Tag: 2022 Conservative Party Conference

  • Colum Eastwood – 2022 Comments on the Conservative Party Conference

    Colum Eastwood – 2022 Comments on the Conservative Party Conference

    The comments made by Colum Eastwood, the SDLP MP for Foyle, on Twitter on 5 October 2022.

    Listening to arrogant Tory ministers defending this mess this morning is infuriating. I’d love them to spend one day in my constituency office in Derry listening to the devastation their policies are causing for families here.

  • Aaron Bell – 2022 Comments on the Prime Minister’s Conference Speech

    Aaron Bell – 2022 Comments on the Prime Minister’s Conference Speech

    The comments made by Aaron Bell, the Conservative MP for Newcastle-under-Lyme, on Twitter on 5 October 2022.

    Great speech from the PM!

    A global economic crisis is completely the wrong time to be raising taxes on businesses that create wealth. Liz’s growth focused approach will mean British businesses have the freedom to grow and invest – creating jobs and boosting prosperity for all.

  • Gordon Brown – 2022 Comments on the Conservative Party Conference

    Gordon Brown – 2022 Comments on the Conservative Party Conference

    The comments made by Gordon Brown, the former Prime Minister, on Twitter on 5 October 2022.

    A message from Tory conference:

    Don’t get sick

    Don’t be disabled

    Don’t be on low pay with kids to feed

    Don’t rely on Universal Credit or public services

    If you do, get ready to pay for £43bn in tax cuts that benefit the wealthiest the most.

    Liz Truss and minister after minister have refused to honour Rishi Sunak’s promise to uprate benefits in line with inflation.

    This would leave millions in desperate need and the number of children in poverty hitting 5 million for the first time in a generation.

    As millions of families suffer sleepless nights worrying whether they can pay their bills, Tory Party Chair Jake Berry simply channels Norman Tebbit and tells people to cut consumption or get a new job.

    Even after receiving the maximum help of £1200, people on Universal Credit are nearly £30 a week worse off than last year.

    If the Chancellor abandons the link with inflation, they could end up over £2000 a year worse off, all to help pay for tax cuts and help for the wealthy.

    After a study estimated over 330,000 excess deaths linked to austerity, can the government really allow another, more brutal round of cuts?

    It’s time for another U-turn to help the millions on the breadline not the millionaires in the boardroom.

  • Liz Truss – 2022 Speech to Conservative Party Conference

    Liz Truss – 2022 Speech to Conservative Party Conference

    The speech made by Liz Truss, the Prime Minister, in Birmingham on 5 October 2022.

    My friends, it’s great to be here with you in Birmingham.

    It’s fantastic to see the cranes across the skyline building new buildings…

    …the busy trams coursing down the streets…

    …and the bull standing proudly at the heart of Birmingham.

    My friends, this is what a city with a Tory Mayor looks like – it’s positive, it’s enterprising, it’s successful.

    And Andy Street is a human dynamo, delivering for the people of Birmingham.

    And our Teesside Mayor Ben Houchen is also delivering new jobs and investment.

    This is what modern Conservatism looks like.

    Let’s get Tory mayors elected in London, in Manchester, in West Yorkshire and right across the country.

    We gather at a vital time for the United Kingdom.

    These are stormy days.

    Together, we have mourned the death of Queen Elizabeth II, the rock on which modern Britain was built.

    We are now in a new era under King Charles III.

    We are dealing with the global economic crisis caused by Covid and by Putin’s appalling war in Ukraine.

    In these tough times, we need to step up.

    I am determined to get Britain moving, to get us through the tempest and put us on a stronger footing as a nation.

    I am driven in this mission by my firm belief in the British people.

    I believe that you know best how to spend your own money, to get on in life and realise your own ambitions.

    My friends that is what Conservatism is about.

    It is a belief in freedom, in fair play and the great potential of the British people.

    So, I’m not going to tell you what to do, or what to think or how to live your life.

    I’m not interested in how many two-for-one offers you buy at the supermarket, how you spend your spare time, or in virtue signalling.

    I’m not interested in just talking about things, but actually in doing things.

    What I’m interested in is your hopes and fears that you feel every day.

    Can you get a good job locally?

    Is it safe to walk down the high street late at night?

    Can you get a doctor’s appointment?

    I know how you feel because I have the same hopes and fears.

    I want what you want.

    I have fought to get where I am today.

    I have fought to get jobs, to get pay rises and get on the housing ladder.

    I have juggled my career with raising two wonderful daughters.

    I know how it feels to have your potential dismissed by those who think they know better.

    I remember as a young girl being presented on a plane with a “Junior Air Hostess” badge.

    Meanwhile, my brothers were given “Junior Pilot” badges.

    It wasn’t the only time in my life that I have been treated differently for being female or for not fitting in.

    It made me angry and it made me determined.

    Determined to change things so other people didn’t feel the same way.

    I remember growing up in Leeds, where I saw too many children being let down.

    Let down by low expectations.

    Let down by a Labour council who were more interested in political correctness than they were in school standards.

    But I was lucky to have been brought up in a family that cared about education.

    They taught me the value of hard work and enterprise.

    And I stand here today as the first Prime Minister of our country to have gone to a comprehensive school.

    That taught me two things.

    One is that we have huge talent across the country.

    And two, that we’re not making enough of it.

    This is a great country.

    I’m so proud of who we are and what we stand for.

    But I know that we can do better and I know that we must do better.

    And that’s why I entered politics.

    I want to live in a country where hard work is rewarded…

    …Where women can walk home safely at night.…

    …And where our children have a better future.

    To deliver this, we need to get Britain moving.

    We cannot have any more drift and delay at this vital time.

    Let’s remember where we were when I entered Downing Street.

    Average energy bills were predicted to soar above £6,000 a year.

    We faced the highest tax burden that our country had had for 70 years.

    And we were told that we could do nothing about it.

    I did not accept that things had to be this way.

    I knew that inaction would be unconscionable.

    Families would have been unable to heat their homes.

    Businesses would have gone bust.

    Jobs would have been lost.

    And we would have had worse public services, including the NHS.

    I could not allow this to happen.

    I refused to consign our great country to decline.

    That is why I promised on entering Downing Street to act.

    Now later on in my speech my friends I am going to talk about the anti-growth coalition.

    But I think they arrived in the hall a bit too early, they were meant to come later on.

    We will get onto them in a few minutes.

    But what we did is we acted.

    We made sure that the typical household energy bill shouldn’t be more than around £2,500 a year this winter and next.

    We followed up with immediate action to support businesses over the winter.

    We are determined to shield people from astronomically high bills.

    So much so, that we are doing more in this country to protect people from the energy crisis than any other country in Europe.

    Our response to the energy crisis was the biggest part of the mini-Budget.

    It was the biggest part for a good reason – because we had to do it.

    But it’s not the only challenge that we face.

    For too long, our economy has not grown as strongly as it should have done.

    I know what it is like to live somewhere that isn’t feeling the benefits of economic growth.

    I grew up in Paisley and in Leeds in the 80s and 90s.

    I have seen the boarded-up shops.

    I have seen people left with no hope turning to drugs.

    I have seen families struggling to put food on the table.

    Low growth isn’t just numbers on a spreadsheet.

    Low growth means lower wages, fewer opportunities and less money to spend on the things that make life better.

    It means our country falling behind other countries, including those who threaten our way of life.

    And it means the parts of our country that I really care about falling even further behind.

    That is why we must level up our country in a Conservative way, ensuring that everywhere everyone can get on.

    Conference it is wrong to invest only in places which are thriving, as economic models often have it.

    We need to fund the furthest behind first.

    And for too long, the political debate has been dominated by the argument about how we distribute a limited economic pie.

    Instead, we need to grow the pie so that everyone gets a bigger slice.

    That is why I am determined to take a new approach and break us out of this high-tax, low-growth cycle.

    And that is what our plan is about: it is about getting the economy growing and rebuilding Britain through reform.

    The scale of this challenge is immense:

    War in Europe for the first time in a generation…

    …A more uncertain world in the aftermath of Covid…

    …And a global economic crisis.

    That is why in Britain we need to do things differently.

    We need to step up.

    As the last few weeks have shown, it will be difficult.

    Whenever there is change, there is disruption.

    And not everyone will be in favour of change.

    But everyone will benefit from the result – a growing economy and a better future.

    That is what we have a clear plan to deliver.

    I have three priorities for our economy: growth, growth and growth.

    Growth means more money in people’s pockets it means businesses creating jobs.

    Growth means people can feel secure and they can plan for their future.

    Fundamentally, growth helps people fulfil their hopes and their dreams.

    That is why our dynamic new Chancellor and I will be taking action in three areas.

    First of all, we will lower our tax burden.

    Over the summer, we had a robust debate.

    The Conservative party will always be the party of low taxes.

    Cutting taxes is the right thing to do morally and economically.

    Morally, because the state does not spend its own money. It spends the people’s money.

    Economically, because if people keep more of their own money, they are inspired to do more of what they do best.

    This is what grows the economy.

    When the government plays too big a role, people feel smaller.

    High taxes mean you feel it’s less worthwhile working that extra hour, going for a better job or setting up your own business.

    That, my friends, is why we are cutting taxes.

    We have already cut Stamp Duty, helping people on the housing ladder – especially first-time buyers.

    We are reversing the increase in National Insurance from next month.

    We are keeping corporation tax at 19%, the lowest in the G20.

    We are helping 31 million working people by cutting the basic rate of income tax.

    We need to be internationally competitive, with all our tax rates attracting the best talent.

    Cutting taxes helps us face this global economic crisis, putting up a sign that Britain is open for business.

    The fact is that the abolition of the 45p tax rate became a distraction from the major parts of our growth plan.

    That is why we are no longer proceeding with it.

    I get it and I have listened.

    Secondly, we will keep an iron grip on the nation’s finances.

    I believe in fiscal responsibility.

    I believe in getting value for the taxpayer.

    I believe in sound money and the lean state.

    I remember my shock opening my first paycheque to see how much money the taxman had taken out.

    I know this feeling is replicated across the country.

