Tag: 2021

  • Jim McMahon – 2021 Comments on Workers in Aviation Industry

    Jim McMahon – 2021 Comments on Workers in Aviation Industry

    The comments made by Jim McMahon, the Shadow Secretary of State for Transport, on 27 September 2021.

    It should be a source of shame for ministers that they have allowed thousands of jobs to be lost in the aviation sector across the country when they promised support – particularly when so many are now staring down the barrel of Boris Johnson’s tax hikes and cuts to Universal Credit.

    Empty words, long delays and broken promises are the default setting for this Government – with working people paying the price over and over again.

    Labour has consistently called for a sectoral deal that supports the whole aviation industry including securing jobs and protecting the supply chain, while continuing to press for higher environmental standards.

  • John Healey – 2021 Speech to Labour Party Conference

    John Healey – 2021 Speech to Labour Party Conference

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

    Conference, it’s an honour to address you again and to serve the Party on Labour’s frontbench.

    Over 20 years, I’ve served for one single purpose: to win a Labour Government. The first duty of any Government is to defend the country and keep its citizens safe. It’s also the public’s first test of any Party aspiring to Government.

    That’s why Keir Starmer has pledged: ‘Never again will Labour go into an election not being trusted on national security’. That’s a pledge, I trust, everyone in our Party – from every part of our great, diverse Labour Movement – will endorse.

    We are a Party with deep roots in defending this country. Throughout the last century, it’s been working men and women who’ve served on the frontline. Fighting and sometimes dying for our country. It was Labour that established NATO and the British deterrent – commitments that have been unshakeable for every Labour leadership since the end of the Cold War.

    We are a Party with deep pride in forging international law and security. The Geneva Conventions, Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty were all signed by Labour Prime Ministers.

    We are a Party with deep respect for the serving men and women of our Armed Forces. Theirs is the ultimate public service. They embody the qualities British people most admire: courage, discipline, loyalty, good humour, service. They defend the country. They’re essential to our resilience at home.

    We may yet see this over driving oil tankers. We’ve certainly seen it as they helped the country through the covid crisis – building the Nightingale hospitals, driving ambulances, delivering oxygen, community testing and giving jabs.

    Conference, on behalf of this Party, I want us to say a huge ‘thank you’ to them.

    We saw again last month why British forces are respected worldwide, with UK troops and pilots at the heart of the Afghan airlift. But the crisis has reopened searing memories for many who served in Afghanistan. Combat Stress say calls to their helpline doubled last month, yet the Government is spending just £20 million this year on veterans’ mental health.

    So I want to announce today that Labour would boost this by £35 million, with a special fund to support mental health care for British veterans and the Afghan personnel now with us in the UK.

    Conference, we’ve seen from this debate today: global instabilities and national threats are greater now than for decades, and growing. Yet Britain is weaker in the world, from a decade of decline under Tory government.

    They have weakened Britain’s influence in the world by breaking international law, antagonizing our European allies, slashing development aid and failing to stand up for human rights.

    They have weakened the foundations for Britain’s defences by cutting 45 00 full-time Forces personnel – leaving fewer troops, fewer planes, fewer ships, bad procurement contracts and a £17 billion black hole in the budget.

    They left Britain unable to influence allies on Afghanistan, questioned over our NATO commitment by US generals and the Prime Minister quoting Muppets to make his case at the United Nations.

    The next decade will shape the rest of the century. Britain needs new leadership.

    With Labour and Keir Starmer, the country will get the leadership to forge a new and powerful role for Britain in the world.

    Britain will be democracy’s most reliable ally. Britain will no longer be half-hearted about essential alliances and treaties, in the UN, NATO, Five Eyes, International Court of Justice. Britain will forge a flexible geometry of new alliances where needed for our national security and international stability.

    We will give the highest priority to security in Europe, North Atlantic and Arctic, pursuing new defence cooperation with European NATO neighbours.

    We will lead moves in the UN to negotiate new multilateral arms controls and rules of conflict for space, cyber and AI.

    We will insist on the UK’s say with the US as our most essential ally, stepping up Britain’s leadership in NATO.

    We will make preventing climate conflict a top priority for our national security strategy and international action

    We will freeze Tory cuts to the Army, then review and reverse the numbers if needed.

    We will build up the resilience of British democracy to deal with continuous new ‘greyzone’ attacks in cyber, disinformation, terrorism and organised crime.

