Tag: 2022

  • PRESS RELEASE : Greens call for free social care for all [November 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : Greens call for free social care for all [November 2022]

    The press release issued by the Green Party on 18 November 2022.

    Chancellor Jeremy Hunt’s refusal to carry out a Tory Manifesto pledge to “fix social care” through a cost cap highlights the urgent need for a radical NHS-style solution, Green co-leader Adrian Ramsay says today.

    “Social care should be free at the point of use for all adults,” says Ramsay.

    “A fully publicly funded, free at the point of use system would offer people certainty and dignity in times of need.

    “Any of us may develop a long-term condition that requires social care support at any point in our lives, as well as in old age.

    “Today – and thanks to Hunt’s Budget for many long years to some – people will have to pay the full cost of private social care if they have assets of more than £23,250 and even those who receive some publicly-funded social care end up paying, between them, nearly £3 billion a year towards their support. [1]

    “Even the government’s own analysis shows that people’s homes are having to be sold after their deaths to pay care costs. [2]

    “Hunt’s Budget postponed a Tory pledge to put an £86,000 cap on social care costs for individuals until beyond the next General Election. Yet local councils are reporting increasing requests for help, with demand from working-age adults in particular increasing by 15 per cent since 2015/16.

    “The Dilnot Commission was set up in 2010 and the Tory government claimed to accept its recommendations, but even Dilnot’s partial costs-cap solution has been kicked down the road again [3].

    “The Tory government previously said that charges should be capped at £86,000, now it says they should be unlimited for at least another two years. We say they should be capped at zero – social care should be free at the point of use.

    “And there are options to fund a new NHS-style service that the Chancellor simply rejects – a wealth tax on the richest 1 per cent [4], a single unified income tax which could raise an additional £24 billion [5], or adding a social care levy to a more progressive tax system are just three examples.

    “The funding options are available to be examined in detail, what’s missing is the political will to solve the social care crisis once and for all.”

    Notes

    1

    https://www.kingsfund.org.uk/projects/nhs-in-a-nutshell/social-care-nutshell

    2

    https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/1015737/Build_Back_Better-_Our_Plan_for_Health_and_Social_Care_web_accessible.pdf

    3

    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2022/nov/17/delaying-social-care-reforms-jeremy-hunt-uk-vulnerable

    4

    https://gala.gre.ac.uk/id/eprint/33819/20/33819%20TIPPET_The_Case_for_a_Progressive_Annual_Wealth_Tax_%282021%29_v2.pdf

    5

    https://www.greenparty.org.uk/news/2021/09/06/green-party-proposes-to-abolish-not-increase-national-insurance-tax-to-fund-social-care/

  • PRESS RELEASE : Greens condemn Austerity 2.0 budget as Chancellor announces spending cuts of £30bn [November 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : Greens condemn Austerity 2.0 budget as Chancellor announces spending cuts of £30bn [November 2022]

    The press release issued by the Green Party on 17 November 2022.

    • Green Party co-leader Adrian Ramsay: “The Greens would put an end to the spiral of chaos and invest in the green infrastructure and world-class public services our country deserves”

    The Green Party has condemned the Chancellor’s Austerity 2.0 budget after he announced spending cuts of £30 billion which will impact the poorest the hardest.

    Green Party co-leader Adrian Ramsay has warned that today’s Autumn Statement has left people paying the price for a decade of Conservative economic mismanagement, while those with the broadest shoulders and those profiting from the crisis have been let off the hook.

    The Chancellor announced he was sticking to his cash spending plans for the next two years, meaning public sector pay rises of just 2% with inflation at 7% next year, which would result in a 5% real terms pay cut for public sector workers across the country.

    Co-leader Adrian Ramsay said:

    “Whatever Jeremy Hunt claims, this amounts to taking £30 billion away from people who need it during a cost of living crisis–both directly and through cuts in services.

    “The cuts will force local councils and vital national public services to deny people vital support.

    “Yet we know there is enough wealth in this country for us to avoid the dire economic situation this Conservative government is forcing us into.

    “The problem is that wealth is concentrated in too few hands, when it should be spread throughout the economy to the benefit of everybody.

    “The Green Party would introduce a 1% wealth tax on the super-rich and increase taxes on unearned income to ensure there is sufficient money to fund the public services we deserve.

    “We would also close the loopholes in the windfall tax to enable investment in green solutions to the energy and the climate crisis.

    “This would put an end to the spiral of chaos and invest in the green infrastructure and world-class public services our country deserves.”

    Ahead of the Autumn Statement, the Green Party put forward its own proposals, including:

    • Taxing the wealth of the richest 1% of households to raise at least £70 billion
    • Imposing dirty profits taxes, without any loopholes, on the oil and gas companies making huge sums from fossil fuels and the energy crisis
    • Provide increased funding for the Environment Agency and Ofwat to ensure proper enforcement of privatised water companies so that they invest in the infrastructure needed to end the scandal of sewage being poured into the rivers and seas

    Money raised from the wealth tax and the dirty profits tax would help fund:

    • a new green skilled workforce
    • a dash for renewables to bring down bills
    • a national home insulation programme to keep people warm
    • free childcare to ease the cost-of-living burden
    • reducing the cost of travelling by train and bus to make public transport cheaper than travelling by car
    • an end to the sewage scandal
    • a National Minimum Wage of £15 an hour
    • decent pay increases that reflect rising inflation for public sector workers.

    Ramsay said:

    “More Tory austerity will create fear in communities across this country. Services are already facing extreme pressures and the country cannot stand billions more of public spending cuts.