    And that’s why we must always be careful with taxpayers’ money.

    It is why this Government will always be fiscally responsible.

    We are in extraordinary times.

    It would have been wrong not to have proceeded rapidly with our energy and tax plan.

    I am clear we cannot pave the way to sustainable economic growth without fiscal responsibility.

    So we will bring down debt as a proportion of our national income.

    We are seeing rising interest rates worldwide in the wake of Putin’s war and Covid.

    The Federal Reserve has been hiking rates in America and has signalled more rises to come.

    Inflation is high across the world’s major economies.

    We will do what we can as a government to support home-owners, such as cutting stamp duty.

    But it is right that interest rates are independently set by the Bank of England and that politicians do not decide on this.

    The Chancellor and the Governor will keep closely co-ordinating our monetary and fiscal policy.

    The Chancellor and I are in lockstep on this.

    Thirdly, we will drive economic reforms to build our country for a new era.

    We are taking a new approach based on what has worked before.

    Previously, we faced barriers to growth like militant unions, nationalised industries and outdated City regulation.

    Now, we must breakdown the barriers to growth built up in our system over decades.

    Decisions take too long.

    Burdens on businesses are too high.

    Infrastructure projects get delayed for years, and years and years.

    As a result, we have seen economic growth choked off.

    Houses have not been built where they are needed and wanted.

    We have become averse as a nation to doing things differently.

    I love business.

    I love enterprise.

    I love people who take responsibility, start their own businesses and invest.

    They generate profits, they create new jobs and they power our success.

    I want to see more of that.

    That is why we will back businesses to the hilt.

    We are cutting taxes and simplifying red tape to help businesses realise their ambitions.

    This is what our new investment zones will do, helping us level up across the country.

    We will be inspired by the great hubs of industry like Bournville, here in the West Midlands.

    That is what zones in places like here and around the country will deliver.

    We want to create the zones in England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.

    Now is the time to harness the power of free enterprise to transform our country and ensure our greatest days lie ahead.

    This is the United Kingdom at its best, working together and getting our economy growing.

    And we will face down the separatists who threaten to pull apart our precious union our family.

    Next year, we will host the Global Investment Summit.

    This will show the world’s top investors there is nowhere better to invest than the UK.

    And we are seizing the new-found freedoms outside the European Union.

    We are the party who got Brexit done and we will realise on the promise of Brexit.

    We are building an economy which makes the most of the huge opportunities Brexit offers.

    By the end of next year, all EU-inspired red tape will be history.

    Instead, we will ensure regulation is pro-business and pro-growth.

    Leaving the EU gives us the chance to do things differently.

    And we need more of that.

    That is why over the coming weeks, my team of ministers will set out more about what we are going to do to get Britain moving.

    We will make it easier to build homes, to afford childcare and to get superfast broadband.

    We will help you set up your own businesses and get a mobile phone signal wherever you are in the country.

    We are in tough times.

    But I want you to know that day in, day out, I’m thinking about how we get this country moving.

    I’m working flat out to make sure people can get through this crisis.

    So let me be clear, we have your back.

    That is why the Government took decisive action to tackle the energy crisis.

    It is why we are pushing ahead with our plan for growth.

    Economic growth makes life better and easier for everyone – and it will level up our country.

    I know that is what people want to see.

    Economic growth will mean we can afford great public services such as schools, the police and the NHS.

    Our fantastic Deputy Prime Minister and Health Secretary will deliver for patients so they can expect a GP appointment within two weeks.

    She will ensure that those who need urgent care will be seen on the same day.

    And she will get ambulances out there faster and she will improve A&E.

    And she will bust the Covid backlog.

    That is not all and she will bolster social care so that everyone gets the care they need.

    We are working to put this country on the path to long-term success.

    That means ensuring we are safe and secure.

    One of the reasons we are facing this global crisis is because collectively the West did not do enough.

    We became complacent.

    We did not spend enough on defence.

    We became too dependent on authoritarian regimes for cheap goods and energy.

    And we did not stand up to Russia early enough.

    We will make sure this never happens again.

    So we are taking decisive action to reinforce our energy security.

    We are opening more gas fields in the North Sea and delivering more renewables and nuclear energy.

    That is how we will protect the great British environment, deliver on our commitment to net zero and tackle climate change.

    We are also taking decisive action by strengthening our borders by beefing up our Border Force and expanding the Rwanda scheme.

    Our brilliant new Home Secretary will be bringing forward legislation to make sure that no European judge can overrule us.

    And while she is acting meanwhile, the Labour Party has absolutely no plan to tackle illegal migration.

    But my friends we cannot have security at home without security abroad.

    That is why our tough Foreign and Defence Secretaries are updating the Integrated Review to make sure we can face down these threats.

    It is why we are increasing defence spending to 3% of GDP by the end of the decade.

    This will ensure that our Armed Forces are ready to tackle new and emerging threats.

    We are working with our friends and allies to support Ukraine in the face of Putin’s brutal war.

    The brave Ukrainian people aren’t just fighting for their security but for all our security.

    This is a fight for freedom and democracy around the world.

    Putin’s illegal annexation of Ukrainian territory is just the latest act in his campaign to subvert democracy and violate international law.

    We should not give in to those who want a deal which trades away Ukrainian land.

    They are proposing to pay in Ukrainian lives for the illusion of peace.

    We will stand with our Ukrainian friends however long it takes.

    Ukraine can win, Ukraine must win, and Ukraine will win.

    I know that President Zelenskyy and the people of Ukraine will welcome our solidarity with them at this very very difficult time.

    To take on Russia and other authoritarian regimes, free democracies need strong economies.

    Economic growth makes us strong at home and strong abroad.

    We need an economically sound and secure United Kingdom.

    And that will mean challenging those who try to stop growth.

    I will not allow the anti-growth coalition to hold us back.

    Labour, the Lib Dems and the SNP…

    …The militant unions, the vested interests dressed up as think-tanks…

    …The talking heads, the Brexit deniers and Extinction Rebellion and some of the people we had in the hall earlier.

    The fact is they prefer protesting to doing.

    They prefer talking on Twitter to taking tough decisions.

    They taxi from North London townhouses to the BBC studio to dismiss anyone challenging the status quo.

    From broadcast to podcast, they peddle the same old answers.

    It’s always more taxes, more regulation and more meddling.

    Wrong, wrong, wrong.

    We see the anti-growth coalition at work across the country.

    Keir Starmer wants to put extra taxes on the companies we need to invest in our energy security.

    And his sticking plaster solution will only last six months.

    He has no long-term plan and no vision for Britain.

    Mark Drakeford in Wales is cancelling road-building projects and refusing to build the M4 relief road.

    Nicola Sturgeon won’t build new nuclear power stations in Scotland to solve the energy crisis in Scotland.

    Have these people ever seen a tax rise they don’t like?

    Or an industry they don’t want to control?

    They don’t understand the British people.

    They don’t understand aspiration.

    They are prepared to leave our towns and cities facing decline.

    My friends, does this anti-growth coalition have any idea who pays their wages?

    It’s the people who make things in factories across our country.

    It’s the people who get up at the crack of dawn to go to work.

    It’s the commuters who get trains into towns and cities across our country.

    I’m thinking of the white van drivers, the hairdressers, the plumbers, the accountants, the IT workers and millions of others up and down the UK.

    The anti-growth coalition just doesn’t get it.

    This is because they don’t face the same challenges as normal working people.

    These enemies of enterprise don’t know the frustration you feel to see your road blocked by protesters, or the trains off due to a strike.

    In fact, their friends on the hard Left tend to be the ones behind the disruption.

    The anti-growth coalition think the people who stick themselves to trains, roads and buildings are heroes.

    I say the real heroes are those who go to work, take responsibility and aspire to a better life for themselves and their family.

    And I am on their side.

    We will build roads, rail, energy and broadband quicker.

    We will be proudly pro-growth, pro-aspiration and pro-enterprise.

    That is how we will forge ahead on our long-term path to national success.

    In this new era, we are taking a new approach.

    My friends, we are focused on boosting growth and opportunity across our country.

    This mission will be difficult but it is necessary.

    We have no alternative if we want to get our economy moving again.

    I am ready to make hard choices.

    You can trust me to do what it takes.

    The status quo is not an option.

    That is why we cannot give in to the voices of decline.

    We cannot give in to those who say Britain can’t grow faster.

    We cannot give in to those who say we can’t do better.

    We must stay the course.

    We are the only party with a clear plan to get Britain moving.

    We are the only party with the determination to deliver.

    Together, we can unleash the full potential of our great country.

    That is how we will build a new Britain for a new era.

  • Suella Braverman – 2022 Speech to Conservative Party Conference

    Suella Braverman – 2022 Speech to Conservative Party Conference

    The speech made by Suella Braverman, the Home Secretary, in Birmingham on 4 October 2022.

    It is such a privilege to be here.

    Being Home Secretary is not just a tremendous honour…

    …keeping the British people safe and securing our borders are the highest duties of state.

    Our Prime Minister understands those duties.

    And so do I. We stand for the law-abiding majority of Britons.

    And in doing so, I draw on a long tradition of Conservative Home Secretaries who were willing to challenge failing orthodoxy. They refused to accept defeat.

    Michael Howard, on his first day as Home Secretary, was told that there was nothing he could do about the inevitable rise in crime.

    He disagreed – and crime fell dramatically.

    They said that Theresa May couldn’t deport Abu Qatada, the Islamist extremist. But – despite setbacks along the way – she made it happen.

    Priti Patel negotiated a ground-breaking deal with our partners in Rwanda to bring forward a new solution to the challenge of illegal migration – providing protection in Rwanda for those that need it while breaking the business model of people smugglers.

    I am grateful to Priti and Boris for the foundations that they laid.

    Serious violent crime has fallen, as has overall crime, excluding fraud and online theft.

    And we are well on the way to 20,000 additional police officers.

    But a Home Secretary can never be complacent – and some things still need fixing. I’m pleased to be working with a brilliant team of Ministers who I am so pleased to see with us today: Tom Tugendhat, Tom Pursglove, Jeremy Quin, Mims Davies and Lord Andrew Sharpe, supported by our excellent PPSes – Gareth Davies and Shaun Bailey, they all bring talent and expertise to the Home Office.

