Tag: 2022

  • Geraint Davies – 2022 Speech on Government PPE Contracts, Michelle Mone and PPE Medpro

    Geraint Davies – 2022 Speech on Government PPE Contracts, Michelle Mone and PPE Medpro

    The speech made by Geraint Davies, the Labour MP for Swansea West, in the House of Commons on 24 November 2022.

    Geraint Davies (Swansea West) (Lab/Co-op)

    The Welsh Labour Government received £874 million for PPE as its population-proportionate share, but spent only £300 million—about a third of the money given. That suggests, says Cardiff University, that the UK Government could have saved £8 billion, or £300 a household across the UK, had they used public authorities, health authorities and councils instead of private profiteering contractors known to Ministers. Will the Minister look carefully at the Welsh model and, in future, use the public sector rather than private sector cronies known to Ministers such as the former Health and Social Care Secretary, the right hon. Member for West Suffolk (Matt Hancock), who is out in the jungle making more money for himself?

    Neil O’Brien

    Inevitably, a huge amount of the PPE that is produced in the world is produced by private companies. There is no world in which we could avoid the use of private companies to supply PPE.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Foreign Secretary to discuss strengthening NATO’s long-term resilience at Foreign Ministers meeting [November 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : Foreign Secretary to discuss strengthening NATO’s long-term resilience at Foreign Ministers meeting [November 2022]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 29 November 2022.

    Foreign Secretary James Cleverly will this week reiterate the importance of enhancing support to Ukraine with NATO allies.

    • Foreign Secretary James Cleverly will reaffirm the importance of enhancing support for Ukraine against Russian aggression with NATO Allies.
    • The Prime Minister and Foreign Secretary’s recent visits to Ukraine underscore UK’s resolve to support the Ukrainian people.
    • The Foreign Secretary will also attend the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe Ministerial Council in Lodz, Poland.

    The Foreign Secretary will discuss how the Alliance will strengthen its support for Ukraine and enhance its long-term resilience at NATO’s Foreign Ministers meeting, which takes place in Bucharest, Romania this week (Tuesday 29 and Wednesday 30 November).

    Ukraine will be top of the agenda when the Alliance meets, with NATO’s Foreign Ministers set to hold discussions on how best to continue supporting Ukraine as the war enters winter.

    The Alliance will also discuss its long-term objectives for enhancing its defences. Finland and Sweden will join their first Foreign Ministerial meeting as NATO invitees, ahead of their accession to the Alliance. Their membership will make Europe safer and grow NATO to 32 countries.

    The UK and the Alliance will also be focused on solidifying their support to partner countries where Russia is exerting its destabilising influence. Moldova is joining the meeting at Foreign Minister level for the first time in history. The Foreign Ministers of Bosnia and Herzegovina and Georgia will also be present to discuss their ongoing cooperation with NATO.

    The meeting will build on discussions at NATO’s Madrid summit earlier in the year, where allies agreed that China is a challenge that requires NATO to build a global perspective. Today’s meeting in Bucharest will look to operationalise the decisions taken by leaders in Madrid and look ahead to next year’s Vilnius Summit.

    While in Bucharest, the Foreign Secretary will meet a range of partners, including both the Prime Minister and Foreign Minister of NATO host Romania.

    Foreign Secretary James Cleverly said:

    With Russia’s war disrupting peace in Europe it’s vital that NATO and its Allies look closely at how we shore up our defences to handle the challenges we face today.

    We are united in the long-term objective of supporting Ukraine and further strengthening NATO as a defensive alliance.

    The UK and its Allies will continue to show collective strength in dealing with the complex issues the world faces today, as we are doing in Bucharest today.

    Following his visit to NATO, the Foreign Secretary will be in Lodz, Poland for the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe’s Ministerial Council (OSCE) on Thursday 1 December. The UK is steadfast in its support for the OSCE and its principles, and its efforts to continue an OSCE presence in Ukraine in the face of Russian pressure.

    Russia, which as a participating State of the OSCE has freely signed up to its body of commitments, continues to frustrate its work by weaponising the consensus principle. Host Poland has restricted Russia from attending due to its illegal invasion of Ukraine.

    The Foreign Secretary will condemn Russia’s actions and reaffirm that the UK will continue to take action to further isolate Russia for its actions destabilising Europe.

  • PRESS RELEASE : British High Commission hosts reception to ‘Welcome the Return of England Test Cricket to Pakistan’ [November 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : British High Commission hosts reception to ‘Welcome the Return of England Test Cricket to Pakistan’ [November 2022]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 29 November 2022.

    On Monday 28 November, the British High Commission hosted a reception to welcome the return of the England Test cricket to Pakistan. In attendance were notable sports and media personalities, political figures, representatives from the ECB and PCB as well as cricket players who are set to play Test cricket in Pakistan for the first time in 17 years.

