Tag: 2021

  • Sadiq Khan – 2021 Comments on the Future of London

    Sadiq Khan – 2021 Comments on the Future of London

    The comments made by Sadiq Khan, the Mayor of London, on 22 December 2021.

    This budget is about focusing on the issues that matter most to Londoners, working to build a safer, greener, fairer city. This means investing more in the police and tackling crime, building more genuinely affordable homes for Londoners, supporting businesses during this difficult time, skilling up Londoners for well-paid jobs, tackling air pollution and the climate emergency, and providing more opportunities for young Londoners to reach their potential.

    The pandemic is continuing to have a serious impact on London’s finances and the Government is still refusing to properly fund our public services, particularly the Met police, Transport for London and the London Fire Brigade. Raising council tax by £2.66 per month is not something I want to do, but the Government is leaving us with no choice if we are to help prevent the collapse of TfL and ensure our police officers and firefighters have the resources they need.

    Despite the difficult financial situation we face in London, I’m excited about the incredible programmes this budget will help us to fund next year, targeting our resources where they can make the biggest difference to Londoners. This includes: offering free training to anyone who is unemployed or low paid, providing a mentor to young Londoners in need, building more homes Londoners can actually afford, and investing millions on green projects so that we can continue to lead the way on tackling air pollution and climate change.

    I’ll never forget that London gave me the opportunities to go from a council estate to being Mayor of the greatest city on earth. As we seek to navigate and recover from this terrible pandemic, I’m determined to use this budget to help build London back as safer, greener, fairer and more prosperous city – putting the dark days of the pandemic behind us and building the better and brighter future all Londoners want and deserve.

  • Rishi Sunak – 2021 Comments on Support for Hospitality Industry

    Rishi Sunak – 2021 Comments on Support for Hospitality Industry

    The comments made by Rishi Sunak, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, on 21 December 2021.

    We recognise that the spread of the Omicron variant means businesses in the hospitality and leisure sectors are facing huge uncertainty, at a crucial time.

    So we’re stepping in with £1 billion of support, including a new grant scheme, the reintroduction of the Statutory Sick Pay Rebate Scheme and further funding released through the Culture Recovery Fund.

    Ultimately the best thing we can do to support businesses is to get the virus under control, so I urge everyone to Get Boosted Now.

  • Victoria Prentis – 2021 Comments on Norway and UK Agreement on Fisheries

    Victoria Prentis – 2021 Comments on Norway and UK Agreement on Fisheries

    The comments made by Victoria Prentis, the Fisheries Minister, on 22 December 2021.

    I am pleased to announce that we have concluded bilateral negotiations between the UK and Norway, securing an agreement on fishing arrangements for 2022 including the establishment of a mutual North Sea waters access zone.

    This will provide fishing opportunities for the UK fleet and it ensures a strong balance that will benefit both our fishing industry and the protection of our marine environment.

    Norway is an extremely close partner of the UK, and we deeply value our relationship with them. We have a longstanding history of cooperation and collaboration and I look forward to building on this partnership in the years to come.

  • Nadhim Zahawi – 2021 Comments on Healthy Food for Children

    Nadhim Zahawi – 2021 Comments on Healthy Food for Children

    The comments made by Nadhim Zahawi, the Secretary of State for Education, on 22 December 2021.

    Being healthy and active is a vital part of growing up, and if we want to continue to level up opportunities for every child in the country this must go hand-in-hand with an excellent education.

    I’m really encouraged to see the huge numbers of children benefitting from our Holiday Activities and Food programme and the National School Breakfast programme. Both provide not just the benefits of a nutritious meal but also the chance to take part in activities they may not otherwise have exposure to, such as music lessons, cookery classes or the arts.

    It’s great to see the latest evidence support what we’ve already seen first-hand in children’s lives. I’m grateful to those running holiday clubs this Christmas, and I urge teachers and school staff to sign up to the National School Breakfast Programme.

  • Ben Wallace – 2021 Comments on UK-Japan Defence Partnership

    Ben Wallace – 2021 Comments on UK-Japan Defence Partnership

    The comments made by Ben Wallace, the Secretary of State for Defence, on 22 December 2021.

