Tag: 2021

  • Boris Johnson – 2021 Comments on UK and India Trade Links

    Boris Johnson – 2021 Comments on UK and India Trade Links

    The comments made by Boris Johnson, the Prime Minister, on 4 May 2021.

    The UK and India share many fundamental values. The UK is one of the oldest democracies, and India is the world’s largest. We are both committed members of the Commonwealth. And there is a living bridge uniting the people of our countries.

    In the last week the British people have stepped up in their thousands to support our Indian friends during this terrible time in a demonstration of the deep connection between the UK and India.

    This connection will only grow over the next decade as we do more together to tackle the world’s biggest problems and make life better for our people. The agreements we have made today mark the beginning of a new era in the UK-India relationship.

  • Alok Sharma – 2021 Comments at the Petersberg Climate Dialogue

    Alok Sharma – 2021 Comments at the Petersberg Climate Dialogue

    The comments made by Alok Sharma, the COP26 President, on 4 May 2021.

    Good afternoon. And thank you to everyone for joining this event, and to our German friends for co-hosting it.

    It is a real pleasure to help to launch this water sector initiative today.

    For too long, adaptation has been the poor cousin of mitigation.

    And – I can tell you – adaptation is very much a top priority for the UK’s COP26 Presidency.

    That is why the UK Prime Minister, Boris Johnson, launched the Adaption Action Coalition earlier this year, with our friends in Egypt, Bangladesh, Malawi, Netherlands and St Lucia.

    And I am very pleased so many members are with us at this event to share their experiences.

    The AAC builds on the Call to Action I launched with partners when I was UK Secretary of State for International Development, in 2019.

    It’s about converting the political ambition into action.

    So it is fantastic to see the AAC going strong, with this first event today. And, of course, its first international collaboration: the water tracker.

    We all know that, even if we reached net zero today, the world would still need to deal with significant climate shocks and disruption.

    And too often, water is a casualty.

    Whether through droughts, floods, or sea level rises, extreme weather events make it harder for communities to access clean water.

    This impacts health, it impacts livelihoods, food production and more. And ultimately threatens economic growth.

    But the very fact that water is so fundamental to life means responsibility is split between many different areas of individual governments.

    Policies can suffer from a lack of integration, and are harder to fund as a result.

    The tracker the Adaptation Action Coalition is launching today seeks to tackle those problems.

    And look at how water can be integrated across countries’ Nationally Determined Contributions, National Adaptation Plans, and national climate plans, creating detailed, consistent plans to help attract public and private funding, and demonstrating the impact we can have when we work together.

    This tracker is supported by the UK, and delivered in partnership with the Alliance for Global Water Adaptation, Sanitation and Water for All, as well as the Global Water Partnership.

    I very much look forward to hearing in Glasgow later this year about the progress that has been made.

    And I wish you the very best for your discussion today, which is about putting the vital ambitions of the AAC into practice.

    And of course helping to create a safer, more resilient world for all of us.

    Thank you.

  • Grant Shapps – 2021 Comments on Green Motoring

    Grant Shapps – 2021 Comments on Green Motoring

    The comments made by Grant Shapps, the Secretary of State for Transport, on 5 May 2021.

    As hosts of COP26, we want to drive decarbonisation on the global stage, which is why we’re going further and faster to make the journeys of our future as clean as possible.

    With news that the half-a-million milestone has now been met, together with the UK now having the second largest EV market in Europe, it’s clear that the shift to green motoring is accelerating at speed.

  • Brandon Lewis – 2021 Joint Statement With Simon Coveney

    Brandon Lewis – 2021 Joint Statement With Simon Coveney

    The statement made by Brandon Lewis, the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, on 5 May 2021.

    Today we met to discuss a range of issues. We agreed on the need to work together in close partnership to protect and uphold all aspects of the Belfast / Good Friday Agreement in all circumstances.

    We have also agreed to convene a meeting of the British-Irish Intergovernmental Conference in June, to discuss matters of mutual interest within the competence of both Governments as the Agreement intended.

    We are aware that there are sincerely held concerns in different communities in Northern Ireland in relation to a number of issues and firmly agree that the best way forward is through dialogue and engagement.

    We recognise the responsibility we all bear to enhance the confidence of everyone in Northern Ireland in all the institutions of the Agreement to help realise its vision for reconciliation, equality, respect for rights and parity of esteem.

