Tag: 2021

  • Liz Truss – 2021 Comments on the Global Investment Summit

    Liz Truss – 2021 Comments on the Global Investment Summit

    The comments made by Liz Truss, the Secretary of State for International Trade, on 27 March 2021.

    The UK was one of the first governments in the world to set a net zero target by 2050 and we are still leading the global shift to clean economic growth.

    From wind turbines in Scotland to hydrogen development in Wales, the Global Investment Summit will be a fantastic opportunity to secure investment deals into the best of British green industry, allowing us to build back better, stronger and greener.

    We look forward to rolling out the green carpet for some of the world’s leading businesses, helping to drive investment into all corners of the country.

  • Therese Coffey – 2021 Comments on Quarry House in Leeds

    Therese Coffey – 2021 Comments on Quarry House in Leeds

    The comments made by Therese Coffey, the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, on 26 March 2021.

    Designating Quarry House in Leeds as our second HQ with Ministerial offices builds on our presence in towns and cities across Britain. Leeds has a leading role in this country’s recovery as we build back better and deliver our Plan for Jobs. DWP ministers are excited about our second office, giving us direct entry into the Northern Powerhouse.

  • Toby Perkins – 2021 Comments on the Government’s Apprenticeship Incentive Payment

    Toby Perkins – 2021 Comments on the Government’s Apprenticeship Incentive Payment

    The comments made by Toby Perkins, the Shadow Minister for Further Education and Skills, on 25 March 2021.

    Young people are being let down by the Government’s irresponsible handling of this crisis which has led to soaring unemployment and the worst economic crisis of any major economy.

    It is clear their apprenticeship incentive is failing, having created just a third of the promised opportunities.

    Ministers have no plan to reverse the fall in apprentice numbers, they should adopt Labour’s plan for a ‘Jobs Promise’ for young people including using a structured wage subsidy to create the apprenticeship opportunities young people need to gain productive skills and long-term employment.

  • Anneliese Dodds – 2021 Speech at the SMMT Electrified Conference

    Anneliese Dodds – 2021 Speech at the SMMT Electrified Conference

    The speech made by Anneliese Dodds, the Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer, on 25 March 2021.

    Thank you so much for inviting me to address you during this critically important event.

    This is a crucial event, in a crucial year, to be talking about our collective aim to reach net zero.

    We are emerging from the coronavirus pandemic into the make-or-break decade for meeting that target.

    The United Nations has been clear: we have less than 10 years to avert the worst impacts of catastrophic climate change.

    And all eyes will be on the UK later this year when we host the COP26 summit and seek to accelerate progress towards the goals of the Paris Agreement.

    Getting there will require all of us to play our part- and so many are already doing so.

    Households up and down the country have changed their behaviour, from recycling waste to reducing their energy use.

    Whole industries – especially automotive – have been making fundamental changes to their business models – with more to come.

    And Government has to play its part, too. Setting the direction for others to follow.

    Incentivising the right behaviour and, yes, disincentivising those who hold back or drag their feet.

    We need a huge collective effort.

    An effort of the type we’ve seen at times during the last 12 months.

    The coronavirus crisis has been an appalling shock to our country, with the most devastating health and economic consequences.

    But our collective response has also demonstrated the power of coming together.

    We’ve seen this in the inspirational partnership between Oxford University and AstraZeneca in developing a vaccine at astonishing speed.

    And in the ventilator challenge, when the Centre for Advanced Manufacturing worked with major manufacturers, trade unions and Government – and they all delivered the seemingly impossible, to record time.

    That experience provides many lessons about the power of joint working. About the power of an active and enterprising Government, working with business and trade unions, in a new spirit of partnership.

    We should hold on to these lessons as we emerge from this crisis and consider how we can better tackle the present climate crisis, and future additional crises.

    But those lessons are already at risk of being lost.

    In the last few weeks we’ve seen the Industrial Strategy mothballed- a strategy which brought business together with government, to develop long-term plans for different sectors.

    The Industrial Strategy Council has been actively disbanded.

    We need a Government ready to take the bold action needed to set us on the path both to post-crisis growth and to net zero, working with business to achieve this.