    Now, the Prime Minister and I want to see homicide, serious violence, and neighbourhood crime fall by 20 per cent.

    Some of our most committed and courageous people serve in the police. In Belfast last week, I joined police leaders to pay tribute to those officers who have died in action. Their ultimate sacrifice is one for which we owe a huge debt of gratitude.

    So, yes I am immensely proud of our police.

    Many on the left want to defund the police.

    Well I say to the militants, I say to the anarchists and the extremists: I will always back our policemen and women.

    That’s what being on the side of the law-abiding majority means.

    But we also need to be frank when things go wrong. Some police officers have fallen devastatingly short of the standards expected.

    We need to get back to common sense policing, empowering the Police to tackle the real issues facing the public – not policing pronouns on twitter or non-crime hate incidents.

    That’s why I’m pleased that Greater Manchester Police, Hampshire, Bedfordshire, and Northamptonshire and the Metropolitan Police have all promised to visit the scene of every burglary.

    But the law-abiding majority expect every force to investigate every neighbourhood crime – and so do I. Drugs, car theft, vandalism and anti-social behaviour cannot be ignored.

    Perhaps the most unsettling, unspeakable crime of all is rape.

    As an MP and as Attorney General, I have already seen first-hand how the system needs to improve. I can’t change things overnight, but I will not accept the status quo.

    Policing is a public service, and must be accountable to you the public.

    That’s why it’s right to publish league tables that show how well every force in England and Wales is doing in their fight against crime.

    You all have a right to know. And greater transparency will drive up standards.

    The modern world inevitably brings new challenges. Our National Security Bill will ensure that law enforcement and intelligence agencies have the tools they need to stay ahead of our country’s evermore sophisticated adversaries.

    Yet everything starts from getting the basics right –

    We need common sense policing. Unashamedly and unapologetically on the side of the law-abiding majority.

    That means that the mob needs to be stopped.

    The police must have all the powers that they need to stop protestors who use guerrilla tactics and bring chaos and misery to the law-abiding majority.

    It’s not a human right to vandalise property. It’s not my ‘freedom of expression’ to protest violently. No – you can’t just start a riot or glue yourself to the roads and get away with it.

    Yes, friends, as Attorney General, I had to go to court to get some of these simple truths established.

    The judges agreed with me last week in the Cout of Appeal in the Colston Statue case. And that’s why our Public Order Bill will empower our police to stop this nuisance. So whether you’re Just Stop Oil, Insulate Britain or Extinction Rebellion – you cross a line when you break the law. That’s why we will keep putting you behind bars.

    It’s very easy to say that the culture wars are a distraction.

    But make no mistake, the Left are attacking our profound, elemental values, wanting to replace them with the poison of identity politics. And when poison seeps into the public sphere, it distracts our public servants from doing their real job. That philosophy dominates the Labour Party, whatever Sir Keir Starmer pretends.

    And that’s why it is not only wrong for the police to take the knee. It is wrong for them to join in with political demonstrations; it is wrong for biologically male police officers to strip search female suspects.

    And it is not just that pandering to identity politics is a huge waste of time.

    They need to stick to catching the bad guys.

    To those who dismiss political correctness as a conservative obsession, I say this. Visit Rochdale. Visit Telford. The grooming gangs scandal is a stain on this country and it’s what happens when political correctness becomes more important than criminal justice.

    More PCs, less PC.

    My other mission is to control our borders.

    Firstly, legal migration.

    I backed Brexit because I wanted Britain to have control over our migration and to cut overall numbers. Brexit was meant to give us a say on how we determine our own migration policy.

    We should use our newfound control to deliver the kind of migration that grows our economy, for example that helps projects that have stalled or builds friendships and relationships with our allies.

    But the truth is parts of our system aren’t delivering. We need to end the abuse of the rules and cut down on those numbers that aren’t meeting the needs of our economy.

    And we mustn’t forget how to do things for ourselves. There is absolutely no reason why we can’t train up enough of our own HGV drivers, butchers, or fruit-pickers.

    The way we will build a high-skilled and high-wage economy is by encouraging business to invest in capital and domestic labour. Not relying wholly on low-skilled foreign workers.

    This isn’t just about policy or economics for me. It’s intensely personal. My parents came here in the 1960s from Kenya and Mauritius. They loved Britain from afar, as children of the Commonwealth. It was Britain that offered them security and opportunity as young adults.

    I’m not embarrassed to say that I love Britain. No Conservative is.

    It’s not racist for anyone, ethnic minority or otherwise, to want to control our borders.

    It’s not bigoted to say that we have too many asylum seekers who are abusing the system.

    It’s not xenophobic to say that mass and rapid migration places pressure on housing, public services and community relations.

    I reject the Left’s argument that it is hypocritical for someone from an ethnic minority to tell these truths.

    My parents came here through legal and controlled migration. They spoke the language, threw themselves into the community, they embraced British values. When they arrived, they signed up to be part of our shared project because the United Kingdom meant something distinct. Integration was part of the quid pro quo.

    That didn’t mean abandoning their heritage, but it did mean adopting British identity. An identity of which we should all be proud. This is the best place on earth to come and live in, but I fear that we are losing sight of the core values and the culture that made it so. The unexamined drive towards multiculturalism as an end in itself combined with the corrosive aspects of identity politics has led us astray.

    I saw this when I went to Leicester recently. A melting pot of cultures and a beacon of religious harmony. But even there, riots and civil disorder have taken place because of failures to integrate large numbers of newcomers. Such conflict has no place in the UK.

    Or when we look at the Prevent scheme, we see how cultural tensions within communities are not being handled well. The murderer of our much missed dear friend Sir David Amess, had been referred to Prevent. But it couldn’t stop him.

    We cannot as a people be cowed into fear by vocal minorities who attempt to undermine our common sense instincts. And as Home Secretary, I will make sure that Prevent is fit for purpose.

    The law-abiding majority deserve nothing less.

    And lastly we have got to stop the boats crossing the Channel. This has gone on for too long. But I have to be straight with you, there are no quick fixes.

    The problem is chronic. Organised criminal gangs are selling a lie to thousands of people.

    Many are drowning in the Channel.

    Many are leaving a safe country like France and abusing our asylum system.

    So what is our plan?

    Firstly, our work with the French has prevented about half of all crossings. I know that alone will not work. So I will work closely with the French to get more out of our partnership. Both on the French coastline and further upstream against the organised criminal gangs.

    Secondly, we need to find a way to make the Rwanda scheme work.

    Thirdly, we need to do more to get asylum-seekers out of hotels – currently costing the British taxpayer £5 million per day.

    And fourth, we cannot allow a foreign court to undermine the sovereignty of our borders.

    A few months ago, the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg did just that,

    By a closed process, with an unnamed judge and without any representation by the UK, a European court overrode our Supreme Court.

    As a result, our first flight to Rwanda was grounded.

    We need to take back control.

    But friends, I need to be honest with you. The Strasbourg Court is not the only problem.

    Now everyone agrees that we must fight the evil of modern slavery. I’m immensely proud of the UK’s global leadership in protecting genuine victims.

    But the hard truth is that our modern slavery laws are being abused by people gaming the system. We’ve seen a 450% increase in modern slavery claims since 2014.

    Today, the largest group of small boats migrants are from Albania – a safe country. Many of them claim to be trafficked as modern slaves. That’s despite them having paid thousands of pounds to come here, or having willingly taken a dangerous journey across the Channel.

    The truth is that many of them are not modern slaves and their claims of being trafficked are lies.

    And it’s not just illegal migrants.

    Since entering the Home Office I have seen egregious examples of convicted paedophiles and rapists trying to game the system.

    Making last minute claims of modern slavery to block their removal from our country.

    Some have even gone on to commit further crimes in the interim.

    In one case, we convicted a sex offender from South Africa who spent a year in prison.

    He was about to be deported from the UK – and lo and behold, he made a claim of modern slavery.

    Our removal was stalled – and in this time he went on to commit a further rape.

    He is now back behind bars – but when he’s released, well – it’s all so terribly predictable.

    In another case, a paedophile from Pakistan received 10 years in prison.

    But at the end of his prison sentence, he put in a spurious claim to be a modern slave.

    Even when they got through that process, he made a second claim – which blocked his removal.

    We simply can’t go on like this.

    We need to make sure that our system strikes the right balance. Our laws need to be resilient against abuse – while at the same time ensuring we help those in genuine need.

    We have got a proud history of offering sanctuary to those in need.

    From supporting thousands of BNOs fleeing persecution in Hong Kong; to welcoming nearly 20,000 Afghan nationals fleeing war and terror, to offering immediate refuge to thousands of Ukrainians fleeing Putin’s barbarism…

    …The UK, and this Conservative Government has always been there to hold out the hand of hope to those who need it most.

    But the law simply isn’t working.

    It isn’t working in the interests of the British people or people who need our help the most.

    Our laws are being abused.

    Abused by people smugglers and criminals pedalling false promises.

    Abused by people making multiple, meritless and last-minute claims.

    Abused by tactics from specialist, small boat-chasing law firms.

    This cannot continue.

    So, Conference, I will commit to you today, that I will look to bring forward legislation to make it clear that the only route to the United Kingdom is through a safe and legal route.

    And that’s so we can help support those who need our help the most, including women and girls.

    If you deliberately enter the United Kingdom illegally from a safe country, you should be swiftly returned to your home country or relocated to Rwanda that is where your asylum claim will be considered.

    UK policy on illegal migration should not be derailed by abuse of our modern slavery laws, Labour’s Human Rights Act, or orders of the Strasbourg Court.

    And we will always of course work within the bounds of international law, but we cannot allow this abuse of our system to continue.

    And of course, at the same time, we need to continue to stamp out illegal working practices.

    We already have some of the toughest penalties for those not playing by our rules, but we will redouble our efforts to go after them.

    I need to be straight with you, Conference. This won’t be easy. I cannot promise a solution immediately. We’ve all heard pledges and promises but this is a complex and entrenched problem. And there are many forces working against us.