    The return of the England Test team comes amid a standout year for UK-Pakistan sporting and cultural ties, coinciding with the 75-year anniversary of UK-Pakistan relations, the Birmingham Commonwealth Games, the England T20 Pakistan cricket tour and the World Cup T20 England-Pakistan final. The Tests mark a highpoint, as 2022 draws to a close.

    The return of England cricket has coincided with a strong focus on the power of sports diplomacy – with both tours taking place following devastation caused by floods. Both the ECB and cricketers contributed to the UK’s DEC Pakistan flood appeal during the T20s which raised over £30m to provide lifesaving aid to those affected. England Test Captain, Ben Stokes, has also generously announced that he will be donating his match fees for this Test series to the DEC appeal. In addition the ECB in collaboration with the Lord’s Taverners, BA, IAG Cargo, Football for Peace and the Sarwar Foundation are shipping in 1 tonne of cricket kit to enable schools affected by flooding to rebuild their sports curriculums and help children return to a sense of normality.

    This sports diplomacy drive compliments a wider UK Government focus in supporting Pakistan’s resilience in the aftermath of the floods via education development. Through its programmes, the UK is currently supporting 40,000 marginalised children with back to school kits including essential textbooks, providing 8,000 dignity kits for adolescent girls, and delivering an accelerated learning programme to 30,000 children to help them catch up on lost learning due to flood disruption. These efforts will safeguard girls in particular, and in the coming months the UK is set to expand its educational drive even further with a ‘Girls and Out of school children: Action for Learning (GOAL)’ programme which will support 20,000 flood-affected students (at least 60% female) to return to education in 235 schools.

    The British High Commissioner, Dr Christian Turner said the following:

    Cricket teaches us to play hard, accept defeat and respect our opponents. The players, PCB and ECB are great ambassadors for their sport and it is a pleasure to welcome them to the High Commission. The generous donations to flood victims is a sign of the deep ties and affection between our two countries.

    England Batter, Ollie Pope, said:

    We’re delighted to return to Pakistan for this historic Test tour after such an exciting T20 series earlier this year. We’re grateful for the warm welcome we have received but also know that many communities have been impacted severely by the floods. It’s great to see so many different organisations coming together to arrange this donation of cricket equipment and hopefully it will go a small way to ensuring that children in some of the affected areas can still benefit from all the good that cricket can do as they try to recover.’

     

  • Mark Harper – 2022 Letter to the RMT Union and Mick Lynch

    Mark Harper – 2022 Letter to the RMT Union and Mick Lynch

    The letter sent by Mark Harper, the Secretary of State for Transport, to Mick Lynch, the General Secretary of the RMT, on 28 November 2022.

    Letter (in .pdf format)

  • PRESS RELEASE : New protections for children and free speech added to internet laws [November 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : New protections for children and free speech added to internet laws [November 2022]

    The press release issued by the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport on 28 November 2022.

    Online Safety Bill to include stronger protections for children, with platforms forced to be clearer with parents about dangers.

    • Legal but harmful provisions to be replaced with new duties to boost free speech and increase accountability of tech firms
    • Tougher measures to be added to protect women and girls from controlling or coercive behaviour

    New internet safety laws will go further than before to shield children and protect free speech online, thanks to improvements proposed by the government.

    Any incentives for social media firms to over-remove people’s legal online content will be taken out of the Online Safety Bill. Firms will still need to protect children and remove content that is illegal or prohibited in their terms of service, however the Bill will no longer define specific types of legal content that companies must address.

    This removes any influence future governments could have on what private companies do about legal speech on their sites, or any risk that companies are motivated to take down legitimate posts to avoid sanctions.

    New measures will also be added to make social media platforms more transparent and accountable to their users, as a result of amendments the Government will propose.

    The changes will offer users a ‘triple shield’ of protection when online: social media firms will be legally required to remove illegal content, take down material in breach of their own terms of service, and provide adults with greater choice over the content they see and engage with.

    Parents and the wider public will benefit from new changes to force tech firms to publish more information about the risks their platforms pose to children so people can see what dangers sites really hold.

    Firms will be made to show how they enforce their user age limits to stop kids circumventing authentication methods and they will have to publish details of when the regulator Ofcom has taken action against them.

    Digital Secretary Michelle Donelan said:

    Unregulated social media has damaged our children for too long and it must end.

    I will bring a strengthened Online Safety Bill back to Parliament which will allow parents to see and act on the dangers sites pose to young people. It is also freed from any threat that tech firms or future governments could use the laws as a licence to censor legitimate views.

    Young people will be safeguarded, criminality stamped out and adults given control over what they see and engage with online. We now have a binary choice: to get these measures into law and improve things or squabble in the status quo and leave more young lives at risk.

    Today’s announcement refocuses the Online Safety Bill on its original aims: the pressing need to protect children and tackle criminal activity online while preserving free speech, ensuring tech firms are accountable to their users, and empowering adults to make more informed choices about the platforms they use.

    It follows confirmation that the Bill will include new measures to make significant changes to the UK’s criminal law to increase protections for vulnerable people online by criminalising the encouragement of self-harm and the sharing of people’s intimate images without their consent.