    As the Party of working people and trade unions, we know when done well: spending on defence can strengthen our UK economy, and our UK sovereignty and security.

    We will make it fundamental that British defence investment is directed first to British industry. We will design in Britain, build in Britain, maintain in Britain with a higher bar set for any decisions to buy from abroad.

    Conference, Labour has a proud record in defence of this country, and our values.

    From Estonia to Mali to the Black Sea to somewhere under the Arctic ice cap – British service men and women are there for us. I say to them – on behalf of us all – that we, Labour, will always be there for you.

  • Priti Patel – 2021 Comments on Extended Legal Action Against Protesters

    Priti Patel – 2021 Comments on Extended Legal Action Against Protesters

    The comments made by Priti Patel, the Home Secretary, on 24 September 2021.

    The British public are rightly furious that the behaviours of a selfish minority have been putting lives at risk and causing untold disruption on our roads and now at Dover. We will not tolerate the recklessness of these few activists and the police continue to have our full support in cracking down on their dangerous behaviour.

    The public and the police want officers back serving their communities and cutting crime, not dealing with people happy to put the safety and needs of others at risk.

  • Grant Shapps – 2021 Comments on Extended Legal Action Against Protesters

    Grant Shapps – 2021 Comments on Extended Legal Action Against Protesters

    The comments made by Grant Shapps, the Secretary of State for Transport, on 24 September 2021.

    We are absolutely committed to protecting the right to peaceful protest, but it is unacceptable that people cannot go about their day-to-day businesses and that businesses or critical supplies should be put on a knife’s edge because of the reckless actions of a few protesters.

    I commend the work of Kent Police and the Port of Dover authorities today to quickly resolve the issue and keep our critical supplies moving and I will do everything to prevent these sorts of guerrilla tactics from putting people’s lives at risk and keeping our emergency services away from the communities that need them.

  • Nadine Dorries – 2021 Comments on the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee

    Nadine Dorries – 2021 Comments on the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee

    The comments made by Nadine Dorries, the Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport on 25 September 2021.

    Her Majesty The Queen’s Platinum Jubilee is a wonderful opportunity to recognise the dedication and service of those who, like the Queen, tirelessly serve our country.

    From the troops who serve overseas to the emergency services workers at home who run towards danger when others would flee, we are honoured to have such dedicated and professional public servants who keep us safe.

    2022 is an opportunity for us to come together as a nation to celebrate and say thank you to Her Majesty and all those who work so hard to make Britain Great.

  • Grant Shapps – 2021 Comments on Shortage of HGV Drivers

    Grant Shapps – 2021 Comments on Shortage of HGV Drivers

    The comments made by Grant Shapps, the Secretary of State for Transport, on 25 September 2021.

    This package of measures builds on the important work we have already done to ease this global crisis in the UK, and this government continues to do everything we can to help the haulage and food industries contend with the HGV driver shortage.

    We are acting now but the industries must also play their part with working conditions continuing to improve and the deserved salary increases continuing to be maintained in order for companies to retain new drivers.

    After a very difficult 18 months, I know how important this Christmas is for all of us and that’s why we’re taking these steps at the earliest opportunity to ensure preparations remain on track.

  • Angela Rayner – 2021 Speech to Labour Party Conference

    Angela Rayner – 2021 Speech to Labour Party Conference

    The speech made by Angela Rayner, the Deputy Leader of the Labour Party, in Brighton on 25 September 2021.

    Angela Rayner, first time deputy leader. I think I can still say that, chair. Because I know it’s 18 months since you – our members, affiliated unions, and supporters gave me the honour of serving as your deputy leader, but this is the first time I’ve had the privilege and the pleasure of speaking to you in person. There’s nothing quite like party Conference.

    There are some things we didn’t miss – the warm wine, the beige buffets, eight hour compositing meetings. The struggle takes many forms.

    Our movement has been a family to me throughout my life, and like so many families, we have waited patiently to gather in person. So here we are. Even better, now we’re off Zoom they can’t even mute me.

    Conference, on the day I was declared your deputy leader I just wanted to get on with working for the party. I wanted to stand up and speak out, but I could barely stand and I could barely speak. Like so many, I’d caught Coronavirus. I know too well that I am lucky to have lived through it when others, including members of my own family, did not.

