Tag: 2021

  • Liz Truss – 2021 Comments on UK/Japanese Defence Partnership

    Liz Truss – 2021 Comments on UK/Japanese Defence Partnership

    The comments made by Liz Truss, the Foreign Secretary, on 28 September 2021.

    Deepening defence ties with Japan is an important part of our commitment to ensuring an open and secure Indo-Pacific and a clear demonstration of Global Britain in action.

    Our two island democracies believe in the same fundamental freedoms and a strong economic and security partnership with Japan is crucial to Britain’s long-term interests.

    The commencement of talks comes soon after the UK’s Carrier Strike Group visited Japan, in a sign of our firm commitment to supporting shared security challenges in the region.

  • Ben Wallace – 2021 Comments on UK/Japanese Defence Partnership

    Ben Wallace – 2021 Comments on UK/Japanese Defence Partnership

    The comments made by Ben Wallace, the Secretary of State for Defence, on 28 September 2021.

    Japan is Britain’s close security partner in Asia, with shared values and common strategic interests. This sends a clear signal about our determination to deepen bilateral defence cooperation, and the UK’s commitment to the Indo Pacific region.

    The aim is to create the conditions for a deeper, more regular and complex defence engagement programme, setting out the terms and conditions for UK and Japanese personnel undertaking activity in one another’s countries which makes bilateral activities like training and joint exercises easier and quicker to facilitate – consequently feeding into a more regular programme of events.

  • Paul Scully – 2021 Comments on New Hospitality Council

    Paul Scully – 2021 Comments on New Hospitality Council

    The comments made by Paul Scully, the Small Business Minister, on 29 September 2021.

    The hospitality industry has shown incredible creativity and resourcefulness through the pandemic, pivoting to new ways of doing business like al fresco dining and takeaway pints to stay safe, meet changing consumer demands and protect livelihoods.

    With the launch of this council, we’re taking the next step in the journey to build back better from the pandemic by unveiling the experts who’ll be driving the reopening, recovery and resilience of the sector. It’s a real ‘Avengers Assemble’ moment for the industry.

  • George Eustice – 2021 Comments on Gene Editing

    George Eustice – 2021 Comments on Gene Editing

    The comments made by George Eustice, the Environment Secretary, on 29 September 2021.

    Gene editing has the ability to harness the genetic resources that nature has provided. It is a tool that could help us in order to tackle some of the biggest challenges that we face – around food security, climate change and biodiversity loss.

    Outside the EU, we are able to foster innovation to help grow plants that are stronger and more resilient to climate change. We will be working closely with farming and environmental groups to ensure that the right rules are in place.

  • Kate Green – 2021 Speech to Labour Party Conference

    Kate Green – 2021 Speech to Labour Party Conference

    The speech made by Kate Green, the Shadow Secretary of State for Education, on 28 September 2021.

    Conference, I’m delighted to be here to debate how the next Labour government will overcome the challenges of the pandemic to deliver an education system that equips children for the future.

    For, as I have heard on visits to nurseries, schools, colleges and universities, the challenges we have to overcome are severe.

    Children out of school for 115 days, isolated from their friends and teachers. Exams chaos, with students suffering 2 years of uncertainty and last-minute decisions disrupting their futures. Children with SEND experiencing huge disruption from school closures, and the shutdown of vital services. And hundreds of thousands of children left struggling to access remote learning, while this callous Conservative government had to be dragged kicking and screaming to provide free meals for children during the holidays.

    We know, it’s not just during the pandemic that our children have been let down. For a decade we have seen the effects of the Tories’ neglect and underfunding of education: Class sizes soaring to their highest in decades, reversing the progress the last Labour government made; a SEND crisis as children have been left without the support they need and parent’s left feeling abandoned and a teacher retention crisis, with a third of teachers leaving our schools within five years.

    But despite being overworked and undervalued, despite the chaos of the pandemic, our brilliant education workforce – teachers, leaders, lecturers and early years staff – have stepped-up. And I want to say, on behalf of the Labour party, you have inspired us, and we extend our deepest thanks for all that you have done.

    But the Conservatives’ handling of the pandemic? Their handling of education over the last decade? Children held back, a workforce exhausted, and a widening attainment gap. Yet children themselves remain excited about their futures. They have high aspirations, high hopes and dreams.