    The Labour Party will try to stop this. The Lib Dems will go bananas. The Guardian will have a meltdown.

    As for the lawyers. Don’t get me started on the lawyers.

    And I’m a recovering lawyer.

    But what can I pledge to you is my total and undeniable and unfettered and unconditional commitment to doing whatever it takes. Despite the obstacles, I won’t give up on you and I won’t give up on the British people.

    The time for words is over. Now is the time for action. Time to put the will of the hard-working patriotic majority at the heart of all we do.

    It’s time for the police to stop virtue-signalling and start catching robbers and burglars.

    It’s time to tackle the small boats – no ifs, no buts.

    Friends, it’s time for common sense.

    I stand ready to serve you. I stand ready to deliver.

    The time is ours, the time is now.

  • James Cleverly – 2022 Speech to Conservative Party Conference

    James Cleverly – 2022 Speech to Conservative Party Conference

    The speech made by James Cleverly, the Foreign Secretary, in Birmingham on 4 October 2022.

    Thank you Conference.

    It’s great be back together,

    As a party.

    As a family.

    Big thank you to Jake Berry our chairman

    Organising conference is a mammoth task.

    And a big thank you our party staff, our volunteers,

    And you, the members.

    I loved being party chairman,

    working with you all, with Ben my co-chairman,

    And working alongside Boris.

    And if I remember rightly we did alright.

    an 80-seat majority –

    A great team of new MPs from all over our great country –

    And Boris’s leadership:

    …Delivered Brexit…

    …Got us through the Covid…

    …And he led the world in support for Ukraine.

    It’s a legacy that we should be proud of.

    And I was proud to serve under him.

    It’s a legacy that Liz Truss will build on.

    I’ve seen her take bold action as Foreign Secretary:

    …her steadfast support for Ukraine and standing up to Russia…

    …her passionate defence of our Union…

    …her determination to promote democracy and freedom around the world.

    As Prime Minister she is also being bold.

    …helping with energy bills…

    …ensuring you can see your doctor promptly…

    Reducing the taxes paid by ordinary, hardworking people across the country.

    I backed her from the start:

    And I know I made the right choice.

    I’m the foreign secretary of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.

    Wow, that still sounds strange!

    It is an honour to be the face and voice of our country overseas.

    I’m the UK’s sales guy.

    I’m pretty good at sales, it was how I paid my bills.

    But I know that the greatest salesperson that the UK ever had was her late Majesty Queen Elizabeth.

    Our greatest diplomat

    Our greatest advocate

    Our greatest champion

    Elizabeth the Great.

    I’ve had the honour of meeting King Charles,

    and I know he will work tirelessly and to continue her work…

    and be our new chief ambassador.

    During the funeral week of her late Majesty

    I was reminded of the standing that our country has in the world.

    When I travel on behalf of our country,

    I am lucky enough to see the UK as others see us.

    And I can tell you the view of here, from over there is really, really good.

    It’s not a terribly fashionable thing…

    To be proud of your country…

    But I am –

    So sue me!!!

    My mother chose to make this country her home.

    She was a young woman from Sierra Leone who adored this country then,

    Just as I adore this country now.

    In fact,

    I am from immigrant stock on both sides of my family:

    My mum came here from West Africa in 1966

    And my dad’s family came here from Normandy in 1066.

    There will always be people that talk our country down…

    Belittle our achievements…

    Underestimate our standing…

    Those self-loathing keyboard warriors…

    Who hate our country’s every success…

    And pray for bad news.

    Those people who aren’t happy until they’re unhappy:

    They want to stand on the side-lines,

    Never contributing,

    Only moaning and bleating.

    But that isn’t us;

    That isn’t this party;

    That isn’t this government;

    That isn’t this country.

    We aren’t commentators watching the match,

    And saying “Ohhhhh I wouldn’t have done that”.

    We are players on the pitch…

    Making a difference…

    Promoting our values…

    Competing on the world stage for what we believe is right.

    And we believe in freedom.

    We believe in the rule of law.

    We believe that an aggressor cannot invade its neighbour with impunity.

    This is why we stand shoulder to shoulder with those brave Ukrainians defending their homeland.

    And Britain has the strategic endurance to see this through to their victory.

    Back in February this year, at the United Nations I said that if Putin was foolish enough to attempt to invade Ukraine,

    The Ukrainians would defend their country ferociously.

    And they have done just that.

    Their bravery and passion has been amplified by the arms and training that we, the UK, have supplied.

    We will support them until this war is won.

    We will support them until their sovereignty is restored.

    We will support them until the last Russian tank is dragged away by a Ukrainian tractor.

    We need to have the strategic endurance to see this through to the end.

    Because, if we don’t…

    we send a message to every potential aggressor that our resolve is fragile.

    We cannot, must not, will not send that message to the world.

    And if you happen to be listening to this speech, Mr Putin, Mr Lavrov:

    Let me be clear:

    We will never recognise the annexation of Luhansk, Donetsk, Kherson, Zaporizhzhia, or Crimea.

    They are Ukraine.

    And when Ukraine has won this war,

    – And it will –

    then we will support them as they rebuild their homes, their economy, and their society.

    We will work with our friends and allies around the world to hold the perpetrators to account.

    To punish those who use rape as a weapon of war;

    To punish those who knowingly target civilian infrastructure;

    To punish those who murder women and children

    We do not do this alone.

    We are a member of many international groups:

    The commonwealth, NATO, UN Security Council, AUKAS, the G7, the G20.

    We intend to build more alliances, friendships and partnerships around the globe.

    It’s why we have ambassadors, high commissioners, and diplomats in hundreds of locations.

    It’s why I and my fantastic team of ministers travel the world.

    Trust me, it isn’t to stock up on those giant Toblerones.

    When there is war, our work on the international stage is visible and obvious:

    Building coalitions of condemnation at the UN for example,

    Coordinating sanctions against those who facilitate the war,

    Working to ensure the exports of food and fertiliser from the Black Sea ports.

    But much of what the FCDO does is less visible,

    But no less important

    I have just returned from a series of meetings in East and South East Asia.

    I paid my respects at the funeral of Japan’s former prime minister Shinzo Abe.

    Then I went to the Republic of Korea;

    And then to Singapore;

    In each country I met with senior ministers;

    met a number of international business people…

    I set out the details of our Indo-Pacific tilt.

    It’s a part of the world which is growing fast.

    And through trade agreements, cooperation agreements, and our ASEAN dialogue partner status,

    We are shrinking the distance between us.

    I spoke about the opportunities that at available to us all.

    And, of course, I spoke about the role that China plays in the region and globally.

    I made our position clear:

    That China could and should take a different path;

    That it should adhere to the rules and norms of the international community;

    And it should stop persecuting its people at home and stop sanctioning my friends and colleagues in parliament.

    And while I was on the other side of the world,

    FCDO ministers were in the USA, in European capitals, in Africa,

    And a number of my ministers are overseas as I speak.

    Because we have to invest in our international relationships.

    Patient, but effective diplomacy:

    We invest time,

    We invest energy,

    And yes, we invest money.

    Because that’s how we generate influence on the world stage

    And that’s how we drive improvements in the lives of people overseas,

    And how we improve the lives of people here in the UK.

    The development money that we spend,

    Our overseas development assistance or “ODA”:

    It helps women and children brutalised by conflict,

    It helps prevent starvation,

    We use our expertise in financial services through British Investment Partnerships to amplify the money that we provide to part-fund projects that generate green energy,

    And increase trade…

    And stimulate economic growth in some of the least developed countries.

    We don’t just stand idly by and watch problems happen:

    We step in to improve things,

    Not passive, but active.

    It is the right thing to do, it helps people that need our help.

    And it also helps us at home.

    Because safe, secure and prosperous countries don’t generate refugees or hundreds of thousands of economic migrants;

    Safe, secure and prosperous countries don’t export terrorism;

    Safe, secure and prosperous countries are good trade partners for us;

    So obviously we want to see more safe, secure and prosperous countries.

    That is the active role that our ODA plays.

    But just because we look to build peace and prosperity in distant places,

    we mustn’t forget the need to build prosperity closer to home.

    A good diplomatic and economic relationship with the EU and its member states is good for us all:

    we’ve worked closely on sanctions against Russians who have enabled the war in Ukraine.

    I want to see more cooperation across the channel and across the Irish Sea,

    And addressing the current problems with the Northern Ireland Protocol is key to that.

    I want to ensure that we restore the integrity of the UK internal market,

    I want to protect North/South trade,

    and restore the balance of the Belfast Good Friday Agreement, which has been disrupted by the protocol.

    I want to see all the communities in Northern Ireland represented again in the Stormont executive,

    So that devolved government is re-established.

    I will work hard to get that.

    Last week I spoke to the EU’s lead negotiator Vice President Maroš Šefčovič.

    We agreed on our desire to reach a solution that works for all parts of the UK, especially the people of Northern Ireland;

    We have the Northern Ireland Protocol bill working its way through parliament.

    In the meantime, we continue to pursue a negotiated settlement which respects the constitutional integrity of the United Kingdom and our single market,

    and supports the institutions of the Belfast (Good Friday) Agreement.

    As you can see my great ministers Vicky Ford, Jesse Norman, Leo Doherty, Zac Goldsmith, Tariq Ahmad, and Gillian Keegan and I have plenty to keep us busy.

    But it is a job worth doing.

    Promoting global Britain on the world stage

    And I speak for the ministers and the civil servants and diplomats in the FCDO when I say:

    It is an honour to represent the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland:

    It is a great country

    A country I am proud of

    A country I love

    Thank you.

  • Anne-Marie Trevelyan – 2022 Speech to Conservative Party Conference

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan – 2022 Speech to Conservative Party Conference

    The speech made by Anne-Marie Trevelyan, the Secretary of State for International Trade, in Birmingham on 4 October 2022.

    Conference, thank you.

    It’s wonderful to be back here with so many of you in Birmingham this year.

    Speaking to you today from the heart of the West Midlands – it serves as a powerful reminder that this region was the crucible from which much of the modern world was built.