  • Alok Sharma – 2021 Speech at the Petersberg Climate Dialogue

    Alok Sharma – 2021 Speech at the Petersberg Climate Dialogue

    The speech made by Alok Sharma, the COP26 President, on 6 May 2021.

    Secretary General, Prime Minister Johnson, Chancellor Merkel, Svenja, Ministers, Friends.

    Today, I have the unique honour of being the only COP President-Designate to welcome ministers to the Petersberg Dialogue two years in a row. And it is a particular pleasure for me to be sitting next to my friend Minister Schulze as I do so.

    Svenja, let me start by congratulating you for the proposal that you put forward yesterday to make Germany net zero by 2045, coupled with enhanced near-term ambition.

    Colleagues will know that at last year’s Dialogue we quite rightly focused on the unfolding impacts of the coronavirus pandemic, and the importance of the green recovery.

    This year, with now less than six months to go to Glasgow, we are focusing on the negotiations.

    And I am very keen that we use every moment of our time over the next two days to delve into adaptation, into finance, and of course, the outstanding elements of the Paris Rulebook, as Svenja has just said.

    And we need to be exploring solutions to issues that require a political resolution.

    And we need to provide clear guidance to our negotiators on what is expected from them ahead of Glasgow.

    And we need to send a clear signal that the political will is there to reach a successful negotiated outcome at COP26.

    Now friends, we are now all too familiar with these video conferences. They can sometimes feel very formulaic. What I sometimes refer to as the ‘doom of Zoom’.

    But, I request that we do everything we can to make full use of the opportunity that we have now today and up to Glasgow.

    That we move beyond positional statements.

    Instead, let’s speak very frankly about what really matters to each of us, to each of our countries. And let’s engage in a genuine conversation about how we, as ministers, can best contribute to resolving these issues.

    It is only through flexibility, through leadership that we will find compromise.

    And it is through that that we will agree a balanced package that makes the goals of the Paris Agreement a reality.

    That is what each of us must bring to this virtual table today. And am really looking forward to the detailed discussions we’re going to have.

    But before we begin, I want to give you a quick but important update.

    As many of you will know, in March the United Kingdom held a Climate and Development Ministerial meeting. And we agreed at this to set-up a Taskforce on Access to Finance, which is absolutely vital for developing countries around the world.

    This will take a new, economy-wide approach to climate finance, aligning support behind developing country priorities.

    And I am very pleased to say that we have developed the draft concept note already, which I am going to invite partners to work with us in shaping and take this work forward. And we will make this available shortly on the COP26 website.

    For now that is all from me, I very much look forward to hearing from ministers and having an interactive discussion.

    Svenja, back to you.

  • Alok Sharma – 2021 Comments on Denmark and Climate Change

    Alok Sharma – 2021 Comments on Denmark and Climate Change

    The comments made by Alok Sharma, the COP26 President-Designate, on 6 May 2021.

    With six months to go we are working hard to ensure COP26 will be a success and international partnerships will be key to this.

    Denmark’s climate leadership, particularly its long-standing climate action across its economy, is very welcome.

    The UK and Denmark will continue to work closely together in the run up to Glasgow as we look to raise ambition on climate action.

  • Boris Johnson – 2021 Comments at Petersberg Climate Dialogue

    Boris Johnson – 2021 Comments at Petersberg Climate Dialogue

    The comments made by Boris Johnson, the Prime Minister, on 6 May 2021.

    Good afternoon everyone, it’s great to be able to join you this year.

    Over the next few months I suspect we’re going to be hearing a great deal about Angela’s legacy, Chancellor Merkel’s legacy, the incredible impact she has had on Germany, on Europe and indeed on the world.

    And your work on climate change has been at the heart of that achievement.

    You presided over the very first COP, more than a quarter of a century ago and I hadn’t remembered that you were of course the driving force behind the great leap forward that was the Kyoto Protocol.

    And you created this now venerable institution in the climate calendar, an event that has consistently elevated climate change to the top of ministerial in-trays.

    That is very important right now because as Svenja says, we can’t allow action on climate change to become another victim of this appalling pandemic.

    This will be the decade in which we either rise up as one to tackle climate change together or else we sink together into the mire.