    I’m grateful that I’m here today and I’m grateful to all those who helped our country survive it too. We saw the very best of our movement through this crisis. Our Labour councillors and Mayors fought for their communities and alongside Manchester’s finest Marcus Rashford, they fed hungry kids when ministers wouldn’t. The Welsh Labour Government led the UK’s most successful vaccination programme, our trade unions fought for furlough, for PPE, for their members to stay safe. And our key workers, you served our country, you saved our country, you deserve better. Britain deserves better and Labour will be better. We must become the government our nation deserves, not the one it has.

    When I think of the sacrifices working people have made, I think of Gill and Leslie, Unison reps who live in my constituency and do the same job now I used to do. They visit elderly and vulnerable people who can’t manage on their own. They’re paid less than a minimum wage which is already too low to live on because they’re not paid between visits. With every trip, for every person they care for, they face the choice: Do I cut down my time caring? Or do I work longer hours without pay? It’s not a choice for Gill and Leslie. They’re carers in every sense because they care deeply for the people they look after. They value their work, and take great pride in it. They deserve not just fair pay and decent conditions, but dignity and respect. Basic values of our party, and of our country too.

    That is why today I’m publishing our Green Paper on Employment Rights. Conference, I want to thank Andy McDonald, our Shadow Secretary of State for Employment Rights, our Shadow Minister Imran Hussain and Andy’s whole team for the work that has gone into producing our most detailed set of policies to date. Andy – we couldn’t ask for a better person to be our future Secretary of State. And I want to thank our affiliated trade unions for all the meetings, discussion, and research that went into this. We didn’t even provide you with beer and sandwiches.

    Conference, I’m not presenting you with a policy document that will sit on the shelf collecting dust. Let’s make this real and show every worker in every workplace in every corner of our country that with their support, their lives, their jobs and their communities can and will be better.

    This Green Paper is for every parent tearing your hair out about childcare, or who missed a sports day or parents evening because you couldn’t come in and leave early. It’s for every young person who daren’t turn down a shift on a zero hours contract because you might not get hours next week, who can’t take a break and can’t get sick. And it’s for every worker who went to work and never made it home, and for their families who will never see them again.

    Conference, this is the reality for millions of people the country over. It doesn’t have to be this way. The Tories‘ political choices made it this way. Labour will make different choices. Not by turning back the clock to a bygone era, but facing the future with workers’ rights fit for the modern world. We will empower people to have a real say over their own working lives and in this hall, we know that our greatest power comes not when we stand alone but when we stand and work together. Throughout our history that is how victories and progress for working people have been achieved.

    Conference, no one knows that better than the Shrewsbury 24. After 47 years they got their day in court and they finally got that miscarriage of justice overturned. It is in that same spirit and tradition that I’m announcing today our plans for Fair Pay Agreements. A Labour government will bring together representatives of workers and employers to negotiate pay and conditions in every sector. Collective bargaining in every sector will end the free market free-for-all that encourages undercutting, exploitation and a race to the bottom. It will give workers and their representatives a legally enforceable seat at the table to set a fair rate for the job, agree basic standards, tackle gender and ethnicity pay gaps, end discrimination, promote equality and make work accessible for disabled workers.

    We will start with social care for people like Gill and Lesley and the 600,000 carers who are paid less than the the living wage. In New Zealand our sister party is establishing agreements just like these. In Wales, our own Labour government’s Social Partnership means that workers have a real say on issues that impact on their lives.

    As a trade unionist, I know there is no better way to deliver a better deal for working people than empowering trade unions to negotiate on our behalf. But conference, some things are non-negotiable. So Labour in power will give all workers rights from day one in their jobs – sick pay, holiday pay, parental leave and protection against unfair dismissal. We will create one, single worker status, banning bogus self-employment and ending the absurd situation in which you could wear a uniform, work regular hours solely for one business and yet be considered by the law to be self-employed. You are either a worker or you’re genuinely self-employed, and either way we will change your working life for the better. We will not only ban zero hour contracts but ensure all contracts come with minimum hours and reflect normal working life, requiring notice of shift changes and pay when they are cancelled at the last minute.

