Tag: 2023

  • Ed Davey – 2023 Speech to Liberal Democrat Party Conference

    Ed Davey – 2023 Speech to Liberal Democrat Party Conference

    The speech made by Ed Davey, the Leader of the Liberal Democrats, in Bournemouth on 26 September 2023.

    Thank you friends.

    I’m afraid I have to start this afternoon with an apology.

    You might remember –

    After our incredible victory in Somerton and Frome in July –

    When the amazing Sarah Dyke overturned a Conservative majority of nineteen thousand –

    I said it’s time to get these clowns out of Number Ten.

    We even wrote it on the side of a big blue cannon.

    Do you remember?

    Well, a party member got in touch afterwards, to say he is an actual clown. And he took great offence at being compared to this Conservative Government.

    On reflection, I have to admit, he’s got a point.

    Clowns didn’t crash our economy and send interest rates soaring.

    Clowns didn’t let water companies make billions in profits while dumping filthy sewage into our rivers and onto our beaches.

    Clowns didn’t plunge our NHS into crisis, pushing waiting lists to record highs.

    Clowns didn’t waste billions of pounds – of our money – on dodgy PPE contracts.

    Clowns didn’t prop up a lying, law-breaking Prime Minister – and then put his cronies in the House of Lords.

    Clowns didn’t do it. The Conservatives did.

    So let me take this opportunity to apologise unreservedly to that party member, and to the whole clowning community.

    I’m sorry. I used the wrong c-word.

    Let me try again:

    It’s time to get these Conservatives out of Number Ten!

    And Liberal Democrats, we’ve made a great start.

    Sarah Green in Buckinghamshire. Helen Morgan in Shropshire. Richard Foord in Devon. And now Sarah Dyke in Somerset.

    And next up, of course, the wonderful Emma Holland-Lindsay in Mid Bedfordshire.

    Friends, our by-election record in the last two and half years is nothing less than historic.

    And so too have been our fantastic local election results.

    This May, we gained an incredible four-hundred-and-seven councillors right across England – from Sunderland to South Hams, from Lewes to Lancaster.

    And gained control of twelve more councils.

    In Scotland last year, we boosted our councillor base by a third. We’re growing back strongly there too as we hold the Nationalists to account for the total mess they have made of everything.

    In Wales, we took control of Powys Council for the first time ever.

    Liberal Democrats – right across our United Kingdom – you should all be so proud of what we’ve achieved together.

    Our campaigns – our victories – are changing the future of British politics and turning the tide against the Conservatives.

    We’ve shown the next election won’t be all about the Red Wall.

    It’s about the Blue Wall too. Former Tory heartlands where we’ve shown we are the only ones who can win.

    The only ones who can bring the change people crave.

    And even better. With Richard’s win in Devon, Sarah’s in Somerset and superb local government success, we can now say proudly:

    The Liberal Democrats are back in the West Country!

    A second front against the Conservatives, where every Liberal Democrat vote is the powerful vote for change.

    But now comes the big one.

    The General Election.

    For the British people, the next General Election can’t come quickly enough.

    People are desperate for change.

    And while Rishi Sunak clings on – out of touch and out of ideas –

    Our job – our responsibility – is to show the British people that positive change is possible.

    And that we are ready to fight for it, whenever the election comes.

    And this week, we’ve done just that.

    We’ve shown we have the policies, the passion and the people – not just to get the Conservatives out, but to deliver the real change people want.

    The fair deal people deserve.

    Our task is to get more brilliant Liberal Democrat MPs elected – so they can be strong local champions for their communities. And lead the change our country needs.

    Bringing real hope to millions in this economic crisis.

    Hope to people struggling to get by and struggling to get on.

    Cleaning up our environment.

    Rescuing our NHS and care system.

    Transforming our politics for good.

    Remember at the start of the year, Sunak gave a big speech where he told the country “we’re either delivering for you – or we’re not”?

    Well, in fairness to Rishi, he was telling the truth.

    It is one of those two things.

    And friends, I think we all know which one.