    And Labour is right there with them. We want every child, regardless of background, to achieve their ambitions. And that is why Labour wants to build on the positive changes we have seen: parents involved in their children’s learning, local schools working together for local communities, the phenomenal dedication of our education workforce.

    So we deliver an enriching, enjoyable, world-class education that enables children to make the most of their childhoods and equips them with the skills they need for life. We’ve already shown Labour’s commitment with our Children’s Recovery Plan. A plan that recognises that children’s learning and wellbeing go hand in hand. A plan that would set children up for life with communication, teamwork, problem solving, social skills.

    That’s why our plan would extend the school day for additional activities – breakfast clubs giving children the fuel to learn, art, sport, cooking, coding, book clubs – so that opportunities to develop life skills and enjoy new experiences become the norm for every child. It’s why we would invest in training world class teachers, and give schools the resources to expand small group tutoring, unlocking all the advantages it brings. Why we would support the early years sector, schools and colleges with an Education Recovery Premium, delivering additional learning support including for children with SEND, and engage with families around the SEND review and it’s why we are prioritising young people’s mental health, with access to a professional mental health counsellor for every school.

    Conference, our children’s futures, life chances and aspirations must not be limited by the Conservatives treating them as an afterthought. They must not be limited by a recovery plan that the Government’s own catch-up expert described as “feeble” and they must not be limited by a weak Prime Minister who took months to sack a failing Secretary of State.

    That is why today, Conference, I am challenging the new Education Secretary to deliver a recovery guarantee. To ensure that every single child who has been let down, ignored and undervalued by this government not only recovers from the pandemic, but thrives on new opportunities to learn, play and develop – just as Labour’s plan would enable them to do.

    But Conference, we must go further to give every young person a brighter future. That’s why Labour will end tax breaks for private schools as Keir announced at the weekend, and use that funding to equip young people with the skills they need for work and for life.

    By providing every young person with work experience and careers advice, ensuring every child has digital access, getting young people who have fallen out of the system back into education, training or employment.

    Labour in government transformed education and we can do it again.

    Delivering enriching, enjoyable childhoods

    The opportunity for every child to reach their potential

    The skills young people need for the future, and the skills our country needs

    Conference, that’s my guarantee and how the next Labour government will make Britain the best place to grow-up.

  • Jonathan Ashworth – 2021 Speech to Labour Party Conference

    Jonathan Ashworth – 2021 Speech to Labour Party Conference

    The speech made by Jonathan Ashworth, the Shadow Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 28 September 2021.

    I start by simply saying, thank you.

    Thank you to those who gave so much and so selflessly. Our national heroes: NHS and care staff. Thank you for your commitment, courage, compassion and care.

    Friends let us rise and say thank you to our nurses, health visitors, midwives, and doctors. Thank you to our health care assistants, care workers, paramedics, cleaners, porters and vaccinators.

    Thank you to all our NHS and care staff.

    As you cared for us, we will care for you with the training, recruitment, wellbeing support and the fair pay rise you deserve.

    And we give you this commitment too: never again should we allow fatal delays to PPE to leave nurses wearing bin bags. Never again should workers be denied the sick pay that is their right. Never again should care homes be left unprotected as a virus rages. So we demand a public inquiry, so that mistakes like this – never again.

    I also want to thank you in this room and in our communities. I want to thank our councillors and our trade unions too. You ran the mutual aid groups, volunteered at the food banks, helped the vulnerable shielding. You gave your time, you offered your energies and at those moments when everything seemed so frighteningly bleak, you kept hope alive. So today, we say thank you to you as well.

    I’m honoured to be here as your Shadow Health and Social Care Secretary and I’m pleased and privileged to work with the very best shadow ministerial team: Rosena Allin-Khan, Liz Kendall, Justin Madders, Alex Norris. In the Lords: Glenys Thornton, Gillian Merron and Margaret Wheeler. Fighting to halt the Tory NHS Bill, fighting to bring services back in house, fighting to reinstate a universal public NHS.