    “And while the government seems to have belatedly acknowledged the importance of driving down our use of gas through energy efficiency, the measures announced today go nowhere near far enough to help people who need their homes insulated right now.

    “Our tax-raising alternative would mean polluting companies and the very richest households contribute more, while our investment in a rapid move to a net zero economy would fund the new skilled, sustainable, well-paid jobs that will be needed to replace those reliant on fossil fuels.

    “Our plans ensure those most able and those most responsible pay, while the vast majority reap the rewards of a rapid move to a green economy.”

  • PRESS RELEASE : Greens call for protection of people and planet [November 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : Greens call for protection of people and planet [November 2022]

    The press release issued by the Green Party on 11 November 2022.

    Reacting to news that the UK economy shrunk in the last three months, the Green Party of England and Wales called for protections for people and the planet.

    Adrian Ramsay, co-leader of the Green Party of England and Wales, said:

    “GDP is a poor and limited measure of sustainable economic activity, but news that the UK economy on this measure has shrunk must not be used by the government as an excuse to cut public services or delay investing to tackle climate change.

    “Wages are falling, prices are rising and at COP27 analysis by the Global Carbon Project shows that despite the need to cut emissions by half by 2030 to restrict global heating to 1.5C and avoid the most devastating impacts of the climate crisis, emissions are rising.

    “We need a radical shift in economic priorities to protect people from poverty, properly fund schools and the NHS, and ensure the urgent shift to a net zero economy takes place now. This would create more sustainable economic activity while also reducing carbon emissions.”

  • PRESS RELEASE : County Devolution Deals – County Councils Network Response [November 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : County Devolution Deals – County Councils Network Response [November 2022]

    The press release issued by the County Councils Network on 17 November 2022.

    Today the Chancellor has unveiled his Autumn Statement, which contained the announcement that the devolution deal in Suffolk is complete, with those in Cornwall and Norfolk close to completion.

    When completed, these devolution deals will be the first of their kind, with these county authorities being the first to adopt directly elected leadership models of upper-tier councils, without a combined authority.

    Separately, the Government has laid an amendment to Clause 16 of the Levelling Up and Regeneration Bill to ensure that the powers and functions that a new Combined County Authority (CCA) can only be those derived from upper-tier councils, or district councils where they choose to exercise powers jointly.

    Below, the CCN responds to today’s announcements.

    Cllr Martin Hill, Devolution Spokesperson of the County Councils Network, said:

    “The announcement today that the devolution deal is Suffolk is complete, with those in Cornwall and Norfolk close to completion is another milestone in the county devolution agenda. All three agreements could be genuinely transformative for their local areas, with the Suffolk devolution deal the first of its kind in putting forward a directly elected county leadership model.

    “In all of these areas, as well as the previously agreed deals with Nottinghamshire, Derbyshire, and North Yorkshire, county authorities have shown flexibility and a willingness to meet government halfway in considering to adopt a mayor or a directly-elected leader. We know how transformative county devolution can be, and we are urging government to go further and faster – turbocharging devolution so at least two-thirds of County Councils Network members have begun discussions, at least, by 2025.

    “Separately, the government has laid an amendment to Levelling Up & Regeneration Bill to ensure that the powers and functions that a new Combined County Authority (CCA) can only be those derived from upper-tier councils, or district councils where they choose to exercise powers jointly.

    “Earlier this year, ministers reassured all parts of the sector that the intention behind Clause 16 was never to unilaterally strip any councils of their powers, and today’s amendment, which we will support, confirms there is no intention of using this new legislation to force reallocation of functions between tiers of local government.

    “It is imperative, however, that the government now progress the Bill as soon as possible and ensure that no further changes are made to the legislation on CCAs, including constitute membership. The upper-tier CCA provides a far more suitable governance model for complex county areas, with the ability for county and unitary authorities to work closely with district councils in their area.”

  • PRESS RELEASE : County Councils Network Response to the 2022 Autumn Statement

    PRESS RELEASE : County Councils Network Response to the 2022 Autumn Statement

    The press release issued by the County Councils Network on 17 November 2022.

    Today the Chancellor has unveiled his Autumn Statement, which confirmed that the government is to delay forthcoming adult social care reforms and will provide an uplift in funding for care services.
    This package includes £1bn grant funding for social care in 2023/24, and a further £1.7bn in 2024/25, in addition to postponing the social care reforms until October 2025, which is a two year delay.

    The breakdown of social care funding, which also incorporates re-prioritising funding set aside for the reforms and extra council tax flexibility, is below:

    £600 million will be distributed in 2023-24 and £1 billion in 2024-25 through the Better Care Fund to get people out of hospital on time into care settings, freeing up NHS beds for those that need them Autumn Statement 2022 27
    £1.3 billion in 2023-24 and £1.9 billion in 2024-25 will be distributed to local authorities through the Social Care Grant for adult and children’s social care
    £400 million in 2023-24 and £680 million in 2024-25 will be distributed through a grant ringfenced for adult social care which will also help to support discharge
    CCN had led calls for social care reforms to be delayed because of intense pressures on services – and for funding earmarked for the changes to be re-prioritised to frontline care services.

    Below, the CCN responds to today’s announcements.

    Cllr Tim Oliver, Chairman of the County Councils Network, said:

    “The County Councils Network has been clear that its member councils face unsustainable pressures: with inflation and demand adding £3.5bn to their costs, we have called on the government to postpone the forthcoming adult social care reforms so funding earmarked for those changes can be reinvested in into stabilising care services that are creaking at the seams, as well as further support for vital services.

