looking for answers on how we invest in our infrastructure, how we get the planning rules right and how we can create consensus across the political spectrum on some of the most difficult decisions.

    These are vital questions.

    So that rebuilding our country will not only begin now but continue for decades to come.

    Giving business the security and confidence they need.

    I know you will all offer Sir John your support in that work.

    Finally, all of these institutional changes need to be underpinned by a confidence about our place in the world.

    So many of you are exporters, looking at new markets, and exploiting those markets you are already involved with.

    The BCC is rightly making the case for greater co-ordination of the work that is done abroad to help you compete and succeed.

    I agree and these are part of the recommendations of our Small Business Taskforce.

    But I believe that if we are to succeed we also need an unambiguous sense of our national future.

    I understand the frustrations you have with the way the European Union often works, including many businesses over regulation.

    And I want a Europe of jobs and growth not the austerity and unemployment we have.

    But for me, I want to be clear: our future lies in the European Union not outside it.

    Because of the 500 million consumers in the single market.

    But also if we are to reach out to the BRIC countries, our place lies in the EU not outside it.

    Because we have more chance of getting our way in breaking down trade barriers with the rest of the world as part of that bloc than on our own.

    Not finding that negotiations about trade happen without Britain in the room.

    So a reformed banking system, a new skills system, a patriotic championing of the British firm, a new approach to infrastructure and a secure sense of our place in the world.

    But there is something else about the way that we will succeed.

    In these times, I think back to the stories my dad told me.

    He came to Britain as a Jewish refugee during the Second World War, fleeing from the Nazis.

    He joined the Royal Navy.

    It was a time when people of all backgrounds, of all beliefs, of all talents came together for a common purpose.

    They shared a vision for the country.

    They knew, like John Longworth said, that we can’t do it alone.

    That is what I mean by One Nation.

    You know, there are many pessimists around today.

    I am not one of them.

    I am one of the optimists.

    Just think what the Olympic Games showed us.

    When we pull together, when we work together, we can achieve anything.

    For the good of ourselves.

    And the good of our country.

    That is what we have shown throughout our history.

    That is what we have shown in our darkest times.

    That is what you show in the work you do every day.

    That’s what we can show again as a country.

    And I look forward to working together.

  • Ed Miliband – 2013 Speech to the Fabian Society

    edmiliband

    Below is the text of the speech made by Ed Miliband, the Leader of the Opposition, to the Fabian Society on 12th January 2013.

    It is great to be here at the Fabians.

    Today I want to talk to you about the idea of One Nation.

    The idea of a country which we rebuild together, where everyone plays their part.

    It is not an idea rooted in Fabian pamphlets.

    Though I bow to nobody in being an avid reader of them.

    It is not an idea either rooted in academic studies of Sweden or any other country.

    Though as some of you know, again I can talk at length about these subjects too.

    It is an idea rooted deep in British history.

    Because it is rooted deep in the soul of the British people.

    Deep in the daily way we go about our lives.

    Our relationships with our family, our friends, our neighbours.

    We know this idea is a deep part of our national story because we have so many different ways of describing it.

    “All hands to the pump.”

    “Mucking in.”

    “Pulling your weight.”

    “Doing your bit.”

    And every day we see it at work in our country.

    On Christmas Day, I helped out somebody down the street from me who makes Christmas lunches for elderly people in the area living on their own, it’s that spirit.

    The same spirit we saw last year in the Olympic Games.

    Now because this idea is so much part of who we are as a nation, of how we think of ourselves, all politicians try to embrace it.

    But its real potential, and what I want to talk about today, comes when we understand the deeper lesson for the way we run our country.

    Turning this spirit of collective endeavour, of looking out for each other, from something we do in our daily lives, to the way our nation is run.

    That is what One Nation Labour is about.

    Taking the common decency and values of the British people and saying we must make it the way we run the country as well.

    And why does this idea – the idea of One Nation – speak so directly to the state of Britain today?

    Because we are so far from being One Nation.

