Tag: 2011

  • Ed Miliband – 2011 Speech in Newcastle-upon-Tyne

    edmiliband

    Below is the text of the speech made by Ed Miliband at a campaign event in Newcastle-upon-Tyne in 2011.

    One year ago the Liberal Democrats told voters in Newcastle that they would fight for the next generation to get fair chances, for families struggling to get by and to strengthen the ties that bind our communities together.

    That is what Nick Clegg told the people of Britain exactly one year ago when he looked viewers in the eye during in that first historic TV debate and promised a different kind of politics.

    But the Lib Dems have broken their promises.

    A year ago the Lib Dems promised to scrap tuition fees. But they trebled them.

    A year ago, the Lib Dems promised to oppose a rise in VAT. But they voted to back the Tories in raising it to 20 per cent.

    A year ago, the Lib Dems promised to protect the NHS. But they backed David Cameron’s expensive bureaucratic plans which put the founding principles of the heath service at risk.

    A year ago, the Lib Dems promised to support measured deficit reduction plans. But they backed Tory cuts that go £40 billion further and faster than those Labour would have made.

    What a difference a year makes.

    Today I want to make a direct appeal to people who voted Liberal Democrat in past elections.

    Some may have voted Labour before, others not.

    But day-by-day it’s becoming clearer the Liberal Democrats can no longer claim to represent the values for which so many voted at the last election.

    I know that some people in the Lib Dem leadership like to claim they are making a difference inside this Conservative-led Government.

    But the truth is that the Liberal Democrats are not front seat passengers or back seat passengers in this Conservative-led Government . They are locked in the boot of a vehicle which is travelling rapidly in the wrong direction.

    We may have heard some shouting coming from that boot in recent days. There is, after all, an election on. But it isn’t changing either the speed or the way this Government is headed. Too many people who thought they were voting for a progressive party a year ago have been betrayed.

    There may still be three main parties standing candidates but there are only two directions for our country

    There is the Labour way: standing up for young people, for students, for sure start, for the next generation; standing up for families feeling squeezed; standing up for strong, safe communities.

    And there is the Tory-Liberal Democrat way. Cuts that go too far, too fast. Cuts that are not only unfair on cities like Newcastle but which also threaten the jobs and the economic recovery we need.

    Labour is standing up for your values. We would tax bank bonuses, not give the bankers a tax cut. We would not have imposed a VAT rise on families feeling the squeeze. We would have made sensible cuts at a speed which protects jobs and services rather than supporting reckless cuts that go too far too fast. We support  the NHS. We support keeping police on the street. We support giving our young people a fair chance in life.

    I believe these are the values of the majority of voters in this country.

    If these are your values, let Labour be your voice in these tough times.

  • Ed Miliband – 2011 Speech at Royal Festival Hall

    edmiliband

    Below is the text of the speech made by Ed Miliband, the Leader of the Opposition, at the Royal Festival Hall on 23rd May 2011.

    Thank you all for coming this morning.

    I’d like to start, by saying a few words about a big event happening later this week.

    Not the visit of President Obama.

    But my marriage to Justine on Friday.

    The most important people at our wedding will be our lovely boys, Daniel and Sam.

    I suppose every father says this, but becoming a parent really does change the way you think about life.

    The love you feel overwhelms you.

    Like most fathers I was unprepared for that.

    It broadens your perspective.

    You think about the kind of future you want for your children.

    For their health and happiness.

    And for the kind of country you want them to grow up in.

    I’d like to speak today, not just about them, but about the prospect of their whole generation.

    My belief that we can and must create a better life for the next generation.

    My concern, like millions of others, is that for the first time for more than a century, the next generation will struggle to do better than the last.

    In the past we took it for granted that if we worked hard, if our children worked hard, they would be more prosperous, and have greater opportunities.

    But the last few decades have begun to show that the promise to the next generation, the promise to our children, what I call the promise of Britain, cannot now be taken for granted.

    Today I want to set out the scale of the problem as I see it, and why it matters – not just to those affected, but for the whole country.

    And how I see it as the duty of my generation of politicians to answer this challenge.

    As a parent, like all parents, I judge myself on the opportunities my children will have—and the happiness that can provide.

    As Prime Minister, I will judge the next Labour government on the opportunities that Britain can provide for all of the next generation.

    I believe this issue is so important that it must a key test for the next Labour government.

    That promise of Britain is a benchmark against which we will be judged.

    Let me start by talking about what I have heard from people about their hopes and fears for the future.

    Some of the people I have met agree with us on the big issue that politics has focused on —the pace and scale of deficit reduction.

    Others disagree with us.

    But what unites everyone I meet is that there seems to be so much that politics isn’t talking about.

    That’s why I say people want more from us.

    People want more from our politics.

    And what is happening to the next generation is one of those unspoken truths that people know about – but somehow politicians seem to refuse to discuss.

    I’ve heard it from the young people I’ve met thinking about their options as they leave school or college, fearing unemployment.

    I’ve heard it from the young man I met in my constituency who said he wasn’t going to go to university, even though he had the grades, because of the debt he feared he would face at the end of it.

    I’ve heard it from the Mums and Dads who don’t understand, because they have done everything right – raised their children well, given them every opportunity – but their kids have no prospect of buying a home until they’re nearly 40.

    Since 2007 the average age of first time buyers without assistance has risen from 33 to 37.

    I’ve heard it from parents who feel like they are working longer hours than ever before and finding it hard to spend time with their family.

    And they’re right because we are the only country in Europe working longer hours now than twenty-five years ago.

    I’ve heard it from people in this country of all ages worried about the environmental legacy our generation will leave behind.

    That’s why people think politics isn’t delivering.

    Now it so happens that David Cameron, Nick Clegg, and I are all about the same age.

    Some people have called us the Jam Generation because of the music we grew up with.

    But our generation is on course to totally fail in meeting our duty to the next: to uphold the promise of Britain from which we all benefitted.

    Which we all took for granted.

    The current representatives of the Jam Generation are on course to create a jilted generation.

    You won’t often hear a politician say this, but I will.

    It’s not all our opponents’ fault.

    Some of these are big problems that are rooted in the way the country’s been changing for years, not just over the last year.

    But my criticism of this government, of David Cameron and Nick Clegg, is that they are doing nothing to turn things around.

    In fact on many of these issues, they are making them worse.

    Their only benchmark of success is dealing with the deficit.

    It is the over-riding concern.

    All others are set aside.

    Cutting the deficit matters.

    And the argument about how we do it matters too.

    But our politics cannot be reduced just to a debate about the deficit without considering the consequences for our country.

    Now they claim to be protecting the next generation by making these decisions.

    But their claim is blown apart by the evidence because the next generation are bearing so much of the burden of deficit reduction.

    They are scrapping the future jobs fund and the investment which gets young people off the dole and into work.

    Years on benefits is not just bad for them, it’s bad for Britain

    They are piling debts on our students – tens of thousands of pounds – which will put people off going to University.

    Those same debts will make it far harder for the next generation to start a business or buy a home.

    That’s not just bad for them it’s bad for Britain.

    They are making damaging changes in the tax system, with double the burden on families with children compared to those without.

    If it’s harder for families to get by, harder to be a parent, that’s not just bad for them but for Britain.

    And they are abolishing financial support for children staying on at school.

    A disastrous reform to our educational system.

    Not just bad for children at school but bad for our country’s future.

    They have failed to understand the problem and that risks accelerating the decline.

    It is exactly these young people whose talents Britain needs to ensure we continue to lead the world – from culture to science to great businesses.

    And wasting the talents of this generation makes it harder to get the deficit down, not easier.

    More young people out of work means more money spent on benefits, and less coming in with tax receipts.

    It’s the ultimate in short-termism.

    So when they claim that they making decisions in the interests of the next generation they’re not.

    Parents know it, grandparents know it, and every young person knows it.

    Let me be clear: I am not just criticising their deficit strategy, I’m criticising them for having a pessimistic, austere vision for the country.

    They have no ambition, no national mission.

    Normally, when new governments take power, the public start to believe the country is heading in the right direction.

    Not this time.

    People still believe, even after a change of government, Britain is heading in the wrong direction.

    Unless we turn round the chances of the next generation, we risk being a country in decline.

    Ask people whether their kids will find it easier to find good jobs, own a home, balance work and family life, have a secure retirement or fulfil their potential and they will tell you by vast majorities that the answer is no.

    In these circumstances, how could people possibly believe the country is heading in the right direction?

    And so when people ask me what our task will be, inheriting from this Conservative-led government the kind of country it is creating, my first answer, our first challenge, our greatest task, must be to take head on the decline in opportunities for the next generation.

    David Cameron’s benchmark for his government is simply deficit reduction.

    The benchmark I set for a future Labour government is much more than that.

    It is about improving the chances for the next generation.

    We must reverse the sense of foreboding that people feel for their children and their future.

    To replace that with hope about what is possible for them and our country.

    Doing so will require us, once again, to be a force for major change in Britain.

    So the task I am setting for our party and our policy review is to identify how we can turn round these trends.

    We already know the areas that matter.

    First, we need to act on jobs for young people.

    We cannot just stand by when nearly one million young people are out of work.

    That is why I have said we should repeat the bank bonus tax and put young people back to work.

    We also have to recognise that one in five graduates in work are not doing graduate-level jobs.

    In other words they are not being given the opportunity to use the skills for which they have worked so hard.

    The pessimistic answer, the apparent answer from this Government, is fewer young people going to university.

    Our ambition instead must be to reshape our economy so that Britain’s firms choose a business model rooted in higher skill, higher wage jobs not in so many low skill, low wage jobs.

    And for those young people who choose not to go to university we need to construct a better route through vocational training, apprenticeships, and entrepreneurship which give people fulfilling work and chances to get on.

    Second, I don’t believe the government’s new university funding plans will leave Britain fit for the 21st century.

    Britain will not compete in the world if we put such great burdens on the next generation’s ability to get on.

    But I also know we can only meet people’s desire for a better politics if we make promises we know we can keep.