    I think of the young parent in my own constituency, trying to bring up a child while working shifts on a zero hour contract. Each week hoping that their shift can work around childcare because they can’t leave their little one waiting at the school gates but they have to put food on the table too. A Labour government will change their life, by writing common decency and fairness into the rules of our economy. And conference, that’s why Labour will end the scandalous practice of fire and rehire once and for all. It is why I stood with the members of Unite and GMB as they took action at companies like British Airways and British Gas, and I said to those companies if you use our country’s name you better respect our country’s values.

    When I am Deputy Prime Minister, it won’t just be my words they face but the full force of law.

    Never under a Labour government will bad employers hold all the cards in a stacked deck. That applies to work life balance too.

    A global pandemic has reinforced for a lot of us how precious time off is, and how utterly exhausting the daily grind can be.

    So Labour will introduce a new right to flexible working as the default, protections for those with caring responsibilities and a right to switch off too.

    Working from home has given some of us a new freedom and flexibility, but it has also blurred the lines between what is home and what is work. A new economy needs workers’ rights that reflect the way we work now.

    We will learn the lessons of this pandemic. increasing Statutory Sick Pay and making it universal, so that everyone can afford to live while they are off sick or self-isolating. That’s not only fair for working people – but vital for all of our health.

    We will put mental health and safety on a legal par with physical health and safety, and make sure the laws are enforced by a new, empowered watchdog unlike this government which has not prosecuted one single case over unsafe work in the pandemic.

    The Tories will say that to be pro-worker is to be anti-business. Conference, we have to nail that lie. So many businesses play by the rules, try to do the right thing but are undercut by the offshore and the unscrupulous.

    Many of them small and medium sized businesses who are the backbone of local and regional economies. They deserve better too. The country has already waited too long, already shouldered too heavy a burden.

    As your Deputy Prime Minister, I will go into government with our first Green Paper already prepared, and within the first 100 days of coming to office, we will sign into law our New Deal for Working People.

    These policies will transform our country and the lives of its people.

    What a contrast to a government that is taking fourteen hundred pounds out of the pockets of a nurse while over two billion pounds of taxpayers’ money has been dished out to Tory donors and mates of Ministers.

    There’s only one rule with this Cabinet and that is that there’s one rule for them and another rule for us.

    Like the Foreign Secretary, cancelling leave for our troops and then trooping off to the beach. One rule for them, another rule for us.

    The Prime Minister who got pinged and tried to go to work anyway. One for rule for them, another rule for us.

    And who can forget the Barnard Castle eye test? One rule for them, and another rule for us.

    And it matters because when they use the public purse as a personal cashpoint, we literally all pay the bill. Billions were wasted on useless equipment.

    We now spend nearly a million pounds a day simply storing it. Our money lining the pockets of their mates. Or in the case of the Health Secretary, thirty million going to his pub landlord.

    He has now been ordered by a court to hand over his WhatsApp messages. Frankly, I don’t think I want to know what’s in Matt Hancock’s WhatsApp.

    But I promise you this. We’ll stop the dodgy deals handing public money to ministers’ mates. It’s bad news for my pub landlord… but good news for the public.

    And let me tell you this: as your minister for procurement, I won’t sign off a single penny that goes to a company that exploits its workers or doesn’t pay its taxes.

    Conference, we will stamp out the Tory sleaze that has polluted our politics and corrupted our democracy. The racket is over. Their time is up.

    A Labour government will sweep away the failed system. Our Integrity and Ethics Commission will do what it says on the tin – put integrity and ethics back into government.

    I can’t think of anyone better to lead that change than our shadow Cabinet Office team.

    Cat Smith, our shadow minister for democracy. Just imagine – a minister for democracy who is actually for democracy. Jack Dromey, who brings a lifetime of experience in the labour movement. Fleur Anderson, who won Putney from the Tories, and has never shied away from a fight. Dianne Hayter who has beaten the Tories in the Lords. Florence Esherlomi, one of our brightest rising stars. And it will be led from the top.

    What a contrast our leader is to the current Prime Minister. Ours has a lifetime of public service. Theirs, a lifetime of self service.

    Conference, in 1945 our party put forward a manifesto called ‘Let Us Face the Future’. That is our task this week.

    Then, as now, our country stood together in the face of a global crisis. A crisis we survived through shared values of collectivism, community and public service. Labour values, British values.

    Then, as now, we were proud of our country, our communities – and yes, working people were proud of our class as well. Then, as now, we wanted better.