    While a very few people at the top are doing well, so many people feel their prospects diminishing, their insecurity rising.

    They feel on their own.

    Not part of a common endeavour.

    You know, a young woman came up to me recently and told me she had decided to go to University in Holland because she said she couldn’t afford to do so in Britain.

    Believe it or not, to a government minister her departure will seem a success because if more people leave the country it will help them meet their net migration target.

    But it doesn’t feel like a success to me to have talented young people fleeing abroad.

    In Britain that young woman doesn’t feel part of a country where she can play her part, she feels on her own.

    And it’s not just our young people who are finding it so hard to do their bit.

    There are so many people across Britain who want to play their part but don’t feel they can.

    Those running small businesses are struggling just to keep their business afloat in the face of rising energy bills and banks that won’t help.

    They don’t feel part of a Britain we rebuild together, they feel on their own.

    And then take all the people struggling to make ends meet, to pay the bills, doing two or three jobs, they feel on their own with nobody on their side.

    So what do so many people in Britain have in common today?

    They believe the system is rigged against them.

    They believe that the country isn’t working for them.

    And you know, it’s not that any of them thinks Britain owes them a living or an easy life.

    All they want is a sense of hope, they want to believe there is a vision for a future we can build together.

    And that is why One Nation is such a powerful idea right now: because it is about our country and what it faces.

    Can David Cameron answer this call for One Nation?

    This week shows yet again why he can’t.

    What did they call it on Monday?

    The Ronseal re-launch.

    But what did we discover?

    The tin was empty.

    And they have no vision for the country.

    And what have we also seen this week?

    The appalling attempt to denigrate all those who are looking for work.

    To pretend that a Bill that hits 7 million working people is somehow promoting responsibility.

    And all the time an attempt to divide the country between so-called scroungers and strivers.

    To point the finger of blame at others, so people don’t point the finger of blame at this government.

    Nasty, divisive politics which we should never accept.

    It should be the first duty of any Prime Minister to be able to walk in the shoes of others.

    This week he has shown he just can’t do it.

    No empathy.

    And no vision either.

    So my overwhelming feeling in looking at this government is simple:

    Britain can do better than this.

    I have said what it means to be a One Nation Prime Minister.

    To strive always to walk in the shoes of others.

    But One Nation tells us more than that.

    It tells us that we need to bring the country together so everyone can play their part.

    And let me explain what One Nation is about in our economy, our society and our politics.

    Let me start with the economy.

    One Nation Labour is about reshaping our economy from its foundations, so that all do have the opportunity to play their part, not just a few.

    And to understand what a One Nation economy means, we need to recognise how it differs from what New Labour did and also how it differs from the current government.

    New Labour rightly broke from Old Labour and celebrated the power of private enterprise to energise our country.

    It helped get people back into work, and introduced the minimum wage and tax credits to help make work pay.

    And it used tax revenues to overcome decades of neglect and invest in hospitals, schools and the places where people live.

    There are millions of people who have better lives because of those decisions.

    It is a far cry from what we see today.

    We’re back to the old trickle-down philosophy.

    Cut taxes for the richest.

    For everyone else, increase insecurity at work to make them work harder.

    In other words, for the 99 per cent: you’re on your own.

    Sink or swim.

    For the top 1 per cent: we’ll cut your taxes.

    We don’t need a crystal ball to know what this will mean, because the last two and a half years have shown us.

    Business as usual at the banks, squeezed living standards, a stagnating economy.

    No plan for rebuilding the British economy.

    But the One Nation Labour solution is not to say that we need to go back to the past, to carry on as we did in government.

    One Nation Labour learns the lessons of the financial crisis.

    It begins from the truth that New Labour did not do enough to take on the vested interests and bring about structural change in our economy.

    To make it an economy that works for the many not just the few.

    From the banks on our high streets to the City of London to the big energy companies.

    Now, New Labour did challenge the old trickle-down economics by redistributing from the top.

    But again it didn’t do enough to change our economy so that it grew from the middle out, not from the top down.

