Tag: 2022

  • Steve Barclay – 2022 Comments on Trip to Warwickshire Health Facilities

    Steve Barclay – 2022 Comments on Trip to Warwickshire Health Facilities

    The comments made by Steve Barclay, the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 5 August 2022.

    With the backlogs due to COVID it is vital that we innovate to speed up diagnosis and treatment. So it was great to see the state of the art new diagnostic centre in Nuneaton, which opens in 10 days time, and to discuss with local GPs how this will also help them deliver improved patient care.

    Diagnostic one-stop shops, like the George Eliot Hospital, are right at the heart of local communities and are helping to speed up access to X-rays, lung function tests, ultrasound and endoscopy. By bringing under one roof cardiac and respiratory diagnosis with access to pathology investigations, it will allow patients to attend once rather than need repeat visits. It is also good for staff retention and progression to have these new facilities with state of the art equipment.

    This, combined with other innovations in the region like remote monitoring at Manor Park Surgery are supporting the NHS on the biggest catch up programme in history.

  • Nigel Huddleston – 2022 Speech at the International Working Group on Women and Sport Handover

    Nigel Huddleston – 2022 Speech at the International Working Group on Women and Sport Handover

    The speech made by Nigel Huddleston, the Minister for Sport, Tourism, Heritage and Civil Society, at New Zealand House, Edgbaston Golf Club on 4 August 2022.

    Thank you to New Zealand for your generous hospitality.

    I am genuinely delighted to be able to attend today’s event which starts the official handover of the International Working Group on Women and Sport from New Zealand to the UK.

    It is great that the event could be happening at the very same time as Birmingham 2022, which – and this is worth repeating – has the largest female sport programme in the history of the Commonwealth Games and will be the first time a major multi-sport event will feature more women’s than men’s medal events and I think that is fantastic.

    I am absolutely committed to supporting women’s sport at every opportunity – pushing for greater participation, employment, commercial opportunities and visibility in the media. The fantastic success of the Lionesses this weekend shows just how far we have come.

    The UK has a strong track record and strong history of empowering women and girls through sport. There is a long way to go but we have much to be proud of in this area.

    The media profile of women’s sport is continuing to rise and recent research shows that two-thirds of UK sport fans currently follow some form of women’s sport, and half have attended an event featuring women’s athletes.

    Our domestic initiatives, like This Girl Can, are inspiring millions of women and girls to get physically active. Something that is particularly important as we recover from the pandemic.

    We have also seen the growth in audiences for women’s sport.

    Recent research published by Women’s Sport Trust shows that domestic women’s sport attracted a record British broadcast audience of nearly 33 million in 2021, the main drivers being The Hundred and the FA Women’s Super League.

    And the leadership role of certain media outlets is very important, including the BBC, which made the strategic decision to make sure that many of those matches were on BBC One, peak time. It worked. It showed that there is a mass audience for women’s sport. And that is pivotal. If the eyeballs are there, then the money and commercial opportunities start flowing. Instead of just doing that because it is the right thing to do, we will have increasing competition to hold these events and make sure these events are on TV because they are commercially viable and commercially lucrative.

    And a record crowd of more than 87,000 attended this year’s UEFA Women’s Euros final – the highest attended match at either a men’s or women’s European Championship.  I was lucky enough to attend some of the matches including the final and I can honestly say that there was a superb atmosphere. The spectators were evenly balanced and importantly, more than 100,000 children were spectators in those matches. I know the whole nation will have been inspired by the Lionesses.

    There have also been record sponsorship deals struck with women’s sports leagues, such as Barclays’ sponsorship of the Women’s Super League, the premier women’s football league in England.

    And the UK is due to host a number of high profile women’s sports events this year, including the Rugby League World Cup and the Billie Jean King Cup. Plus Birmingham 2022 of course which is going on at this moment in time.

    We are working tirelessly to make the most of these events in showcasing women’s sport, and encouraging more women and girls to get active as a result. But we recognise that we need to go further.

    The IWG is a great opportunity to build on this success and not only share the fantastic work we are doing but to learn from other countries too.

    The UK Secretariat’s vision for a ‘just and sustainable post-pandemic world where women and girls play a full and equitable role’ is something that I feel passionately about.

    It is vital that we continue to strive for greater equality and opportunity in sport.

    We have been working with our women’s sport working group in the UK, which many of you have attended, to look at some of the challenges and opportunities that exist and I am really keen that we continue to make progress as a result of these discussions.

    I would also like to commend the work of the current hosts New Zealand in sharing, promoting and supporting stories of inspiring change from around the world.

    Their development of the world’s first IWG Insight Hub as a home for the world’s best research, insight, case studies, news and interactive programmes such as training and seminars has also been ground breaking.

    I believe the IWG can be a catalyst for women’s sport as we recover from the impact of the pandemic.

    I would like to take this opportunity to thank you for the role you have all played in securing the IWG secretariat for the UK.