    To make sure the Bill’s protections for adults online strike the right balance with its protections for free speech, duties relating to “legal but harmful” content accessed by adults will be removed from the legislation and replaced with the consumer-friendly ‘triple shield’.

    The Bill will instead give adults greater control over online posts they may not wish to see on platforms. If users are likely to encounter certain types of content – such as the glorification of eating disorders, racism, anti-semitism or misogyny not meeting the criminal threshold – internet companies will have to offer adults tools to help them avoid it. These could include human moderation, blocking content flagged by other users or sensitivity and warning screens.

    The legal but harmful measures will be replaced with new duties which strengthen the Bill’s free speech requirements on major online platforms to make them more accountable for their policies. It will explicitly prohibit them from removing or restricting user-generated content, or suspending or banning users, where this does not breach their terms of service or the law. In addition, firms will need to have clear, easy to understand and consistently enforced terms of service.

    It comes as new polling from Ipsos reveals that 83 per cent of people think social media companies should have a duty to protect children who are using their platforms (only 4 per cent disagree). Eight in ten people (78 per cent) want social media companies held accountable for keeping underage children off their platforms (only 7 per cent disagree).

    There is overwhelming public backing for action. Eight in ten people (81 per cent) think the government should make sure social media companies protect children when they are online and 77 per cent think social media companies should be punished if they don’t protect children.

    Sanjay Bhandari, Chair of Kick it Out, said:

    Users of social media have benefitted from a right that does not exist in the real world. Not only do they have freedom of speech but they have the freedom to force you to hear it. People who play, watch and work in football are often the victims of such vicious trolling

    We welcome the principle of extending the user empowerment provisions in the Bill to close this loophole. Social media companies will need to make available technology that enables each of us to have the online experience we desire. We shall review the amendments to the Bill in detail but encourage parliamentarians to move quickly.

    The Bill is due to return to Parliament next week. The first amendments have been tabled to the Bill in the Commons for Report Stage on 5 December. Further amendments will be made at later stages of the Bill’s passage.

    As well as making larger tech companies publish a summary of their risk assessments concerning the dangers their platforms pose to children, other moves to boost transparency and accountability include giving Ofcom a new power to require platforms to publish details of enforcement action it takes against them.

    Another set of amendments will boost protections for women and girls online by adding the criminal offence of controlling or coercive behaviour to the list of priority offences in the Bill. This means platforms will have to take proactive steps, such as putting in measures to allow users to manage who can interact with them or their content, instead of only responding when this illegal content is flagged to them through complaints

    In addition, the Victim’s Commissioner, Domestic Abuse Commissioner and Children’s Commissioner will be added as statutory consultees in the Bill, meaning Ofcom must consult with each when drafting the codes tech firms must follow to comply with the Bill.

    Dame Rachel De Souza, Children’s Commissioner for England, said:

    I am pleased that Government is bringing back the Online Safety Bill to Parliament. This landmark legislation is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to protect all children online, particularly the most vulnerable. “That’s why I am glad that the Children’s Commissioner is now recognised on the face of the Online Safety Bill as a statutory consultee to Ofcom’s codes of practice. This will enable me, in my unique position as representative of children’s rights and views, to oversee the codes which tech firms must follow to comply with the Bill – ensuring that children’s views and experiences are fully understood.

    We cannot allow any more children to suffer. The loss of children by suicide, after exposure to hideous self-harm and suicide content, are tragic reminders of the powerful consequences of online material. I am determined to see this Bill pass through Parliament. I will work to ensure that children’s voices and needs underpin each stage of the legislative process. I look forward to us all getting behind such a crucial moment to protect children online.

    Campaigner Lucy Alexander said:

    We live in an online world where bullying is 24/7. Young people are bombarded by harmful content online and there is no room for escape. It is on their phones, in their bedrooms and with them on their way to school.

    My son Felix was driven to suicide at the age of 17 due to the barrage of bullying he experienced online. This is the reason why I am on a mission to make sure no other child feels as much pain as he did. One death is one too many.

    The Online Safety Bill is a step in the right direction, it will hold social media accountable for protecting children online. The new changes to the bill will also see social media firms forced to publish risk assessments so that parents can see for themselves the dangers and risks that face children on these sites. It is time to prioritise the safety of our children and young people online.

  • Rishi Sunak – 2022 Speech on Foreign Policy to the Lord Mayor’s Banquet

    Rishi Sunak – 2022 Speech on Foreign Policy to the Lord Mayor’s Banquet

    The speech made by Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister, at the Guildhall in London on 28 November 2022.

    My Lord Mayor, Ladies and Gentlemen,

    Whether by virtue of history or accident of geography, our country has always looked out to the world.

    I was born in Southampton…

    … a port city the Victorians called the gateway to the world…

    … where the Mayflower set sail…

    … where Spitfires were built and allied troops embarked on D-Day.

    And just as we look out to the world, so the world often looks to Britain.