    In 1945, the country faced a choice between a Tory government who sought the credit for our shared achievement but longed for the status quo that preceded it, where the state would step back and the market would rule again, where people knew their place and took what they were given.

    Or a Labour government that would harness the values that saved a nation, and make a country fit for those who had fought for it.

    Our country chose to face that future. Now Conference, let us face the future again.

  • Anneliese Dodds – 2021 Speech to Labour Party Conference (Women and Equalities speech)

    Anneliese Dodds – 2021 Speech to Labour Party Conference (Women and Equalities speech)

    The speech made by Anneliese Dodds, the Chair of the Labour Party, in Brighton on 25 September 2021.

    Conference, I’m honoured to have been appointed by Keir Starmer to serve as Shadow Secretary of State for Women and Equalities.

    I must first pay warm tribute to my predecessor, Marsha de Cordova – a fearless and formidable advocate for equality all her life. Let me also say an enormous thank you to Charlotte Gerada, our National Women’s Officer and all our sisters who made this summer’s Women’s Conference such a success.

    Conference, equality is the core commitment of our party. It runs through us like the writing in a stick of Brighton rock as we fight for a world free from all forms of bigotry and discrimination. The COVID-19 crisis brutally exposed how unequal and unfair our country has become under the Conservatives. Disabled people have been 11 times more likely to die of COVID-19 and many have suffered as the Tories shamefully refused to uprate legacy benefits. Black, Asian and ethnic minority people were left overexposed, under-protected and overlooked throughout the pandemic – as Baroness Doreen Lawrence powerfully argued in her report ‘An Avoidable Crisis’.

    This situation is shocking, but sadly not surprising. Even before the pandemic hit, Britain under the Tories was already horribly unequal. Ethnic minority people are twice as likely to be unemployed as white people. Women in the UK are still earning 18% less than men: a gender pay gap that would take 60 years to eradicate on current trends. Too many people feel unsafe, simply because of who they are. One in five LGBT+ workers are the target of negative comments or conduct from colleagues at work; and one in three trans people face the same.

    Every single person in this country should know that their government always has their back. But instead, the Conservatives are letting them down.

    Conference, we need a more equal society. We need it now and the people of Britain know that. We saw that in the public outcry over Sarah Everard, Nicole Smallman, Bibaa Henry, Sabina Nessa and so, so many women. When people came together to say: enough is enough. We saw it this summer when our brilliant England football team took the knee together to say: enough is enough.

    And what did the Tories do?

    They brought in a Police and Crime Bill that doesn’t even mention the word “woman”. That issues longer sentences for attacking statues than for raping women. They published a report that denied structural racism even exists. They dragged their feet again and again on outlawing the abhorrent practice of conversion therapy. They failed to condemn those who booed the England players for taking a stand – showing themselves to be utterly out of touch with the people of this country.

    The Tories say they want a war on woke. You know what I want, Conference? I want a war on inequality. I want a war on poverty. I want a war on this callous and cronyist Conservative excuse for a Government that seeks political gain from pitting community against community, neighbour against neighbour.

    What the past 18 months showed time and time again was that division is not what defines this country. When times were hard we pulled together. We looked out for one another. In all its great diversity this country united in the face of a common challenge and said: we’ll come through this together. We’re stronger, together.

    That spirit is central to us as a Labour Party. It is who we are and it will be central to the next Labour Government and its defining mission to create a more equal society. A Labour Government committed to an equal recovery from the COVID-19 crisis. A Labour Government that would introduce a Race Equality Act to tackle structural racial inequality at source. A Labour Government that would make tackling violence against women and girls a priority. A Labour Government that acknowledges that trans rights are human rights and that would reform the Gender Recognition Act to enable a process for self-identification while continuing to support the 2010 Equalities Act.

    Conference, we know that a Labour Government would make good on these commitments. Because every day, where we are in power, Labour works to tackle unfairness and inequality. Every day there are people in this country whose lives are better – who feel safer and more supported – because of their Labour council, their Labour mayor, their Labour government in Wales. We need to make that a reality for everyone in this country, no matter who they are and no matter where they live.

    And that means a Labour Government in Westminster – the only route to the better, more equal society we all want to see.

    Thank you.

  • Anneliese Dodds – 2021 Speech to Labour Party Conference (Party Chair speech)

    Anneliese Dodds – 2021 Speech to Labour Party Conference (Party Chair speech)

    The speech made by Anneliese Dodds, the Chair of the Labour Party, on 25 September 2021.