    But what we’ve got in the UK, is a Government in retreat.

    A Government that cut £500m from planned capital spending in the latest Budget, when our international peers rightly see the virtue of wise public investment to stimulate growth.

    A Government whose flagship scheme to promote retrofitting and renewable energy sources for households has failed so miserably it is actually costing jobs. And rather than trying to fix it and get it back on track, the Chancellor slashed its budget and left it to wither and die.

    A Government whose response to the challenge of increasing take-up of electric vehicles is to cut the plug-in grants that would help people buy new cars.

    That lack of aspiration contrasts woefully with the appetite I know there is in industry and amongst the general population, to harness the power of green technologies.

    I was privileged to attend the launch of the new electric Mini – built in my own constituency of Oxford East at the BMW Cowley plant. I know how proud the workforce are of what they have created- it’s a pride I’ve also seen reflected when I visited the LEVC factory in Coventry.

    Our country needs a government with similar self-confidence and determination- to set out a vision for our critical industries and our economy as a whole, and a path to get there.

    We have not seen that confidence and determination over the last 10 years- and we do not see it now. 10 years ago, the then coalition government published a ‘Plan for Growth’.

    However, since the publication of that plan:

    UK growth has dropped below the OECD average.

    Our trade balance has worsened.

    Levels of foreign direct investment have halved.

    We have fallen down the World Bank’s rankings for ease of doing business.

    We have the highest levels of skills mismatch in the G7.

    Apprenticeship starts have collapsed.

    And we have a £70bn investment gap compared to the rest of the G7.

    Most starkly of all, the Office for Budget Responsibility has illustrated that successive Conservative-led governments have fallen spectacularly short of their ambitions for growth.

    Back in 2011, the OBR looked ahead fifteen years and set out what they thought the economy would look like based on the Government’s plans.

    Earlier this month, they did the same exercise based on what we know now.

    The result is that our economy is set to be £300bn smaller by 2026 than the OBR had originally forecast.

    That’s every person in the country being £4,500 worse off.

    We need to be far more ambitious for Britain than simply reiterating pledges from 2011, many of which still haven’t been delivered.

    We deserve a Government that is ambitious for the future of our country, and understands that what businesses need more than anything right now is certainty and stability.

    That’s why our Shadow Business Secretary, Ed Miliband, this morning set out three crucial ways in which Labour would give manufacturers and consumers alike the confidence they need for a mass rollout of electric vehicles.

    By accelerating the rollout of charging infrastructure right across the country, and supporting new jobs in the process.

    By making electric vehicle ownership more affordable through a combination of interest-free loans for those on low incomes and a scrappage scheme.

    And by Government partnering with private investors to guarantee three new gigafactories by 2025 – so that batteries are made right here in the UK and we secure the supply chain.

    We know that by providing clear, forward guidance to investors and businesses alike, Government can and should lay the groundwork for the private sector to innovate, to flourish, to create more jobs and transition to net zero.

    That strategic, long-term thinking is at the heart of Labour’s approach to economic policy.

    Labour’s horizon for economic policy would not end after five years. Instead I would be aiming 10 and ideally 20 years from now – so that we can take the difficult and necessary choices today that would lead to greater security and prosperity in the future.

    We would also focus on how every level of Government can work, together with business, trade unions and local communities, to ensure we see economic growth right across our country.

    It’s a very different strategy to that of the Conservatives, where town is pitted against town in bidding for pots of cash doled out by Ministers in Whitehall, and where businesses and local authorities have invested time, money and energy in drawing up regional industrial strategies, only for the whole exercise to have apparently been dropped by government earlier this month.

    We should use the power of Government, in a new partnership with business, trade unions and communities, to maximise the potential of every part of the country – so that wherever public money is invested we see genuine commitment to the use of local businesses in the supply chain, and to the creation of local jobs and training opportunities.

    We do not need here to remake the wheel- that kind of strategic approach to innovation has already often been in evidence, in Labour-run Wales, London Manchester and elsewhere.

    That type of concerted action is only possible if the Government of the day truly believes it can make a difference.