    An understaffed NHS has been pushed to the brink, no one is pretending the NHS hasn’t been impacted by 18 months of covid. But let’s not pretend – pre covid – the NHS wasn’t impacted by ten years of the Tories. We entered the pandemic with the longest financial squeeze in NHS history, 17,000 beds closed, hospitals crumbling, public health services cut, GP numbers down, services privatised, nurse training cut, children’s mental health budgets raided, thousands waiting longer for cancer treatment, the 18 week target not met for 5 years, the A&E target not met for 6 years.

    So the NHS is in crisis not simply because of covid. The NHS is in crisis because of the Conservatives. And it has the devastating consequence of forcing more and more people in pain and desperation to take out loans and crowdfunding on the internet to pay for an operation because the wait too much to bear.

    £12,000 for a hip replacement,
    £9,000 for a knee replacement,
    £3,000 for a hernia.

    A two-tier health system, privatisation by the backdoor. That’s the Tory threat to our NHS. That’s what we’re fighting against to rebuild our NHS.

    Access to health should not depend upon wealth, that’s why this party created a National Health Service free at the point of use as a right for everyone irrespective of wealth.

    In place of fear, we offered hope and we do so again.

    A Keir Starmer Labour Government will bring waiting times down again. We’ll transform cancer care and ensure a doctors’ appointment when you need one. But the challenges facing the NHS today dwarf anything it’s faced in its history.

    Society is aging, long term chronic illness more prevalent, infectious disease hasn’t gone away and climate change is the biggest health threat we face – there is no healthy future without a green future.

    Our mission is more than a health service that just cures the sick. Our commitment is to help people stay well from the moment they enter this world to their very final breaths. There is a saying: “Health is made at home. Hospitals are for repairs.” It captures a fundamental truth: that health is created in our communities and depends upon the conditions in which we live.

    If covid has taught us anything, surely it’s that poverty makes people ill and the ill are often trapped in poverty. It was the poorest most likely to be admitted to hospital with covid. It was the poorest twice as likely to die from covid.

    After a decade of the Tories life expectancy has gone backwards.

    I say to these Tories: don’t lecture us about levelling up when you’ve spent ten years smashing down.

    So because we know blood pressure, cholesterol and smoking hits the worst off hardest leading to cancers, heart failure or stroke we’ll drive up access to health checks and rather than cutting smoking cessation services – we’ll protect them.

    Place of birth should not determine length of life and to change that, we start with children. A child born into poverty is too often condemned to a life of ill health. More likely to be admitted to hospital, more likely to leave school obese, more likely to suffer mental ill health.

    Surely it is a scandal that we fail so many children so often even before their life’s journey has begun. So we’ll put in place the biggest children’s health and wellbeing strategy ever seen. We’ll ensure no child is denied the mental health care they need. We’ll strengthen health visiting and improve maternity care. We’ll take bold action on childhood obesity and nutrition.

    Drawing inspiration from Marcus Rashford we’ll ensure the poorest young children receive fresh fruit, vegetables and vitamins as we attack child hunger. A hungry child cannot be a healthy child.

    Keeping people well means confronting something that casts a shadow over so many families: dementia. It can start with forgetting little things, silly things, the keys, glasses, perhaps the day of the week. There comes a moment when you see your loved one in difficulty trying to remember the steps involved in something so simple like making a cup of tea.

    Dementia cruelly changes the person you love and you assume there will be proper help. But so often there’s not. It’s a struggle to access a memory clinic just to get a diagnosis. And when that diagnosis comes you’re often left abandoned to battle a complex, demoralising system only to be told – as 3,000 are every day – you or your loved one doesn’t qualify for care.

    This social care system is broken. It sees the frail and confused trapped in hospital beds with nowhere to go. It sees short inadequate 15 minute visits and for adults with severe autism and learning disabilities it can mean being locked up in a room with a foam mattress and food shoved through a hatch in a door.

    That’s an affront to a civilised society, that’s shameful. We’re going to end it.

    So we will fix social care with a plan as far reaching as Nye Bevan’s plan for the NHS. With personalised care to help people stay at home. Care will be seamless, delivered hand in hand with the NHS. We’ll end zero hours contracts and pay our care workers at least the living wage – the fair pay they truly deserve.