    Like many others, my grandparents came to the UK, via East Africa and the Indian subcontinent… and made their lives here.

    In recent years, we’ve welcomed thousands of people…

    …from Hong Kong, Afghanistan, and Ukraine.

    We’re a country that stands up for our values…

    … that defends democracy by actions not just words…

    A country that commits not just our resources but our ingenuity to better the lives of others, and ourselves.

    Ukrainian flags have flown over almost every town and city on these islands for the past nine months.

    No one told people to put them there.

    They felt moved to show solidarity with people they’ve never met, in a country most have never even visited…

    …to show their faith in fairness, freedom and the rule of law.

    These values are constant.

    They are set in stone.

    But as the world evolves, so does our application of those values.

    As Edmund Burke argued, circumstances and context are everything.

    And today the pace of geopolitical change is intensifying.

    Our adversaries and competitors plan for the long term.

    After years of pushing at the boundaries, Russia is challenging the fundamental principles of the UN Charter.

    China is conspicuously competing for global influence using all the levers of state power.

    In the face of these challenges, short-termism or wishful thinking will not suffice.

    We can’t depend on Cold War arguments or approaches, or mere sentimentality about our past.

    So we will make an evolutionary leap in our approach.

    This means being stronger in defending our values and the openness on which our prosperity depends.

    It means delivering a stronger economy at home, as the foundation of our strength abroad.

    And it means standing up to our competitors, not with grand rhetoric but with robust pragmatism.

    We will do all this…

    …not only through our diplomatic expertise, science and tech leadership, and investment in defence and security…

    …but by dramatically increasing the quality and depth of our partnerships with like-minded allies around the world.

    We will set out more detail in the updated Integrated Review in the new year…

    …including how we’ll work with friends in the Commonwealth, the US, the Gulf states, Israel and others.

    But tonight I’d like to describe how we’re already making this evolutionary leap in three other places.

    First, as we stand by Ukraine, we’re also reinvigorating our European relationships to tackle challenges like security and illegal migration.

    Second, we’re taking a longer-term view on China, strengthening our resilience and protecting our economic security.

    And third, we’re seizing the huge opportunities on offer in the Indo-Pacific by building deep and long-lasting partnerships.

    First, Ukraine.

    In Kyiv, I just saw how Russia’s focus is shifting from bruising encounters on the battlefield to brutalising the civilian population.

    It was written in the scarred buildings and the piles of rubble lining the streets…

    …in the stories of the first responders I met from liberated Kherson…

    …from the torture chambers to the booby traps left in children’s toys.

    As the world comes together to watch the World Cup…

    …I saw how an explosive device had been hidden inside a child’s football – seeking to make it a weapon of war.

    It defies belief.

    So be in no doubt, we will stand with Ukraine for as long as it takes.

    Next year we will maintain or even  increase our military aid.

    And we will provide new support for air defence, to protect the Ukrainian people and the critical infrastructure they rely on.

    By protecting Ukraine, we protect ourselves.

    With the fall of Kabul, the pandemic, the economic strife, some said the West was weak.

    In fact, our response in Ukraine has shown the depth of our collective resolve.

    Sweden and Finland are joining NATO.

    Germany is increasing its defence spending.

    Partners as far afield as Australia, Japan and South Korea are standing with us.

    We’ve developed an entirely new sanctions model.

    And through NATO and the Joint Expeditionary Force we’re guarding against further Russian aggression…

    …whether in the east or the High North.

    We’re also evolving our wider post-Brexit relations with Europe…

    …including bilaterally and engaging with the new European Political Community.

    But this is not about greater alignment.

    Under my leadership we’ll never align with EU law.

    Instead, we’ll foster respectful, mature relationships with our European neighbours on shared issues like energy and illegal migration…

    …to strengthen our collective resilience against strategic vulnerabilities.

    And that brings me to my second point.

    We also need to evolve our approach to China.

    Let’s be clear, the so-called “golden era” is over…

    …along with the naïve idea that trade would automatically lead to social and political reform.

    But nor should we rely on simplistic Cold War rhetoric.

    We recognise China poses a systemic challenge to our values and interests…

    …a challenge that grows more acute as it moves towards even greater authoritarianism.

    Instead of listening to their people’s protests, the Chinese Government has chosen to crack down further…

    …including by assaulting a BBC journalist.

    The media – and our parliamentarians – must be able to highlight these issues without sanction…

    …including calling out abuses in Xinjiang – and the curtailment of freedom in Hong Kong.

    Of course, we cannot simply ignore China’s significance in world affairs…

    …to global economic stability or issues like climate change.

    The US, Canada, Australia, Japan and many others understand this too.

    So together we’ll manage this sharpening competition, including with diplomacy and engagement.

    Much of this is about dramatically improving our resilience, particularly our economic security.

    That’s why we created new powers under the National Security and Investment Act…

    …it’s why we used them this month to block the sale of Newport Wafer Fab.

    It’s why we took action on 5G.

    And it’s why we’re ending global dependence on authoritarian regimes – starting with Russian gas.