    At this stage, I can’t make a promise on tuition fees, but I am clear about our guiding principles.

    Genuine access for all, minimising the debt burden on the next generation, and a world-class university system.

    I have to say I don’t believe the current policy will achieve these things.

    Third, we need to change the way we think about what support families need and have a right to expect.

    If we want the next generation to do better than the last we need to make being a parent easier not harder.

    That is why our challenge is not just to grow the economy, but also to address something politicians hardly ever talk about – the culture of long working hours, low pay and insecurity at work.

    Our family policy needs a better economic policy.

    Fourth, all the decisions this government is making on housing – cuts in investment, removing the requirement on local authorities to allow new homes, botching the planning system – will make it harder not easier to provide homes.

    Our generation of politicians must act or people will be waiting till their 40s before they buy their first home.

    It is a sign of our commitment on this issue that when we said the bank bonus tax should be extended for another year, we said part of it should be used to build homes.

    And a task I have set for our policy review is that we must seek to stop the inexorable rise in the average age of home ownership.

    Fifth, when I think about my own children, they will judge me in twenty or thirty years time by the extent to which my generation took the environment and climate change seriously.

    That is why as part of every aspect of policy – the economy, transport, homes – the environment must be a built in part of what we prioritise.

    So these are five priorities which will be central to our work and our next manifesto.

    But there’s one other thing.

    The overwhelming majority of our young people are decent, and they want to do the best for themselves, their families and their communities.

    We owe it to them to paint a fairer picture of young people in our country, and to celebrate what they do.

    But it’s a two way street.

    The promise of Britain is not just about the promise we make to them, but the promise they must make to themselves and our country to be good citizens.

    Let me end with this thought.

    When their time comes, future generations will look to our record just as we look to history.

    As the child of parents who found refuge in Britain from the Nazis, I owe my life to British decency and democracy, to British freedom.

    That’s why the promise of Britain means so much to me.

    It’s why I’m so proud of our country, and its people.

    It’s why I’m so sure of what we can achieve in the future.

    Today my message is a simple one.

    I am convinced from listening to people, that the public want more from us.

    They want more from our politics.

    They want a debate about the kind of country we are now, and the kind of country we could be.

    It is our duty as an Opposition to be people’s voice in tough times.

    Not just by criticising specific policies, but by setting out a distinct national mission.

    To protect the promise of Britain.

    A national mission that meets the hopes people have for their children and their grandchildren.

    A national mission which ensures Britain’s next generation have a more optimistic future

    That is my task.

    The task for Labour in opposition.

    And in government.

    To deliver on the promise of Britain.

  • Ed Miliband – 2011 Speech Launching Local Elections Campaign

    edmiliband

    Below is the text of the speech made by Ed Miliband, the Leader of the Opposition, on 31st March 2011 to launch Labour’s local elections campaign.

    Thank you for those kind introductions.

    Thank you Jo, for letting us join you this morning at your fantastic school – and to all of you for coming.

    On May the Fifth it will be a year since the General Election.

    For many people the local elections are the first chance for people to reflect on whether our country is heading in the right direction.

    So I want to talk to you today about what I believe are the big three challenges facing our country.

    – The cost of living crisis facing British Families;

    – Whether we can meet the British promise by which the next generation should always do better than the last

    – And how we build stronger communities.

    I wish this Conservative led government was addressing these challenges.

    I wish they understood that in tough times, we need to be ambitious about the kind of nation we should to be.

    The problem is that because they have decided to cut too far and too fast, they are taking the country in the wrong direction.

    1. From Downing Street to your Street.

    We would halve the deficit in four years, and so the Tories say that there’s no real difference between us.

    The local elections show how wrong they are, because up and country, we can see how Tory values, Tory choices impact our local communities.

    Today we published new research that the Tory-led government’s cuts to local government will hit the average family with cuts of £182 per year.

    And that’s on top of the cuts to services, the threat of redundancy, the increase in VAT and the tax credit changes which will make the squeeze even tighter, for the squeezed middle.

    The scale and pace of these cuts threaten what I call the promise of Britain – the belief that the next generation must do be tter than the last.

    Sure Start centres are being closed. Tuition fees trebled. Education Maintenance Allowances and the Future Jobs Fund scrapped.

    The safety of our streets in the battle against crime is being put at risk by scrapping 12,000 police officers. While the youth services, leisure centres and after school clubs that help combat the causes of crime are being shut. These cuts threaten to unpick the very fabric of our communities.

    No one should be in any doubt: all these cuts are coming direct from Downing Street to your street.

    They go too far. And they are coming too fast.

    2. Unfairness

    But not only are these cuts happening too far and too fast.

    We can see the values of this government in the way they make their cuts.

    In our most vulnerable communities, in cities like Manchester and Liverpool, the cuts are nearly twice as deep as the national average, and nearly ten times as deep as in places like Windsor.

    Communities across England face these threats. Great Yarmouth, Burnley, Corby, Thanet and West Somerset all face the highest level of cuts.

    It‘s not about North versus south, it’s about fair versus unfair.

    It’s the trademark of this government.

    The politics of division.

    3. Labour values

    We can do something better.

    I want us to do more than simply protest.

    I want us to be able to protect.

    Labour councils are focusing – and will focus – on supporting front-line services. We want to keep communities strong and safe and share the burden of cuts as fairly as possible.

    Being a Labour council under this government is not going to be easy.

    Labour councillors are being forced to make some hard choices.

    But what matters to us is the chance to put our values into action.

    We know that means tough decisions.

    So Durham, for instance, facing cuts of £266 for an average family, the Labour council asked their residents, what they wanted to protect.

    They said adult social care, so Labour protected those services.

    But in the Conservative and Liberal Democrat-led Birmingham council, where we are today, adult social care cuts will hurt 11,000 vulnerable people.

    The Tories so-called “EasyCouncil” in Barnet, is closing eight children’s centres and cutting sheltered housing wardens for the elderly.

    And when it comes to reducing waste, Labour’s Sandwell Council has cut the number of top managers by fifty per cent, so money can go to frontline services.

    In Liverpool, ranked by the Audit Commission as having the “worst financial management” in the country under the LibDems Labour’s Joe Anderson and his team found millions of pounds in efficiency savings.

    Their reward? Some of the biggest cuts in funding in the country.

    So Labour councils will strive to protect what matters most.

    Labour councillors will put the communities they serve first.

    We will try to make things a little fairer for hard pressed families.

    These are our values.

    These are the choices we’d make.

    If you want a strong first line of defence against cuts that are coming too far, too fast.

    If you want the tough decisions taken fairly and openly.

    If you want councillors who will be your voice in tough times

    Then vote Labour on May the Fifth.

  • Ed Miliband – 2011 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 in January 2011.

    We’ve just witnessed our first by-election of the Parliament in Oldham East and Saddleworth.

    It was an unusual by-election not only because – I am proud to say – Labour won, but also because of the behaviour of our opponents and the great churning of votes between the parties.

    David Cameron became the first prime minister in recent years to campaign in a by-election.

    And definitely the first party leader that I can remember to not know the name of his own party’s candidate.

    Then we saw Nick Clegg vowing to have more public rows with Mr Cameron just to remind people that the Liberal Democrats still have a separate identity.

    That is an unusual, probably unhealthy, way to conduct any relationship let alone one in a government that is having such a profound impact on people’s lives.

    I suspect it is a symptom of a having coalition based on political convenience rather than values.

    But, as I said, it was also unusual because we saw significant transfers of votes from the Liberal Democrats to Labour. From the Conservatives to the Liberal Democrats. And from Conservatives to Labour.

    Above all, what the Oldham East and Saddleworth by-election shows us is that people are deeply uneasy about where this Conservative-led government is taking the country.

    However our party would be deluding itself if we thought that meant that the next election would fall into our lap.

    The next election will be as much about us as about them—and our ability to change and become the voice and standard-bearer of Britain’s progressive majority once again.  And that’s what I want to talk about today.

    Because I believe that from the very founding of the Labour party as the Labour Representation Committee through to the great reforming Labour governments of the second half of the twentieth century and the early years of this, Labour has succeeded when it has seen itself not as a narrow party of sectional interest, but when through a sense of mission, passion and optimism for the future it has become the voice and vehicle for progressive change.

    We need to be honest over 13 years in government we forfeited the right in too many people’s minds to be the natural standard bearers for this progressive majority in Britain.

    I want to talk today about the reasons why that happened and about the three ways we need to change and change profoundly if we are to put it right.

    The first is to understand why our economy has stopped working for people – and how we can again offer a new economic model for Labour and for Britain. In particular, understanding that simply redistributing taxpayers’ money through the welfare state, important though that is, is inadequate and will not build the more just, more sustainable economy.

    The second is to recognise the way our managerialism took us away from the instincts and values of the broad progressive majority in Britain.

    That our communities came to see us as the people who put markets and commerce before the common good.

    And many citizens came to see us also as the people who did not understand that the state could be intrusive as well as empowering.

    We must respond to this by breathing new life into our sense of ideological purpose, drawing on what is enduringly good in the Labour tradition, and reaching outside it too.

    And third we must accept that in how we do our politics we came to be not leaders of a broad, open progressive majority built on a coalition of values, but into a political force that was far less than that.

    We must respond by putting democratic renewal and a willingness to reach out to others beyond our party at the heart of the way we do our politics.

    Understanding that Labour must change the way it works and that no one party can claim to have a monopoly of wisdom in today’s politics. That Labour must earn its leadership of Britain’s progressive majority – it is not ours by right.

    The Context

    Before turning to my argument, let me set the context.

    It’s two years since I opened the Fabian New Year Conference of 2009.

    I remarked then that the Tories had never been more on the ideological defensive in my political lifetime.

    The financial crash had demolished the Conservative fallacy that markets always know best and David Cameron was busy discovering that there was such a thing as society.

    Two years later, we are clearly in a very different place.

    David Cameron didn’t win the general election last May.  But he did end up as Prime Minister and he hasn’t let the absence of a mandate stop him from embarking on the most ideologically dangerous assault on our public services in a generation.