    And this year, at COP26, will be the moment at which the world chooses which of those two fates awaits us.

    But while the solution to our climate conundrum is on the surface of it simple – achieve net zero and limit the rise in global temperature to 1.5c – the complex nature of international diplomacy is such that we can’t just expect to make progress or hope to make progress in the 10 days of talks this November.

    The stakes are too high for COP26 to become some kind of last-minute dash to the line.

    And so it is absolutely vital that when we have time we should spend the next six months productively, untangling those knots and unblocking some of the stickiest issues.

    If we do the hard miles now I hope that in November we can meet in person in Glasgow to hammer out the final details of what must be an era-defining outcome for our planet and for future generations.

    And as hosts of COP26, we in the UK have a responsibility of course to make that happen.

    So throughout this year Alok and I are pulling every lever, using every opportunity to make COP the success it needs to be.

    And that, of course, includes next month’s G7 summit in Carbis Bay where leaders of the world’s biggest economies will be coming together, in person, face-to-face for the first time in far too long and climate change will be right at the heart of the agenda.

    For one thing I can tell you the meeting itself will be completely carbon neutral.

    But more significantly, it will be the first G7 at which every member has committed to hitting net zero by 2050.

    Though in Angela’s case, in Germany’s case now, 2045, congratulations to you on your drive and your ambition.

    That’s great news for our planet and shows us as G7 leading by example. But in Cornwall I want to see much more.

    I will be seeking commitments from G7 members to use their voices and their votes wherever and whenever possible to support the transition to net zero, kick start a green industrial revolution, and build economies that can withstand whatever our changing climate throws at us.

    And I also hope to secure a substantial pile of cash with which to help all countries to do that.

    We simply must meet our existing commitments on climate finance, that long-overdue $100 billion a year target, and then we must go further still.

    Because I think it is really up to us in the wealthier economies just to walk a mile in the shoes of developing nations.

    Who are more likely to feel the effects of climate change, less able to withstand the impact it has, and all the while striving to raise the living standards of billions of people.

    As those of us who have benefitted from 150 years of carbon-heavy industry lecture from the side lines about the need for clean growth.

    Developed nations cannot stop climate change on their own, but if we want others to leapfrog the dirty technology that did so much for us, then we have a moral and a practical obligation to help them do so.

    That means putting our money where our mouth is, which is why the UK recently doubled its climate finance contribution.

    At the G7 and other international fora I will not hesitate to bend the ear of my fellow leaders on the need for them to do the same.

    Because if all that emerges from COP26 is more hot air than we have absolutely no chance of keeping our planet cool.

    It must be a summit of agreement, of action, of deeds not words.

    For that to happen then over the next six months we must be relentless in our ambition and determination, laying the foundations on which success will be built.

    Today’s event is the latest stepping stone on the path to Glasgow.

    So let’s use it to show the world just how serious we are about delivering the change we need.

  • Dominic Raab – 2021 Statement on Israeli Settlements

    Dominic Raab – 2021 Statement on Israeli Settlements

    The joint statement issued by the UK, France, Germany, Italy and Spain on 6 May 2021.

    We urge the Government of Israel to reverse its decision to advance the construction of 540 settlement units in the Har Homa E area of the occupied West Bank, and to cease its policy of settlement expansion across the Occupied Palestinian Territories. Settlements are illegal under international law, and threaten prospects for a peaceful resolution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

    If implemented, the decision to advance settlements in Har Homa, between East Jerusalem and Bethlehem, will cause further damage to the prospects for a viable Palestinian State, with Jerusalem as the capital of both Israel and a Palestinian State. This move, alongside settlement advancement in Givat HaMatos and continued evictions in East Jerusalem, including in Sheikh Jarrah, also undermines efforts to rebuild trust between the parties, following the positive resumption of Israeli-Palestinian cooperation.

    We call on both sides to refrain from any unilateral action and resume a credible and meaningful dialogue, to advance efforts for the two state solution and an end to the conflict.

  • Keir Starmer – 2021 Open Letter to the Country

    Keir Starmer – 2021 Open Letter to the Country

    The open letter written by Keir Starmer, the Leader of the Opposition, on 4 May 2021.

    In a couple of days’ time our country faces important elections. I wanted to write to you directly about the choice facing your community.