    Now we’re also acting to deepen our ties in the Indo-Pacific – the third example of where we’re evolving our approach.

    Before I came into politics, like many of you, I invested in businesses around the world… and the opportunity in the Indo-Pacific is compelling.

    Take Indonesia, which I visited just this month.

    It’s a young, vibrant country…

    …the world’s third largest democracy…

    …poised to become a top 5 global economy.

    By 2050, the Indo-Pacific will deliver over half of global growth …

    …compared with just a quarter from Europe and North America combined.

    That’s why we’re joining the Trans-Pacific trade deal, the CPTPP…

    …delivering a new FTA with India…

    …and pursuing one with Indonesia.

    But in the Indo-Pacific economics and security are indivisible.

    60% of global trade passes through regional shipping routes…

    …including choke points like the straits of Malacca.

    It’s in our interests to keep these trade lines open.

    That’s why we joined the Five Power Defence Arrangements with Australia, Malaysia, New Zealand and Singapore half a century ago.

    And it’s why we’re evolving new long-term defence, industrial and technological partnerships…

    …like AUKUS with Australia and the US…

    …and the Future Combat Air System with Italy and Japan.

    By deepening these ties we’ll help protect the arteries and ventricles of the global economy…

    …supporting security and prosperity – both at home in our European neighbourhood and in the Indo-Pacific.

    My Lord Mayor,

    As we meet here tonight, the people of Ukraine are hunkered down in freezing temperatures, on the front line of the fight for freedom.

    In Iran, women are displaying the most humbling and breath-taking courage…

    …refusing to bow to thuggish, theocratic control.

    And tomorrow Iran’s football team will again stand with them in solidarity – facing unknown consequences as a result.

    Freedom and openness have always been the most powerful forces for progress.

    But they have never been achieved by standing still.

    As Henry Kissinger wrote:

    …during periods of crisis… whether war, technological change or economic dislocation… management of the status quo may be the riskiest choice of all.

    Under my leadership we won’t choose the status quo.

    We will do things differently.

    We will evolve…

    … anchored always by our enduring belief in freedom, openness and the rule of law…

    … and confident that in this moment of challenge and competition…

    … our interests will be protected… and our values will prevail.

    Thank you.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Ministerial Taskforce meets to tackle state threats to UK democracy [November 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : Ministerial Taskforce meets to tackle state threats to UK democracy [November 2022]

    The press release issued by the Home Office on 28 November 2022.

    The first meeting of the new Defending Democracy Taskforce took place today (Monday 28 November), chaired by the Security Minister Tom Tugendhat. Its primary focus will be to protect the democratic integrity of the UK from threats of foreign interference.

    Announced in the House of Commons earlier this month by the Security Minister, the Taskforce will work across government and with Parliament, the UK Intelligence Community, the devolved administrations, local authorities and the private sector on the full range of threats facing our democratic institutions.

    These threats include foreign interference in our elections and electoral processes; disinformation; physical and cyber threats to our democratic institutions and those who represent them; foreign interference in public office, political parties and universities; and transnational repression in the UK.

    Security Minister Tom Tugendhat said:

    State threats are growing and changing. My priority is, and has always been, to defend our country and the freedoms that guarantee our prosperity and sovereignty.

    We are bringing together experts from across Government, security and intelligence agencies to defend our democracy and our right to choose our own future.

    The National Security Bill, currently on its way to becoming law, will give the UK more tools to tackle these threats. These include a suite of new measures to tackle the full range of modern-day state threats, from sabotage and spying to foreign interference and economic espionage.

    The Taskforce will also bring together the many structures both inside and outside of Government which are aimed at protecting UK political parties, elected officials and core electoral infrastructure.

    It will seek to build resilience across all levels of the UK’s democratic system, including vital security practice for all elected officials, ensuring that core electoral infrastructure is secure. The Taskforce will seek to do this across all elements of the UK’s democratic system, working closely with the Devolved Administrations and Local Government Authorities.

    The work of the Taskforce will report into the National Security Council (NSC). More details will be set out in the update of the Integrated Review.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Grave concern for the increasing instability in the West Bank and Jerusalem – UK statement at UN [November 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : Grave concern for the increasing instability in the West Bank and Jerusalem – UK statement at UN [November 2022]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 28 November 2022.

    Statement by Ambassador Barbara Woodward at the Security Council meeting on the Situation in the Middle East.

    Thank you President, and thank you Special Coordinator Wennesland for your thoughtful briefing.

    The UK is gravely concerned by increasing instability in the West Bank and Jerusalem. Since 14 November, four Israelis have lost their lives in terror attacks in the city of Ariel and in Jerusalem, including a 16 year old. There is no justification for this violence. During this time, two Palestinian minors have also been killed in the West Bank, including a 15 year-old. 141 Palestinians have now been killed by Israeli Security Forces since 1 January – the most in a single year since UN records began in 2005. In the same period, 31 Israelis have also lost their lives. Each life lost is a tragedy for all communities, particularly the families affected. So this ongoing conflict needs to be resolved for the sake of all Israelis and Palestinians alike.

