Tag: 2021

  • Boris Johnson – 2021 Comments on Creating New Vaccines

    Boris Johnson – 2021 Comments on Creating New Vaccines

    The comments made by Boris Johnson, the Prime Minister on 19 February 2021.

    Perhaps more than ever, the hopes of the world rest on the shoulders of scientists and over the last year, like countless times before, they have risen to the challenge.

    The development of viable coronavirus vaccines offers the tantalising prospect of a return to normality, but we must not rest on our laurels. As leaders of the G7 we must say today: never again.

    By harnessing our collective ingenuity, we can ensure we have the vaccines, treatments and tests to be battle-ready for future health threats, as we beat Covid-19 and build back better together.

  • Iain Stewart – 2021 Comments on British Army’s Boxer Vehicles

    Iain Stewart – 2021 Comments on British Army’s Boxer Vehicles

    The comments made by Iain Stewart, the Minister for Scotland, on 19 February 2021.

    We look forward to working with Thales UK on the delivery of these Remote Weapons Stations, knowing this contract will not only contribute to the safety of British military personnel on the front line, but also support industry growth here in Scotland.

    Protecting hundreds of jobs and supporting 30 apprenticeships, this £180 million UK Government investment further demonstrates our commitment to supporting the defence sector in Scotland and underscores the many opportunities available within the United Kingdom economy.

  • Dominic Raab – 2021 Comments on Brexit and Trade Agreements

    Dominic Raab – 2021 Comments on Brexit and Trade Agreements

    The text of the comments made by Dominic Raab, the Foreign Secretary, on BBC’s Andrew Marr Show on 14 February 2021.

    ANDREW MARR:

    Now, I want to talk to you about the results so far of Brexit. There’s been a huge amount of rhetoric and argument on both sides all across the media. I’d like to just focus on a real life actual situation, and somebody called Tony Bowker. He runs a company in Sheffield which imports precision engineered goods from Japan and then exports them to the EU. And under your Brexit deal he says he has to pay duties because of rule of origins requirements. Many of his products now require export licences and every shipment to Europe has gone from costing him zero to costing hundreds of pounds. He has been advised that his best option now is to relocate the majority of his operations from Sheffield to the continent, and he wants to know from you is the government going to change the elements of the Brexit deal which make his business model unviable, or should he move out of the UK?

    DOMINIC RAAB:

    We certainly want all businesses to stay here. We want to manage the risks regarding exports that you describe. We’ve put a huge amount of money into supporting those businesses. The BBC itself was reporting that in terms of freight the flows of freight, both into the UK and out of the UK, are now back to 99 per cent of the pre-end of transitional period level. So that’s good news.

    We talked last time I was on the show about some of the teething problems, and I think on the BBC’s own reporting, based on the data, that’s been to a large extent resolved and we’ll continue to keep a very close eye on that. And of course there are all the wider export opportunities with the rest of the world with the new free trade deals we’re doing. But we have also been clear that there are changes that come with exiting the transition period and what we’re trying to do is support businesses as best we can to manage those.

    ANDREW MARR:

    50% of the lorries that you’re talking about were empty. We know that too. And in terms of teething trouble, Mr Bowker, like many other businesses, is actually facing an existential challenge. Stay in Sheffield or move to the continent. And unless things change he’s going to have to move, and it’s not just smaller businesses like him. Peter Cowgill, who’s the chairman of JD Sports, a huge business, says: ‘when we had a free trade agreement – we were told we were going to get a free trade agreement, that is really not the case. If you source from the Far
    East and bring it into the UK and ship to stores in every country in Europe where tariffs apply, then your business needs to relocate
    and find a distribution centre in Europe.’ And if that doesn’t happen, then the employment is going to go from the UK. There are lots of businesses facing real practical, day to day problems right now. What are you going to do for them?

    DOMINIC RAAB:

    We’re already doing, as I said, a huge amount to support them with advice, with guidance, particularly into mediating things like customs declarations, and we’ve been clear all along that come the end of the transition period there would be changes, and we’ve put a significant amount of money into supporting those businesses. I think it’s also fair to say, for the sake of balance and context, there have also been lots of other businesses investing in the UK because they see the certainty that a free trade deal provides, and/or because they think that the UK is a great source for business because of its own merits. There are also the new opportunities for export that come with breaking down barriers to trade. For example, if you look at the Japanese free trade agreement that we’ve got and its extension into areas like digital and data, a really important area of comparative advantage for the UK. So yes, there’s some change, but we can manage the risks, grasp the opportunities, and I’m very confident overall. We can always take individual cases and I know they all matter, for the businesses and the employers, but overall we’re in an excellent position now to grasp the opportunities of a global Britain out there, particularly investing in the areas of the IndoPacific region, but also maintaining our key trading relations with Europe.