    His Government is failing to deliver, and what’s so horrific is the sheer scale of their failure.

    In so many ways, our country today just isn’t working the way it should.

    It’s not working as it should for the parents forced to travel two hours just to find their kids an NHS dentist. Or skipping meals so their children can eat.

    It’s not working for the couple in my constituency, who fear losing their home of thirteen years as their mortgage payments have shot up by more than four hundred pounds a month.

    It’s not working for the teaching assistant and her young family, evicted from their home in Ambleside so the landlord could turn it into a holiday let.

    It’s not working for the pensioner going without heat in the winter.

    Or the commuter left on the platform by yet another cancelled train.

    It’s not working for the swimmer who spent thirteen days in hospital with cellulitis after swimming in sewage-infested water.

    Conference, I have never known our country so badly governed.

    Crimes unsolved. Backlogs in our courts. Delays to get a passport.

    Crumbling school buildings. High streets in decline. And potholes, everywhere.

    Now, there are many reasons why all these issues have got so bad, of course.

    But there is one fundamental cause.

    The Conservative Party.

    Britain isn’t working, because the Conservatives aren’t working.

    They’re more like a bad TV soap than a functioning government.

    The factions and the feuds.

    The personal vendettas.

    The shock exits. And unwelcome returns.

    Each episode worse than the last.

    Well it’s time to change the channel.

    The corruption of Boris Johnson. The chaos of Liz Truss. The carelessness of Rishi Sunak.

    This whole Conservative shambles.

    They all have to go.

    And Liberal Democrats, our task is to get them out. And then get Britain working again.

    And that of course starts with the economy.

    We need to get our economy growing strongly again.

    Conservative Ministers might think zero percent growth and seven per cent inflation are numbers to boast about – but the British people certainly don’t.

    Inflation’s still higher than any time since Black Wednesday. Worse even than the height of the financial crisis.

    Food prices up thirty percent in just two years. Energy bills almost doubled. Mortgage rates through the roof.

    And Rishi Sunak says this all shows his plan is working.

    Honestly, the Prime Minister sounds so complacent, so out of touch, sometimes I think he must be reading the graphs upside down.

    Well Rishi, if this is what it looks like when your plan is working, I think we need a new plan.

    And that’s what the Liberal Democrats have been putting forward.

    A real plan – not just to stop things getting worse, not just to return to business as usual – but to build the economy of the future.

    To build an economy that is genuinely innovative, prosperous and fair.

    An economic plan that gives everyone the chance to get on in life, and see their hard work and aspiration properly rewarded.

    A plan that backs entrepreneurs to grow their small businesses and create worthwhile, well-paid jobs in their communities.

    And yes – a plan to tackle the climate crisis, reach net zero, and embrace the clean technologies of the future.

    To lead the world, instead of trying to hide from it.

    Conference, after Rishi Sunak’s disgraceful speech last week, the contrast between our approach and his could not be clearer.

    We already knew he doesn’t care about tackling climate change. That’s no surprise.

    But what about the damage his U-turns will do to our economy? To our car industry? To people’s jobs right across the UK?

    Doesn’t Sunak care about any of it? Apparently not.

    Frankly, instead of delivering that speech, Rishi should have torn it up and thrown it away.

    If he’s got seven bins, he might as well use them!

    His small-minded and backward looking approach is simply not worthy of our great United Kingdom.

    From the steam train to the internet, Britain has always led the world with ingenuity and innovation.

    We are a nation of pioneers and inventors. Not just in our history, but in our present and our future.

    Liberal Democrats understand that.

    In Government, we made Britain the world leader in offshore wind.

    We invested early. We had an industrial strategy. We showed we were serious.

    We attracted global firms to come to the UK, and spend tens of billions of pounds to build factories and windfarms and create thousands of clean, secure jobs.

    And thanks to Liberal Democrat policies, the price of wind energy has more than halved.

    So now renewables are by far the cheapest form of electricity. And the most popular.

    We could be doing the same with so many other new technologies.

    Tidal power. Clean flight. High-speed rail.