    If Government recognises the part it can and must play in setting targets and enabling businesses, trade unions, communities and individuals to come together to meet them.

    Today we are talking about the most important target of all.

    A target that is existential.

    That requires a Government that is up to the task.

    I can assure you that a Labour Government would be.

    Thank you.

  • Anna McMorrin – 2021 Comments on Yemen

    Anna McMorrin – 2021 Comments on Yemen

    The comments made by Anna McMorrin, the Shadow International Development Minister, on 25 March 2021.

    The Conservative Government chooses to slash life-saving aid to Yemen and fuel conflict with UK arms instead of coming together to help this war torn country in its darkest hour.

    After six years of immeasurable suffering, the humanitarian situation in Yemen is on the brink of irreversible catastrophe.

    Millions of Yemenis are without critical lifelines and face one of the worst famines in a generation. The UK should not be cutting aid and instead play its part saving lives.

  • Sam Tarry – 2021 Comments on Greater Manchester Bus Services

    Sam Tarry – 2021 Comments on Greater Manchester Bus Services

    The comments made by Sam Tarry, the Shadow Buses Minister, on 25 March 2021.

    The decision to take local public control of Greater Manchester’s buses will benefit all users, after Conservative governments have spent the last 10 years presiding over a toxic mix of cuts to services and ever-rising fares.

    This is a positive step forward from one of the leading Mayors in Britain, who’s not afraid to take bold measures that are in the best interests of all those across Greater Manchester. This clearly shows what Labour can do in power.

  • Anneliese Dodds – 2021 Comments on Business Rates Relief

    Anneliese Dodds – 2021 Comments on Business Rates Relief

    The comments made by Anneliese Dodds, the Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer, on 25 March 2021.

    This latest u-turn from Rishi Sunak shows why his Budget was so short-sighted. The Chancellor’s last-minute changes to rates relief just kicked the can down the road and caused more confusion for British business.

    Now he’s had to go back to the drawing board yet again, while businesses are left counting the cost of more chopping and changing from this Chancellor.

    On Monday, Labour called on the Government to reform the business rates system to level the playing field between high street businesses and online giants, but it ducked that decision again.

    While the Conservative Government wrings its hands and fails to act, Labour has pledged to put communities first and deliver a bright future for our high streets.

  • Stephen Kinnock – 2021 Comments on the Myanmar Military

    Stephen Kinnock – 2021 Comments on the Myanmar Military

    The comments made by Stephen Kinnock, the Shadow Minister for Asia and the Pacific, on 25 March 2021.

    Labour supports government sanctions and has been demanding for them to be implemented since August 2020.

    These sanctions must now go further to include services and sanctions against the Myanmar Economic Corporation.

    The UK government must also show global leadership and join the Gambia’s case against at the International Court of Justice in which Myanmar stands accused of genocide against the Rohingya.

  • Anneliese Dodds – 2021 Comments on Support for the Self-Employed

    Anneliese Dodds – 2021 Comments on Support for the Self-Employed

    The comments made by Anneliese Dodds, the Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer, on 25 March 2021.

    It’s now been a full year that more than a million self-employed people have had to get by while being excluded from Covid support schemes. For Government, it’s been a year of looking the other way.

    That’s not just spectacularly unfair on those who have had the courage and entrepreneurial spirit to go it on their own. It also risks damaging the recovery we so desperately need.

    The Government needs to fix the gaps in its support scheme and help self-employed people to get back on their feet and out the other side of this crisis.

  • Lisa Nandy – 2021 Comments on Chinese Sanctions Against UK Parliamentarians

    Lisa Nandy – 2021 Comments on Chinese Sanctions Against UK Parliamentarians

    The comments made by Lisa Nandy, the Shadow Foreign Secretary, on 26 March 2021.

    These sanctions are a blatant attempt to silence British Parliamentarians who are shining a spotlight on the appalling persecution of the Uyghur people. They will not succeed.

    The UK has a moral duty to continue to raise the horrific abuses taking place in Xinjiang, and we will continue to press the government to lead the international community to hold the Chinese government to account for their actions.