    As the Mayor, Andy Street, is tireless in saying as he promotes this wonderful region.

    The infrastructure that powered that growth can still be seen today, and we are giving it a new 21st century boost.

    Less than a mile away from here, I visited Curzon Street – one of the first train stations built in the UK. It has facilitated passengers and freight for over a hundred years.

    Designed by Robert Stephenson – one of Newcastle’s finest exports, providing designs and inspiration for constructions around the world – it took 20,000 workers nearly five years to build.

    Today, 27,000 workers have spades in the ground, with so many of them working to reopen and transform stations. These will serve at the heart of our newest high-speed railway delivering additional capacity for the network, drawing in huge investment into the region – and of course, helping the whole country and our economy to grow.

    From land to sea, the UK also has a historic leadership in underwriting prosperity and trade.

    Shipping continues to drive the global economy today, just as it has done for millennia.

    Our seas are by far the most important arteries for global trade, carrying over 95% of all goods.

    But while our maritime industry normally conducts its business beyond the public gaze, recent events have thrust global supply chains into the spotlight-and in particular, the importance of resilient and secure shipping routes.

    At Transport, we are charged with ensuring the security of all networks that move goods, people and information around the world, and that underpin our way of life and our economy.

    We have seen Putin weaponise food by trying to crush the economic and humanitarian criticality of Ukraine’s agricultural economy.

    In blockading those Ukrainian ports, Putin has prevented the export of global grain supplies.
    Our maxim is to ensure the UK is and remains the most secure and reliable nation to trade with globally.

    Because at a time when Russian aggression is disrupting established trade routes,

    it has never been more important for the international community to come together and protect global shipping.

    So, we will work with all our partners to ensure maritime trade and travel continues to operate safely, securely and sustainably, right around the world.

    Now Conference, there is an elephant in the room today.

    We cannot ignore that nine out of ten train services were at a standstill last Saturday – with further strikes planned tomorrow and this coming Saturday.

    While our priority, our overwhelming objective, is to grow our economy and tackle the rising cost of living, we also have to deal with rolling strike action.

    Strikes disrupt everyday life for everyone and slow down our prospects for growth.

    The more quickly we can resolve these disputes, the sooner all our efforts can be spent on getting our economy motoring at full speed.

    Despite soaring international energy prices, the war in Ukraine and the continued global impact of COVID, we are taking the necessary action to help families and businesses.

    We can only do this through growth and having the infrastructure that makes this possible.

    We want to transform the rail industry to make it sustainable for the next 100 years.

    The very last thing our country needs right now is more damaging industrial disputes.

    My message to the trade union membership is simple: please take your seats at the negotiating table and let’s find a landing zone which we can all work with.

    Punishing passengers and inflicting damage on our economy by striking is not the answer.

    As a former Trade Secretary, I know something about making deals.

    And I can tell you, there is a deal to be done between the unions and our train operators. It’s a deal that will require compromise. So I want to see positive proposals to bridge the differences.

    As part of these, I am asking industry to launch consultations on reforming our ticket office provision across the country.

    The way we buy everything from groceries to holidays has transformed over the last decade. Online shopping is increasingly the norm, and all our favourite retail stores are using the latest self-service tech, making the in-store experience quicker and smoother, with fewer queues and more convenience.

    We’re seeing the same trend on the railways with a huge increase in online ticket sales – today, only 12% of transactions take place at ticket offices. We need to be looking at ways to move with the trend and support our customers in the most effective way possible.

    There will be some stations where the ticket office will be important to the running of the station. In other areas rail employees may be better in front of the glass helping passengers in other ways.

    This is not about cutting jobs – this is about putting the passenger at the heart of the Railway.

    We all want the same outcome – to modernise the railway so that customers can choose rail as their preferred travel method with confidence and with ease.

    I hope Union leaders together with employers will work with us to deliver the much-needed changes and resolution, so that together we can grow the economy for everyone.

    Conference –

    Just as coal power and steam propulsion powered a global revolution in growth and development – which transformed everything from medicines to transport and brought prosperity across the world – we are at the tipping point of another revolution that has the potential to transform.

    The way that all our modes of transport are powered is changing at pace.

    Hydrogen fuels. Net Zero Emission Vehicles. Sustainable Aviation Fuels. Green shipping corridors.

    Those markets that change first, and have the potential to grow fastest, will go the furthest. We want UK Business to lead the way on this new clean growth revolution.

    That’s why we are investing record amounts in our roads, in our railways and future green transport solutions, to provide the conditions that will make sure business can grow on the back of clean transport.

    Building the vital connections that will open up access to jobs, education and housing across the whole of the United Kingdom.

    This Government is unashamedly going for growth.

    Growth is key to delivering jobs, higher wages and more money to invest in world class public services.

    A key part of achieving that growth is keeping our promises and delivering for the people.

    Speaking as the Member of Parliament who has campaigned for dualling the A1 – a road improvement first promised in 1992 – and was elected on that promise, delivering on our promises is firmly on my mind.

    The A1 is just one example.

    The A303 is another. One of the main gateways to the South West, it acts as a bottleneck to growth. So we are committed to getting these road solutions delivered.

    Delivery is the key.

    Something my fantastic ministerial team are focussed on.

    Kevin Foster – is taking on the challenge of modernising our Railway.

    Katherine Fletcher – will deliver the Roads the Prime Minister has asked me to accelerate, which the Chancellor announced in his Growth Plan.

    Baroness Vere – will work to decarbonise the aviation industry.

    Lucy Frazer who will be working on the Future of Transport, making it fit for a modern world.

    And our Parliamentary Private Secretaries Marco Longhi, Anthony Browne, and Damian Moore in the Whips Office are going to help us stay on track.

    As a rural constituency MP, one of the most common issues that gets raised with me is the state of my local roads. Indeed – I became very popular overnight with many colleagues who have constituents raising similar issues with them.

    That’s why we have set aside a pothole fund to repair 10 million potholes a year.

    So motorway or local street, this is a government which will invest so that our country can grow. We are a team that is determined to get spades into the ground at pace.

    Conference, we’ve got a lot to do – it’s time to Get Britain Moving.

    Thank you.

  • Therese Coffey – 2022 Speech to Conservative Party Conference

    Therese Coffey – 2022 Speech to Conservative Party Conference

    The speech made by Therese Coffey, the Deputy Prime Minister and Health & Social Care Secretary, in Birmingham on 4 October 2022.

    Conference, I am delighted to be here in Birmingham for my first speech as Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, and as Deputy Prime Minister.

    I was here just a couple of months ago for the Commonwealth Games,

    And I was absolutely blown away,

    by the Games themselves,

    and also by how the city has been transformed since we were last here.

    And that is thanks to Conservative Mayor, Andy Street.

    Andy has shown,

    That being ambitious for the people and communities he represents,

    getting on with the job at hand,

    and focusing on delivery,

    is exactly what our voters want,

    and why he was re-elected,

    resoundingly.

    Conference, as a Conservative government,

    we believe in the Great British people,

    and we are ambitious for our country.

    Despite the severe challenges facing the global economy, in the wake of Putin’s illegal invasion of Ukraine, and the aftershock of Covid,

    Now is the time we must come together,

    to tackle the issues that we have long faced.

    And we will take decisive action

    to get Britain moving again….

    … from getting Britain building,

    to channelling investment into local areas,

    to helping families get on in life.

    We will deliver, deliver, deliver…

    Conference,

    Our National Health Service has the admiration and gratitude of the British people, particularly for getting us through COVID.

    The doctors, the nurses, the midwives, the paramedics, the chemists, the cleaners, and all the clinical and support staff,

    As well as all the carers, working in care homes or our communities.

    They regularly go the extra mile.

    They are the pride of Britain.

    The NHS is and always has been a national endeavour.

    That was set out in 1944, when it was a Conservative politician, Sir Henry Willink, who put forward the proposals for “A National Health Service”.

    That’s right, a Conservative MP,

    from my home city of Liverpool,

    who conceived the NHS,

    – a good omen, I think!

    And I continue to be proud of the many doctors, nurses, and dentists serving as Conservatives in Parliament,

    far more than we see in the Labour Party.

    And it is because of our Conservative Party’s commitment to the NHS,

    …That we will be spending 173 billion pounds this year on health and social care, in England alone,

    …up from 124 billion pounds when we entered office in 2010,

    …and that’s accounting for inflation –

    This has resulted in more doctors and nurses than ever before.

    But, as Health Secretary, it’s my job to be honest, and level with you about the scale of challenge ahead of us.

    And frankly,

    I won’t be turning to Labour for solutions.

    If you want to see the Labour Party running the NHS,

    just look across the border into Wales,

    where around 60,000 patients are still waiting for more than 2 years for treatment, higher than last year.

    This isn’t the time for brickbats though.

    It is precisely because healthcare matters so much

    that we need to have honest discussion

    and be prepared to hold the NHS to account

    forging a partnership with them focused on delivery, not on dogma.

    So, let’s be honest.

    While most patients receiving care in our NHS have a good experience,

    Too many do not…

    …Whether it’s the 8am scramble to see a GP…

    …Or the long waits to get tests or treatment…

    Or the struggle to see an NHS dentist at all.

    Much of this has been made worse by the pandemic.

    And I must level with you,

    Backlogs are expected to rise before they fall,

    as more patients come forward for diagnosis and treatment.

    But this isn’t just about Covid.

    There is still too much variation in patient experience.

    I saw that for myself this July when I went to A&E.

    I waited nearly nine hours to see a doctor,

    before being asked to return the next day for treatment.

    Now I knew, from previous experience,

    that would be too late,

    so I took myself to a different hospital,

    and was treated that same day.

    That is the sort of variation we see across the NHS.

    From two hospitals just a couple of miles apart, and it must change.

    That is why my first job in the Department was creating Our Plan for Patients, which puts the needs of patients front and centre.
    Our new Plan for Patients deliberately places an emphasis on primary care, the gateway to the NHS for most people.

    It empowers doctors and nurses by reducing bureaucracy,

    …which gets in the way of them doing their jobs.

    And it seeks to improve performance across the country by unlocking data.