    These changes will re-shape Britain in as profound a way as Mrs Thatcher re-shaped Britain in the 1980s. I’m sure I speak for everyone here when I say that everywhere I go I see an assault on many of the things I value – from Sure Start to the way in which the trebling of student debt will kick the ladder of opportunity away from a generation of our young people.

    The combination of this assault on our institutions, the global economic crisis and the formation of the Conservative-led government has marked a period of change which occurs only once in a generation.

    There have been two other moments in my lifetime when economic upheaval has been followed by a dramatic break in the established pattern of British politics.

    The first was the IMF crisis in 1976 and the Winter of Discontent two years later, followed by the defeat of the Callaghan government, the formation of the SDP and eighteen years of Conservative government.

    The second was Britain’s ejection from the Exchange Rate Mechanism on Black Wednesday, the emergence of New Labour and the election of the first three-term Labour government in our history.

    In both cases a fundamental shift in the character and direction of our national politics proved to be enduring.

    Facing Up to Defeat

    On these two occasions a governing party lost power on the expectation of a quick return to office, and it ended up in the wilderness for a generation.

    In both cases that was because they didn’t learn the right lessons about the changing economic circumstances, about what their values meant for their time, and the way they did their politics.

    We cannot afford to sit back and wait for this Conservative-led government to fail. That is why we must seize this moment to understand these lessons and to change if we are to ensure that this is a one-term government.

    This government is making costly mistakes and will continue to do so.  But it is the changes we make to ourselves that will decide whether we avoid the fate that has befallen parties in the past.

    That is why “one more heave” just won’t do.

    A party that slumps below 30% of the popular vote has a responsibility to face up to the scale of its loss.

    Understanding why we lost touch means learning to see ourselves as the British people see us.

    We began learning that lesson after 1983, but it took us far too long.  I am determined that we will not make the same mistake again.

    Of course I am proud of the achievements of our last Labour government. The truth is that for a lot of people those achievements are clearer, now that they are under threat from this government.

    But let’s not mislead ourselves – aspects of our record in government are also the reason we are now in opposition.

    Parties don’t suffer defeats like the one we suffered last May because of an accumulation of small errors.

    They do so by making serious mistakes, and that’s why I have said what I have said on issues like Iraq, failing to properly regulate the banks, ignoring concerns about economic security and not doing enough to deliver on the promise of a new politics.

    We have to show that we have learnt lessons if the British people are to trust us again.

    The Progressive Majority

    So that is the scale of the challenge we face.

    But if the result of the election showed why we need to change, it also revealed something important about the nature of British politics from which we ought to draw encouragement.

    Most people cast their votes for parties that talked about the need to make Britain fairer and more equal, that warned against the dangers of cutting the deficit too early and urged a deepening of democratic reform.

    It’s easy to forget today, but that brief bout of Cleggmania was animated by this progressive hunger for change.

    So there is a progressive majority in Britain.  It’s just that we failed to attract enough of it to Labour’s cause to return a viable progressive government.

    We will rebuild ourselves as a broad movement by understanding where the centre-ground of British politics truly lies.

    I want us to become the voice and hope of those who feel squeezed by an economic system that promised to liberate them.

    I want us to articulate the frustration of people who are fed up with bankers taking vast public subsidies and then rewarding themselves for failure while the rest of the country struggles.

    I want us to be the party that answers the call for a fairer sharing of the nation’s wealth, strong and responsive public services and a different kind of politics.

    Over the coming months, I will be talking in greater detail about how we approach the economic challenges, the challenges of renewing our values and the challenge of renewing our politics.

    Today I want to set out the direction of that journey.

    Economic Crisis

    So let me start with the first change we need – on the economy.

    The financial crisis shook the world economy, but more specifically it exposed some of the flawed assumptions on which the economic policies of Britain have been based under successive governments.

    The last election saw a majority crying out for a party and a government which had learned the lessons of the crisis and could offer Britain a new economic future.  But we must accept that we failed to win the argument that it was Labour that could offer people a better economy working in their interests.

    If we are again to offer a vision of hope and change to the majority in Britain it is essential that we learn the right lessons of the crisis. This is the argument that will define this decade and beyond.

    The implication of much of what the Conservative-led government say is that it was high levels of public borrowing that caused the crisis. That is just not true.

    In fact, it was the crisis that caused high levels of public borrowing.

    The deficit rose from manageable levels of around 2% of national income to above 10% because of the global financial crisis.

    And when the Tories and the Liberal Democrats are trying to propagate this myth about the past we must not let them get away with it.

    The reason is not simply because of desire for truth about the past but because they are using it to shape our future.

    They want to tell people that the only lesson to learn from the crisis is that as long as we simply cut back spending far and fast enough, we will contain the deficit and reach the sunny uplands of economic prosperity.

    But just as we need to counter their myth about the past, we need to acknowledge what we got wrong.  Along with other national governments, we didn’t get banking regulation right.

    And our economy was too vulnerable to the crisis because we were too reliant on financial services.

    These are two important lessons of the crisis. But there is a deeper issue about why the crisis happened and what it teaches us about the economy we need to create.

    Freer markets combined with ‘light touch’ regulation were sold to middle Britain on the basis that they would guarantee economic freedom, rising living standards and a fair reward for the hard working majority.

    For the best of reasons, New Labour signed up to this vision precisely because it spoke to the hopes of aspirational voters.

    Our period in office was marked by notable successes: record levels of employment, a decade of continuous growth until 2008, low inflation, low interest rates and the minimum wage.

    What is more we used the proceeds of growth to both rebuild public services and tackle poverty.

    Whereas before 1997, relative poverty had trebled and the public realm had crumbled, we comprehensively changed the direction in which our country was headed.

    But economic growth and productivity masked a hidden truth: that life in the middle was getting harder not easier.

    Real wages in the middle may have been rising but they weren’t keeping pace with the rest of the economy.

    And they were wildly outstripped by the gains made by those at the top.

    And though Labour did a lot to offset this with tax credits and other forms of public support, we found ourselves swimming against stronger economic currents.

    The “squeezed middle”, a phrase some people might have thought I would never use again, is not a marketing concept but a reality of life for millions of people as the result of the economy we have.

    It speaks to families working hard for long hours, stretching a limited family budget and who found the only way to increase their living standards was to increase their personal debt.

    The lesson we must draw is that there is a connection between the inequality of a system that distributes wealth unfairly and the economic imbalances of a country that became too reliant on personal debt and financial services.

    Put these parts of the argument together—about regulation, about the need for a broader industrial base and about inequality – and I come to this conclusion: we can’t build economic efficiency or social justice simply in the way we have tried before.

    It won’t be enough to rely on a deregulated market economy providing the tax revenues for redistribution.

    New Labour’s critical insight in the 1990s and 2000s was that we needed to be stewards of a successful market economy to make possible social justice through redistribution.  The critical insight of Labour in my generation is that both wealth creation and social justice need to be built into the way our economy works.

    That’s why I think the living wage, for example, is such a powerful idea.

    Because I know that tax credits for all the good they do have their limits.

    If we can build an economy with more living wage jobs – and well paying jobs – we embed social justice at the heart of the way the market economy is run rather than having to make it an optional extra.

    This is important for us not just because it is necessary to create social justice but because it reflects the fiscal climate we will face in the coming decade.

    Why was the last Labour government too slow in the language that we used, after the financial crisis had created a big deficit, to acknowledge what our own plans implied, that there would eventually have to be cuts?  Part of the answer is that we hadn’t shown other ways of delivering social justice.

    So the first part of the way we must change is to show we can build a fair economy, with wealth creation and social justice for all at its heart.

    Our Values

    The second part of our challenge is to understand how over 13 years of government we came to seem detached and remote from the instincts and values of families across Britain – families who share our values but saw a party that was out of touch with their daily struggle.

    For all our achievements, I know what our biggest problem was – it afflicts all governments.

    We became too technocratic and managerial.

    But more than that, we sometimes lost sight of people as individuals, and of the importance of communities.

    In our use of state power, too often we didn’t take people with us.  That is why over time people railed against the target culture, the managerialism of public service reform and overbearing government.

    At the same time, we seemed in thrall to a vision of the market that seemed to place too little importance on the values, institutions and relationships that people cherish the most.

    We turned a blind eye to the impact of out of town retail developments and post office branch closures on our high streets. We knew all about the benefits of a flexible and mobile labour force, but we didn’t think enough about its impact on weakening social bonds and squeezing time with our families.

    So people began to see a government which looked remote from they cared about. They could see a government doing things they either agreed with or disagreed with, but not a political movement that spoke to their values.

    To change, we will look critically at our traditions and why they have led us to become remote.

    Among the many strands of the British Labour tradition, two have proved particularly influential.

    The first was the idea of socialism as a kind of missionary work to be undertaken on behalf of the people.

    I’m sorry to give the Fabians a hard time, but this view is most obviously associated with the early Fabians around Sidney and Beatrice Webb.

    The alternative strand, represented by the co-operative movement and the early trade unions, saw Labour as a grassroots, democratic movement to enable people to lead the most fulfilling lives.

    As we seek the right traditions to draw on as a political party in the 21st century, it is so important that we understand the appropriate role of each tradition.

    The Webb Fabian tradition was born of an era where the challenge of the Left was meeting people’s basic needs for health, housing, education and relief of poverty.

    That need will always remain.

    But people rightly expect more out of their lives than simply meeting basic needs.

    The New Labour tradition which embraced dynamic markets is also important for our future and creating wealth.

    But people don’t just care about the bottom line, there is so much more to life.

    So the bureaucratic state and the overbearing market will never meet our real ambition as a party, that each citizen can be liberated to have the real freedom to shape their own lives.

    To do that, we need to draw on that other tradition based on mutualism, localism and the common bonds of solidarity that captures the essence of our party at its best.

    The belief in those common bonds means we should also be defenders of the things that people value and which are threatened – sometimes by market, sometimes by government.

    When we say we care about the closure of a Sure Start, it isn’t just about the supply of a service to individual families.  Sure Start is a place where community is built, as families get to know each other and form friendships.