    ANDREW MARR:

    Well, let’s try and move away from individual businesses to the wider picture. And I don’t deny at all that there will new opportunities for all sorts of businesses going ahead, but the truth is that Boris Johnson promised a deal that you signed would – and I quote – ‘if anything, allow our companies and our exporters to do even more business with our European friends.’ And the truth is that because of all sorts of new paperwork, there are now twenty page export health certificates for vets, there’s the 27-page catch certificate for exporting fish, there’s duties for goods of all kinds which don’t meet rules of origin requirements, and if that is going to make trading with business – with Europe harder and harder and harder, then the common sense conclusion is that people will do less of it.

    DOMINIC RAAB:

    Well, no. First of all, of course you’re right to say that the EU regulatory requirements, the red tape of the paperwork that they will apply to the UK, the same as they apply to other businesses from other countries around the world, if they ramp that up and they don’t take a sensible smart approach to that of course it will have an impact. It will also have an impact on them. I think if you take a 10-year view as well as looking at the short term risk, which it’s right to do, actually the growth opportunities of the future are going to come from emerging and developing economies around the world, in particular the Indo-Pacific, and having the freedom, the latitude to trade, bespoke Britain-friendly terms and conditions with those growth markets in the future is a huge opportunity, when it comes to jobs, when it comes to
    livelihoods, when it comes to startup and to scale up. So you’ve got to look at this in the round, but of course we will want to also manage those short term challenges, and reduce them, mitigate as far as we can the bureaucratic obstacles that the EU is imposing.

    ANDREW MARR:

    So are you saying in effect we should stop thinking quite so much about Europe and think more about the Far East?

    DOMINIC RAAB:

    I wouldn’t put it quite in those terms, but it’s certainly right to say we want to bank, if you like, the baseline of our European trade, it’s very important to us and also our neighbours. But if you look at the opportunities and the growth for the future for UK companies, bearing in mind the comparative advantage of our businesses, I think the growth markets and the growth economies are going to come from the Indo-Pacific region and actually if you look at what the EU says, they agree with that analysis, which is why it’s so important we’ve got the latitude to strike the best deals with those economies, which Liz Truss is already now doing, to really maximise the opportunities and that’s the long term sustainable approach.

    ANDREW MARR:

    Let me turn to one of the most important industries in terms of tax revenue coming in and Britain’s traditional strength which is the City. Now in the week just passed Amsterdam took over London’s leading role in terms of the centre for European equities being dealt with and there are lots of pieces of evidence now, again hard evidence of actual companies moving hundreds of people out of the City and onto the Continent of Europe. And a certain sense that something may have been changing. This may be a fulcrum moment for what has been one of Britain’s great industries and we may be beginning to see the City being eclipsed by the EU. And my point I suppose to you is that really that given that the EU wants to take that business into its own territory we don’t have many levers to, as it were, use against them.

    DOMINIC RAAB:

    Well I certainly don’t accept the sort of binary zero sum sort of attrition with the EU … What matters to the UK and to the City is the comparative advantage we have in the fundamentals. So for example you were citing Equities, but actually the boss of Barclays has been saying recently how the long term future of the UK and its leadership role is unparalleled, unrivalled. And the crucial question for the EU, it may be able to, if you like, nick a bit of business here or there from the City, but the problem is the measures that they will take to achieve that will undermine their own competitiveness. If I’m really – I think to be really honest about it the challenge to London as the global financial centre around the world will come from Tokyo, New York and other areas rather from those European hubs, particularly if they start to erect barriers to trade and investment.

  • Matt Warman – 2021 Comments on UK Cyber Security

    Matt Warman – 2021 Comments on UK Cyber Security

    The comments made by Matt Warman, the Digital Minister, on 18 February 2021.

    The need for cutting-edge cyber security has never been greater and this resilient sector is growing, diversifying and solidifying its status as a jewel in the UK’s tech crown.