    The UK stands ready to support the new Israeli administration and the Palestinian Authority to deescalate and address the root drivers of conflict. The UK remains fully supportive of Israel’s right to self-defence. But Israeli Security Forces should show maximum restraint in the use of force, and investigate all Palestinian deaths.

    We urge both parties to engage in meaningful dialogue, refrain from escalatory actions, and work to restore trust and a pathway towards peace and a resolution of this conflict. The UK shares the concern of others at scenes of settler violence perpetrated against Palestinians in Hebron in recent days. Settler violence must end, and we call upon Israel to hold those responsible to account.

    We condemn the demolition by Israel of a primary school in Masafer Yatta. Mr. President, all children have a basic right to access education safely, and we call on the Government of Israel to uphold these rights.

    Finally, I urge Israel and the Palestinian Authority to accelerate efforts to improve the economic and humanitarian conditions in the West Bank and Gaza. I welcome ongoing dialogue to address PA Clearance Revenues and call for the parties to honour their recent AHLC commitments.

    The UK remains a firm supporter of a two state solution, based on 1967 lines, with Jerusalem as a shared capital, as the only way to ensure a lasting peace between the parties.

    Thank you President.

  • Steve Barclay – 2022 Speech at the Spectator Health Summit

    Steve Barclay – 2022 Speech at the Spectator Health Summit

    The speech made by Steve Barclay, the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, in London on 28 November 2022.

    In the Autumn statement – alongside difficult decisions designed to tackle inflation and keep mortgage rises down – the Prime Minister and the Chancellor made a clear commitment to public services, increasing the NHS budget by an extra £6.6 billion over the next two years and increasing funding for social care by £2.8 billion and £4.7 billion in each of the next two years. So, combined, £8 billion going into 2024.

    That recognises that what happens in our health and care system has a big impact on the wider economy.

    I’m pleased that investment and prioritisation was well-received within the NHS itself, with Amanda Pritchard, the NHS chief executive, welcoming our decision to prioritise health and the NHS Confederation calling it a “positive day for the NHS”.

    But with that financial package a key part now of my job is to make sure those funds are spent effectively.

    That means tackling the pandemic backlogs, operations, access to GPs, and urgent and emergency care. I’m sure this audience recognises that a big part of the challenge we face both with ambulance handovers and in A&E is shaped by what happens with delayed discharge – those patients who are fit to leave hospital but are often still in hospital for many days further.

    Now, efficiency within the NHS is often seen through the lens of finance.

    So, the case I want to make today is that efficiency is not just a finance priority – it’s a patient priority too.

    Because efficiency is an indicator of wider system health.

    An efficient system addresses bottlenecks that delay patient care by designing new journeys for patients that avoid those delays.

    Because quicker – and therefore earlier treatment – will lead to better patient outcomes whether that is from earlier cancer diagnoses, with the announcement a couple of weeks ago on direct access for GPs, or on antibiotics – getting the right antibiotic first time, rather than the third or fourth time. Obviously bringing significant patient benefits, but it is also efficient in terms of cost.

    So an efficient system will get better treatment to the patient and improvement patient outcomes, but in doing so, it will also unlock value for money.

    And for this to happen, we need to move to more personalised care – we can already see examples of this taking shape.

    During the pandemic, people got used to the idea of a Covid test being sent to them at home. Home testing offers the opportunity for patients to be tested for specific things, even before they realise they have the symptoms, enabling them to get care at a much earlier stage than what would have traditionally been the case.

    That kind of fast-tracking is not only potentially life-saving but it also will mean that the NHS over time will pay less for that care.

    Another example is what we set out in the Women’s Health Strategy around one stop shops, enabling women to access a range of services on a single visit. Not only do you improve the speed of care, but we also improve its effectiveness whilst delivering that at a lower cost.

    So we know whether through the Women’s Health Strategy, through Community Diagnostics Centres, through surgical hubs, we can deliver care in different ways – where the treatment is delivered to the patient at an earlier point than is currently the case, but in turn will unlock better value for money.

    And that requires us to think differently about the mix of services. Let me give you an example in terms of Pharmacy First. Pharmacist First you would have thought, in the name, would involve the pharmacy being indeed first, and yet, quite often, the patient goes to the pharmacy before the GP programme referral, suggesting the scope to further streamline the process.

    So, in short, quicker access to treatment means addressing bottlenecks, delivering new pathways, and in doing so, unlocking better outcomes for patients.

    But for this to really take root, we need to be open about our attitude to risk and our risk appetite.

    Currently, I believe the NHS scores the risk of innovation too highly when compared to the risks of the status quo and I think that needs to be recalibrated.

    This is because innovation tends to be judged, in isolation, in a silo.

    Take for example the risks around the introducing machine learning.

    On its own, it may carry some risk. But that risk should be judged against the risk of the status quo, where there may be long delays due to staff shortages, and so the speed of treatment and the ability to better target valuable resource needs to be weighed as part of the risk assessment of that innovation.