    Strengthening our partnerships in the Indo-Pacific is a strategic priority and this commitment with Japan, one of our closest security partners in Asia, is a clear example of that.

    Designing a brand-new combat air system with a fighter aircraft at its heart is a highly ambitious project so working with like-minded nations is vital. Building on the technological and industrial strengths of our two countries, we will be exploring a wide-ranging partnership across next-generation combat air technologies.

  • Pat McFadden – 2021 Comments on Government’s Business Support Package

    Pat McFadden – 2021 Comments on Government’s Business Support Package

    The comments made by Pat McFadden, the Shadow Chief Secretary to the Treasury, on 21 December 2021.

    This is a holding package from a Government caught in a holding position. The Prime Minister is a prisoner of divisions inside his party and within the Cabinet about whether any further measures are needed and whether they will get past Tory backbenchers. That is not the way that crucial public health decisions should be taken.

    Labour has been calling for an economic support plan for businesses affected by a wave of pre-Christmas cancellations. Support is welcome to see but we will be going through the details of this announcement to see which business and workers are included and excluded.

    Business support should have been announced when the Plan B changes were voted on last week but it has only happened after the Chancellor was dragged back from California to focus on the plight facing businesses and workers here in the UK.

    The real question after yesterday’s indecisive Cabinet meeting is what will happen next, when will the country be informed of that, and will support for businesses and workers be placed alongside any further public health measures that might be announced.

  • Sadiq Khan – 2021 Comments on Bringing Hounslow Housing into Council Ownership

    Sadiq Khan – 2021 Comments on Bringing Hounslow Housing into Council Ownership

    The comments made by Sadiq Khan, the Mayor of London, on 21 December 2021.

    I’m determined to continue increasing the number of council homes for Londoners and I’m delighted that Hounslow has committed to using investment from City Hall to bring so many properties back into council ownership. This will enable Hounslow to provide good quality and genuinely affordable homes to more than 500 families in London.

    London has a wonderful tradition of helping those in need, and I’m proud Hounslow will use some of the funding to help house vulnerable care leavers and Afghan refugees.

    Hounslow joins Islington in taking swift, bold action to help deliver the homes Londoners so desperately need. I’m hopeful that other boroughs will look to them and submit their own proposals. We also need to see ambition from Ministers to replicate the ‘Right to Buy-back’ scheme nationally, giving councils and housing associations the support they need to purchase much-needed homes.

  • Angela Rayner – 2021 Comments on Omicron

    Angela Rayner – 2021 Comments on Omicron

    The comments made by Angela Rayner, the Deputy Leader of the Labour Party, on 21 December 2021.

    Dithering and delay have caused disruption throughout this pandemic but we cannot see that happen again.

    It is vital that we have as much information as possible about the impact of Omicron and how this Government plans to mitigate those impacts. It would be an irresponsible dereliction of duty to not have contingency planning in place.

    The public have a right to know that the Government is taking this seriously.

  • Nicola Sturgeon – 2021 Speech to the Nation

    Nicola Sturgeon – 2021 Speech to the Nation

    The speech made by Nicola Sturgeon, the Scottish First Minister, on 14 December 2021.

    The last two years have been the toughest most of us can remember.

    I can never thank you enough for the sacrifices you have made.

    This winter, just as we thought we had turned a corner in the pandemic, the emergence of Omicron struck us a cruel blow.

    Omicron is much more transmissible than previous strains, and it is now spreading very quickly.

    We anticipate a steep and rapid rise in cases.

    We don’t know yet if Omicron’s impact on individual health is milder than variants like Delta.

    Some have suggested it might be, and let’s hope so. But there is not yet strong or consistent evidence of that.

    And even if it is the case, the challenge Omicron poses is real.

    When we are facing, as we may be, thousands upon thousands of cases per day – perhaps as high as 15,000 or more – even if just one in every hundred of those cases needs hospital care, the burden on the health service quickly becomes impossible.

    Omicron can do this through sheer weight of numbers. More people infected will lead to more people with serious illness and, tragically, more people will die.