    It’s such a pleasure and a privilege to be with you all today as Chair of our Party.

    Our Labour Party – founded over one hundred years ago in the shadow of dark, satanic mills – and today fighting harder than ever for decent jobs, proper pay and dignity at work. The party of our NHS, the party that set up the first national parks and green space for people to enjoy and the only party that can protect our planet while protecting jobs.

    Now, more than ever, Britain needs a Labour government.

    The last 18 months have exposed just how unequal and unfair our country has become under the Conservatives. But the crisis also showed what the British people achieve when we come together. Across our country, people united to look after their neighbours. Trade unions and businesses worked with the Welsh Labour government to build ventilators in record time and our NHS worked with thousands of volunteers, Oxford University and business to create a vaccine in months when that would normally take years. We’ve shown that we are stronger together – and that’s the title of our policy roadmap. Today I’m proud to present to conference its first two reports.

    Britain in 2030 shows how Labour would start to meet the biggest challenges of our age. From an electric car revolution, to catch-up for every child, to a new Race Equality Act to a trade policy that protects jobs at home while securing human rights abroad and much, much more – the report shows how much better our country will be under Labour.

    I’m so grateful to all the Labour members, trade unions, shadow Labour teams, members of the NPF and socialist societies who’ve contributed to it. As we continue to develop together the key new policies to win the next general election, the stakes have rarely been higher.

    These callous, chaotic, crony Conservatives plunge new depths every day. This Conservative Party shovels money to its chums and acts like there’s one rule for senior Tories and another rule for everyone else. This Conservative Party likes to consider itself the party of opportunity and to be fair – if, like my opposite number Ben Elliot, you are a nephew to a royal, were educated at Eton and can fly teabags to Madonna, you too could go far in the Conservative Party. You know, recently Ben Elliott has been joined as Conservative Party co-chair by Oliver Dowden, confirming what many in this hall have always known: that it takes two Tory men to do the job of one Labour woman.

    Conference, we know Britain deserves better than this Conservative Government – and we’re proving it in communities up and down the country, where Labour is transforming lives right now. As our second report says: Labour Works. In local government, in Wales, in Scotland, with our metro mayors and our police and crime commissioners-Labour is delivering, right now, for communities, jobs and our environment.

    There’s so much to fight for. The power is in our hands – in the miles we walk on the streets to knock on doors and the tonnes of leaflets we all deliver and it’s also in the choices we make about who we are and what we do as a Party. At this conference, we must have the confidence to set things right – once and for all. With a new, independent complaints process – so there is never, ever any place for anti-Semitism, Islamophobia, Anti-Black racism or discrimination or prejudice of any kind. Where we root out sexual harassment wherever it rears its ugly head and where we are a constant, uncompromised, clarion voice for equality, respect and social justice.

    Britain can’t take another five years of these job-destroying, climate-wrecking, poverty-growing, division-sowing, sleaze-ridden Tories. Let’s get serious.

    Let’s take the energy, commitment and passion that’s in this hall and let’s use it to boot them out, get into government and pull our country up – for a stronger future together.

  • Ed Miliband – 2021 Speech to Labour Party Conference

    Ed Miliband – 2021 Speech to Labour Party Conference

    The speech made by Ed Miliband, the Shadow Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy Secretary, in Brighton on 26 September 2021.

    Friends it’s great to be back. Last time I spoke to you I was leader of our party.

    Remember David Cameron’s warning. “Britain faces a simple and inescapable choice – stability and strong Government with me, or chaos with Ed Miliband.” Didn’t work out so well for him did it?

    Or more to the point for the country. Instability? Weak government? Chaos? Friends, I didn’t get everything right.

    But I’ll tell you one thing: I’d have done a damn sight better than this miserable shower. I want to thank you, party members, for having kept me going.

    There is a lesson in all this. We don’t give up. And we don’t give in.

    We stay and we fight. Not for our own sake but for the big causes that brought us into politics.

    That’s why I’m still here when my past opponents – Cameron, Clegg, Osborne – are all gone.

    Today I want to talk to you about the biggest cause of all, the cause I came back to fight.

    The climate crisis where the future threat of yesterday is the devastating reality of today.