    So, we need to be scoring innovation risk within a much wider context than simply looking at it in a silo.

    And as we change our risk appetite for innovation, we also need to change our risk appetite for transparency.

    Because only when we’re transparent about the challenges we face will we empower greater patient choice, particularly in the context of vested interests which are inevitable in a budget of £182 billion.

    It’s also why we need senior clinicians to lead that change too.

    And why I’m so pleased that Professor Sir Tim Briggs – one of the country’s most highly regarded orthopaedic surgeons is taking up his new leadership role as Clinical Lead for the Elective Recovery Programme working closely with Sir Jim Mackey, one of the country’s most respected hospital CEOs.

    Now, one shared point of understanding must be the scale of the Covid backlog, with around now 7.1 million patients.

    We must also be transparent coming out of Covid around excess deaths.

    For example, we know from the data that there are more 50 to 64-year-olds with cardiovascular issues.

    It’s the result of delays in that age group seeing a GP because of the pandemic and in some cases, not getting statins for hypertension in time.

    When coupled with delays to ambulance times we see this reflected in the excess death numbers.

    In time, we may well see a similar challenge in cancer data.

    I want us to innovate around challenges like this.

    We already know that GPs are under pressure. So what else can we do by way of innovation?

    Well, let me give you just one example – we could think about how employers can help us better reach those who might otherwise not come forward?

    So, by being more transparent around who to prioritise on excess deaths, I believe we can engage employers and different ways of reaching key groups.

    When we are collectively understanding the challenges, it becomes easier to find the solutions.

    We also need to be clear about some of the demographic headwinds we face too.

    We have an ageing population.

    By the end of this decade, there are projected to be over four times as many people aged over 80, as a proportion of the population, that there were around the time the NHS was set up.

    On average, treating an 80-year-old is four times more expensive that treating a 50-year-old.

    And as proportion of the population, we have fewer working people to pay for healthcare.

    Around the time the old age pension came in over a century ago in England and Wales, we had 19 people aged 20 to 69, for every person over 70.

    Today that figure is down closer to 5 to 1.

    At the same time, healthcare continues to become more expensive.

    But in the face of such headwinds – from an ageing population or on the legacy of the Covid backlogs – it’s important we also focus on where we have the ability to turn the tide.

    Today I want to pick out on just two of those:

    The expansion of life sciences – and the promise of new treatments and the embrace of technology and the better use of data.

    As today is Life Sciences Day, that’s where I’ll start.

    When we published our Life Sciences Vision last year we also launched ambitious missions, from dementia to vaccine discovery.

    And I’m pleased that we’re seeing four more missions on cancer, obesity, mental health and addiction – and we’re backing those with £113 million of new funds.

    It’s an example of how we’re turning our country’s cutting-edge research capabilities onto the biggest healthcare challenges that we face and doing so in a way where the British people can really experience the benefits.

    And these missions will continue to benefit from the incredible life sciences ecosystem we have built here in the UK, from the MHRA, to NICE, to the NHS.

    And just this morning, that powerful collaboration has seen us give the go ahead to a new life-extending treatment on the NHS for patients with advanced stage prostate cancer. It’s another example of how that ecosystem is working for the benefits of patients.

    Another increasingly important part of that ecosystem is Genomics.

    Whilst Genomics England has been in place since 2014, there is scope to bring forward and apply their science more directly to the immediate challenges the NHS faces, rather than Life Sciences being seen as uneventful research that will emerge in a number of years’ time.

    Genomics in particular offers significant hope to rare diseases, often the diseases that receive less treatment.

    Life sciences offers scope to get the medicines, the right drugs, first time.

    By using genetic insights, we can discover the unique “signature” of a cancer tumour and make sure each patient gets the best course of treatment for them.

    The second area that I wanted to bring up this morning in terms of meeting those headwinds is around tech and big data.

    We are at a historical moment where we have the ability where patients consent to generate big data through the internet of things through new MedTech and wearables.

    We can achieve it because, over the last decade, the cost of computer chips has come down exponentially helping us generate more valuable data, with the ability to store it safely, cheaply and securely in the cloud – which has also increased significantly.

    That in turn combines with machine learning, where we have a new capability to analyse it.

    Generate. Store. Analyse. All of which have been transformed in recent years.

    This is a virtuous triangle that unlocks our ability to move to a more personalised form of care.

    It’s also yet another area where efficiency will actually equate to better patient outcomes, enabling funding to go further.

    Just as genomics can help create more bespoke treatment – like those examples I gave on drug resistance and cancer, so can data.

    And I will encourage the safe and secure sharing of data through the NHS for those patients who consent so that patients can play their part in life-changing medical breakthroughs and become the beneficiaries too.

    Now, we can see this spirit in action with the new Our Future Health research programme, which was launched last month.

    It aims to find new ways to prevent, detect and treat disease.

    Three million people have been invited to join the programme, which will eventually recruit five million or more people from all walks of life.