    “Today’s confirmation that these reforms for adult social care will be delayed is a brave decision but completely the right one. We understand that many will be disappointed but postponing these reforms and reinvesting significant additional funding into frontline care services is strongly welcomed and will protect the most vulnerable in our society as well as buy councils vital time to stabilise the care system. This will go a long way to enable us to address existing pressures, commission more care packages, and ensure that the reforms are a success on day one of their introduction in 2025. The government must ensure that as much of this additional funding as possible is distributed directly to councils, who will work tirelessly with their health partners to speed up hospital discharge.

    We understand the financial climate the Chancellor has made today’s decisions in, and the outcome is better than envisioned a few weeks ago – with councils spared any further reductions over the next two years and seeing a rise in funding due to the additional resources for social care and extra flexibilities on council tax. We also strongly welcome the extension of the Household Support Fund for councils, which will allow our members to provide more support to families through the cost of living crisis.

    “However, while today’s announcements help meet inflationary and social care pressures, councils still face very difficult decisions over the next two years, with little resource available for local leaders to protect non-care services and deliver improvements to vital services. In addition, some county leaders may be reluctant to levy a 5% council tax increase during a cost-of-living crisis considering ratepayers in county areas currently pay the highest bills on average.

    “Looking ahead, a reduction in planned funding growth from 2025 could be extremely difficult for local services, which are already under immense pressure. Unless government addresses inflation next year, and the economy picks up before 2025, councils’ funding shortfall will grow year-on-year and become unsustainable.”

  • PRESS RELEASE : Only one in five of England’s largest councils are confident of setting a balanced budget next year [November 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : Only one in five of England’s largest councils are confident of setting a balanced budget next year [November 2022]

    The press release issued by the County Councils Network on 11 November 2022.

    Only one in five of England’s largest councils are confident they can meet their legal obligation of setting a balanced budget next year, with a new survey revealing the extent of planned service reductions due to soaring inflationary pressures.
    Council leaders warn that ‘everything is on the table’ in reducing local services if the Chancellor does not spare councils from further cuts and provide more funding for local government in Thursday’s Autumn Statement as they grapple with £3.5bn of additional costs this year and next.

    The survey, carried out by the County Councils Network (CCN), finds that in order to make up the shortfall and stave off bankruptcy councils are likely to have to reduce economic growth projects, their spend on climate action, and reduce adult social care packages and support for young people. They are also likely to reduce other essential everyday services such as bus route subsidies, waste centres and streetlighting. This comes off the back of councils seeing a reduction in spend each year between 2010 and 2018.

    The survey, which received a 90% response rate, asked councils about the impact inflation and demand were having on their budgets over the next two years and reveals:

    • Only one in five (22%) of councils are confident of preventing financial insolvency next year if there is no additional support in the upcoming Autumn Statement. Councils are legally obliged to set a balanced budget, unlike the NHS, meaning they must use their reserves or cut services if spending exceeds their funding.
    • This is because councils are grappling with £3.5bn of additional costs this year and next due to inflation and rising demand; more than double the expected rise. Even if local authorities raised council tax by 3% and the Chancellor does not reduce their budgets further, those councils face a funding gap of £821m. In addition they face £700m of extra costs for their capital expenditure over this year and next, which is for one-off projects such as new buildings and roads.
    • At a time when economic growth and levelling-up is a key aim of the new government, councils say they will have little choice but to cut back on growth-related activity. Almost two-thirds (65%) of respondents said it was ‘likely or very likely’ that they will pause or cancel some economic growth and major road projects as well as routine road maintenance, whilst 81% said it was ‘likely or very likely’ they would have to pause or cancel projects such as building new leisure centres and bus or train station improvements. In addition, 78% said it was ‘likely or very likely’ they would have to scale back climate change action.
    • Services for the elderly, vulnerable people and children could be scaled back. In total, 72% of councils said it is ‘likely or very likely’ they would tighten eligibility for adult social care services, and 56% said they would likely have to reduce reablement and community-based adult social care services. In addition, 63% would scale back school transport services, with almost half – 44% – councils said it is ‘likely or very likely’ they would have to cut support packages to young people with special educational needs, with 45% reducing the number of children’s centres and youth services.
    • Highly valued everyday services would also see reductions, unless further funding is made available. In total, 75% of respondents said it was ‘likely or very likely’ they would cut some or all bus route subsidies which enables services to run on uncommercial routes. Almost two thirds – 63% – said it was ‘likely or very likely’ they would turn off an increased amount of streetlights or turn them off at certain periods in the night. Over half (56%) of councils also said they would likely reduce the number of libraries and (53%) household waste recycling centres or cut their opening hours

    The release of today’s questionnaire follows CCN publishing a document with the Society of County Treasurers and LG Futures last month, which projected councils’ funding pressures over the next 18 months due to inflation and demand. You can download it here.

    With inflation soaring this current year, significant shortfalls have opened up in every single county authority’s budget. To address this, CCN members are using their reserves this year but these can only be spent once and are viewed as a very short-term solution.

    The CCN says that many of its councils are facing a ‘cliff edge’ where even making substantive cuts to frontline and highly-valued services may not be enough to prevent them from issuing a Section 114 notice. For all of its member councils, difficult decisions over what services to reduce will have to be made with many likely to offer just the bare minimum in local services.

    The CCN has written to the Chancellor to outline the scale of the challenge facing its members, which calls on the Treasury to maintain existing 2021 Spending Review commitments for local government at the very minimum, and not propose any reductions. However, the councils say that the government needs to go further to support councils to cope with rising inflationary costs by increasing direct funding or reprioritising existing spending commitments.