    Now,

    You may have heard ‘ABCD’ are my immediate priorities.

    No, I wasn’t broadcasting my A Level results to the nation.

    Nor was I reciting a new hip hop beat by Dr Dre.

    Those four letters represent my commitment to focus – resolutely – on the issues that affect patients most:

    Ambulances.

    Backlogs.

    Care.

    Doctors and Dentists.

    And with my excellent ministerial team,

    Robert Jenrick,

    Will Quince,

    Neil O’Brien,

    Nick Markham,

    and our very own in-house ministerial medic, Dr Caroline Johnson,

    Together, we WILL focus on the issues that affect patients most

    To deliver their priorities.

    AND be their champion.

    Starting with ‘A’ for Ambulances.

    Access to urgent treatment can be life-saving.

    When people phone 999 because they think they or their loved one is having a heart attack or a stroke, they want to know help will come,

    and will come soon.

    Let’s be clear,

    Average waiting times are too long,

    So, we are increasing the number of 999 call handlers.

    And we must also get ambulances back on the road from handovers at hospitals,

    so we are placing a laser-like focus on our most challenged trusts, because as we saw last winter,

    nearly half of all handover delays were at just 15 trusts.

    We also know to be able to admit more patients,

    we need to open up more space in hospitals.

    So we are acting immediately to create more capacity,

    the equivalent of 7,000 more beds, this winter.

    But it’s not just capacity in our hospitals we need,

    it’s also in our communities,

    to help support people…

    …who could be cared for more appropriately at home or in a care home, rather than being kept in hospital, unnecessarily.

    That is why the ‘C’ for care is such an integral part of Our Plan.

    And why we have invested a further 500 million pounds this winter,

    so local councils and the local NHS,

    can work together to tackle delayed discharges.

    It isn’t all about emergency care though.

    It is also about diagnosis and treatment.

    And that is where we go back to ‘B’ for backlogs.

    The waiting list for planned care, made worse by the pandemic, currently stands at about 7 million.

    This includes people waiting for diagnosis, to know if they need any treatment at all.

    While, in England, we have now virtually eliminated waits of over two years,

    we are speeding up our plans to roll out community diagnostic centres, as well as new hospitals.

    And we will maximise the use of the independent sector too, when patients are waiting too long for treatment.

    Lastly, but key is ‘D’ – for doctors and for dentists.

    Now, I think it is perfectly reasonable when people need to see a GP, they should expect to do so within a fortnight.

    Of course, I would like to be more ambitious, and while I will not be prescriptive on how GPs interact with their patients,

    I am clear Patients must be able to see their doctors promptly.

    To help achieve these priorities,

    I will publish a lot more information for patients,

    so they can see how their local NHS is performing, including their GP practice, and on access to NHS care and treatment.

    Another key element is personnel.

    I have listened to why people say they are leaving the NHS,

    or what is holding them back, from offering more services.

    And I am responding.

    I am empowering GPs to use their funding more flexibly for the recruitment of more support staff, and making significant changes to pension arrangements.

    I am extending the emergency clinical register,

    so that health professionals who have come out of retirement,

    can continue to practise for a further two years.

    I am opening up more prescription capability and services to pharmacists.

    I am investing in IT for telephony and digital appointments.

    And I am making it easier for clinicians registered outside England to be accredited, to get to work more quickly, treating patients.

    It is, frankly, bonkers, that we have restrictions on the recognition of doctors, dentists, and nurses within the UK itself.

    That is why I am laying regulations next week,

    …which will allow the General Dental Council to get on with accrediting dentists to work right across our United Kingdom,

    so we can have oases of oral care, rather than dental deserts.

    This is all on top of our existing commitments,

    to boost the health and care workforce,

    including our manifesto pledge to recruit 50,000 more nurses by 2024.

    Conference,

    Whether you live in a city or a town,

    in the countryside or on the coast,

    this Conservative Government will always be on your side,

    when you need care the most.

    This is just the start of our ambitions for health and care.

    Our Plan informs patients and empowers them to live healthier lives.

    Because we know prevention is better than cure.

    It is right we continue our longer-term health approach,

    Strengthening mental wellbeing and resilience,

    as well as the physical health of the nation,

    because that is also good for the economic health of the nation.

    We have a record number of people, in work, on the payroll, but there are many vacancies still to be filled.

    We know work is good for you,

    both physically and for mental wellbeing,

    as well as putting more pounds in your pocket.

    That is why I will strive to support

    those not working now due to ill health,

    to help them to start, stay, and succeed in work;

    building on the Prime Minister’s pledge to have more mental health support in communities.

    Because together, we can deliver a healthier, more productive society, all the stronger, to help grow our economy.

    As the Prime Minister said on the steps of Downing Street,

    she has three clear priorities:

    growing the economy,

    tackling energy security and costs for households and businesses;

    and the NHS.

    When I first went into the Department,

    I asked what the biggest risk was this winter and what we could do to help?

    I was told – help with energy bills,

    so older people would not worry about the cost of turning on the heating,

    and for health and care providers too.

    The Prime Minister and the Chancellor listened.

    They acted.

    They have delivered.

    And we need to act on growing the economy too.

    We need a strong economy to have a strong NHS.

    We need a resilient, sustainable economy,

    to have a resilient, sustainable NHS.

    And we need a compassionate, and considered, Conservative government,

    to deliver, deliver, deliver.

    And that, Conference,

    is what we will do.

    Thank you.

  • Simon Clarke – 2022 Speech to Conservative Party Conference

    Simon Clarke – 2022 Speech to Conservative Party Conference

    The speech made by Simon Clarke, the Secretary of State for Levelling up, Housing and Communities, in Birmingham on 4 October 2022.

    Hello conference, I’m delighted to be with you virtually today in my new role as Secretary of State for Levelling Up, Housing, and Communities.

    I’m sorry I cannot be there in person as I would like, but I hope over the coming weeks and months I will get a chance to meet and talk to as many of you as possible as we work to deliver for our country, and earn the chance to do so again at the next general election.

    I want to start with a single, core proposition.

    Levelling up matters.

    It matters economically.

    It matters politically.

    It matters morally.

    This spring I visited St Pius X Catholic Primary in Park End in my constituency.

    Park End is a ward in Middlesbrough, not far from where I grew up.

    It is one of the most deprived communities not just on Teesside, but in the whole of the UK.

    But it is also home to people who are determined, resilient and proud of their community, their town and their country.

    I had lunch with the pupils at St Pius’. You could not find and a nicer, more thoughtful, polite and friendly group of children.

    They were an absolute credit to their headteacher Mrs Walker, their parents and each other.

    And it was a visit that has stayed with me.

    Because delivering on levelling up is about transforming the life chances of those children and children across the country.

    For too long, Middlesbrough has been one of the scores of places across this country that have been associated with economic decline, and all the social ills that come with that…

    High unemployment…

    Higher crime, and lives blighted by the fear of it…

    And lower life expectancy.

    I’ll return to the Teesside story in a moment.

    But it has much wider applicability.

    For Middlesbrough read Blackpool, or Burnley, or other northern towns.

    And not just to towns and cities in the North.

    I could equally well be speaking of parts of Glasgow, or the Welsh Valleys, or Jaywick in Essex, or Hastings on the south coast.

    Levelling up matters to all these places and more.

    The task of delivering it is the work of a generation.

    The prize of delivering it is enormous.

    If the performance of the bottom-performing quarter of places by productivity were to be “levelled up” to the median, the boost to productivity would be equivalent to a pay rise of around £2,300 for individuals in the poorest areas.

    Levelling up is about kickstarting growth in the areas where it is hardest, the areas of our country that have been left behind in previous pushes for growth.

    We want to turbocharge success, but to do that we must recognise that we are not working on a level playing field.

    It is my job and that of this Government and our Party to address this.

    And here I would say one thing above all else: we have no lessons to learn here from the Labour Party.

    The legacy of the last Labour government on these questions was one of failure.

    Their solution to a lack of jobs was an unsustainable expansion of the public sector, that did nothing to deliver economic opportunity or resilience.

    They squandered the opportunities of a time of global stability and affluence on gimmickry, ducking the hard challenges of public service reform.

    Labour ignored the Midlands and the North when they were in power. For every ten private sector jobs created in the London and the South between 1998 and 2008, only one was created in the Midlands and the North.

    And they patronised and ignored the voices of Britain’s left behind communities in a way that reached its logical nadir in their arrogant response to the people’s decision to leave the European Union, that was embodied by no one more than Sir Keir Starmer.

    Labour is no longer trusted by the places that need levelling up the most.

    Instead, we have been given the chance to deliver for them – and so far, our Conservative government and Conservative local leaders across the UK have made excellent strides in this direction.

    The work done by my predecessors to get the levelling up mission off the ground means that we are already seeing tangible change, from Stoke to Teesside.

    And I am absolutely determined that we should continue in this fashion. But we must also go further, be bolder, and more ambitious.

    We must continue to help rejuvenate our local areas, support our high streets, and re-instil a sense of community.

    But we must also take more fundamental action, to unleash our local economies, drive growth and boost opportunity too.

    In delivering this agenda, I am fortunate to have the support of a truly brilliant ministerial team…

    Paul Scully as Local Government Minister and Minister for London…

    Andrew Stephenson taking the lead on vital issues like homelessness and supporting Ukrainian refugees…

    Lee Rowley as Housing Minister, working tirelessly to unlock the homes we need…

    Dehenna Davison, my near neighbour in the North East, as Levelling Up Minister…

    Baroness Jane Scott, our champion in the House of Lords…

    As well as our whips Nigel Huddleston and Olivia Bloomfield, and our excellent PPSs Jason McCartney and Simon Jupp.

    I could not be more glad to have their support and advice, and I could not be more grateful to our Prime Minister for making it so clear how much of a personal priority this work is for her.

    Recent weeks should have quelled any doubts about this Government’s appetite for bold action.

    Last month’s fiscal statement was defined by its ambition and scope and at DLUHC, we really are hitting the ground running.

    I am proud that our work on Investment Zones holds its place among so many exciting announcements that fire the starting gun on our mission to grow our economy.