    This is about more than the care system. One in three people born this year will develop dementia. It has no cure. But throughout the history of the NHS, the genius of medical science has discovered advances whose reach may exceed our grasp today but soon become the routine treatments of tomorrow.

    Let us glimpse the possibilities of the future.

    A Labour government will double current funding for dementia research to play our part in finding a cure. Just as Labour led the world in creating a National Health Service in the twentieth century, we offer hope and will lead again to build a national care service in the twenty first.

    We offer hope for the best quality health care for all in a public NHS. Hope for nurses, care workers and NHS staff as we repay their dedication. Hope to end the inequalities that covid exposed, hope for every child to have the healthiest start in life.

    Our commitment shows it, our history proves it. With health the foundation from cradle to grave. The hope of a stronger future together.

    Now, friends, let’s build it.

  • David Lammy – 2021 Speech to Labour Party Conference

    David Lammy – 2021 Speech to Labour Party Conference

    The speech made by David Lammy, the Shadow Secretary of State for Justice, in Brighton on 28 September 2021.

    David Lammy, Tottenham CLP.

    I am excited to give my first ever conference speech, it has only taken me 21 years as an MP to get here.

    When I first entered Parliament people told me I looked like Denzel Washington. These days I look more like Forrest Whittaker. But I am proud to stand here as the first ever Black Shadow Justice Secretary.

    Conference, I am proud that my parents arrived in the UK as part of the Windrush generation. My mother worked for the London Underground to support our family single-handedly. My aunts gave their working lives to the NHS.

    Growing up in the shadow of Tottenham’s Broadwater Farm Estate, life was tough. In Thatcher’s Britain, we lived under the indignity of poverty. Racism was rife. Signs saying “No Blacks, No Dogs, No Irish” had only just disappeared.

    I was just twelve when I was first stopped and searched by the police. They said I matched the description of a mugger. The reality was just like how Gavin Williamson confused Marcus Rashford with Maro Itoje, they could not tell one Black person from another.

    Conference, I will never forget where I came from. I understand how justice is intertwined with everything else. Education, economics, class, race, work, welfare, housing, even health.

    Prison is only for other people until someone you know ends up there. The courts are only distant until you become a victim of crime. The justice system is only abstract until it is not. We take it for granted at our peril.

    But conference, taking justice for granted is exactly what the Conservatives have done. The pandemic has hit the justice system like a baseball bat but the Tories had knocked it onto its knees already.

    Since 2010, the Tories closed 295 courts. The Crown Court backlog is now at an all-time high of 60,000 cases. Victims are giving up on the criminal justice system altogether. They are not being given court dates until up to four years later – if they get one at all.

    Prosecutions and convictions for rape are at an all-time low. The government is now desperately setting up temporary ‘Nightingale courts’ to deal with the backlog they created. But just 30 nightingale courts are open, a fraction of the hundreds of permanent courts this government closed.

    It is a classic example of Conservative false economy. Cutting infrastructure over a decade. Now having to pay more to Sellotape the broken parts together again.

    Conference, we are all proud of the legal aid system that was created by Clement Attlee’s Labour government in 1949. Its purpose is to provide legal advice for those who cannot afford it. But since 2010, the Conservatives have cut legal aid by 38%.

    What’s left is a legal system that only serves the rich.

    In government, Labour will ensure that courts, prisons, the Probation Service, and Legal Aid are never left so vulnerable again. Probation, once the national service for second chances, has been abused by failed Tory ideology.

    We should take a moment to celebrate that this year the government have finally listened to Labour and the trade unions by performing a screeching U-turn. The National Probation Service is back.

    Conference, I want to pay a tribute to the hidden heroes working in our probation service, our prisons, our courts, and right across the justice system. For sacrificing so much to keep the wheels of justice turning in a pandemic with little help from the government.

    To you, we say this: thank you. But now the Tories are coming after the rule of law. Conference, they are coming after your human rights. We will fight them.

    Conference, they are coming after Judicial Review. We will fight them.

    Conference, whatever rights they come for next we will fight them.

    This government is slapping the victims of Grenfell, Hillsborough and the Windrush scandal in the face. Victims who depend on their legal rights to hold the government to account. Unlike the government which wants to water them down, Labour will strengthen your Human Rights.