    With more than 3,800 new jobs created, firms – large and small – are doing vital work keeping people and businesses secure online so we can build back safer from the pandemic.

    I am committed to supporting the industry to reach new heights, create more jobs and lead new innovations in this field.

  • Helen Whately – 2021 Comments on Nursing Applications

    Helen Whately – 2021 Comments on Nursing Applications

    The comments made by Helen Whately, the Minister for Care, on 18 February 2021.

    I’m delighted to see such an incredible boost in this year’s applications, with more mature applicants helping to contribute to a diverse and truly representative nursing workforce. Thank you to everyone who has stepped up to support our health and social care services.

    These are the nurses of the future who will help the NHS and social care recover from this pandemic and continue to deliver world-class care to patients for years to come.

    These figures are a testament to the work of Health Education England and UCAS in highlighting nursing as a rewarding and accessible career path, as well as the remarkable achievements of all health and care professionals over the past year.

    We’re another step closer to delivering 50,000 more nurses for our NHS and providing better healthcare for everyone.

  • Ben Wallace – 2021 Statement on UK’s Commitment to NATO Missions

    Ben Wallace – 2021 Statement on UK’s Commitment to NATO Missions

    The statement made by Ben Wallace, the Secretary of State for Defence, on 18 February 2021.

    The UK is setting a course for the future of NATO by modernising our own Armed Forces to keep the country and its allies safe in a more threatening world, following the record settlement of more than £24bn.

    Our commitment to NATO is at the heart of this approach and I was pleased to discuss with allies our shared vision of deepened cooperation, refreshed operational concepts, and the use of cutting-edge technology to counter the threats of today and tomorrow.

    First and foremost we are committed to delivering on NATO operations. The UK Government remains resolute in our support to the government of Afghanistan in the face of unacceptable Taliban violence. We are determined to ensure that conditions are met for achieving a lasting political settlement, which is the only means of ensuring security from terrorism for the people of Afghanistan, the United Kingdom and its Allies.

  • Kate Green – 2021 Comments on the Education Policy Institute Report

    Kate Green – 2021 Comments on the Education Policy Institute Report

    The speech made by Kate Green, the Shadow Education Secretary, on 18 February 2021.

    The Conservatives have treated children as an afterthought throughout this pandemic and should be far more ambitious for their recovery.

    Enabling all young people to catch-up on lost learning and time with friends must be central to rebuilding our country after this pandemic.

  • David Lammy – 2021 Comments on the Criminal Justice System

    David Lammy – 2021 Comments on the Criminal Justice System

    The comments made by David Lammy, the Shadow Justice Secretary, on 18 February 2021.

    The collapse in cases dealt with by the criminal justice system in the past year is a result of the government’s slow and incompetent response to the pandemic.

    The Government has failed to listen to Labour’s calls for a rapid extension in Nightingale Courts, reduced war time juries while pandemic restrictions are in place, and the immediate roll-out of testing in courts that would have allowed more justice to be done.

    A decade of failed Conservative ideology has wrecked the justice system, leaving it vulnerable even before the pandemic began. We now need to rebuild the justice system so that the UK can become the fairest country in the world.

  • Keir Starmer – 2021 Speech on a New Chapter for Britain

    Keir Starmer – 2021 Speech on a New Chapter for Britain

    The speech made by Keir Starmer, the Leader of the Opposition, on 18 February 2021.

    When I went to one of our brilliant vaccine centres a few weeks ago I saw something extraordinary.

    People arriving – by the dozen – with anxiety etched across their face.

    Many hadn’t been out of the house for months, but as our brilliant NHS vaccinated them, I saw their anxiety drain away.

    And they left with smiles – broad smiles – on their faces.

    It’s that spirit of hope and optimism that I want to start with today.

    A spirit we’ve seen too little in the last year.

    The dedication of our frontline workers, the skill of our NHS, the brilliance of our scientists and the solidarity of the British people now point the way to a better future for our country and allow us to glimpse how we can thrive again as a nation.

    Covid has shown us the best of Britain, but it’s shown our fragilities too.

    This virus has a deadly ability to find the most vulnerable and to expose deep inequalities and injustices.

    We have to seize this moment to address them.

    I believe there’s a mood in the air which we don’t detect often in Britain.