    Cllr Sam Corcoran, Labour Vice-Chairman of the County Councils Network said:

    “The next two years are shaping up to be some of the most challenging for councils in recent memory. After a decade of austerity and with inflation soaring, if the Chancellor does not spare councils from further cuts and provide more funding for local authorities, everything is on the table when considering which vital services to cut.

    “This County Councils Network budget survey paints a clear picture of what will happen if we do not receive more funding to address inflationary and demand pressures. Councils will have little choice but to reduce vital everyday services and those for the most vulnerable in society, as well as economic growth projects and those aimed at tackling climate change. Reducing these all create a false economy that stores up problems for the future.

    “Even these decisions will not be enough, with less than one in five councils confident of setting a balanced budget next year without further support. This is why it is vital that the government recognise the value in supporting councils – with investment in local government allowing us to continue vital economic growth and climate action, supporting people to stay outside of hospital settings, and provide vital services people rely on every day.”

  • David Lammy – 2022 Speech to Christian Aid’s Annual Lecture

    David Lammy – 2022 Speech to Christian Aid’s Annual Lecture

    The speech made by David Lammy, the Shadow Foreign Secretary, on 22 November 2022.

    It is a great honour to give this lecture at Christian Aid.

    An organisation that fights injustice, supports victims of humanitarian emergencies, and defends human rights.

    The Christian faith that my mother taught me has always been, and will always be, central to my values.

    And I’ll tell you why. It’s because in the example of Jesus we learn of a man willing to challenge power.

    Not simply saying ‘this is sad’ but ‘this is wrong’.

    Someone who sought to end cruelties and injustices because he saw in every single one of us one of his Father’s children.

    I believe it was in this spirit that in 1952, a group of Labour MPs, led by future Labour Prime Minister Harold Wilson, published a pamphlet called the ‘War on Want’.

    It set out a challenge not only for the UK, but for the whole of the Global North and our allies.

    “Transcending all our immediate problems,” the War on Want group said a year before, “the gap between the rich and the poor of the earth is the supreme challenge of the next 50 years.”

    Let me say that again. The gap between the rich and poor of the earth is the supreme challenge.

    Because here too were individuals recognising that gaps – in wealth, in dignity, in power – offend us on a moral level just as much as suffering touches us on an emotional one.

    And that is what I want to talk to you about tonight.

    About how we can have a new development approach, fit for the 2020s, that addresses questions of power and inequality, just as vigorously as the last Labour government sought to tackle the very worst forms of poverty we then faced.

    It would be wrong to fail to recognise the progress the world has made since Harold Wilson was launching his war on want.

    In 1950, nearly two-thirds of the world were living in extreme poverty.

    Today that figure is estimated at around 9%.

    Hundreds of millions have been lifted out of the most dire poverty.

    Smallpox was eradicated.

    Infant and youth mortality has vastly reduced.

    Vaccinations rates for preventable diseases have soared.

    Extraordinary progress has been made.

    And yet few look upon the world with optimism at present.

    Today, we face enormous challenges – old and new, immediate and long term.

    The world today is facing acute humanitarian crises.

    Not only stubborn poverty and pervasive inequality, but famine, conflict, climate change, refugee and migration flows and global health insecurity.

    Earlier this year I was sitting in a classroom in district 17 on the north-west outskirts of Kabul with a group of women helping children displaced by war.

    One told me she was considering selling a kidney so she could put food on the table for her family.

    Another explained she was having suicidal thoughts.

    A third asked me: “Two or three generations have suffered. Will another generation suffer? Should we have hope or is it just hopeless?”

    In Afghanistan alone, more than 18 million people are facing potentially life-threatening food insecurity.

    But this is just one pocket of desperation in a world that is becoming increasingly insecure.

    Drought is gripping the Horn of Africa.

    Up to 26 million people will face food shortages in Kenya, Ethiopia and Somalia over the next six months.

    In Lebanon, real terms food inflation has spiked to 72 per cent.

    According to the World Food Programme, 345 million are facing acute food insecurity in 82 countries.

    A new global coalition – Hungry for Action – of which many of you in this room are a part, has been formed to campaign against this outrage, standing in a long tradition from the anti-apartheid struggle to Jubilee 2000 and Make Poverty History.

    But while this new effort shares its heritage with those great campaigns of the past, it is also new because , for the first time, it brings the worlds of development and domestic poverty together, something I know Christian Aid has been keen to do for some time.

    Because it cannot be right to say to my constituents in Tottenham that their pain, in this terrible cost of living crisis we are facing, somehow matters less than that of our brothers and sisters overseas.

    That the sleepless nights of a worried mother who knows there is nothing to give her children for breakfast matter if they are spent in Hargeisa but not in Haringey.

    The answer to those who say ‘charity begins at home’ cannot be ‘you don’t know how lucky you are’.

    No. It must be ‘we stand together, because no child should be hungry anywhere at any time, when we live in a world of plenty and a century of promise.

    Charity might begin at home, but it shouldn’t end there.

    So this idea that we must stand together as people experiencing inequality wherever we are in the world is one of many ways that the world has changed since Labour came into power 25 years ago in 1997.

    It is not the only thing that is different.

    On the one hand Covid, the Global Financial Crisis, the global energy crisis, the climate emergency show that the world is more interdependent than ever – with our fates more closely intertwined.

    On the other hand our world now is more divided.