    We have seen it all too clearly this summer around the world and this is just a foretaste of what is to come if we don’t act.

    As David Attenborough has said, the decisions we make in the next few years will “profoundly affect the next few thousand years.” So, to our generation, is given a unique responsibility that we cannot shirk.

    We are at five minutes to midnight. We cannot deny the crisis we confront. There is still time to act but only just.

    That is why the stakes are so high. That is why we need a Labour government. And I am here to tell you not just that we must confront the climate crisis but that as we do we can and must confront the other great cause of our time.

    The scar of inequality. The glaring gaps in wealth and income between the richest and everyone else.

    An economy based on low pay and insecurity, which simply does not have enough of the good jobs at good wages that the British people have a right to expect.

    This crisis is a deep, moral shame on our country. As we respond to the climate crisis with all the transformation that entails, we have a fateful choice to make:

    We could try and put a green coat of paint on an unfair, unequal, unjust Britain. Or we can make a different choice and see the opportunity in front of us to change our economy and society.

    For a green Britain where there is an irreversible shift of income, power and wealth to working people. A green Britain where we deliver good secure, unionised jobs for people across our country. A green Britain where there is clean air and green spaces for everyone everywhere in our country. A green Britain where there are warm affordable homes for all, wherever they live and where we end fuel poverty. A green Britain where public and alternative models of ownership play their proper role in making the transition affordable, secure and fair.

    I know what choice we need to make. Britain needs a fairer economy. Britain needs a green industrial revolution. Britain needs a green new deal. This is the cause I came back to fight for.

    Now I get that some people think it can’t be done. Some say that if we put the climate crisis front and centre of our agenda that we will not solve and may deepen the wounds of economic and social injustice.

    Don’t go too fast they say. They worry that families already struggling to pay their heating bills will struggle even more.

    About workers in oil and gas. Let me say to those people, including in this hall, I get your worries. I grew up in the 1980s.

    I am an MP in Doncaster. A former mining constituency.

    We remember what the Tories did. I know our responsibility – this climate transition must leave no worker, no family, no community behind.

    If we fail that test we won’t take you or the British people with us and we won’t deserve to do so. I tell this conference – our party cannot, will not, must not shirk the fight for economic justice.

    Now at the same time as those saying we are going too fast, there are others who worry that no government, no political party is doing enough to tackle this climate threat, including in this hall. They say we are going too slowly.

    They believe we are on course to leave the most awful legacy in human history and they are right.

    If we do not act on climate, it won’t be the richest or the most powerful who suffer it will be the poorest and most vulnerable, here and around the world.

    I say to them: our party cannot, will not, must not shirk the fight for climate justice.

    This then is our historic responsibility. To be the party of green and red together. To be the party of climate and economic justice together.

    Let me tell you, if we don’t do it nobody else will. Can the Tories do it? No way.

    Friends, the Tories are not climate deniers, they are something even more dangerous. They talk green but fail to act. They refuse to rise to the scale of the emergency and they will not make the investments we need.

    They are climate ditherers. They are climate pretenders. They are climate delayers.

    When it comes to COP26 in Glasgow in November, the most important climate conference ever held, Boris Johnson is the wrong man in the wrong place at the wrong time. That isn’t just bad for the planet, it costs the British people.

    Gas prices are surging here not because we have done too much to go green but because we haven’t done enough. That’s why we are so vulnerable to the price instability of the international gas market.

    The Tory cuts to home insulation means greater energy use, it costs the planet and it costs the British people. The Tory moratorium on onshore wind, cuts to solar subsidies and failure to move forward on nuclear costs the planet and it costs the British people. The Tory failure to have a green recovery and invest in the industries of the future costs the planet and it costs the British people.

    Let’s be clear friends, this energy price crisis is a disaster made in Downing Street, a disaster caused by a decade of Tory climate inaction. Of course they are making the cost of living crisis far worse by cutting Universal credit.

    If they really cared about the cost of living crisis, if they really cared about the fuel poor, it’s time to cancel the cut in universal credit that takes place in just five days’ time.

    Let’s lay to rest the idea that these Tories can somehow manage a just or fair green transition. A couple of months back Boris Johnson was challenged on Tory credentials on climate change.

    He joked that Mrs Thatcher closed the pits and gave us a head start. This guy laughing about people losing their jobs, communities losing their lifeblood, generations losing hope. How dare he?