    It was there in 1945, after the sacrifice of war, and it’s there again now.

    It’s the determination that our collective sacrifice must lead to a better future.

    In a few weeks’ time, we’ll have a Budget that will offer a simple choice:

    A fork in the road.

    We can go back to the same insecure and unequal economy that’s been so cruelly exposed by the virus, or we can seize this moment, and go forward to a future that’s going to look utterly unlike the past.

    That choice will define the Budget

    That choice will define the next election.

    We know what the Conservatives say they want to do to:

    They want to Build Back.

    But I don’t want to go back.

    We can’t return to business as usual.

    And certainly not to an economy rooted in insecurity and inequality.

    I want our country to go forward, to embrace the change that’s coming – in science, technology and work – and be ready to face the future

    Today I want to set out how we can build that future together.

    Covid is not only the worst health crisis in memory, it’s the biggest economic convulsion in 300 years.

    We have the worst death toll in Europe and the worst economic crisis of any major economy.

    I’ve said a lot about the incompetence of the government in handling the pandemic and I make no apology for that.

    They’ve been slow at every stage. They’ve ignored advice. They haven’t learnt from their mistakes.

    Yet a government out of its depth is not even half the story.

    The terrible damage caused by the virus to health and prosperity has been made all the worse because the foundations of our society have been weakened over a decade.

    Ten years ago, at the start of this period of Conservative government, Professor Michael Marmot published a report on the state of England’s health.

    In February of last year he updated it and he’s done so again in the shadow of Covid.

    It shows that even before the pandemic:

    • Life expectancy had stalled – for the first time in a century.

    • Child poverty had shot up to over 4 million

    • And that a child growing up in a deprived area in the North East can expect to live for 5 years less… than a child growing up in a deprived area in London.

    What sort of legacy is that, for a party that’s been in government for a decade?

    That life itself has got cheaper.

    And shorter.

    In his most recent report, Marmot set out the costs of inequality.

    That Covid got into the cracks and crevices of our society and forced them open with tragic consequences.

    During the last year, my thoughts have returned time and again to the wartime generation; those who suffered through the horrors of World War Two; who rebuilt Britain from the rubble of the Blitz; created the NHS and built millions of homes fit for heroes and I contrast that with how so many of them were let down in their time of need – exposed to Covid in underfunded care homes, unable to say goodbye to families and loved ones.

    How can the Prime Minister now look those families in the eye and say: “We did everything we could?”

    When the truth is that the Conservatives promised to fix social care for a decade, but never got round to it.

    The problem is even bigger than the serial failures of this government:

    It’s about an ideology that’s failed.

    An ideology that’s proved incapable of providing security for the long-term, that’s indifferent to the moral and economic necessity of tackling inequality, and that left Britain unprepared when we were tested most.

    Our care homes are perhaps the clearest example of this

    But we see the same tragic story in overstretched hospitals and GP surgeries, in schools with ever-growing class sizes, in our once proud town centres and high streets, in an economy so insecure that millions of people can’t afford to isolate and where the lowest paid have been amongst the most exposed.

    These are the inevitable consequences of a decade of decisions guided by the notion that government can’t interfere with the market.

    That you can strip back public services, ignore inequalities and take money out of the pockets of those who need it most, only to look the other way when the consequences of those choices became clear.

    This pandemic has pulled back the curtain on that way of doing things.

    This must now be a moment to think again about the country that we want to be.

    A call to arms – like the Beveridge Report was in the 1940s.

    A chance to diagnose the condition of Britain… and to start the process of putting it right.

    That’s the path I would take in the March Budget.

    To begin a new chapter in the history of our country – and to equip Britain for the opportunities of the future.

    But I fear that the Conservatives are incapable of seizing this moment.

    That what we get on March 3 will be short-term and it won’t even be a fix.

    Successive Conservative Prime Ministers have used the rhetoric of change: of ‘northern powerhouses’, ‘burning injustices’ or ‘levelling up’

    But all it ever adds up to is a few soundbites and the odd photo opportunity.

    The truth is, whoever their Prime Minister is, the Conservatives simply don’t believe that it’s the role of government to tackle inequality or insecurity.

    They believe a good government is one that gets out of the way, rather than builds the path to a more secure future.

    You can get away with that in the short-term.

    Perhaps even for a few years, but after a decade the results are obvious.