    Now, throughout the pandemic, the British public showed their willingness to play their part and be part of the solution.

    And it’s great to see them doing so again in our fight against diseases like diabetes, Alzheimer’s and many more.

    Anyone can sign up – so, and I use this as an opportunity for a plug, just go and Google Our Future Health and register online.

    The programme also reflects an innovative new model of funding.

    While about £80 million of the programmes’ funding comes from the UK government another £160 million comes from life sciences companies.

    So, it’s a great example of public and private coming together to strengthen the NHS and help lift some of the burdens of late-stage disease.

    The final thing I want to reflect on this morning is what this embrace of technology and data can achieve for our mental health.

    The pandemic saw us move online like never before – and mental health provision was no exception.

    Our services rapidly adapted to provide patients with support through video consultations, digital models of therapy and self-management apps.

    I know that for patients, it presents a number of advantages, with greater flexibility to use resources at evenings and weekends and greater anonymity too.

    So it’s exciting to explore the future possibilities of technology in the treatment and support of metal heath conditions – from common conditions like depression and anxiety to more complex conditions like eating disorders ad bipolar disorder.

    I recognise that much of the demand for mental health provision comes from children and young people.

    We know that 50 per cent of mental health problems are established by the age of 14, and 75 per cent by the age of 24.

    That’s why mental health provision for children and young people is such a priority for my department.

    And when it comes to our adult population I’m a strong supporter also of social prescribing and the wellbeing agenda.

    Indeed, when I was Chief Secretary, to the slight surprise I think of the Department of Health and Social Care and DEFRA, I chaired a committee trying to get the Treasury to push those departments to go further on social prescribing.

    I think it’s exciting to see the scope that social prescribing offers through the ability of tech to better measure activity now and therefor make the wider economic case around what potential that it unlocks, and that in turn, I think, will help change the Treasury appetite for programmes which were given lower priority in the past.

    In Great Britain, the total cost to our economy of preventable or treatable ill health amongst the working age population is somewhere between £112-153 billion.

    To put that in a different context, it’s equivalent to up to 5-7% of GDP.

    So at a time when we have a shortage of workers, making strides on mental health makes sense on every level. For those more familiar with the Treasury, it is what one might call a double or triple word score – it benefits health, it benefits their agenda on levelling up, and it benefits the economy in terms of GDP.

    In closing, I want to be clear on the central themes through which we will approach the significant challenges the department faces.

    First, a focus on devolving decisions matched with better quality data and more of that data in real time, rather than through a rear-view mirror looking weeks, months – and sometimes even years behind.

    Second, a prioritisation of patient outcomes and empowering much greater patient choice.

    Indeed, when I was Minister for the Cabinet Office, with responsibility for science and technology, I discovered we had 50 different strategies within government for science and technology.

    So, I strongly favour a more agile approach of delivering the initial change and then building from there – rather than looking to what might be delivered in many years’ time, through a particular big change some years hence.

    Third, embracing transparency to help empower patients in supporting the case for change and in particular, for innovation – given that, when spending around £182 billion of public money there will always be defenders of the status quo. And indeed, some of those interests will often be more trusted than, dare I say it, politicians making the case for change.

    What brings those three principles together is the fact that – to meet the scale of the health challenges we face must ensure we don’t slip back into old habits.

    Covid is still with us. And so in particular are its consequences, in the form of pandemic backlogs.

    So we must continue to embrace the pace and risk appetite of the pandemic when it comes to innovating at pace and at scale, and better assessing how risk is scored when we do so.

    That is what I believe the British people rightly expect us to do, and if we are to confront the scale of challenges facing the NHS, that is what we need to do.

  • Tan Dhesi – 2022 Speech on Government PPE Contracts, Michelle Mone and PPE Medpro

    Tan Dhesi – 2022 Speech on Government PPE Contracts, Michelle Mone and PPE Medpro

    The speech made by Tam Dhesi, the Labour MP for Slough, in the House of Commons on 24 November 2022.

    For Tory peers and other chums of the Conservative party to have been profiteering at taxpayers’ expense from shoddy, unusable PPE, especially through the VIP procurement lane, at a time when people were locked down in their homes and tens of thousands of people, including my loved ones, were dying is absolutely sickening, shameful and unforgiveable. Given that The BMJ estimates that the Government have written off approximately £10 billion in unusable, undelivered or shoddy PPE, will the Minister take the opportunity to apologise to bereaved families for the amazing lack of integrity at the heart of the whole process?

    Neil O’Brien

    I set out earlier what the high priority route was and was not: it was absolutely not a guarantee of any kind of contract; it was a way of managing the huge numbers of contacts and offers for help that we were all receiving. It delivered something in the order of 5 billion items of PPE, all of which helped to save lives and protect workers in our NHS and social care settings. Of course, we had to take up those offers of help and respond to them when people wanted to help in the middle of a huge national and global crisis. We had to process those offers, but they were processed in exactly the same way as every other bid for a contract.