    It’s absolutely essential that we work collectively to share the messages behind the bid of inclusivity, equity and collaboration.

    I look forward to continuing to work with you to ensure that women’s sport continues to thrive not just in the UK but on the international stage.

  • Anneliese Dodds – 2022 Comments on Admission by Rishi Sunak he Removed Funding from Deprived Areas

    Anneliese Dodds – 2022 Comments on Admission by Rishi Sunak he Removed Funding from Deprived Areas

    The comments made by Anneliese Dodds, the Chair of the Labour Party, on 5 August 2022.

    Proof Rishi Sunak and the Tories deliberately funnelled taxpayers’ money to rich parts of the country.

    If your school is crumbling, your hospital overflowing or your police station closing, remember who’s to blame.

  • Lisa Nandy – 2022 Letter to Greg Clark after Rishi Sunak Admitted to Diverting Money from Deprived Areas

    Lisa Nandy – 2022 Letter to Greg Clark after Rishi Sunak Admitted to Diverting Money from Deprived Areas

    The letter sent by Lisa Nandy, Shadow Secretary of State for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities, to Greg Clark, the Secretary of State, on 6 August 2022 following the comments made by Rishi Sunak.

  • Nadhim Zahawi – 2022 Comments on August 2022 Interest Rates Rise

    Nadhim Zahawi – 2022 Comments on August 2022 Interest Rates Rise

    The comments made by Nadhim Zahawi, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, on 4 August 2022.

    I know today’s news will have been concerning for many people across the UK. I’ve spoken to Andrew Bailey, the Bank of England Governor to discuss the challenging global context and our continued focus to tackling inflation and supporting people with rising prices.

  • Lisa Nandy – 2022 Comments on Admission by Rishi Sunak he Removed Funding from Deprived Areas

    Lisa Nandy – 2022 Comments on Admission by Rishi Sunak he Removed Funding from Deprived Areas

    The comments made Lisa Nandy, the Shadow Secretary of State for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities, on 5 August 2022 following the comments made by Rishi Sunak in Tunbridge Wells.

    This is scandalous. Rishi Sunak is openly boasting that he fixed the rules to funnel taxpayers’ money to rich Tory shires. This is our money. It should be spent fairly and where it’s most needed – not used as a bribe to Tory members. Talk about showing your true colours.

  • Rishi Sunak – 2022 Comments on Taking Money from Deprived Urban Areas

    Rishi Sunak – 2022 Comments on Taking Money from Deprived Urban Areas

    The comments made by Rishi Sunak, the former Chancellor of the Exchequer, at a Conservative Party campaign event in Tunbridge Wells on 29 July 2022.

    I managed to start changing the funding formulas, to ensure that areas like this get the funding that they deserve. We inherited a bunch of formulas from Labour that shoved all the funding into deprived urban areas and that needed to be undone. I started the work of undoing that.

  • Andy Burnham – 2022 Comments on HS2 and Manchester

    Andy Burnham – 2022 Comments on HS2 and Manchester

    The comments made by Andy Burnham, the Mayor of Greater Manchester, on 4 August 2022.

    We cannot continue to repeat the mistakes of the past – failing to invest in central Manchester’s rail links has led to rail chaos across the North time and again.

    This is a huge moment and the decisions that are made now will affect the prospects for people here in the North for hundreds of years to come. A second-class choice for HS2 at Manchester Piccadilly station will be a hammer blow to any prospects of really Levelling Up our country.

    If we get the wrong solution at Piccadilly, it will limit economic growth, limit opportunities for local people and businesses, and limit the right rail solution for the whole of the North of England. This issue is of first order importance to our city-region, and it is only right that all MPs have the opportunity to debate and vote on the final plans for this once-in-a-century opportunity.

    We are pleased that there has been some progress and welcome the comments from Liz Truss to fully commit to delivering the North’s version of Northern Powerhouse Rail. But if she is being true to her words, this must also include a reset moment on HS2 and the station at Piccadilly which is fundamental to the future of the North.

  • Eddie Hughes – July 2022 Update to Grenfell Residents

    Eddie Hughes – July 2022 Update to Grenfell Residents

    The letter sent by Eddie Hughes, the Minister for Rough Sleeping and Housing, to residents in the area of Grenfell Tower on July 2022.

    Letter (in .pdf format)

  • Nigel Adams – 2022 Comments on Visit to Osaka

    Nigel Adams – 2022 Comments on Visit to Osaka

    The comments made by Nigel Adams, the Cabinet Office Minister, on 4 August 2022.

    It has been great to visit Osaka, see the site for the 2025 Expo and learn more about the historic ties between Japan and the UK.

    Expo 2025 will be a fantastic opportunity to showcase the best of British innovation and culture and further enhance our deepening partnership with Japan.

    My conversations with stakeholders this week have underlined the deep interest and shared values between the UK and Japan and the scope for us to work more closely together in the coming years on key global challenges in life sciences, sustainability and digital technology.