    This is a changed Labour Party. Under new leadership, we are putting working people and their communities first, focusing on creating jobs, tackling crime and protecting the NHS.

    My dad was a toolmaker who spent his life working on the factory floor. I’ve always believed in the importance of having a good, secure, local job you can be proud of. But these days, that kind of work is difficult to find for too many people. I want to change that. That’s why Labour will back local businesses and entrepreneurs to create jobs that boost the economy and your community.

    I am proud that my mum, sister and wife have all worked for the NHS. I know the value of our amazing key workers – from nurses and police officers to supermarket workers and delivery drivers, they have kept our country going during this pandemic. Under my leadership, they’d get the rewards they deserve.

    As Director of Public Prosecutions, I led a criminal justice system that prosecuted criminals and protected victims of crime. I know what it takes to get things done to make our country a safer and better place, reversing the rise in violent crime and anti-social behaviour we have seen in recent years.

    As we emerge out of this pandemic, my burning desire is to build a brighter future for our country. My vision for Britain is simple: I want this to be the best place to grow up in and the best place to grow old in, whoever you are and wherever you live. That can start with this week’s elections. Labour in your area has a plan to deliver that future by:

    Investing £30bn to support the creation of hundreds of thousands new jobs in the industries of the future, including steel and manufacturing.
    Introducing a guarantee for young people to get them into work, training or education and end long-term unemployment.
    Getting police out from behind desks and back on our streets to tackle the recent rise in violent crime and anti-social behaviour.
    Guaranteeing the proper pay rise our NHS heroes were promised.

    Under my leadership, the country’s priorities will always be Labour’s priorities. Labour councils, councillors and mayors who are utterly focused on delivering the secure jobs, safer streets and health services we all want to see. We are focused on those issues because they matter most. They are the first step of Labour’s plan to rebuild Britain, based on security and opportunities across the country

    Under the Conservatives, it is one rule for them, another for everyone else. I get angry when I hear how the friend and neighbour of a Tory minister gets £30million of taxpayers’ money, while towns and communities across the country see their local services cut. Or when I see the British people’s money wasted on government contracts that don’t deliver.

    If I were Prime Minister, I would stop the abuse of taxpayers’ money, stop the wasteful approach to outsourcing contracts and clean up our politics. When I was Director of Public Prosecutions, I was not afraid to prosecute MPs who had broken the rules over MPs’ expenses. As Prime Minister, I would not be afraid to overhaul a system that still allows power to be abused.

    But it is not just about fixing things, it’s about a restless, relentless focus on change. Improving people’s lives and the country we all love. There’s no reason we can’t have better jobs, better schools, more opportunities, high streets we are proud of, public services that put people first and an NHS that is the envy of the world again: we just have to prioritise them.

    That means a Labour Government, councils and mayors who are focused on the country, not a Conservative Government busy providing favours for those who have ministers in their WhatsApp contacts. A Labour Government that can deliver a better future for our children, not one cutting pupil premium or that has to be dragged kicking and screaming to provide free school meals for families.

    On Thursday, you have a chance to vote for the first step in that change towards a brighter future and a Britain that works for you. A vote for Labour on Thursday is a vote for more jobs, more police on the streets and to protect our NHS. That’s the change Labour will deliver for you locally and it’s the change I am focused on delivering nationally. It’s the future our country deserves.

  • Angela Rayner – 2021 Comments on Conservative Donors Paying for Boris Johnson’s Childcare

    Angela Rayner – 2021 Comments on Conservative Donors Paying for Boris Johnson’s Childcare

    The comments made by Angela Rayner, the Deputy Leader of the Labour Party, on 4 May 2021.

    We are seeing what looks like another cover up from the Prime Minister, who is trying to hide his attempts to fund his lifestyle through secret payments from wealthy Tory donors.

    Boris Johnson forcing his MPs to vote against free school meals and making stealth cuts to schools at the same time as asking Tory donors to pay for his own childcare is yet more evidence that it’s one rule for him and his mates another for everyone else. What did these donors expect in return for their generosity, and what were they promised?

    With an investigation already underway into potentially illegal activity, the Prime Minister and Conservative Party should stop taking the British people for fools and immediately publish all correspondence relating to all attempts to get Tory donors to fund the Prime Minister’s lifestyle.