    The same is true of local libraries.

    The same is true of ways of life which are deeply ingrained in our country and which we should understand.

    Just before Christmas, I went with Jon Cruddas to Billingsgate fish market and met a porter there who told me that the best day of his life was when he got his porter’s badge and that there has not been a day since when he has not woken up feeling proud to be doing the job he does.

    That is why politicians should not shrug and walk away when they hear that traditional ways of life are under threat. We should seek to defend ways of life which give people self-respect.

    And a Britain of respect and decency demands obligations from all of us.  What offends me most about the outrages in the banks is the sense that some of the bankers apparently feel little obligation to the society and country in which they are located.

    It isn’t enough to say this is what the market will pay me – societies are built on deeper social obligation.

    I care about the success of our financial services industry – about the jobs it creates.

    But today when we you see some of our leading bankers constantly threatening to leave the country, trying to hold the country to ransom and thinking only of themselves, it makes me angry.

    And that is why it makes me so angry that this government is refusing to act.

    To be at heart of the progressive mainstream, we also need to draw on values that may not have always been central to our party.  One of our tasks is to learn the lessons of the green movement and put sustainability at the heart of what we do.  Another is to draw on the traditions of liberty.

    Progressive politics is not just about meeting economic and social needs.

    Those are only ever a means to human flourishing and freedom.

    Part of that is about upholding the liberty of the person.

    Nobody should pretend there aren’t important and difficult choices to be made about how to uphold security and protect liberty. But we didn’t take the need to uphold liberty seriously enough.

    In recent months, we have shown with our willingness to support the reduction of 28 day detention to 14 days, we are determined to take liberty seriously as part of our governing philosophy.

    The Way We Do Politics

    So we must renew our approach to the economy, and renew our values.

    But thirdly, we also have to reform our approach to politics.

    Not since the era of the rotten borough has our political system faced such a grave crisis of legitimacy as the one it now faces.

    From declining turnout and shrinking electoral rolls to anger over expenses and broken promises on tuition fees, people have lost trust in politics and its ability to offer solutions to the problems they face.

    That crisis is a matter of national urgency. It’s a crisis of unreformed institutions, broken promises, remote political parties and a knee-jerk adversarial political culture.

    Part of the problem has been the failure of all parties to honour repeated promises to usher in a new politics.

    Of course that involves reforming our political institutions.  Our own credibility was undermined by our failure to honour a manifesto commitment to hold a referendum on voting reform and the stalling of democratic reform of the House of Lords.

    We will take every opportunity to reform the way our political system works.  That is the reason I will be campaigning in favour of the Alternative Vote in the referendum.  I will keep my promise.

    But this audience knows that very few people on the doorstop ask about the Alternative Vote or reform of the House of Lords.  They think the reason politics is discredited is because politicians always break their promises.

    The reality is that that the broken promises of this government do not just damage their own reputations, but that of all politicians. That is why we have to be careful not to over-promise, either in terms of language or in terms of policy.

    But that is just part of the story of how we renew our politics.

    Think back to our early days as a political party.

    Of course, we fought elections but we did a lot more than that.

    We were part of the fabric of community life through our wider movement: not just the trade unions, but the co-operative movement.

    Nostalgia for times past is not an answer to the challenges of the future.

    But the challenge to us all is to be a genuine movement for change appropriate to our time up and down the country.

    That is why as part of our party reform, we want to learn the lessons of organisations like London Citizens to become a genuine community organising movement.

    The only way we rebuild the case for politics is from the ground up.

    The campaign for the local library, the local zebra crossing, the improvement of a school, must be our campaign.

    And not just campaigns for the state to do things, but campaigns that achieve things themselves.

    There is one other thing we need to change in our politics.

    No party has a monopoly of wisdom or virtue, and it is foolish to pretend that they do.

    The decision of the Liberal Democrats to join a Conservative-led government was a tragic mistake, and I hope they come to see that in time.

    Forgive me if I decline to join those who are gloating at the expense of the Liberal Democrats.

    Because their mistake means they are part of a government attempting to shift politics to the Right.

    I am certainly pleased that many Liberal Democrats now see Labour as the main progressive hope in British politics.

    Thousands of them have joined us since the election.

    I want them to find a welcome home in our party – not just making up the numbers, but contributing actively to the strengthening of our values and the renewal of our policies.

    But equally there are many Liberal Democrats who have decided to stay and fight for the progressive soul of their party. Most of them do not want to see their progressive tradition sacrificed for personal ambition.

    I respect their choice too and I understand how painful it must be to watch what is happening to their party.

    We do not doubt that they hold sincere views and we will co-operate, where we can in Parliament and outside, with those that want to fight the direction of this government.

    It is our duty to work with progressives everywhere.

    Conclusion

    So this is the way we need to seize the mantle of progressive politics and shape the economic, ideological and political landscape of the future.

    Building a fair economy.

    Rooting our values in traditions and ideas that go beyond the bureaucratic state and the overbearing market

    And a different kind of politics

    The prize is not simply a Labour government but more than that.

    It is about a political movement that in every community up and down this country can shape the politics of the future.

    Make our values and our ideas the commonsense of our age.

    And shape a country and a world based on our ideals.

  • Maria Miller – Speech to 2011 Capita Conference

    marimiller

    Below is the text of the speech made by the Minister for the Disabled, Maria Miller, made at the Capita Conference on 5th April 2011.

    It is a great pleasure to see so many people here today focused on the issues of child poverty. There are few more important – or emotive – topics in politics. We all know that tackling the problem demands far more than warm words or political posturing. We recognise that money matters, whether it is measured in relative or absolute terms.

    Yet we also know that dealing with child poverty demands more than just thinking about poverty in cash terms. Poverty of aspiration, lack of life chances and inequality of opportunity are all powerful factors too. So let me say right now that this Government is determined to tackle the underlying causes of child poverty – not just the symptoms.

    Indeed, this is already the starting point for so many of the actions we are taking to promote greater social justice across society. It lies at the heart of our welfare reforms. And in the long run, it is the only way we will deliver the fairer and more responsible society we all want to see.

    Before he became Secretary of State, Iain Duncan Smith spent years examining exactly these issues with the Centre for Social Justice. Under his lead, the Government fully recognises that far broader social issues are at play – debt, addiction, family breakdown, educational failure, and worklessness, to name but a few. Any one of these topics represents a huge social challenge in its own right.

    Every person in this room will have worked with families trapped in situations where they feel it is very difficult to break out and where benefits alone are not going to provide the answer:

    families where feeding an addiction has become a greater priority than feeding the children

    working with people frightened about payday loans hanging over their heads

    or picking up the pieces after a childhood spent in the care system.

    These are the type of challenges many of you deal with day in, day out. I am sure we can all agree, it is only by Government accepting that there are not going to be many quick fixes – that we can start to gain a deeper understanding of the challenges, and then work together to find ways to meet them. Accepting that there are a whole host of issues to tackle along the way also helps us to understand how best to deliver for the poorest. If I take just one statistic, I could point to the fact that we have spent £150 billion on Tax Credits alone since 2003. Yet despite the apparently vast resources being aimed mostly at families with children, real progress on child poverty all but stalled in the years that followed.

    We all know what the results are today:

    2.8 million children still living in relative poverty

    1.6 million children still in absolute poverty, and

    almost 2 million children living in workless households – one of the worst rates in Europe.

    Clearly, simply throwing money at the problem has not worked. I believe in the principles underpinning the Child Poverty Act and the Government is determined to meet the challenge it sets. So we need a new approach. That means moving away from the goal of getting every child one penny past an arbitrary income threshold. And instead, it means focusing on helping each child to move out of poverty in the real-world sense. That is why we need to start looking at child poverty through a sharper lens and start tackling the underlying issues of poverty such as education, debt and worklessness. This is also why the Government is so focused on tackling welfare dependency.

    The benefits trap presents a very real barrier to many of the poorest in our country. They become isolated from broader society. They get stuck in a rut where aspiring to work and a better life actually represents a real risk to income levels. And as if all that were not bad enough, it costs the taxpayer a fortune to maintain this broken benefits system.

    This is why we are so committed to fundamental welfare reform:

    completely rethinking our approach to people on incapacity so that we don’t abandon them to a life on long-term benefits

    reinventing welfare to work with one of the biggest work programmes this country has ever seen

    and just as importantly, rewriting the incentive base for jobseekers through the Universal Credit to make sure work pays.

    The introduction of the Universal Credit on its own is forecast to lift some 600,000 working age adults and 350,000 children out of poverty. Yet it is the long-term behavioural changes inspired by the three legs of these welfare reforms that we expect to have a bigger impact.

    We will move towards a benefit system that is there to support people when they need it, but without trapping them in a cycle of intergenerational poverty. We will move those who can work back toward employment so that we reduce the number of children who think it’s normal to have no one in the house heading out to earn a living in the morning. And at the same time, we will work to tackle some of the other big issues that too often leave children trapped in poverty. One of those is educational attainment. This is an area that has been flagged by both Graham Allen and Frank Field in reports commissioned by the Government, to help us find new ways of making a positive impact on the life chances of children.

    I think everyone here today can agree just how important education and early intervention are in tackling child poverty. That’s why, for example, the Department for Education is targeting extra money at pupils from deprived backgrounds – pupils we know are at high risk of poorer outcomes. This is a key priority for the Government, which is why we are increasing the funding available under the Pupil Premium to £2.5 billion. At the same time, we recognise the huge role that local authorities play in influencing the life chances of children. As a result, we are allocating £2.2 billion this year under the Early Intervention Grant to help local leaders act more strategically and target investment early, where it will have greatest impact. This will help fund new investments such as early education and 4,200 extra health visitors to build stronger links with local health services, which can make all the difference in early years.

    And of course, we are also reforming the child maintenance system to ensure that we put child welfare firmly at the centre of our policy approach and prevent the state from exacerbating potential disagreements between parents. These are just some of the many actions this Government is already taking to help children in the UK escape the poverty trap and the consequences that too often follow. We have to make taking action on child poverty a continuing priority – just as we have in these first 11 months of Government. The Child Poverty Strategy is a document that will bring together the details of all these policies and plans and it will be published very shortly.