    Investment Zones represent an amazing opportunity for every corner of our country, and illustrate perfectly how this government intends to go further on levelling up.

    A truly exciting and meaningful offer to help accelerate homes, development and enterprise across the UK.

    They will bring jobs and opportunities to the areas that need them most, boosting growth on local people’s terms.

    They will roll back the bureaucracy that shackles our local economies to bring homes and jobs to families across the UK.

    We remain committed to the same outcomes we always have been clear on, on the environment and beyond, but are determined to speed up processes to get growth going.

    Investment Zones are ultimately defined by three things.

    The first is consent. We are absolutely clear that these zones must be led by the people who know best what their area needs and what it does not.

    There will be no top-down imposition of these arrangements on anywhere that does not want them.

    Don’t get me wrong, I am passionate about the benefits that these zones can bring and will advocate for them wherever I can.

    But ultimately if local people decide an investment zone isn’t for them – then that will be the final word.

    The second principle is of targeted and precise action.

    Investment Zones will target specific and effective sites that would benefit from accelerated development and a tax structure that incentivises investment.

    This is a practical proposal for change.

    Which brings me to the third principle – of pragmatic acceleration. This is an outcomes-focused policy that seeks to accelerate investment, development and growth.

    That means finding where things can be sped up and doing it, not revisiting already shovel-ready projects, slowing them down.

    I am delighted that we have already got the portal open for local areas to submit their applications to get an investment zone in their area…

    And let me give you a sneak preview conference – the reception from MPs, councils and Mayors alike has been fantastic.

    Investment Zones are the first major step that we have taken in this new look government to deliver on our promise to level up in a Conservative way.

    This conservatism will guide our agenda across the department’s portfolio. Which is why I am also steadfastly committed to increasing home ownership.

    Getting more people on the housing ladder, to give people security, a stake in society, and somewhere to call their own, is a fundamentally conservative goal.

    Investment Zones will help deliver many of the homes that we need, but we must go further.

    I want to reassure those hoping to get on the housing ladder, that you remain at the heart of our agenda for Government.

    In the coming weeks I will be fleshing out how we intend to get more homes on the market, and improve access to those homes.

    This will build on the work of both this government’s recent measures to lift the worst of the Stamp Duty burden, and of previous Conservative administrations, which is paying dividends in the form of record numbers of homes being built today.

    I want, like the Prime Minister, to build more houses, and to do so in the right way.

    Accelerating development of brownfield sites is of the upmost importance, as is building beautifully. We want to grow organic communities, not impose cardboard boxes across our shires. As with investment zones, local consent will sit at the heart of our plans.

    Because it is not the case that either home ownership, investment zones, or the wider challenge of levelling up, can be addressed from Whitehall.

    We know as Conservatives that decisions are best taken as close as possible to the people that they affect.

    I am proud and passionate about what devolution has brought to many of our regions and want to build on those successes.

    The people of Birmingham don’t need me to tell them that.

    Andy Street has truly led the way here in the West Midlands and we meet in a city and a region transformed by his leadership.

    His leadership and championing of this region are a fine example of the good that mayors can do.

    I want to create many more mayors, in areas like the East Midlands where Ben Bradley is leading the way, but also in the south of our country – where even if the title may differ, the principle of strong, directly-elected leadership is central to enabling the highest level of devolved government.

    I also want to strengthen and deepen the powers of our existing mayors, so that they can crack on with the work of delivery.

    People like Tees Valley’s Ben Houchen.

    I want to return for a moment to what has been happening on Teesside.

    I talked earlier in my speech about the challenges that my home area faces.

    But there are also huge opportunities, which Ben is helping to unlock.

    In so doing, he is showing just why elected Mayors can make such an extraordinary difference.

    Whether it be in saving Teesside Airport from closure…

    Securing thousands of new jobs in clean energy on sites like Teesworks, right next to our new Freeport…

    Ben champions our area both to central Government and to investors at home and abroad…

    Delivering opportunities that until recently, few would have dreamed of.

    He has shown what Conservatives can do locally when we are empowered to.

    And as we deliver, so we unlock pride and purpose.

    Teesside is becoming somewhere that successful people are moving to, rather than move from.

    And somewhere where a child studying today at a school like St Pius Primary can realise a bright future.

    So there is so much we can enable through devolution – and this is why I care so much about it.

    The flipside of devolving and empowering local government is that strengthening accountability is vital.

    I intend to support the Local Authority sector and be an advocate for it, but I will also crack down on mismanagement wherever I find it, such as in Thurrock, Nottingham or Croydon.

    I believe in local government because I believe that it delivers for our people, the taxpayers.

    Where it does not, there must be effective scrutiny, turnaround programmes and consequences – and I will say more about this in the weeks ahead.

    Conference, there is so much else that I am charged with delivering, and on which I will expand over the months ahead.

    When it comes to building safety, I want to finish what my predecessors started to fix our system for the long term, to protect leaseholders and ensure the industry fixes the problems it created.

    I will push on with pragmatic, common-sense reform that protects leaseholders…

    Facilitates an operable insurance industry…

    And ensures we never have to face a tragedy like Grenfell again.

    The legacy of Grenfell must be better standards and safer homes for everyone.

    That is why I am resolved to fix the cladding issue as soon as possible.

    As we enter into Autumn and Winter, the Government also remains focused on protecting the most vulnerable from rising energy costs and the wider cost of living in a world turned upside down by Putin’s aggression.

    Our measures to protect households during the pandemic worked, and to help those facing cost of living pressures now we are delivering thousands of pounds worth of support to households and businesses – as well as our new energy price guarantee.

    We remain committed as a Department, and I as a Secretary of State, to doing all that we can to limit homelessness and rough sleeping.

    I will be working closely with my new colleague Andrew Stephenson on this.

    Together, we will work to ensure that we build upon the fantastic support and dedication that this Government has already given to tackle the scourge of homelessness.

    I know I will have the support of you all in delivering on this work.

    And that is why I want to end this speech by saying thank you.

    I know the importance of the grassroots of our party to what we are trying to achieve.

    You, the boots on the ground, the activists and volunteers, the canvassers, the candidates and the Councillors, are the backbone of our great party.

    It is because of your delivery – of leaflets through doors, local services from our Conservative Councils, and our message of optimism and patriotism to every corner of the country, that we have the platform and ability to deliver for the country in Government.

    And as Secretary of State responsible for levelling up, for local government, and for communities, I want to ensure I am always working with and for you to deliver on the extraordinary opportunities that lie ahead.

  • Jacob Rees-Mogg – 2022 Speech to Conservative Party Conference

    Jacob Rees-Mogg – 2022 Speech to Conservative Party Conference

    The speech made by Jacob Rees-Mogg, the Business Secretary, in Birmingham on 3 October 2022.

    Well, Ladies and gentlemen. Thank you.

    Congratulations on arriving at the conference.

    In spite of the best efforts of Mick Lynch, who seemed to wish to get in the way.

    But thank you for being here, because you are the beating heart of the Conservative Party, you’re the stalwarts who do all the work for us and ensure people like me get elected.

    So, I thank you for all you do for conservatism, and supporting us so much. And you make it work, you ensure we have Conservative governments, and your getting here is proof of that.

    I must say, I think the unions need some of my little calling cards saying “I look forward to seeing you back at work soon”.

    Because actually, we have a tireless quest for productivity in this country, and we need to make sure that everyone is working efficiently, and we obviously want them to be working in their proper places of work.

    Also, thank you for giving me almost as warm a welcome as I got outside the hall.

    I think that’s rather marvellous. I happen to think that having a democracy where you can actually walk through the streets and people can exercise their right to peacefully protest, shows the strength of our society.

    And if people want to call me “Tory scum”, I don’t mind!

    And it has to be said, walking through the beautiful streets of Birmingham, turned blue once again- or turning blue once again- thanks to the great efforts of Andy Street; is a great privilege, and it’s lovely to be here, and to be here with this fantastic audience, and to be speaking to you as Business Secretary.

    I’m going to reintroduce a great tradition that Secretaries of State used to have when they came to the Conference, by introducing my brilliant ministerial team.

    So, my fellow Cabinet member Graham Stuart, Minister for Climate; Jackie Doyle-Price, who is here as Minister for Industry; Nusrat Ghani, Minister for Science and Investment Security; Dean Russell, Minister for Enterprise and Markets; and Lord Callanan, who I can’t actually see here but is nonetheless a great man, is Minister for Business, Energy and Corporate Responsibility.

    I am so lucky to be supported by what I think is the ‘A-Team’ of ministers, and you can tell that to all the other departments who only have ‘B-Teams’. So, let’s be clear that I have the ‘A-Team’ supporting me.

    It’s also quite fun to be speaking, for the first time in all the years I’ve been a Member of Parliament, from the main stage. I did once in the old days, when I was the candidate in Wrekin, get up to the main stage, but that was only for about three minutes, and I’ve got a bit longer now.

    It makes a change, I used to do the rounds of the fringes. Sometimes, I wasn’t entirely in line with what the Government was doing, and leaving the fringes to certain other Right Honourable Friends of mine, who seem to be having a jolly time.

    Instead, I am here in full support, and honoured to serve a first-class Prime Minister.

    And the Prime Minister, since she took office, has completed about a years’ Government business in a fortnight. And I’m glad to say I think the Prime Minister- and I say this as the Minister for Energy- is a genuine dynamo and is producing electric fields that are making sure things get done.

    And she knows how urgent the challenges we face are.

    Energy

    And the challenges are particularly in energy: first, affordability this winter; second, securing energy supplies; and third, what I would like to call Intelligent Net Zero.

    And how we are tackling those challenges? Rapidly is the answer.

    While the Opposition sniped, and cat-called, and did what it usually does, we got on with it.

    We worked properly, night and day. And actually, the Civil Servants in BEIS worked incredibly hard to create the Energy Price Guarantee for households and the Energy Bill Relief Scheme for businesses.

    We have ensured that the British people – families and businesses
    – will get help now, form the First of October with the energy price support that took effect on Saturday, regardless of where they live in the United Kingdom and however they get their energy.