    More aggressive, more transactional, more short-termist, more dangerous.

    In 1997, the UK economy was almost double the size of China’s.

    Today, China’s economy is roughly six times the size of the UK.

    Where economic gravity has shifted, international institutions have been put under strain.

    The UN remains vital, but Russia’s veto on the Security Council limits its power.

    Populists and autocrats are blocking the path to progress, pursuing narrow nationalist interests and fanning the flames of division.

    Our problems require collective solutions, but collective action seems harder than ever.

    As we neglect the multilateral institutions that have been at the heart of so much progress, China is intent on reshaping and in some cases replacing them creating their own institutions through which to make investments and deliver aid.

    Western development assistance is just one part of shifting financial flows.

    ODA from donor countries – totalling $180bn last year – is dwarfed by remittances which were $773bn last year, more than four times bigger.

    And funding and debt from authoritarian states are reshaping the development map.

    These funds come without the restraints and expectations of development assistance, but with other strings attached.

    It is no coincidence which countries in the Global South have abstained at UN votes instead of condemning Putin’s illegal invasion.

    The role of the IMF is now rivalled by Chinese investment, which is now the largest official bilateral creditor in more than half of the world’s 73 poorest countries.

    Visit the capitals of the developing world and it is glaringly obvious the sheer scale of investment and construction from China.

    We are still working out how to compete in this current reality while remaining committed to our values, but we do not have time to waste.

    In the decade ahead, these trends reshaping the world will only intensify.

    The most significant of all is the climate emergency – the greatest challenge the world faces.

    The UN warned recently that the world is on course for a catastrophic 2.8C of warming, in part because the promises made at COP26 a year ago have not been fulfilled.

    This would deliver devastating consequences for our natural world and dangerous, destabilising effects for all countries.

    It would usher in an era of cascading risks as the uncontrolled effects of global heating result in more frequent extreme heat, sea level rises, drought and famine.

    This will end up hitting us in the UK too. We are seeing its effects already with floods and heatwaves becoming the norm not the exception.

    Global heating will hurt us all.

    But the truth is that developing countries and people living in poverty are the most exposed to the worst consequences of the climate emergency.

    I have just returned from COP27 in Egypt, where the issue of loss and damage was front and centre.

    The agreement to create a new fund is an important step forward in recognising the consequences of the climate crisis for the world’s most climate-vulnerable countries.

    This is a matter of solidarity, and the reality that those most likely to be affected by climate change are the least able to afford to adapt to it.

    The UK government already supports poorer countries to cut emissions, and to adapt to climate change.

    Loss and damage is about coping with the disastrous effects.

    But on the necessary actions to keep global warming to 1.5 degrees yet again we hear the unmistakable sound of the can being kicked down the road – and as a result it is now at grave risk.

    Too many countries were clearly resistant to what is required, including on fossil fuels.

    And the government’s leadership has been weak, with the Prime Minister having to be embarrassed into even showing up.

    We need a government that can step up – delivering cheap, home-grown zero-carbon power at home so we have the credibility to pressure other countries to fulfil their obligations and play their part.

    Given what is at stake, it is easy to be pessimistic.

    But I still believe that multilateralism – incremental and imperfect as it may be – remains our best hope to face our common challenges.

    The rise of geopolitical competition just makes it harder.

    And we need to work much harder to show that multilateralism works in the interests of the whole world, not just its most prosperous nations.

    Development and diplomacy are our best tools in the fight against poverty, conflict, and climate change.

    But instead of straining to make multilateralism work I am afraid our government has sometimes seemed intent on breaking our relationships and trashing our reputation.

    12 years of Conservative government has left Britain disengaged, forgetting that sharing vaccines and investing in global health makes our citizens less likely to experience deadly pandemics.

    Forgetting that tackling climate change will stop sea levels rising and submerging British towns.

    Forgetting that reducing key drivers of the refugee crisis – poverty and conflict – will make a more secure world for everyone.

    Under this government the Conservatives have knocked down the pillars upon which Britain’s development leadership was built.

    First, they retreated from Britain’s commitments – cutting our development target from 0.7 to 0.5, and stripped billions from vital aid programmes in the process.

    They lost credibility by failing to meet promises on climate and covid.

    Then, they undermined delivery, overseeing a bungled merger between DFID and the Foreign Office – deprioritising development, sapping morale and pushing out expertise.

    Now, they are projected to spend £3 billion of the development budget here, in the UK, to cover the costs of incoming refugees.

    Meaning billions in foreign aid never leave Britain.

    Their retrograde strategy for development, takes a transactional approach to aid which risks repeating the worst mistakes of the past.

    The improvement in the UK’s credibility on aid after the horrors of the Pergau Dam was not a matter of chance, but of choice.

    The choice to untie aid and focus it on the goal of poverty eradication.

    The Conservatives’ approach to trade is today a shameful shambles, as none other than George Eustice has recently found the courage, after office, to concede.

    It reflects not so much a mindset of “Global Britain” but “Little England”.

    The Tories fail to understand that neglecting the challenges of climate, conflict, famine and global health makes all of us less safe, and will work against Britain’s national interests in the long term.

    This shift towards making aid transactional is not only damaging our reputation for development, it reduces our diplomatic influence.

    When we had a clear moral purpose, focused on helping those most in need, there was far less suspicion about our own agenda.

    The time for post imperial delusions is over, it’s time for a new and more effective approach.

    And this brings me back to where I started, with the idea that we shouldn’t have any sort of hidden agenda, but a public and radical one.