    What I can tell you is that the Government takes child poverty extremely seriously and we have quite deliberately waited to publish our strategy at the right time – not some arbitrary deadline set by the previous administration. Rather than rush the strategy out as just another piece of Government business, everyone involved has been determined to make sure it is right so that we can deliver the change that this country needs. This reinforces just how highly child poverty features on this Government’s policy agenda.

    As a new Government taking a fresh approach to child poverty, there is a real determination to do our best. It is the only way we will achieve the joined-up approach we will need to make a real impact on children’s lives – in central government, at local authority level and across the third sector and civil society. Clearly, we have a great deal to do. But I am convinced that by working together, we can deliver the right solutions for the children of Britain.

    That is the challenge, and I look forward to meeting it with you.

    Thank you.

  • Maria Miller – 2011 Speech on Equality for Disabled People

    marimiller

    Below is the text of the speech made by Maria Miller, the then Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for Disabled People, in London on 20th October 2011.

    It’s important to recognise the practical work the Mayor is doing to support disabled people in London to live more independently.

    The Government wants to support disabled people to make their own choices, to have full control over their own lives and to reach their full potential.

    In part this is about taking practical measures, like those the Mayor has mentioned, to remove the physical barriers to independent living.

    This could involve making some basic adaptations so disabled people can live in their own homes, making transport facilities more accessible and ensuring public buildings are accessible to everyone, including disabled people.

    There is, of course, a requirement, in law, for organisations to anticipate necessary reasonable adjustments for disabled people to access their services.

    This not only encourages service providers to proactively consider how to make their businesses more accessible – it also provides disabled people with the right to challenge if the legal requirement is not met.

    But changes to legislation and improvements to physical accessibility can only go so far.

    We have not yet seen these changes translate into complete equality and independence for disabled people in their everyday lives.

    The Mayor and I know for disabled people to enjoy truly independent lives we must transform attitudes and support aspirations, as well as transforming buildings and buses.

    Too often it is societal barriers rather than the person’s impairment that prevents disabled people living independently.

    Findings on public perceptions of disabled people, published by the Office for Disability Issues (ODI) earlier this year, revealed that out dated attitudes about disability still exist.

    Worse yet, we know very well that prejudice exists. ODI’s findings showed that eight in ten people believe there is prejudice in society towards disabled people.

    This prejudice may not be expressed openly. Although we know from some of the dreadful hate crime cases we have encountered over the last few months that too often it is and in the most awful terms.

    Thankfully it is a minority who behave this way. But ODI’s research shows that prejudice about disabled people exists within many more people.

    Three quarters of people believe disabled people need caring for.

    This “benevolent prejudice” is perhaps the most prevalent. There are still many, well-meaning people, who believe disabled people need to be looked after, protected from the world, and supported in a way which means they are detached from mainstream society.

    It must be addressed because whilst well-meaning, it is harmful, holding disabled people back and preventing them from realising their full potential.

    This is particularly clear in education.

    We know that the aspirations of young disabled people are the same as those of young non-disabled people.

    But too often these aspirations go unfulfilled.

    The ODI findings discovered four in ten people admitted they thought disabled people could not be as productive as non-disabled people.

    We have a responsibility to support disabled young people to overcome the lack of expectation that surrounds them.

    The role of society should be to inspire young people, whether disabled or not, to achieve their full potential in life.

    I want to make sure that at every stage of their lives disabled people are encouraged and supported to make the most of the opportunities that are available to them.

    One of the things I am particularly interested in is developing a really clear route for disabled people through the education system and into work.

    In education – we know that the experience of disabled young people at school and beyond has an enormous impact on their ability to fulfil their potential.

    In the right environment, aspirations are encouraged and young disabled people will flourish.

    I want to ensure we create more of the “right kind of environments”.

    The Department for Education has recently consulted on how to support young disabled people at school and beyond to achieve their ambitions.

    The Special Educational Needs and Disability Green Paper set out far reaching changes to improve the support that young disabled people get from birth to adulthood.

    Proposals include a single assessment process andcombined education, health and care plan from birth to 25 years old.

    For the first time people with special educational needswill have one plan that follows them through from birthto adulthood.This is a really radical idea that many people have been talking about for a long time.

    Early intervention is of course key. A child’s early experiences can have such a powerful impact on their lives we cannot leave this to chance.

    We must ensure young disabled people are getting the right messages about what they are capable of from a young age. And for many disabled people, the short answer to that is anything they put their minds to.

    Following a recommendation from the Sayce Review, I have formed a new cross-government ministerial group on employment.

    One of the issues this group will be considering is how we can ensure young disabled people have the support they need to identify their path in life, achieve in education and move on into work and be the best they can be.

    But our philosophy is not just about making sure disabled people are able to do well at school, or even about smoothing the route into employment.

    It is about ensuring disabled people are able to fully take part in life – that means forming friendships and relationships, being spontaneous with friends, enjoying the freedoms many of us take for granted.

    And that means we have to really transform attitudes.

    The public perceptions research revealed that one in six people still feel discomfort and embarrassment around disabled people. This is a real barrier to equal participation in society.

    Changing such attitudes is difficult and takes place over a long period of time.

    But we have some real opportunities coming up to challenge out-dated perceptions of disabled people – as well as celebrating our sporting heroes, and inspiring new ones.

    London 2012 is the first Games to bring together the Olympics and the Paralympics.

    More than 100, 000 people applied for 1.14 million Paralympic Games tickets.

    Sixteen sports were oversubscribed in at least one price category, including athletics, swimming, and track cycling. Tickets for these events will be balloted.

    Having some sessions already oversubscribed a year before the Games, has never been seen before in the history of the Paralympic Games. To have such interest and hunger in the Games really is unprecedented.

    The Government wishes to build on the inspirational power of the Games by using this opportunity to encourage more disabled people to take part in sport and become involved in their communities and to challenge the perception of disabled people in society.

    The Paralympic Games will enjoy more UK airtime than ever before thanks to Channel 4 and BBC Radio, and overseas the Games will be broadcast in more territories than previous years. These Games will show disabled athletes performing at their best.

    And it’s not just the mainstream media and sporting worlds that have a role to play in changing attitudes towards disabled people.

    Government is responsible for setting the public agenda and has an important role to play in driving change.

    But it would be entirely wrong for Ministers alone to be at the forefront of this change – disabled people must lead change by telling us what they want, and of course, wider society has an integral role to play.

    Government departments are increasingly involving disabled people in developing government policies and services.

    We want more disabled people to be involved in taking the decisions that affect all disabled people.

    The Government is serious about this involvement. We want to ensure it is meaningful and representative and that disabled people have the tools they need to influence and engage in the right way.

    That is why we are investing £3 million in User Led Organisations (ULO) – groups that are run by disabled people, for disabled people.

    These organisations have a unique insight and are a powerful voice for the disabled people they represent both locally and nationally – as well as providing important support to disabled people.

    We want to secure their continued role by supporting them to develop their skills and build their experience.

    We want every disabled person to have access to a good ULO in their area so we will work with disabled people to improve coverage across the UK.

    We also want to see more disabled people in positions of influence.

    Direct, meaningful contact with disabled people plays a major role in promoting positive attitudes and this is why the participation of disabled people in public life and at work is so important.

    We want to support disabled people to become MPs, councillors, other elected officials. To put them at the heart of the decision making process.

    We recently asked disabled people what would make the biggest difference to them if they were to run for elected office.

    On the basis of their answers we have developed the Access to Elected Office strategy which includes practical measures such as training and development and funding to provide additional support with disability related costs.

    The change we want will be hard won.

    You cannot change attitudes overnight.

    But we have a very clear sense of what we are trying to achieve.

    Working alongside disabled people we want to create a completely accessible world – in every sense of the word.

    One in which disabled people have the adaptations they need to live in their own homes, are able to spontaneously go out with friends without having to make complicated travel arrangements and check accessibility as a matter of course.

    One in which society’s attitudes and expectations do not prevent disabled people from participating fully in every aspect of life.

    A world in which disabled people are able to live truly independent lives, achieve their aspirations, fulfil their potential and be the very best they can be.

  • Andrew Mitchell – 2011 Conservative Party Conference Speech

    Below is the text of the speech made by the then International Development Secretary, Andrew Mitchell, to the 2011 Conservative Party Conference on 2nd October 2011.

    Conference, it is 50 years since a Conservative Prime Minister, Harold Macmillan, set up what is now the Department for International Development.

    Since then, we have made huge progress. But still today:

    Every hour 180 children die needlessly from diarrhoea.

    Tonight, millions of families will spend the hours after sunset in the dark, with no electricity, no running water, no healthcare.

    And in South Sudan this girl is more likely to die during childbirth than she is to finish primary school. Let me just repeat that. This girl is more likely to die during childbirth than she is to finish primary school.

    Even now, in Government, when I go to these places, I still feel overwhelmed by the scale of human suffering. But I am uplifted by the work being done to help and the progress Britain is leading.

    So now, please join me in thanking Britain’s development team Alan Duncan, Stephen O’Brien, Lady Verma and Mark Lancaster for the role they are playing.

    All of us in this team feel personally accountable for the way that taxpayers’ money is spent.

    We know that every pound wasted is a pound not saving lives. So in our first few days in office, we cancelled over £100m of ineffective spending.

    Let me say what else we’ve done to get our house in order.

    We stopped Labour’s practice of sending DFID’s own glossy magazine around the world by airmail at a cost of nearly half a million pounds a year.

    We stopped first-class travel. Just in Labour’s last year in office, they spent a staggering £75,000 on first-class rail tickets.  In our first year, it was just £197 – a reduction of over 99%. Why should British taxpayers pay over the odds to fund complementary cups of tea, when the people we are supposed to be helping don’t have running water?

    And we stopped Labour’s quarter-of-a-million-pound funding for a Brazilian dance troupe in North London which specialises in percussion. At least that’s one Labour fandango which was easy to clear up.