    One Nation Labour is explicitly about reshaping our economy so that it can help what I call the forgotten wealth creators of Britain.

    The millions of men and women who work the shifts, put in the hours.

    Who are out to work while George Osborne’s curtains are still closed.

    And are still out at work when he has gone to bed.

    Those who have gone to university and those who haven’t.

    The people who don’t take home millions or hundreds of thousands, but make a hard, honest and difficult living.

    These are the people on whom our future national prosperity truly depends.

    So what do we need to do today?

    We need to reform our economy.

    To take on the vested interests that block the opportunities for our small businesses and for all the other forgotten wealth-creators.

    We need a new deal for our small businesses who have been let down by the banks.

    We have to tackle short-termism in the City to enable companies to play their part to contribute to long-term wealth creation.

    We have to work with business radically to reform our apprenticeships and vocational education, so we use the talents of all young people, including the 50 per cent who don’t go to University.

    And we have to promote a living wage to make work pay.

    That is the way that we rebuild our economy.

    From the middle out.

    Not from the top down.

    That’s what One Nation Labour is about in the economy.

    So we learn the lesson of New Labour’s successes, embracing wealth creation.

    We learn the lessons of what it didn’t do well enough, reshaping our economy and creating shared prosperity.

    And we recognise there will be less money around because of the deficit we inherit.

    That’s why Ed Balls rightly came to this conference last year, to say if we were in government today we would have to put jobs in the public sector ahead of pay increases.

    And in a way that we did not have to be under New Labour, we will have to be ruthless in the priorities we have. And clear that we will have to deliver more with less.

    So One Nation Labour adapts to new times, in particular straitened economic circumstances.

    And the power of the idea of One Nation also shapes the kind of society I believe in.

    One Nation Labour is based on a Britain we rebuild together.

    That means sharing the vision of a common life, not a country divided by class, race, gender, income and wealth.

    And that’s so far from where we are in Britain today.

    We can only build that kind of society, where we share a common life, if people right across it, from top to bottom, feel a sense of responsibility to each other.

    Now, New Labour, unlike Old Labour, pioneered the idea of rights and responsibilities.

    From crime to welfare to anti-social behaviour, it was clear that we owe duties to each other as citizens.

    It knew we do not live as individuals on our own.

    And it knew that strong confident communities are the way that you build a strong confident nation.

    All of this is so far again from what we have seen from this government.

    This government preaches responsibility.

    But do nothing to make it possible for people to play their part.

    They demand people work, but won’t take the basic action to ensure that the work is available.

    They talk about a “big society”.

    But then it makes life harder for our charities, our community groups.

    But here again the answer is not simply to carry on where we left off in government.

    New Labour was right to talk about rights and responsibilities but was too timid in enforcing them, especially at the top of society.

    And it was too sanguine about the consequences of rampant free markets which we know can threaten our common way of life.

    Learning from our history, One Nation Labour is clear that we need to do more to create a society where everyone genuinely plays their part.

    A One Nation country cannot be one:

    Where Chief Executive pay goes up and up and up and everybody else’s is stagnant.

    Where major corporations are located in Britain, sell in Britain, make profits in Britain but do not pay taxes in Britain.

    And where at the top of elite institutions, from newspapers to politics, some people just seem to believe that the rules do not apply to them.

    To turn things round in Britain, we all have to play our part.

    Especially in hard times.

    We are right to say that responsibility should apply to those on social security.

    But we need to say that responsibility matters at the top too.

    That’s the essence of One Nation Labour.

    It shares New Labour’s insight about our obligations to each other.

    And it learns the lessons of what New Labour didn’t do well enough, ensuring responsibilities go all the way through society from top to bottom.

    And what does One Nation Labour mean for the way we do our politics?

    It starts from the idea that people should have more power and control over their lives, so that everyone feels able to play their part, not left on their own.

    New Labour began with a bold agenda for the distribution of power in Britain.

    And it stood for a Labour party not dominated by one sectional interest, but reaching out into parts of Britain that Old Labour had never spoken to.

    Inviting people from all walks of life to join the party and to play their part.