    Creating jobs and cutting prices.

    But Rishi Sunak says no.

    We say: build Britain’s economic future here in the UK. Rishi Sunak says: outsource it to China.

    That is a dismal failure of leadership. And we can do so much better.

    Britain led the world, and we can lead it again.

    But not with the Conservatives squabbling amongst themselves and clinging to the fossil fuels of the past.

    And not with the Prime Minister refusing even to attend the United Nations General Assembly last week.

    Instead of standing at his lectern in Downing Street single-handedly trashing our economic future,

    Rishi Sunak should have been in New York working with global leaders to tackle this crisis together.

    Britain can be an incredible force for good when it stands tall on the world stage.

    But Rishi Sunak doesn’t seem to care about that either.

    He’s getting it wrong at home, and he’s getting it badly wrong abroad too.

    Our vision is for a Britain that leads the world as we embrace the economy of the future.

    The Conservatives would only shackle us to the past.

    And there’s another crucial part of our economic vision. Another area where we are different from this Government.

    Something that would so obviously make an enormous difference to our economy and our standard of living.

    Something we have always been proud to champion, even when no one else even dared whisper it.

    Fixing our broken relationship with Europe.

    The Conservatives botched the deal with Europe, and it’s been a disaster for the UK.

    They sold out British farmers and fishers.

    They tied up British business in red tape.

    And they pushed up food prices in our supermarkets.

    So much unnecessary pain inflicted on so many by so few.

    And only the Liberal Democrats have consistently stood up against it.

    Only we have set out a plan to tear down those trade barriers, fix our broken relationship with Europe and get a better deal for Britain.

    Yes – only we.

    Because Labour’s plan – if you can call it a plan – is nowhere near that ambitious.

    To be fair, they’ve come a long way from when they voted for Boris Johnson’s terrible deal.

    But Labour has a long way still to go.

    Which means it’s up to us to lead the way.

    A better economy. A better future. With Europe.

    Opportunity. Investment. Innovation. Trade.

    That’s the Liberal Democrat recipe for economic success.

    And one more ingredient:

    People.

    Because at its heart, what makes our approach different is that we understand that the economy isn’t just a series of abstract percentages and meaningless slogans.

    It’s all of us.

    It’s the things we do every day, together.

    It’s the jobs we do. The services we rely on. The food we eat. The homes we live in.

    It’s the TV shows we watch. The places we visit. The presents we give each other.

    We understand that, when you strip everything else away, an economy is its people.

    And if we want to get our economy growing strongly again, we need to focus far more on our people.

    That means investing in people through education. Training. Skills. Of course.

    But today I want to talk about another investment in people.

    An investment that too often has not been linked to economic growth – even though it’s central to growth.

    And that’s an investment in people’s physical and mental health.

    Because we can’t build the economy we need, with seven million people stuck on NHS waiting lists.

    We can’t grow the economy with two and half million people shut out of the labour market by long-term physical and mental illness.

    When people aren’t supported to recover from long Covid.

    Wait weeks for a GP appointment.

    Can’t get basic help, so they can get back to work, feed their families and get on in life.

    A healthy economy needs a healthy population…

    And a healthy NHS.

    I am so proud that we Liberal Democrats have consistently led the way in highlighting the crises in the NHS and proposing solutions.

    Reversing cuts to GP numbers and guaranteeing an appointment when you need one.

    Tackling life-threatening ambulance delays, and improving access to NHS dentists.

    There are so many parts of our NHS plan that would both treat people better and boost our economy.

    And today I’d like to focus on one particular, awful part of this health crisis. That shatters lives, and takes people in their prime.

    It can be very difficult to talk about. It’s difficult for me, and I know it’s difficult for many of you, but we do need to talk about it.

    And that’s cancer.

    As many of you know, my brothers and I lost both our parents to cancer when we were young.

    My dad died aged thirty-eight, just a few months after being diagnosed with a cancer called Hodgkin lymphoma.

    I was only four, so I don’t remember it very well.