    Conference, this kind of loose spending is not just incompetent. It is an insult to British taxpayers.

    Let us resolve together here today: no more Labour waste.

    We’ve also fundamentally changed the way we direct our aid.

    Look at the map.  Here’s where Labour thought it fit to spend aid while they were in office.

    It doesn’t look like that any more.

    No more aid to China, which spent billions hosting the Olympics. We closed it down.

    Or Russia, a member of the G8.

    As a result of our detailed review we’re closing DFID aid programmes in 16 countries. That, after all, is the whole aim of aid – do it well and then get out when it’s done.

    So as you can see: we’re giving aid to the people who really need it, from the Ghurkha villages of Nepal, to the dignified people of Zimbabwe who have suffered so long under the tyrannical rule of Robert Mugabe.

    And we were just as tough with the international organisations which get British taxpayers’ money. We’ve assessed them and ranked them.

    Now some of these agencies are absolutely brilliant. Let me give you just one example.  We found that GAVI, the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunisation, was achieving amazing results.  So, along with Bill Gates, the private sector and other countries, we backed them. I can now tell you that for the next five years the British taxpayer will help to vaccinate a child every two seconds. Ladies and Gentleman, something as small and as simple as this will protect a life every two seconds for the next five years. Lives as important as those of our own children. I’m proud that Britain is leading the way in making that happen.

    But some international organisations are doing less well.  We’ve put four of them into special measures. They need to make serious improvements. No improvements, no more cash from the British taxpayer.

    And we’ve shown some organisations the red card. The International Labour Organisation was not delivering value for the core funding it received. So it’s not getting any more. Conference, I make no apology for saying: we have to be tough when lives are at stake.

    This tough approach means that during the next 4 years we will achieve incredible results.

    – We will get 11 million children into school in the poorest parts of the world

    – 15 million people who don’t have it today will have safe drinking water

    – And 10 million women who have never had access to family planning will have it for the first time.

    And at this time when money is really tight, and the responsibility to spend it well has never been greater, we never forget: these results are paid for by the British taxpayer. When I visit these countries, people come up to me with a simple message. A message I pass on to you today: thank you, Britain, for standing by us in our hour of need.

    Conference, this is Britain at its best.

    And this government is focusing on two key areas: tackling conflict and promoting the private sector.

    To deliver real value for money, we have to tackle the root causes of poverty. And chief among these is conflict.

    And these problems affect us here. Terrorism, the drugs trade, infectious diseases, illegal migration – if we want to tackle these problems at home, we have to understand and address their root causes abroad.

    Some say we can’t afford to engage in development. But Conference, we cannot afford not to.

    So what does this mean in practice?

    In Pakistan, we’re going to get 4 million children into school for the first time over the next 4 years. It is hard to think of a better way to tackle the poverty and illiteracy upon which the terrorist recruiters pray. This is good development and good politics.

    In Somaliland we’re helping to build the police force to promote law and order.

    In Afghanistan, right across the country our work to improve the business environment is paying off.

    Don’t just take my word for it.

    In July, General Sir David Richards, the head of Britain’s armed forces, said this:

    “Alternative livelihoods and development assistance are as important as the determination and courage of our forces. Together they are a powerful combination that will leave an enduring legacy for the Afghan people, the region and international community.”

    I completely agree with him.

    And let us pay tribute today to every single one of the brave men and women of our armed forces, who are working night and day to keep our country safe.

    Our forces’ action helped stop a bloody massacre in Benghazi, and helped create the conditions for the people of Libya to take control of their own destiny.

    And long-term planning was part of the story from the beginning, the lessons of Iraq uppermost in our minds.  Today, working closely with William and Liam, we’re helping Libyans rebuild their country’s police and security forces.

    The Arab Spring has inspired us all, as we see yet again that a yearning for freedom is deeply rooted in the human spirit.

    So let us celebrate the spirit of the Arab Spring, and the millions of ordinary men and women who have made change happen. They are an inspiration to the world.

    Just as conflict causes poverty, so it is the private sector – jobs, property rights, investment – that lifts a country out of poverty.

    By the end of the last government, even Labour Ministers started to mouth words about the importance of the private sector in development. But somehow I always felt that, under the bedclothes late at night, they didn’t really believe it.

    We do believe it.  It’s hard-wired into our Conservative DNA.

    And we now for the first time have a private sector division within DFID, dedicated to promoting that age old Tory principle and truth: that no matter where in our world, private enterprise is the engine of growth and development.

    So Ladies and Gentlemen, under your Government:

    Britain’s development policies transformed.

    Value for money demanded

    Every day, lives saved.

    All thanks to the determination, support and generosity of the people of Britain.

    I want to leave you today with a thought and a photograph.

    I met these children in July. They’re smiling here, but just a few days earlier they’d arrived from Somalia at the largest refugee camp in the world.

    Many of them had shredded feet from walking through miles of desert for up to 30 days. Some of them had brothers or sisters who had died along the way.

    Here on the outskirts of this vast camp they don’t have much, but at least they’re safe and have access to food.

    And looking at these kids – I think of all the suffering they have faced, and the contrast with the lives of our own children.

    And I also think that ours is a world where borders aren’t what they used to be…

    …where threats to our security aren’t defined simply by national armies declaring war on each other…

    …where our own prosperity depends upon poor countries becoming prosperous economies and trading partners.

    One of these children could be the next Bill Gates or the person who discovers the cure for cancer.

    I can’t think of any picture that better sums up the purpose of Britain’s development budget: a better life for millions of the world’s poorest, and a safer, more prosperous world for us all. Thank you.

  • Ann McKechin – 2011 Speech to Labour Party Conference

    Below is the text of the speech made by Ann McKechin to the 2011 Labour Party conference on 26th September 2011.

    Conference, without any doubt 2011 has been a very tough year for Labour in Scotland but it has been an even tougher year for the people of Scotland.

    Jobs disappearing – more and more in long term unemployment; incomes frozen; hours cut and the highest youth unemployment since the 1980’s.

    Along with rising inflation in the items we need the most – food; energy bills and transport, people across Scotland are really feeling the squeeze on their living standards.

    Not surprisingly after the May elections, our critics rushed to claim that labour would never recover; that we no longer have a vision for Scotland’s future; that we have lost our way.

    But conference the task to protect what is best about Scotland and to tackle the enormous problems we face today is one where Scottish labour should be at the heart. Be in no doubt that we are determined to be Scotland’s voice for social justice.

    Since May our members have shown with an amazing determination that this party will not simply fade away.

    When we were hit by the tragic death of our colleague and friend, David Cairns, our activists came from across Scotland and were out in the streets of Inverclyde through wind and rain to secure an impressive victory and the election of Iain McKenzie as our newest Member of Parliament.

    Our members have also actively engaged with our party review ably chaired by Jim Murphy and Sarah Boyack, which has already introduced substantial changes to the way we work and there will be more change to come.

    By the end of this year, we will have a new Scottish Labour Leader, to lead us in our fight against the equally narrow visions of the Tory-led Government and the SNP Government.

    Being a leader when your party is in Opposition is a tough job particularly when you have to cope with disappointment and setbacks. But I want to thank Iain Gray today for his unstinting commitment and loyalty to our party over the last few years – Iain, I know that your lifelong drive for social justice will continue to ensure that you make a difference to our country.

    And this year, conference has been one where the constitutional future of Scotland and that of the UK has again been dominant.

    Our nationalist opponents don’t miss an opportunity in repeating the constant refrain of our separate history and culture, be it Bannockburn or Culloden.

    Yes, conference these were momentous battles but there are many battles which have moulded our lives – much more recent; just as impressive and much more relevant to the way we live now.

    All of us wherever we live in the UK share the heritage which began with the Industrial Revolution that witnessed working people taking the opportunity to organise and agitate for a better future:

    Votes for women, the creation of free universal healthcare and education, equal pay and the birth of the Trade Union Movement which in turn led to the formation of our great Party.

    And Scotland was always integral to these advances for working people.

    Keir Hardie recognised that the social challenges of poor working conditions, insanitary housing and inadequate education were problems not just faced by Scots but shared with the whole of the United Kingdom.

    His call to arms for social justice is one that this Labour Party still heeds today.

    Just 2 weeks ago we celebrated the 40th anniversary of the world’s first ever “work-in” at the Upper Clyde shipyards.

    That movement was supported at the time not just by Scots but by thousands of people throughout the UK and it became a potent symbol of the fight by ordinary people against Tory complacency.

    Conference, just like 40 years ago, ordinary people want to work and live their lives in dignity.

    And yet again we have a Tory-led Government failing to reflect established Scottish values of responsibility and community.

    It too often rewards an irresponsible minority at the top of our society while leaving hardworking Scots to feel the squeeze of frozen wages and spiralling costs of living. This is a government that has sat idly by and has watched from the sidelines while its cuts, which went too far and too fast, choked off Britain’s recovery last autumn.

    It’s time for action. It’s time to heed Labour’s call to temporarily reverse the VAT hike to get people spending again and to re-introduce the banker’s bonus tax to provide a job guarantee for every young unemployed Scot.

    Instead of sitting on their hands, it’s time for Cameron and Osborne to act now.

    And Conference, the Scottish Government too has to live up to its responsibilities.

    The time for playing games with the people of Scotland should now be over.

    Are we seriously to believe that the First Minister, who has spent most of his waking hours for the past 30 odd years on how to achieve separation, doesn’t know the question to ask the Scottish electorate?

    Does anyone in the Scottish Government believe that this constitutional uncertainty is a good thing for Scotland?

    The Scottish Government has spent the last four years having a national conversation with its citizens but still can’t answer basic questions on defence policy, our currency or our relationship with Europe?

    What will it take for the SNP to come clean?

    Conference, let us be clear – Scottish Labour have never played games with the electorate on our country’s future and we never will.

    We judge the argument for change on whether it will be help secure the social justice we fight for and if it is in Scotland’s interests.

    And when there is a convincing argument for change we seek political consensus and objective hard evidence.