    Our ambition should be nothing less than redistributing power to people – particularly women and girls – at the sharpest end of inequality at home, and around the world.

    For Britain’s development to get back on track, we need a Labour government.

    You only need to look at history to know that we are the party that can be trusted as a force for good.

    What has today become known as international development arose originally from a plan to extract even more profit from the colonies.

    After World War One, Britain experienced large-scale unemployment.

    UK politicians reasoned that if British colonies were given loans for capital projects that required British imports, unemployment at home would reduce.

    The 1924 Trade Facilities Act did just this.

    By 1929, the colonial Development fund was established for 10 years of up to £1 million per year.

    The fund was predominantly targeted at the West Indies and Africa, and it was presented as in Parliament as in the interests of Britain rather than the colonies themselves.

    It was not until the 1950s that Britain’s thinking towards international development began to mature.

    This happened for two reasons.

    First, Britain’s empire was rapidly collapsing.

    Second, there was growing international recognition that richer countries would need to assist poorer countries on their journey to economic and social progress.

    The US, which at the time provided two-thirds of resources to developing nations, demanded fairer burden sharing.

    And the issue moved up the agenda of the UN.

    But it was not until the Labour government of 1964 that a Ministry of Overseas Development was created.

    Harold Wilson, who had helped write the ‘war on want’ pamphlet, finally got his wish.

    In 1997, Labour created the department for international development, which became renowned around the world.

    More important than the structural model of delivery was the seismic shift in ambition that Labour brought to development policy.

    Under the leadership of Tony Blair and Gordon Brown we set our sights on an eventual target of 0.7%.

    It was one of the greatest successes of our last period in office.

    Through international aid, Labour helped lift 3 million people out of poverty each year.

    1.5 million people got improved water and sanitation services.

    3 million more people got access to drugs for HIV and AIDs.

    We helped 40 million extra children go to school.

    And we made huge progress on eradicating polio.

    At Gleneagles in 2005, Labour led an international campaign to cancel 100 per cent of multilateral debts for the world’s poorest countries while securing an extra billion dollars of aid.

    In September 2008, the UK played a key role in the Millennium Conference making progress on malaria, food, education and health.

    And we supported an Environmental Transformation Fund, anticipating the urgent action needed to tackle climate change.

    One of Labour’s lasting achievements had been to forge a new political consensus around development that it was in Britain’s interests, that it should be rigorous and transparent, focused on effectiveness and value for money, and that it was something that Britain should truly be proud of.

    To their credit, David Cameron and George Osborne sustained that commitment, keeping Britain on the path to 0.7% that Labour had set it on.

    And while there is much that I disagree with them on, this was an important area of broad cross-party consensus.

    Under the numerous Tory prime ministers since then… Boris Johnson, Liz Truss and Rishi Sunak that consensus has broken down.

    At the time when – as I described earlier – humanitarian need is soaring not falling, and the challenges of famine, conflict and climate threaten our security.

    Labour made Britain a world leader in development before and we can do it again.

    In a world of global challenges, and political divides, we need both the long-term transformational agenda of development, and the political nous of good diplomacy.

    Both will be essential as we continue that hard work towards the ambitions of the Sustainable Development Goals and beyond.

    We must be able to lead by example – not break our word or commitments.

    That goes for the treaties we sign with our closest partners in Europe or the promises we made to deliver climate finance to the developing world.

    It means not reducing our focus on development while asking others to do more.

    It means not preaching to others about Net Zero without a credible plan to get there ourselves.

    It means rediscovering the core principles that should guide us: our commitment to human rights, democracy and the rule of law.

    But our approach to development must also evolve with the world we are living in.

    We must be realistic about the role and contribution of Western donors.

    Development finance and policy are vital but they are not the only – or indeed the main driver – of global economic development.

    Overstating our own influence downplays the other profound forces at work and undermines the agency of developing countries themselves.

    Instead, we must be focused on where we can really make a difference.

    We must adapt to a world where lower and middle income countries across Africa and Asia have greater economic weight, and greater political influence.

    Our approach should be grounded in a deeper understanding of our own history, and the way people in many countries in the Global South view the historical role of the UK.

    It must be sensitive to the criticisms of aid as patronising or paternalistic, and build instead modern relations of equals, two-way partnerships based on respect and mutual trust.

    I think of the example of the development sector’s understandable pre-occupation with the fair distribution of vaccines around the world.

    It is of course an injustice that millions of Europeans were vaccinated many times over while much of the world waited for a first dose.

    All because a few wealthy nations stockpiled more vaccines than they could ever use.

    This cannot happen again.

    But our goal must be even bigger: for intellectual property and manufacturing capacity to be shared around the world so that countries are producing their own vaccines, not waiting for our leftovers.

    That’s what I mean when I talk about power. The old slogan was ‘justice not charity’.

    I want us to go further and think not about justice bestowed but power claimed.

    The power for people to chart their own futures.

    Development policy must be rooted in the aspiration for lives of dignity and opportunity across the world.

    I’m sure that everyone in Britain shares this aspiration, and we must show them that being a good partner to low-income countries is not only a great British tradition but an opportunity for our growth and prosperity too.

    Our development agenda must respond to the vast need for financial investment across the developing world, from a range of sources.

    Development should support the role of effective public services in the developing world to help support capable, accountable governance.

    We must work alongside our trade union movement and partners overseas to strengthen workers’ rights and fair labour practices.

    I am convinced that we can do more to share the experience of Britain’s most beloved institution at home – the NHS – to support the goal of universal health coverage abroad.