    It wanted too, to open up our system of government and oversaw the biggest Constitutional changes for generations, including devolution to Scotland and Wales.

    The contrast with this government is clear.

    The way they operate, the high-handed arrogance of their way of doing things.

    They cannot claim to be opening up politics.

    And they certainly cannot claim to be rooted in the lives of the British people.

    But once again we have to move on from New Labour, as well as from this government.

    Because although New Labour often started with the right intentions, over time it did not do enough to change the balance of power in this country.

    That was true of the Labour Party itself.

    Of our democracy.

    And of our public services.

    By the time we left office, too many people in Britain didn’t feel as if the Labour party was open to their influence, or listening to them.

    Take immigration.

    I am proud to celebrate the multi-ethnic, diverse nature of Britain.

    But high levels of migration were having huge effects on the lives of people in our country.

    And too often those in power seemed not to accept this.

    The fact that they didn’t explains partly why people turned against us in the last general election.

    So we must work to ensure that it never happens again.

    And what is the lesson for One Nation Labour?

    It is to change the way that power and politics works in our own Party right away.

    That is what you will be seeing from One Nation Labour in 2013.

    Opening up in new ways.

    Recruiting MPs from every part of British life: from business to the military to working people from across every community.

    Seeking support in every part of the United Kingdom, across the South of the country as well as the North.

    Building a party that is dedicated to working with people to help them improve their own lives—even before government.

    So for example, Labour Party members going to door to door offering people practical to help switch energy suppliers and cut their bills.

    Creating a policy-making process that enables people directly to shape our policies so that they reflect their own concerns.

    Jonathan Primett from Chatham wrote to us recently, complaining about rogue landlords at a time when the private rented sector is growing fast in our country.

    Today I want to respond to him.

    Britain is in danger of having two nations divided between those who own their one homes and those who rent.

    If we are going to build One Nation, people who rent their homes should have rights and protections as well.

    That’s about rooting out the rogue landlords.

    Stopping families being ripped off by letting agents.

    And giving new security to families who rent.

    So we will introduce a national register of landlords, to give greater powers for local authorities to root out and strike off rogue landlords.

    We will end the confusing, inconsistent fees and charges in the private rented sector.

    And we will seek to give greater security to families who rent and remove the barriers that stand in the way of longer term tenancies.

    That is a real example of how a One Nation Labour Party, by opening up our politics, is responding to the new challenges that the British people care about today.

    One Nation Labour is also practising a new approach to campaigning—through community organising—which doesn’t just seek to win votes but build new relationships in every part of Britain.

    For example, taking up local issues from high streets dominated by betting shops to taking on payday loan companies.

    And, of course, a One Nation Labour government should open up too.

    If devolution to Scotland and Wales is right, so it must be right that the next Labour government devolves power to local government in England.

    And reforms our public services so that the people who use them and the people that work in them, feel as if they have a real chance of shaping the way they operate.

    That’s the way to ensure we can all work together, to rebuild our country, with everyone playing their part.

    That’s what One Nation Labour is about.

    It learns the lesson of New Labour’s successes, seeking to reach out to parts of Britain that Old Labour ignored.

    It learns the lessons of what it didn’t do well enough, of where New Labour left people behind.

    And it recognises that in 2013, as the world has changed, politics has to change with it.

    I talked about it in my Labour Party conference speech a few months ago about why I came into politics.

    It was because of my personal faith.

    A faith that we are better, stronger together than when we are on our own.

    A faith that when good people come together they can overcome any odds.

    For me, that’s what One Nation Labour is all about.

    This faith isn’t unique to me.

    It is deeply rooted in our country.

    One Nation Labour is different from the current government.

    And from New Labour and Old Labour too.

    It will take on the vested interests in order to reshape our economy in the interests of all.

    It will insist on responsibility throughout society, including at the top so we can build a united, not divided, Britain.

    It will strive to spread power as well as working for prosperity.

    We must build One Nation.

    It is what the British people demand of us.

    And, together, it is what we can achieve.