    That is why Scottish Labour was the party of devolution and gave Scotland its parliament; that is why we have supported the aims of the Scotland Bill and that is why we reject debates fixated purely on process rather than real policies of change.

    Conference, it is clear that Scots want us to focus on meeting the challenges of unemployment, the cost of living, protecting our public services and ensuring that the next generation in Scotland do not miss out.

    These are shared challenges within the UK and, as we have in the past, we will meet them together.

  • Theresa May – 2011 Speech to Conservative Party Conference

    theresamay

    Below is the text of the speech made by the Home Secretary, Theresa May, to the  Conservative Party Conference held in October 2011.

    Thank you, Damian, for that excellent presentation. Everybody in this room who spends time knocking on doors knows just how strongly the public feel about clearing up the mess Labour made of our immigration system – and that is exactly what we will do.

    Damian is part of an incredibly strong team of ministers we have in the Home Office. Earlier today, you heard from Nick Herbert, the Policing and Criminal Justice Minister. James Brokenshire is the Crime and Security Minister. Lynne Featherstone is the Minister for Criminal Information. And our newest recruit – Lord Henley – is our Minister in the House of Lords. Please join me in thanking them for their work to reform the police, cut crime, protect national security and cut immigration.

    Three weeks ago, Lord Henley replaced Baroness Angela Browning, who had to stand down for health reasons. Many of you will know what a formidable politician Angela is, and her last act as a minister was to steer with great skill the Police Reform Act through the House of Lords.

    This Act means that next year, across England and Wales, the public will vote for police and crime commissioners – one commissioner for each police force in the country, responsible for setting police budgets, deciding police priorities, holding the police to account, and hiring and firing chief constables.

    They will be powerful public figures, and they will, for the first time, make the police truly accountable to the people.

    The candidates who run to become police and crime commissioners will need to be of the highest calibre. They’ll need to inspire their electorate. They’ll need to be tough enough to work with police chiefs. They’ll need to be single-minded about keeping their communities safe and cutting crime.

    So it gives me great pleasure to introduce to you the first person to declare their intention to run as a Conservative candidate to become a police and crime commissioner. Decorated for his bravery, honoured for his public service, and remembered for his inspirational speech to British troops in Kuwait, please welcome to our conference, Colonel Tim Collins.

    [speech by Tim Collins]

    I wouldn’t want to be a criminal if he gets elected. Thank you, Tim, for that great speech.

    Reforming the police to fight crime

    Some people question why we’re reforming the police. For me, the reason is simple. We need them to be the tough, no-nonsense crime-fighters they signed up to become. But right now – despite what police officers want – too many of them are not. Stuck too often in the station instead of on the streets, filling in forms instead of catching criminals, thanks to Labour the police became a bureaucratic service instead of an operational force.

    It’s easy to hear politicians like me talking about red tape and political correctness. So let me give you one simple fact to prove my point. Although we have a record number of police officers, just twelve per cent are visible and available to the public, on the streets, at any one time.

    As Bernard Hogan-Howe, the new Metropolitan Police Commissioner, says, police officers aren’t social workers, they’re there to stop crime, catch criminals and help victims.

    I couldn’t agree more. That’s why the first thing I did as Home Secretary was abolish all police targets and set chief constables one clear objective: cut crime. I haven’t asked the police to be social workers, I haven’t set them any performance indicators, and I haven’t given them a thirty point plan, I’ve told them to cut crime.

    It’s amazing that, for the Labour Party, this seems to be a revolutionary idea. When Ed Balls was Shadow Home Secretary, he said policing isn’t “only about tackling crime”. It’s not “simply about catching and convicting criminals.”

    Well, we know that the police are there to cut crime, and we’re going to help them by taking the axe to Labour’s bureaucracy. The steps we’ve already taken will save up to 3.3 million police hours every year – the equivalent of more than 1,500 officers, out there policing your streets. And there will be more to come.

    We’re also going to help them by making sure that as we reduce budgets, we cut waste, not frontline services.

    But before I explain how, let me explain what’s happening to police budgets. When you factor in the council tax precept, the police will face a six per cent cash reduction in total over four years.

    Through better procurement, improved efficiency and a likely pay freeze, there is no reason at all why frontline police services should not be maintained and improved.

    Our police reform agenda might be made more urgent by spending cuts, but it’s not just about managing smaller budgets. Overdue action to cut out inefficiency and waste, a ruthless assault on targets and bureaucracy, a restoration of police discretion and independence, a National Crime Agency to get tough on organised crime, the most transparent crime data in the world, and a new model of accountability that puts the people in charge of policing.

    It all amounts to a comprehensive plan to change policing for the better and take the fight to the criminals.

    That’s what the public want, it’s what criminals fear, and it’s what police officers deserve.

    They do incredible work patrolling the streets, going into dangerous situations unarmed, doing the sort of things that we hope we never need to do. We’ve seen them do a brilliant job this week, policing our conference. So let’s give a big thank you to Greater Manchester Police for everything they’ve done this week. We see it every day in every village, town and city across the country. We see it when our country is at its best, like during the Royal Wedding, and at its worst, like during the riots in August.

    A lot has been said about the riots and their causes. But let me get one thing straight: in the end, the only cause of a crime is a criminal. Whatever their circumstances, everybody gets to choose between right and wrong and everybody has to take responsibility for what they’ve done.

    The disorder this summer wasn’t about poverty or politics. It was about greed and criminality, fuelled by a culture of irresponsibility and entitlement. To those who say the judges were too tough, I say the guilty should get what they deserve.

    But there are lessons we need to learn. Police tactics need to keep pace with new technologies and criminal tactics. Police powers need to be strengthened. Justice needs to be visible, swift and tough, not just as a one-off but all the time.

    And now we know more about the culprits. Three quarters already had a criminal record. A quarter had committed more than ten criminal offences before. In London, a fifth were known members of gangs. And that should be a wake-up call for all of us.

    Ending gang violence

    Gang violence is endemic in many of our cities. Across the country gang members are involved with the use and supply of drugs, firearms and knives.

    It’s a deep-rooted problem bound up with family breakdown, poor schooling and intergenerational worklessness, as well as policing and the criminal justice system. We won’t be able to bring it to an end until we fix some of those complex problems. That’s why Iain Duncan Smith and I are leading a cross-government team focusing on what we can do in the NHS, in schools and in communities. But the police still have a crucial role in taking on gang violence.

    There are several success stories we can learn from. In Liverpool, Operation Matrix went after gang members and halved the number of gun incidents in four years.

    In Glasgow, Strathclyde Police achieved an 85 per cent reduction in gun possession by the gang members they worked with.

    Here in Manchester, Operation X-Calibre cut firearms incidents by a third. What these successful operations have in common is the police working well with other agencies, an aggressive enforcement campaign targeted at the whole gang, and strong support for gang members looking for a way out.

    So by the end of the month I will publish the Government’s new gangs strategy.

    That strategy will need to address the 120,000 problem families who are responsible for so much crime, disorder and anti-social behaviour across the country. It will need to tackle drug abuse and addiction. And it will need to deal with the prevalence of knives and guns in our towns and cities. It will have at its heart a relentless drive against the violence that wrecks communities and ruins lives.

    As Conservatives, we understand instinctively the importance of law and order. There can be no sense of community without clear rules and strong enforcement. No prosperity without stability. No liberty without security.

    This is not some abstract concept. When a neighbourhood is under siege by yobs committing regular acts of crime and anti-social behaviour, there can be no community. When we see riots on our streets, hundreds of small businesses are forced to close. When a terrorist cannot be deported on human rights grounds, all our rights are threatened.

    Cutting immigration

    And as Conservatives, we understand too the need to reduce and control immigration. Of course, limited immigration can bring benefits to Britain, and we’ll always welcome those who genuinely seek refuge from persecution.

    But we know what damage uncontrolled immigration can do. To our society, as communities struggle to cope with rapid change. To our infrastructure, as our housing stock and transport system become overloaded. And to our public services, as schools and hospitals have to cope with a sudden increase in demand.

    Yet that is exactly what Labour let happen. As Damian explained earlier, under Margaret Thatcher and John Major, net migration to Britain was never any higher than the tens of thousands. But under Tony Blair and Gordon Brown, net migration to Britain was in the hundreds of thousands. In total, net migration to Britain under Labour was 2.2 million – more than four times the size of Manchester.

    That’s why we’ve made it our aim to get net migration back down to the tens of thousands. Cutting immigration is not as simple as turning off a tap – it’s a complex and litigious system – and so it will take time. But we’re taking action on every route to the UK – and the numbers will soon start to come down.

    Under Labour, economic migration was so out of control that almost a third of the people who came here as highly-skilled workers did unskilled jobs. So we’ve cut out that abuse and we’ve capped economic migration from outside the EU.

    Under Labour, the student visa system was so badly abused that it became the main way to get to Britain. So we’re closing down bogus colleges, regulating the remainder, restricting the right to work here and bring dependants, and making sure that all but the very best go home at the end of their studies.

    Under Labour, temporary immigration led to an automatic right to settle here. So we’re breaking that link, making sure that immigrants who come here to work go home at the end of their visa.

    And under Labour, the family visa system failed to promote integration, curb abuse and protect public services. So we’ve made it compulsory to speak English and we’ll soon publish tough new proposals on family visas.

    So we’re taking action to reduce immigration across every route to Britain. But these tough new rules need to be enforced, and we need to make sure that we’re not constrained from removing foreign nationals who, in all sanity, should have no right to be here.

    We all know the stories about the Human Rights Act. The violent drug dealer who cannot be sent home because his daughter – for whom he pays no maintenance – lives here. The robber who cannot be removed because he has a girlfriend. The illegal immigrant who cannot be deported because – and I am not making this up – he had a pet cat.

    This is why I remain of the view that the Human Rights Act needs to go. The Government’s Commission is looking at a British Bill of Rights. And I can today announce that we will change the immigration rules to ensure that the misinterpretation of Article Eight of the ECHR – the right to a family life – no longer prevents the deportation of people who shouldn’t be here.