    And it must address the twin drivers of climate change and conflict – championing the green energy transition, climate finance, and supporting peace building and conflict prevention.

    Let me explain some of the ways Labour would set about doing this.

    First, we will become one of the world’s leading conveners.

    Our new foreign and security policy pact with the EU will enable a constructive working forum with our European partners.

    We will use our deep relationship with the United States to strengthen collaboration on development.

    We will use our membership of the UN Security Council, the G7 and the G20 to move development further up the international agenda.

    And the Commonwealth provides a unique opportunity to partner with the Global South.

    As my great colleague Ed Miliband has outlined, we will build a clean power alliance of developed and developing nations committed to renewable energy.

    If we prioritise development in all of these fora, Britain can become one of the world’s best connected and trusted leaders on aid.

    And Labour will be strategic in its approach to forming new partnerships with African nations.

    There is far more the UK can do to support aspirations in the most climate-vulnerable continent, but also the continent with the greatest potential for increased development and prosperity over the coming century.

    Second, we will use the power of example to extend the UK’s soft power.

    From our leadership on development to the brilliance of the BBC World Service and British Council, our credibility abroad starts from the strength of our support at home for these vital instruments of UK soft power

    Not by exchanging aid for trade. That would do the opposite.

    But by offering the best of Britain as partners in their own development.

    We need to offer an alternative to Chinese physical infrastructure – and link it to British innovation in education, governance and healthcare to support their own development.

    Third, yes, we will get Britain back on track to meet its commitment to the UN’s 0.7% development target, as soon as possible as the fiscal situation allows.

    Let me address today why even at a time of real economic hardship and fiscal constraint, I believe it is unequivocally in the UK’s national interest to restore the UK’s leadership in international development.

    For me, the answer is deep and deeply personal, the roots of my politics are nourished by the belief in the equal worth of every human being.

    A world this unequal and divided offends that fundamental belief.

    It demands a response based on solidarity, not simply sympathy.

    It demands a response based on justice, not charity.

    It demands a response based on dignity, not dependence.

    And it demands a response that recognises that in the UK we have a real national interest in a world that is more equal, more sustainable and more stable.

    So, for me, the case for UK leadership in international development combines a moral and a strategic dimension.

    It is not only the morally right approach. It is also the strategically smart approach.

    It’s about who we are, and the world we want to leave to our children and grandchildren.

    And we will target this development assistance for the most impact.

    Prioritising early, smart and innovative development interventions.

    Getting people into decent employment using locally driven information.

    Restoring the role of our trade unions in supporting development policy and programmes, through their partnerships with sister labour organisations across the world.

    And using private sector finance where interests align.

    For example, the International Rescue Committee’s partnership with Google in Nigeria which uses satellite imagery to trigger cash payments to communities in advance of extreme weather events.

    We will set up a new taskforce to coordinate private sector support for development finance in line with the government’s priorities.

    Fourth, learning the lessons of the government’s bungled merger we will create a new model for international development to meet the challenges of the 21st century.

    Labour has always maintained that development and diplomacy are related but distinct, and our new model will have the independence needed to reflect those important differences and empowers both to meet the challenges of the 21st century.

    We are working at the moment on what are the best structures of delivery to restore transparency, value for money and focus to the UK’s international development.

    We are consciously and purposely looking outwards not inwards, and forward not back in undertaking this work.

    We are looking at best practice in the sector internationally and looking at what are the challenges of the coming decades.

    In this task, development organisations like Christian Aid have a crucial role and we want your help.

    As we continue this work, we want to hear your fresh thinking on how we met the development challenges of tomorrow.

    Just as in the past, it will fall to an incoming Labour Government to once again move the UK’s development efforts back into a position of international leadership so we’re determined to do the work, look at the evidence and reach the correct outcome.

    Fifth, we remain committed to a feminist development policy.

    Away from the world’s gaze, millions of school age girls across Africa face forced marriage, with all the dangers and humiliations it wreaks on a child’s life.

    But we’ve seen the shameful deletion of references to protecting women and girls’ reproductive rights in the Government’s statement on freedom of religion or belief and gender equality.

    As we approach the 16 Days of Activism against Gender Based Violence, Labour reaffirms its commitment to the UN Sustainable Development Goals of reaching gender equality.

    And sixth, we will recognise the inextricable link between tackling the climate crisis and global development for all.

    A Labour government will campaign for climate action to become a fourth pillar of the UN, and push for a new international law of ecocide to criminalise the wilful and widespread destruction of the environment.

    And as our excellent Shadow Cabinet Minister for Development, Preet Gill, set out at conference, Labour will legislate to make sure that Britain’s aid budget makes climate action a priority.

    The world today is increasingly insecure.

    Too many people live under authoritarian regimes, denied the dignity of democracy.

    I know many of us will have been praying for and thinking of the women of Iran in particular in recent days.

    Too many are still in poverty, while the gap between them and the super rich grows.

    Covid and Climate Change show how disease and disaster know no borders.

    International rules, multilateral institutions and political leadership are needed more than ever.

    Throughout our history, Britain has played a leading role in establishing this system.

    Helping to create institutions like the UN and NATO.

    But today our leaders in government are jeopardising it.

    Acting outside of the rule of law for domestic, short-term reasons.

    Undermining the system that keeps our people safe in a lame effort to protect their own jobs.

    The Conservatives have focussed more on protecting themselves than protecting others.

    Britain can be better than this.

    Britain must be better than this.

    It is time to repair our relationships with our allies around the world.

    Revitalise our nation’s soft power, influence and impact with a renewed strategy for modernising international development.