    And so the mistakes the Conservatives are making today are the mistakes they always make.

    They try to pretend this is a different Conservative Party, you could have fooled me

    If you can’t decide whether to plunge hundreds of thousands of children into poverty by cutting Universal Credit, you have no chance of mending our broken system.

    If you vote against children getting free school meals, you’re not going to find the solution to millions of children growing up in poverty

    If you can’t support three million self-employed people, but you can spray billions on contracts that don’t deliver for our NHS, you’re not going to be able to build the economy of the future

    And if you freeze pay for millions of key workers you’re hardly going to build the high wage, high standards Britain that we so desperately need.

    That’s why, despite the scale of the moment, all we can expect from this government is more of the same:

    A roadmap to yesterday.

    Another decade of insecurity and inequality.

    Labour would choose a different path.

    A path that is focused on the long-term.

    That tackles inequality, invests in the future and builds a more secure and prosperous economy.

    That journey starts with the responsible steps that are necessary now to protect family incomes and to support businesses.

    As the OECD, the IMF and the IFS have all indicated, the public finances must be returned to sustainability over the medium to long-term not in the short-term.

    So this is no time for a second wave of austerity.

    And this is no time for tax rises on businesses and families either.

    That would waste the sacrifices of the last year.

    And it would choke off our recovery.

    That’s why a Labour Budget would protect families.

    • We wouldn’t cut the £20 uplift in Universal Credit, benefiting 6 million families by £1,000 a year….
    • We’d provide local councils with the funding they need to prevent huge rises in council tax
    • And we’d end the insult of a pay freeze for our key workers after they’ve given so much.

    A Labour Budget would also back British business.

    • By extending business rate relief and the VAT cut for hospitality and leisure.

    • By easing the burden of debt that weighs down so many businesses.

    • And by extending and updating the furlough scheme so it’s better able to help people back into work.

    We’d also fix the gaping holes in the government’s Kickstart jobs scheme.

    It shows how badly this Government has let down young people that on average 292 young people have become unemployed every day but the government’s flagship scheme only supports 13 jobs a day.

    That’s 1 job supported for every 22 jobs lost by young people.

    We also need to use this Budget to build a more sustainable, secure economy for the long-term.

    The Chancellor is pinning his hopes for recovery on short-term consumer spending.

    But as the Bank of England have said, the vast majority of savings built up during the pandemic won’t be spent.

    That’s understandable. But it won’t help rebuild our country and it won’t do much to help savers.

    There’s an opportunity here to think creatively.

    To build on the spirit of solidarity we’ve seen in the last year.

    And to forge a new contract with the British people:

    The British people invest in rebuilding an economy that’s more secure

    And the government provides financial security for millions of people – many of whom have saved for the first time.

    If I were Prime Minister, I would introduce a new British Recovery Bond.

    This could raise billions to invest in local communities, jobs and businesses.

    It could help build the infrastructure of the future – investing in science, skills, technology and British manufacturing.

    It would also provide security for savers.

    And give millions of people a proper stake in Britain’s future.

    This is bold, it’s innovative.

    And it’s an example of the active, empowering government I believe is needed if we’re to build a more secure economy.

    The March Budget is a pivotal moment.

    But I also want to lift our sights, to talk about the decade to come.

    Under my leadership Labour’s priority will always be financial responsibility.

    I know the value of people’s hard-earned money – I take that incredibly seriously.

    I know that people rightly expect the government to look after it too.

    To invest wisely and not to spend money we can’t afford.

    Those are my guiding principles.

    But I think that Covid has shifted the axis on economic policy.

    Both what is necessary and what is possible have changed.

    The age in which government did little but collect and distribute revenue is over.

    The mistakes of the last decade have made sure of that.

    I believe people are now looking for more from their government – like they were after the Second World War.

    They’re looking for government to help them through difficult times, to provide security, and to build a better future for them and for their families.

    A government that knows the value of public services, not just the price in the market.

    A government that invests in British skills, science, universities and manufacturing, that provides world-class education for all of our children, and whose driving mission is to tackle inequalities from birth.

    A government that can ensure people don’t have to leave their home town to have a chance of getting a good job and won’t leave university with crippling debt.

    That can build a new generation of affordable homes – and not stand idly by while millions are denied the dream of homeownership.

    A government that can work with trade unions and businesses to shape the future of work, and harness the opportunities of new technology.