    What I do remember is my mum’s grief. And her incredible strength in the months and years that followed, after being widowed so young, with three boys under ten.

    Then, when I was nine, cancer came for mum too.

    She was diagnosed with breast cancer, and I do remember how that felt.

    She had treatment, including a mastectomy. But three years later, they found secondary breast cancer – metastatic cancer – in her bones.

    And they told her it was incurable.

    Yet mum refused to accept that it was incurable. She battled it for three years. For her boys.

    She tried everything – including a naturopath – while we looked after her.

    It was hardest of course in the last eighteen months or so, as she became bed-ridden and the pain became excruciating.

    For me, caring for her became my life. Before school and after school.

    I’d sit for hours on her bed, talking to her. Telling her about my day, listening to her stories. Trying to make the most of every minute.

    When she was fighting the cancer with the naturopath, my top task was mashing up carrots and apples for the healthy juice drinks she lived on.

    Then there was helping her with the pain. Pouring out doses of morphine from this big bell jar we had in the kitchen. I don’t think they’d allow that now.

    Putting pads on her legs and sides so she could give herself small electric shocks when the pain got really bad.

    That was a tough period as a teenager. But of course it was much tougher for mum.

    Yet those years were also special. They gave me an incredible bond with my mum.

    She was so strong, so resilient. Fighting to be with her boys, even in the face of such a cruel disease.

    I like to think I learnt a lot from her.

    I was fifteen when she died.

    They’d put her on a totally unsuitable dementia ward in Nottingham General Hospital.

    I was visiting her. On my way to school. In my school uniform. By her bedside.

    When she died.

    Now I don’t tell you all this because I want you to feel sorry for me. It was a long long time ago and I’ve been very lucky since.

    But I do tell you all about it because actually too many families have their cancer stories. Like mine. Today.

    My family’s story isn’t unique: there are millions of us whose lives get turned upside down by cancer.

    This very day, across the UK, a thousand people will hear that fateful diagnosis.

    A thousand people, choking back tears as they try to process what it means for them.

    A thousand people, trying to figure out how to tell their loved ones.

    How to break the news to their partners. To their parents. To their children.

    And then, a thousand people wondering what comes next.

    Now, we are fortunate in this country that there are brilliant people in our NHS and in charities like Macmillan.

    And there’s a story of progress. And hope.

    Cancer mortality rates have fallen by twenty-five percent in the last thirty years.

    Ten-year survival rates have doubled in the last forty.

    Diagnoses like both my parents were given are no longer necessarily the death sentence today that they were back then.

    Science, and universal healthcare, really are wonderful things.

    But I still think we could be doing so much better on cancer.

    Far too many people are still waiting, far too long for a diagnosis. Or to start treatment after being diagnosed.

    And I’m afraid to say, they’ve been let down and forgotten by this Conservative Government.

    Last year, the Government promised a new Ten-Year Cancer Plan.

    It was supposed to be “a searching new vision for how we will lead the world in cancer care”.

    This year – after two changes of Prime Minister and three changes of Health Secretary – that plan has been junked.

    Yet another casualty of all the Conservative chaos.

    Hopes raised. Only to be cruelly dashed.

    Because we do need a cancer plan.

    Despite all the progress, our survival rates still lag behind France, Germany, the US and Japan.

    And the Government is now missing every single one of its waiting time targets for cancer.

    Not by a little. But by a lot.

    Right now, there are more than twenty thousand people across England who’ve been told they have suspected cancer –

    Who have been referred for urgent treatment by their GP –

    But who’ve been waiting more than two months to start treatment.

    More than two months.

    Just imagine the fear. The anxiety. The helplessness.

    Knowing you need treatment. Knowing every day could make a difference.

    But powerless to do anything but wait.

    Like Ian. An engineer who I was speaking to just last week.

    Ian lives in Nottingham, just down the road from where I lived with mum before she passed away.

    And like me, Ian lost both of his parents to cancer when he was young too.

    Ian had been fit and healthy all his life, but he was diagnosed with bowel cancer two years ago, in his mid-sixties.