    Building on the internationalist, progressive values we all share in government Labour would legislate to bring The United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child into domestic law. Make no mistake, the values that make our country great: openness, community and the rule of law are all being trampled by Boris Johnson’s government.

    A charlatan who swept to power by championing division, bigotry and lawlessness.

    The tragic deaths of Sabina Nessa, Sarah Everard, Bibaa Henry and Nicole Smallman this year should have been a turning point for change. But instead of addressing the epidemic of violence against women and girls, the Tories have ignored it. Proposing tougher sentences for those who graffiti statues than the minimum for those found guilty of rape.

    Enough is enough. Women have to feel safe on our streets.

    Labour is putting ending violence against women and girls at the very top of our agenda. Fast-tracking rape and sexual assault cases in our courts, increasing minimum sentences for rapists, creating a new offence for street harassment, ensuring victims of domestic abuse get the legal aid they need and, finally conference, making misogyny a hate crime.

    Labour will put victims first.

    The Tories have promised a Victims’ Bill in several Queens’ speeches but never delivered. Labour have produced legislation that would enshrine victims’ rights in law. It has been published. Introduced to Parliament. It is ready to go.

    It has been another year of widening inequality. City Law firms are making billions in profit while low-paid workers see their tax bill rise and wages fall.

    Labour recognises the importance of the private sector working in partnership with the public sector. That’s why today we are announcing that a Labour government would support the introduction of a new national pro-bono service. With binding pro bono targets to support those who can’t afford legal advice and are ineligible for legal aid.

    Conference, it cannot be right that 51% of children in prison are Black, Asian or minority ethnic. Labour will address the unfairness that runs right through the justice system. Finally implementing the Lammy Review. Introducing targets to bring in more women and more ethnic minorities to the most senior positions in our courts. We will reform the judiciary so that judges look more like the people they judge.

    Under the Conservatives, everything in the justice system that is meant to be up is down and everything that is meant to be down is up. Anti-social behavior is up, convictions are down, the court backlog is up, rehabilitation is down, racial unfairness is up, access to justice is down.

    Boris Johnson promised he would level the country up but instead he is levelling the country down. Labour will turn what is supposed to be up, up. And everything that is supposed to be down, down.

    The Conservatives are bringing the country down, Labour will bring the country up.

    Together we can make the UK the fairest country in the world.

    Thank you.

  • John McDonnell – 2021 Comments on Unison Supporting Labour Leadership

    John McDonnell – 2021 Comments on Unison Supporting Labour Leadership

    The comments made by John McDonnell, the Labour MP for Hayes and Harlington, on 27 September 2021.

    As a Unison member I have watched yesterday the majority of Unison Labour Link delegates at Labour Party conference vote against our union’s policies. It’s shocking. That’s why we need to vote for this team of candidates who will stand by the democratic decisions of our union.

  • John Healey – 2021 Comments on Support for Afghan Interpreters

    John Healey – 2021 Comments on Support for Afghan Interpreters

    The comments made by John Healey, the Shadow Defence Secretary, on 27 September 2021.

    Our brave service personnel and their Afghan partners have shown immense courage and professionalism despite the government’s woeful mishandling of the crisis.

    The Conservatives are failing our forces. Recent funding announcements are simply a drop in the ocean and the uncertainty surrounding future funding for the Office of Veterans Affairs has pulled the rug from under our personnel when they need it most.

    Recent funding announcements are simply a drop in the ocean and the uncertainty surrounding future funding for the Office of Veterans Affairs has pulled the rug from under our personnel when they need it most.

    Labour’s new support fund will make sure we protect those who protected us.

  • Ed Miliband – 2021 Comments on Fuel Crisis

    Ed Miliband – 2021 Comments on Fuel Crisis

    The comments made by Ed Miliband, the Shadow Business Secretary, on 27 September 2021.

    The Government should be using every tool at its disposal to tackle the fuel and supply chain crisis that its complacency has helped cause, so this is the right thing to do. But it is ministers’ appalling and wilful intransigence that has got us to this point.

    Ministers must urgently address the 100,000 HGV driver shortfall, which is at the root of this chaos. With every hour and day that goes by the public will feel increasingly outraged by the incompetent and shambolic government that has brought us to this point.