    A government that will ensure care homes are places of dignity.

    A government that reflects our values on the world stage.

    And that puts tackling the climate emergency at the centre of everything we do.

    That’s what I mean when I talk of a future where Britain can be the best place to grow up in and the best place to grow old in.

    But none of this is possible if you don’t believe in the power of good government.

    And the need to create a new partnership between an active government, enterprising business and the British people.

    The Conservatives are incapable of this:

    They simply don’t believe it’s the duty of government to deliver social justice and equality – that’s why they’ll always fall back on the short-term demands of the market.

    But, if we’re honest, for too long Labour has failed to realise that the only way to deliver social justice and equality is through a strong partnership with business.

    Under my leadership, that mind-set will change.

    I believe in the power of active, enterprising government working alongside British business.

    Not because I believe business is something just to be tolerated or taxed, but because I know that government can’t do this on its own.

    And that a new partnership with British businesses is the only way to build a secure economy, strong families and a prosperous country.

    The vast majority of businesses know this too.

    They know the days of ignoring their social and climate responsibilities are long gone.

    In fact, many businesses are waiting for politicians to catch up.

    A new partnership with business – one where we have high expectations of business and where business can have high expectations of Labour – is pivotal to my leadership.

    And to my vision of the future.

    It’s also personal to me.

    My dad worked on the factory floor his entire life.

    A steady, secure job allowed him to build a better life for his family.

    That’s why, when I think about business I see a source of pride, dignity and prosperity.

    And I know there’s no vision of a future where Britain fulfils its potential in which business does not thrive.

    That’s why, if I was Prime Minister, I’d back a new generation of British entrepreneurs.

    By providing start-up loans for 100,000 new businesses across every region of the UK.

    For too long, businesses have been concentrated in too few parts of our country.

    This doesn’t reflect where our talent lies and it stifles potential.

    This is just a start in addressing that.

    But we can’t afford to ignore it any longer.

    People often ask me why I want this job.

    The answer is simple:

    To change people’s lives.

    Because when I see an injustice, I want to put it right.

    That’s not just about policy choices: it’s an utter determination that pulses through my veins.

    That’s why I went into law It’s why I spent two decades fighting human rights cases.

    It’s why I served as Director of Public Prosecutions – to fight against injustice and to help keep our country safe.

    It’s why I’m so proud to lead the Party I love.

    And why I want to lead the country I love.

    The last decade of failed Conservative ideology and the last year of our collective suffering

    Demand we now create a new, more secure future.

    For me, this isn’t just a political question.

    It’s an economic question too, because if Britain is to succeed in the world if we’re going to be ready to face the challenges of the 2020s and the 2030s.

    We can’t waste anyone’s talents.

    We can’t accept that some regions of our country are being held back.

    We can’t accept that if you’re born into a deprived background, you’ll have worse life chances.

    Or that if you’re from Black, Asian or minority ethnic communities you’ll face structural racism and discrimination at every stage of your life.

    The Britain of the future, the Britain I want to build is going to need the talents of everyone.

    Inequality is not only morally bankrupt, it’s economic stupidity too.

    A fair society will lead to a more prosperous economy.

    It’s not the choice of one or the other, as the Conservatives would have you believe.

    We either have both or we have neither.

    Harold Wilson once said that the Labour party is a moral crusade or it is nothing.

    He was right.

    Our moral crusade now is to address the inequalities and injustices that this crisis has so brutally exposed – and to build a better, more secure future.

    Thank you.

  • Gavin Williamson – 2021 Comments on Provision of Devices to Disadvantaged Children

    Gavin Williamson – 2021 Comments on Provision of Devices to Disadvantaged Children

    The comments made by Gavin Williamson, the Secretary of State for Education, on 16 February 2021.

    I know what a challenging period this has been for pupils, teachers and parents – but it has been nothing short of inspiring to see schools and staff going above and beyond, as they always have done, to give our pupils the very best education possible.

    Online access has been an important part of this work and will continue to be as we help young people catch-up after the disruption caused by the pandemic, which is why the delivery of these one million laptops is so vital. They represent one million children who will not let their education be overcome by this virus.

    I want parents to know that we’ll continue to do everything we can to protect our children’s education at this unprecedented time and ensure they have the tools they need to get on with and make the most of their lives.