    How dare this arrogant, contemptuous, cruel, shameless, duplicitous, out of touch charlatan, laugh about the devastation of coalfield communities.

    It tells you so much about who he really is, who they really are. I say this: our country desperately needs the decency, integrity and values of Keir Starmer over the double-dealing, duplicity and dishonesty of Boris Johnson.

    They fail on climate and they fail on fairness and all the while we lose the most precious gift of all: time. That is why it falls to us to seize the moment and tackle the crisis in this decisive decade

    So let me tell you what we would do. Look at what Joe Biden is doing in the United States with a ten-year plan to invest at scale in the green transition. That’s what we need to do here.

    The most unaffordable, irresponsible, reckless choice is not to invest. It makes sense to invest now because we relieve the burden we place on future generations. It makes sense to invest now because not acting will cost more than acting. It makes sense to invest now because it will enable us to create wealth, jobs and lead the world in the industries of the future.

    Take steel – a massive test of whether we get the green transition right. Steel is a vital strategic industry for our country, crucial for our national security and the foundation of our manufacturing industry. It provides tens of thousands of jobs for our communities.

    But here is the challenge. We need to green steel. It’s more than 10 percent of our manufacturing emissions.

    The Tories are woefully failing to make our steel industry strong for the future. Their delay, their inaction, is a recipe for throwing tens of thousands of workers on the scrapheap.

    Under Labour, we won’t let it happen. If we want a future for steel, we have to invest and we will.

    So today I can announce we are making an unprecedented 10-year commitment for the steel industry to go green, investing up to £3 billion, in collaboration with business, over the coming decade.

    We will make the steel industry not simply a proud industry of our past and present but a proud industry of our future. No other country is yet showing the same ambition.

    That’s what I mean by a green industrial revolution. That’s what I mean by delivering climate justice and economic justice together.

    Same with our car industry. Vital to the climate fight, vital to the strength of our economy, and providing tens of thousands of jobs in communities across our country.

    The Tories are losing the global race for electric car manufacturing. That’s why a Labour government would help fund the investment in the gigafactories we need.

    Not just subsidy but public equity stakes taken by government to ensures a people’s dividend from the green transition. That’s what I mean by delivering climate justice and economic justice together.

    The green industrial revolution is about no worker being left behind. We need the skills, expertise, know-how of the people who work in fossil fuel industries for our zero-carbon future.

    People say under the Tories the low carbon jobs have not been delivered and they are right. We would change that.

    That’s why we would increase the investment in our ports and it’s time our world leading status in offshore wind generation finally led to jobs for workers in the UK.

    So, we will raise the requirements for domestic content so we can buy, make and sell British, not the Tory offshoring of jobs in offshore wind. That’s what we mean by delivering climate justice and economic justice together.

    Just because a job is in a green industry it doesn’t give a free pass on rights and protections at work. Jobs in our renewable industries should be good jobs at decent wages with strong trade unions.

    That is what we mean by delivering climate justice and economic justice together and this is just the start: Climate education in our schools; a net zero and nature test for every policy; climate apprenticeships for our young people.

    Working with our brilliant Labour local authorities to push ahead with local Green New Deals. That’s what we mean by delivering climate justice and economic justice together.

    Just as business is a crucial partner in making the transition happen, so they must be accountable for playing their part. Many of our leading companies are already ahead of the government in setting ambitious climate targets. But we need the rest to step up.

    A Labour government will require every major business to tell us their carbon footprint and how it is consistent with net zero. That’s what we mean by delivering climate justice and economic justice together.

    Under a Labour government, every department will be a climate department. Every department delivering climate justice and economic justice together.

    There is a lesson for us in the climate crisis. Tinkering around the edges will not answer the defining challenges of this century. We must match the crises of our time with the scale of our response.

    So let us resolve today to be the first country in the world to implement a Green New Deal. A Green industrial revolution.

    Good jobs at decent wages. Nurturing and supporting our great businesses. Protecting the planet for future generations. The morally responsible, fiscally responsible choice.

    Delivering climate justice and economic justice together. This is the cause I returned to fight for. This is the cause that summons our party. This is the cause of our day, our decade, our generation. This is the cause that is the destiny of our country.

    For the sake of ourselves and generations to come, let us fight with everything we have because the whole future far beyond our own time depends upon us.