    We are also already seeing an impact across the economy, and on public services.

    Staff absence caused by COVID means trains without drivers, classrooms without teachers, wards without nurses and businesses without workers.

    That’s why this is not a choice between protecting health and protecting the economy.

    If we don’t act now to protect health, Omicron will inflict untold damage on businesses and critical services across Scotland.

    That’s why we must act to slow it down, as we speed up vaccination.

    Getting boosters into arms as quickly as possible is our top priority.

    Vaccination is our best defence. And boosters give us much more protection against Omicron than just one or two doses.

    So our plan is, before New Year, to offer every eligible adult the chance to book an appointment.

    If you are over 30, you can already book online.

    From tomorrow over 18s can do so too.

    Our mission is to get the overwhelming majority of people boosted before the bells.

    In January, we will catch up with anyone who couldn’t be done before Hogmanay.

    My thanks to everyone doing truly heroic work to get jags in arms as fast as possible – and to everyone rolling up their sleeve to protect themselves and others.

    Boosters are how we will beat this.

    But in this race between the virus and vaccines, as we speed up their delivery, we also need to slow down the virus.

    Put simply, that means all of us having fewer contacts with fewer people – and making sure those we do have are safer.

    To help workers and customers to do that, we are putting a legal requirement on businesses to take reasonable steps to reduce transmission on their premises.

    So in supermarkets, for example, you will see the return of some of the measures that were in place at the start of the pandemic.

    And we are asking employers to do even more to support working from home.

    We know this is worrying news for business – especially in the hospitality trade which is being hard hit as people rightly follow advice to defer Christmas parties.

    So today, we have put in place a package of financial support to help them.

    And we are making more money available to ensure eligible people can claim isolation payments. No one should find themselves unable to afford to do the right thing, to protect themselves and others from COVID.

    The reality, however, is that our resources are limited. The UK government holds the purse strings, and only they can put in place critical support such as furlough.

    Alongside the Welsh and Northern Irish governments, we are hoping they will do more.

    My biggest request today is to all of you.

    Please believe me when I say I would not be asking you to sacrifice more, if I did not think it essential for the health and well-being of all of us.

    We are not banning household mixing in law, as we had to do before. We know the impact of this on mental health.

    And I am not asking you to cancel or change your plans for Christmas Day, Boxing Day, or whenever you have your main festive celebration.

    But in the run up to, and in the aftermath of Christmas, I am asking – I am appealing – to everyone to cut down as far as possible our contacts with people in other households.

    My key request to all of you today is – as far as you can, please minimise your indoor social interactions with other households at this time.

    And, if you do plan on socialising – either at home or in indoor public places – please limit the number of households represented in your group to a maximum of three. And test before you go.

    We are asking this because Omicron is so infectious. Our experience says if it gets into a group of people, it will infect many of them. So limiting numbers helps us restrict its spread.

    Speaking to you in these terms is the last thing I wanted to be doing a few days before Christmas.

    We’ve all had enough of this.

    But the threat from Omicron is severe. And we must respond seriously.

    This is another difficult juncture in the course of the pandemic – but vaccines and home testing do put us in a better position than last year.

    And wearying though all this is, we are not powerless.

    So let’s pull together and look after each other again.

    We know what we need to do.

    Keep windows open.

    Wash our hands.

    Wear face coverings.

    Limit our contacts.

    Test before we go anywhere.

    And get vaccinated.

    Thank you – for everything.

    And in sending you my Christmas wishes, let me more than anything wish for all of us a happier and brighter new year.

  • Kit Malthouse – 2021 Comments on Sobriety Tags

    Kit Malthouse – 2021 Comments on Sobriety Tags

    The comments made by Kit Malthouse, the Crime, Policing and Probation Minister, on 20 December 2021.

    Alcohol-fuelled violence ruins too many lives and families and creates mayhem in our town centres. It is a sad reality that over Christmas we see a worrying spike in domestic abuse and crimes fuelled by drink.

    Sobriety tags have already brought enormous benefit helping offenders change their ways and the Probation Service to clamp down on this behaviour and protect victims from further violence.