    I expect not many people have actually read Article Eight, so let me tell you what it says:

    “Article 8.1. Everyone has the right to respect for his private and family life, his home and his correspondence.” You can imagine, in post-war Europe, what the draftsmen intended. But now our courts – and the problem lies mainly in British courts – interpret the right to a family life as an almost absolute right.

    Let me read to you the rest of what Article Eight says: “Article 8.2. There shall be no interference by a public authority with the exercise of this right except such as is in accordance with the law and is necessary in a democratic society in the interests of national security, public safety or the economic well-being of the country, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, or for the protection of the rights and freedoms of others.”

    The right to a family life is not an absolute right, and it must not be used to drive a coach and horses through our immigration system.

    The meaning of Article Eight should no longer be perverted. So I will write it into our immigration rules that when foreign nationals are convicted of a criminal offence or breach our immigration laws: when they should be removed, they will be removed.

    Our opponents will say it can’t be done, that they will fight us every step of the way. But they said that about the cap on economic migration, and we did it. They said that about our student visa reforms, and we’re doing them. As Home Secretary, I will do everything I can to restore sanity to our immigration system and get the numbers down.

    Economic migration – capped.

    Abuse of student visas – stopped.

    Automatic settlement – scrapped.

    Compulsory English language tests, tough new rules for family visas, ending the abuse of Article Eight.

    A clear plan to get net migration down to the tens of thousands.

    Conservative values to fight crime and cut immigration

    You know, the Labour Party still claim they had immigration under control. That their points-based system had sorted everything out. That all they should have done was introduce it earlier. They still don’t get it.

    We know now that they denounced anybody worried about immigration as a bigot. And they say we can’t trust the public to vote for police and crime commissioners, because they might elect extremists. They have total contempt for what the people think.

    When government fails to protect the public from crime and when it fails to control immigration, it might not bother the left-wing elites, because they’re not the ones who pay the price. But the people who do are the very people I’m in politics to serve – the men and women who work hard for a living, make sacrifices for their family, and care about their community. It should be our moral mission to help working people build a better future for themselves and their families.

    So I will never be ashamed to say that we should do everything we can to reward those who do the right thing, and I will never hesitate to say we should punish those who do the wrong thing.

    That’s why we must trust the people, by giving them their say about policing their communities. And it’s why we must respect the people, by doing what they want and getting to grips with immigration. That is what I am determined to do.

    Thank you very much.

  • Sir Nicholas Macpherson – 2011 Demos Speech

    The below speech was made by the Permanent Secretary to the Treasury, Sir Nicholas Macpherson, made at Demos on 8th March 2011.

    The Treasury has had an extraordinary few years: a banking crisis followed by recession and a ballooning budget deficit.

    But, even by those standards, the last year has been a defining one.

    We delivered two budgets, in March and June.

    We have been through only the second political transition in thirty years.

    We delivered a Spending Review.

    We have navigated through a sovereign debt crisis in Europe.

    And we have embarked upon the biggest reform of financial regulation since 1997.

    On top of this, we have made a number of institutional and organisational changes, in particular the creation of the Office for Budget Responsibility.

    At the same time, the Treasury is getting smaller. Staffing levels which peaked at 1420 in September 2009 currently stand at 1260 on a like for like basis.

    In my view, the Treasury will enter the new financial year with greater credibility as the nation’s finance and economics ministry.

    This is partly because of what the department has achieved: in particular, the sheer scale of the fiscal consolidation. But also its associated outcomes: long gilt yields have fallen by 30 basis points over the last year, while they have increased by 130 basis points in Spain.

    It is also partly about the way in which we have gone about these tasks. The official Treasury forged a strong working relationship with the new Government and quickly learned how to work with the first coalition in 65 years. I would like to think this was down to careful planning on our part. But credit should also go to the open and constructive way in which the new administration approached the civil service. Similarly, the successful delivery of the Spending Review relied not only on classic Treasury skills of analysis and negotiation, but also on an inclusive approach, both within and beyond Whitehall. And we are adopting a similarly open and consultative approach to the reforms to financial regulation: it is critical that any reforms are built to last.

    And it is also because organisational changes have strengthened the Treasury’s influence.

    The creation of the Office for Budget Responsibility is a good example. Its clear remit and independent status makes its forecasts that much more credible. And it strengthens the Treasury’s hand on fiscal policy since adjusting the forecasts to avoid difficult decisions is no longer an option.

    We have also managed to effect this change in a way that minimises the duplication of work between the Treasury and the OBR. This is not only a good thing in terms of saving the taxpayer some money, but it also means we can maintain the macroeconomic analytical capacity that we need to be effective. For example, these changes have allowed our Chief Economic Advisor, Dave Ramsden, to spend much more time on analysis and policy advice, building up economic capacity across Whitehall, because it is now Robert Chote and colleagues that spend their time worrying about the forecast.

    Other institutional changes have further strengthened policy making and the Treasury. The creation of the Office of Tax Simplification has created a force against unnecessary complexity; the absorbing of the Office of Government Commerce in the Efficiency and Reform Group by the Cabinet Office has enabled the Treasury to concentrate on its core objective of public spending planning and control; and the abolition of the National Economic Council has addressed the risk of the Cabinet Office becoming an economics ministry, which would have led to duplication and potentially confusion of policy responsibility.

    The Treasury’s strength derives from its institutional and strategic coherence and the breadth of its oversight. As Britain’s economics and finance ministry, it is perhaps the only national institution that has a genuine interest in both public and private finances and in the economic success of households, businesses and public services.

    The Treasury’s finance ministry role is clearly central. Only the Treasury can plan, control and account for public spending, and set the strategic direction of tax policy. And it has been doing it for eight hundred years.

    But the Treasury also has an important economic policy role, on financial services, in the international arena, in steering macroeconomic policy, and in improving the supply side.

    The Treasury’s effectiveness also derives from its small size. This requires the Treasury to be agile and to focus relentlessly on its core functions.

    The Treasury is set to become smaller still. I expect staffing levels to be around 1000 in 2014, the smallest in my time at the Treasury (once machinery of government changes are taken into account).

    We have recently carried out a Strategic Review of the Treasury – the first fundamental examination of the department’s role in two decades. It concluded that the department’s finance ministry role is vital, and none more so than in the coming period when making the consolidation stick must be the department’s number one priority. However, the economics ministry role remains as relevant as ever. But in carrying it out, the Treasury works best when it is operating at a strategic level: creating the framework or legislation, and leaving it to others to put it into operation. And so the challenge is to define clearly the boundary between the Treasury and its partners which maximises alignment and minimises duplication.

    One example of this is public service reform. The Treasury needs to focus on the big strategic risks, rather than spread itself too thinly, interfering in what should be the responsibility of departments.

    Another example is financial regulation. With the enactment of the forthcoming legislation, it will be the Bank of England which is responsible for macro-prudential policy, as well as prudential regulation and for the resolution of banks in a crisis. But we will still have responsibility for the framework as a whole and will need to retain a capacity to be an intelligent interlocutor and to take charge in a crisis when taxpayers’ money is put on the line. This is not new; the monetary policy framework follows a similar model, but the Strategic Review pushes us to be more rigorous in applying this approach across the Treasury’s other areas of business.

    And it is right that responsibility for the financial services framework remains in the Treasury, as it has since the 1990s.

    The banking crisis underlined the linkages between financial and economic policy. That is informing the Government’s reforms to the Bank of England; and it has also reinforced the importance of the Treasury’s historic relationship with the Bank. Moreover, most new regulation emanates from Brussels, it is finance ministers who take the important decisions on financial service issues whether in the EU Council of Economic and Finance Ministers, or in the G20 at a global level. And the Government’s interventions in the banking sector in recent years have involved fiscal as much as economic policy judgements.

    Another good example of our focus on creating clear partnerships is tax. The Treasury is best placed to ensure tax policy decisions are taken in the context of wider financial and economic policy: and its proximity to Ministers means that it is well placed to take into account the fundamentally political nature of tax raising. But Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs have a critical role in ensuring that tax policy is informed by operational and implementation issues. They are inevitably closer to the detail and data. The relationship works best when the comparative advantages of each institution are exploited, and where the two institutions can challenge each other from a position of mutual respect. The relationship is not a contract: it is more like a marriage than an arms treaty.

    But the Treasury’s effectiveness is not just about the way we are organised, or about how we work with our main partners. It is also about the people we have working here.

    The events of recent years have demonstrated the need for a flexible workforce that can move quickly and effectively into new priority areas, with a set of skills that allows them quickly to deliver.

    This is not to say that our staff should be moved around so frequently that they cannot develop expertise in critical areas. And in the past the Treasury may have celebrated youth a little too much over experience.

    Recent events have also placed a high premium on expertise. Here, I think we have made real progress. We now have a critical mass of tax professionals. Our economist cadre is strong. And we have strengthened financial management expertise, as well as attracting people with operational experience of delivering public services. We are managing staff’s careers more proactively. And our best staff are increasingly going out of the Treasury on secondment to deepen their experience, whether working in a local authority or a front line department or the Bank of England. In my view, we now have a much more plural workforce which is better placed to deliver the right mixture of challenge and experience, as well as mitigating the risks of mono-cultural group think.

    The areas where expertise has made the most difference are those most directly affected by the recent crisis: debt management and financial stability. Of course, we need to learn the lessons of the causes of the crisis. And that is informing the Treasury’s painstaking approach to legislation. But the professionalism with which the Treasury handled the crisis from the autumn of 2008 onwards has been recognised by external commentators. Only last week, Lord Myners said

    “the analysis, advice and support I received from…[Treasury] officials… was as good as any I experienced in 30 years in the private sector and at least as good as that received from commercial parties advising the Treasury”

    We have so far been successful in retaining expertise and that allowed us to deal more effectively with the sovereign debt crisis in Europe and the subsequent loan to Ireland. And the challenge will be to retain the right staff as our headcount declines.

    It’s been a challenging few years for the Treasury, as it has been for the global economy. But I believe the Treasury has come through stronger as the nation’s economics and finance ministry and is well placed to deal with whatever lies ahead.