    Restore the influence of multilateral institutions like the UN.

    Once again reach the target of 0.7% because it is the national interest for Britain to be a force for good.

    Only by playing our role in fixing the problems around the world will we be able to provide security and prosperity at home.

    In a dark age of authoritarians and populism Labour will shine a light for democracy, the multilateral system and human progress once again.

  • Ed Davey – 2022 Statement on Carers Rights Day

    Ed Davey – 2022 Statement on Carers Rights Day

    The statement made by Ed Davey, the Leader of the Liberal Democrats, on 23 November 2022.

    People looking after their loved ones are doing a remarkable job, often in very difficult circumstances. This is something I know all too well, as a carer for most of my life – first for my mum, then for my gran, and now for my disabled son, John.

    This year, we mark the theme of Caring Costs. It’s clear that Caring Costs in so many ways, whether it’s emotional or financial. Especially in light of the cost of living crisis.

    Up and down the country, family carers are facing huge pressures. Soaring energy costs and fuel prices can make it difficult to undertake their caring responsibilities. At the same time, many carers are struggling to juggle paid work with their caring responsibilities. And Carer’s Allowance remains the lowest benefit of its kind, at just £69.70 a week.

    But yet again, the Conservatives are completely ignoring family carers. They were left out of the £650 Cost of Living Payment  – and have even seen their support slashed by £207 this year, once soaring inflation is factored in.

    Our carers deserve so much better than this. That’s why Liberal Democrats are calling on the Conservatives to extend their £650 Cost of Living Payment to all those on Carer’s Allowance. And we will keep campaigning to increase Carer’s Allowance by £1000 each year.

    Carers and their loved ones desperately need extra support this winter. And Liberal Democrats will keep fighting for them.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Mebyon Kernow demands housing justice and ban on Airbnbs [November 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : Mebyon Kernow demands housing justice and ban on Airbnbs [November 2022]

    The press release issued by Mebyon Kernow on 21 November 2022.

    Mebyon Kernow members unanimously backed a call for an immediate ban on residential dwellings being allowed to become airbnbs at their National Conference, held at Heartlands in Pool on Saturday (19th November).

    In a wide-ranging debate about the housing emergency in Cornwall, party members expressed anger at the dysfunctional and out-of-control housing market, which is doing harm to so many people and their communities.

    The Conference even heard personal testimony from people who had recent experience of struggling to find accommodation, including a young person who had to live in temporary accommodation in a Travelodge for many months.

    Party members reaffirmed MK’s commitment to the prioritisation of proper local-needs housing over the delivery of open-market housing. They also pledged to continue to campaign for planning policies to control and reverse the spread of second homes.

    Delegates at the Conference also demanded planning controls on airbnbs and an immediate ban on residential dwellings being allowed to operate as such holiday accommodation, while also calling for rent controls and an end to evictions as has been brought forward in Scotland through the Cost of Living (Tenant Protection) Act which recently went through the Scottish Parliament.

    Delegates at the Conference also launched the “Towards a Cornish Parliament,” and hit out at the inadequate “county deal” about to be published by the UK Government.

    Speaking at the Conference, MK leader Cllr Dick Cole expressed disappointment at how central government was not doing enough to deal with the housing emergency and repeated MK demands for meaningful devolution.

    He said: “The proposed ‘county deal’ will not include any decent controls over housing and planning. There has been a housing crisis in Cornwall for decades, but it is now worse than it has ever been. Devolution is needed to provide Cornwall with the tools to achieve housing justice. We are restating our commitment to a new political system – a Cornish Parliament – with all aspects of housing and planning devolved to Cornwall, which we will believe will be better placed to deliver housing justice.”

  • PRESS RELEASE : Cornwall needs a Parliament, not inadequate “county deal” [November 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : Cornwall needs a Parliament, not inadequate “county deal” [November 2022]

    The press release issued by Mebyon Kernow on 21 November 2022.

    With the UK Government about to publish its proposed “county deal” for Cornwall’s unitary authority, Mebyon Kernow members have hit out at the inadequate nature of the deal.

    Members of MK were gathered at Heartlands in Pool for MK’s 2022 National Conference on Saturday (19th November) and also launched a policy document, which makes the case for a Cornish Parliament.

    Speaking at the event, MK leader Cllr Dick Cole told delegates that the so-called “devolution” on offer from the UK Government is not devolution at all.

    Cllr Cole said: “To the Westminster parties, devolution is not the far-reaching shift of powers away from Westminster, that led to reconvening of the Scottish Parliament and the creation of a Welsh Parliament. To them, it is all about tweaks to local government.”

    He criticized London-based political parties for being unable to see Cornwall as anything other than a local government unit and viewing “devolution” as limited accommodations with Cornwall Council, adding it was actually a form of “business as usual,” rather than meaningful democratic change.

    Party members at the MK Conference:

    – Condemned the UK Government for refusing to treat Cornwall as one of the nations of the United Kingdom and seeking to impose an inadequate local government “county deal;”

    – Reaffirmed MK’s view that Cornwall merits devolution parity with Scotland and Wales, through the creation of a Cornish Parliament;

    – Mandated MK councillors on the unitary authority to argue for a Cornish Parliament during upcoming discussions on the “county deal,” and

    – Challenged other political parties to participate in a “national conversation” about meaningful devolution for Cornwall.

    In addition, MK members voted to oppose the proposed imposition of a “local government mayor” on Cornwall Council.

    The policy document “Towards a Cornish Parliament” will underpin MK’s ongoing campaign for greater self-government.