    His Majesty’s Government has acted with speed and foresight to deliver this protection for households throughout the entire Kingdom.

    Thank you, somebody agrees with me! You’ve all been here a very long time so the fact that one person is paying attention is a great relief.

    The same is true for businesses, and we have averted genuine economic disaster by protecting businesses, charities and public services including schools and hospitals, and particularly care homes, from catastrophic rises in their energy costs.

    We did this because of Putin’s monstrous invasion of Ukraine. He seems to want to make Ivan the Terrible look like Padre Pio.

    His wicked acts forced up the price of gas to an extent that would have ruined almost every business and left virtually every family unable to afford their energy. I actually said a journalist from the Sun, the only person who could have afforded an energy bill this winter would’ve been the proprietor of the Sun, and everybody else would’ve been in penury.

    And that’s why, ladies and gentlemen, we have done what we have done, not some blunt instrument that our socialist counterparts would have used.

    But a well-designed, and effective way, of getting support to all. And a support that will decline as the energy price normalises.

    Now, you are proper conservatives, aren’t you? You are the bluest of the blue.

    And there may be some of you who think it’s not conservative to intervene in this way.

    But I would say that there was no question that we had to come to the British people’s aid. We could not let the people face this winter alone.

    This is actually what the state fundamentally is there for: to do things that people cannot do themselves.

    Some burdens are too great for individuals and families to bear and these must be borne by the nation herself – these are the burdens of security, of policing, of defence.

    This intervention is an act of defence for our people, every bit as much as making munitions or tanks.

    And our great hero, and I’m sure this man is a great hero of many of you: Adam Smith himself, the father of free marketeers, the pater familias of economic theory, put the defence of the nation above all else.

    He told that the Navigation Acts, which you’ll all recall from your O-Level history, against the Dutch.

    It’s quite interesting, you know all those things we say about ‘Dutch courage’ and so on all come from the 17th century wars we fought against the Dutch.

    But he said the Navigation Acts were “wisest of all the commercial regulations of England” because they stopped a then-hostile nation – and just for the record, we are now very friendly with the Dutch- harming Britain.

    Defence

    “Defence”, Adam Smith said, was “of much more importance than opulence”. He meant it was worth the short-term cost to defend Britain from “national animosity”.

    And as so often what was true in the 18th century is true today.

    The war may not be on our shores, but we will defend the United Kingdom against Mr Putin’s evil.

    Our decisive action will save millions of families and businesses from penury.

    And do you know what, imitation is the greatest form of flattery– we’re being imitated by our German friends who have rolled out almost a carbon copy scheme.

    So, this intervention helping families across the country from falling into debt and misery through crippling energy costs imposed on them by a tyrant in Moscow, has averted a disaster for Britain’s small businesses this winter, salvaging the livelihoods that would have been destroyed.

    So this winter, we are once again standing together with the British people.

    But there is more to do, because we have to make sure that this does not occur again.

    We must act to provide energy security, and to use our energy better.

    But the more we produce, the more affordable our scheme will become.

    Energy supply, cheap energy, is the foundation of our prosperity.

    Our reserves of coal and the pursuit of new technologies to dig it out,

    I’m going back to history; I’m not advocating going back to coal now,

    Digging it out of the ground spurred the Industrial Revolution.

    The discovery of North Sea oil and gas, combined with Mrs Thatcher’s visionary leadership, turbocharged the British economy in the 1980s.

    Now our future prosperity depends on our ability to secure affordable energy in abundance.

    High energy costs have made our industries uncompetitive and increased the cost of building roads and railways.

    They have often meant the difference between businesses choosing to invest in the UK or turning their backs.

    So the Energy Supply Taskforce, led by the esteemed Maddie McTernan, who delivered the vaccines that rescued us from the Covid pandemic, and she is moving to secure our energy supply in the coming months.

    Our aim is to secure cheap and plentiful supplies of energy, the veritable engine of economic growth.

    Now that may lead Socialist commentators to paint me as a fossil fuel junky.

    But I am neither a fossil fuel junky, nor a junky of any other variety.

    Let me reassure you. I am committed to Net Zero by 2050.

    But the green agenda does not mean an agenda of poverty. It does not contradict the growth agenda.

    We will go green in a way that makes the British people better off not worse off, drives growth instead of hindering it, and levels-up, by boosting industries in our regions instead of imposing costs that drive them to the brink of ruin.

    The faddish, Islingtonian Labour Party was happy to destroy industries like steel by imposing needless costs on their energy: this wasn’t just unfair, it was un-green, and simply forced manufacturing overseas, making us import more polluting products.

    We need intelligent greenery not religious zealotry.

    As for the socialist ideas of a nationalised energy dream:

    it will lead to nothing but shortages, rationing and intermittency.

    Ladies and Gentlemen, I’m sure you’ve heard me called the Right Honourable Member for the Eighteenth Century. But it’s not an insult to me.

    The Georgians were pioneers, innovators, inventors of the power loom and the spinning jenny, the fathers of the industrial revolution.

    Think of Jethro Tull, whose seed drill transformed agriculture – some of you thought I was talking about a pop star but actually I was talking about agricultural innovation.

    Or of Matthew Boulton of this great city, who with James Watt developed the steam engine that powered the Industrial Revolution.

    It is that same spirit of progress this government must capture.

    That is why we are moving full steam ahead with carbon capture and storage, expanding the world’s biggest windfarm at Dogger Bank, developing hydrogen and nuclear, including modular nuclear reactors.

    But perhaps the most exciting is fusion.

    Now, bear in mind, Isaac Newton believed in the Philosophers Stone and thought you could turn base metals into gold, so fusion is a great hope, a potential ace up our sleeve, but it would be silly of me to pretend it’s not difficult.

    It offers unparalleled potential for clean power production, promising a future of inexhaustible energy that could unshackle us from hydrocarbons,

    and make us truly self-sufficient and secure.

    The technological hurdles are big –

    fusion reactors must sustain a temperature 10 times hotter than our sun,

    Which whether you use Centigrade or like me use Fahrenheit is nonetheless very hot,

    the containment of which requires magnets so strong they could lift an aircraft carrier clean out of the ocean.

    We could get one of those and make Mr. Putin’s life rather difficult.

    But over decades we have established ourselves as pioneers in fusion science,

    and as a country, our capability to surmount these obstacles is unparalleled.

    I am delighted to make an announcement on the next step in that mission.

    We will build the UK’s first prototype fusion energy plant in Nottinghamshire,

    replacing the West Burton coal-fired power station with a beacon of bountiful green energy.

    This plant will be the first of its kind, built by 2040 and capable of putting energy on the grid,

    and in doing so, proving the commercial viability of fusion energy to the world.

    It will create thousands of high-skilled jobs throughout its lifetime,

    it will underpin an industry expected to be worth billions to the UK economy,

    and position the UK to design, manufacture and export the first fleet of fusion plants,

    placing us at the vanguard of a market with the potential to be worth trillions of pounds a year.

    But never fear, in the meantime, we got enough hot air from the Socialist conference to keep the turbines spinning for decades to come.

    From this year, the future of environmentalism will be about prosperity, about opportunity, not lectures.

    Now, we’ve been having a discussion about shale gas, and I know not everybody is keen on it and we have to get community support.

    Lord Deben wrote to my predecessor, saying that shale gas can provide 2 to 63 grams per kilowatt hour of carbon dioxide equivalent less, than from LNG being imported.

    This is what I mean about intelligent net zero. It’s about making decisions that reduce carbon but make us more prosperous. It doesn’t mean that everything I say will happen tomorrow,

    But it’s about having a programme that makes sure we don’t harm our industry, so we go green in a way that create, rather than destroy, prosperity.

    Cheap energy is essential to a flourishing economy, but this is only one part of our supply side reforms that go much further.

    At this conference we have announced that the definition of small and medium sized enterprises will expand from 250 employees to 500, extricating them from a host of regulatory burdens, including costly non-financial reporting requirements which are simply paper shuffling.

    Which in my case is not so much paper as parchment.

    The structural reforms we are about to deliver include the Brexit Freedoms Bill, a fantastic piece of legislation, a defining constitutional piece of legislation,

    … which is going to prize the dead hand of the EU from our statute book once and for all.

    As we review, repeal or amend the 2,400 pieces of European law on our books, any EU regulation which remains will no longer apply to these SMEs of up to 500 employees.

    And thanks to this Prime Minister, we will get it done by the end of 2023.

    This will take even more businesses out of the clutches of overbearing regulation,

    freeing the British economy still further.

    And while we’re talking about getting Britain moving, we will deal with strikes.

    We’ve got to keep Britain moving.

    In her campaign, the Prime Minister was clear that we would legislate for minimum service levels for essential services to ensure the modernisation of our economy is not held to ransom by union militancy.

    And bear in mind, Owen Jones came up to me today and had a go about the funders of the Tory Party.

    But the funders of the Tory Party don’t buy the right to have a say in the leadership. But in the socialist party they hold the leadership to ransom.

    Minimum service levels will make that reality harder, and we will be introducing that bill soon.

    And if I may use a rude word, it is a great modernisation.

    My department spends billions on research and development each year.

    And that must be a focus for value for money and turning our innovations into inventions.

    We wouldn’t have our nuclear technologies without this.

    But we need to make sure that every pound spent delivers.

    I’m delighted that Aria has such strong leadership, ensuring we can turn seed capital in R&D to real investment capital for the nation.

    Ladies and gentlemen, we know these are difficult times.

    And historic mistakes in energy policy have led us to where we are, but it’s always the Conservatives who are always best at dealing with difficult situations,

    And make us take those tough decisions that aren’t necessarily initially popular.

    This doesn’t matter whether its in nuclear, or shale, or deregulation.

    It is cheap energy and supply side reforms will provide us with economic growth – and the pressure of difficult times is forcing us in the direction we need to go.

    You, ladies and gentlemen, are so fundamental as advocates and ambassadors for that, because you are the Toriest of the Tory, and you know how the country should be governed,

    And it’s why we need your support.

    We have a nation-defining mission to complete, and I hope you will all join us in completing it.