    The national screening programme caught it early. It was a small stage one tumour.

    Crucially, it was operable.

    Ian needed chemotherapy and surgery – as quickly as possible.

    But he was kept waiting for four months before starting any treatment.

    Now his cancer has progressed to stage four and spread to his liver.

    Now it’s inoperable.

    Ian calls those four months of waiting the worst time of his life.

    He said “I would wake up every morning wondering if I had a future.”

    And he told me how preventing those delays could not only have saved his own despair, but also saved the NHS so much money.

    Conference, it’s just not right to keep people in such limbo, for so long.

    We owe patients better than that.

    We owe their families – their children and their loved ones – better than that.

    We owe Ian better than that.

    We must, must, must do better than that.

    But here again, there is hope.

    Just in the last few months, we have seen incredible breakthroughs that could revolutionise the way we diagnose and treat many types of cancer.

    Trials of a new blood test that can detect more than fifty types of cancer are encouraging, and the head of the NHS says it could “transform cancer care forever”.

    A simple blood test you could even carry out at home.

    Or the new breast cancer drug trialled at the Royal Marsden hospital.

    It’s been shown to slow the growth of tumours – and even shrink them in many cases. With far less debilitating side effects than chemotherapy.

    Just think what a difference breakthroughs like these could make.

    Think how much time they could save.

    How much misery they could prevent.

    How many lives they could save.

    It’s the job of government to back research like this, so scientists and doctors can make the next breakthrough, and the one after that, and the one after that.

    It’s the job of government to make sure that – whenever those breakthroughs happen – the NHS rolls out the benefits to patients as quickly as possible.

    If someone’s life can be saved by a new blood test or a new drug, no unnecessary delays should stand in their way.

    And it’s the job of government to make sure that we are diagnosing cancer as early as possible, that patients are starting treatment as early as possible, and that every patient gets the ongoing care and support they need.

    Now, friends, none of this should be party political.

    I know there are MPs in every party who have lost loved ones to cancer like I did, or who’ve battled it themselves.

    So I fervently hope we can build a consensus across politics to make cancer a top priority in the next Parliament.

    But as Leader of our party, I can at least promise you this:

    For Liberal Democrat MPs, it will be a top priority.

    And that’s why today I am announcing our new and ambitious plan to end unacceptable cancer delays and boost survival rates.

    We will hold the Government to account, for every target it misses and every patient it fails.

    We will never stop fighting for better care for you and your loved ones.

    Of course, it’s not just cancer where the Government is letting patients down.

    It’s pretty much everything.

    The Conservatives have broken promise after promise on the NHS.

    From their forty new hospitals. To six thousand more GPs. To Rishi Sunak’s pledge to bring waiting lists down.

    All of it – just meaningless noise.

    All a total con.

    Perhaps there should be a warning on the ballot paper, like there is on cigarette packets:

    Voting Conservative is bad for your health.

    So it falls to us to rescue the NHS, and make sure everyone can get the care they need, when they need it.

    We know it won’t be easy, but we see a bright future for the NHS.

    Not because we are blind to the scale of the crisis,

    But because we are clear-eyed about the solutions:

    More GPs, so that everyone can get an appointment within seven days, or twenty-four hours if it’s urgent.

    More investment in the latest technology from MRI scanners to radiotherapy machines.

    And, crucially, more carers.

    Conference, we know that the crisis in the NHS is inextricably linked to the crisis in care.

    We know that you can’t fix the NHS without fixing social care.

    We know you can’t fix the NHS without valuing family carers.

    Fix care and you fix the NHS.

    Better social care, with many more care professionals, better paid.

    More support for family carers, so people can cope better looking after loved ones.

    These are low-tech, affordable ways to save our NHS – investing in care.

    So people can be discharged more quickly. Or don’t need hospital care in the first place.

    So pressure on overstretched hospitals can be reduced.

    So patients aren’t stuck for hours waiting to be seen in A&E.

    So ambulances aren’t stuck for hours waiting outside A&E to hand over patients.

    It’s all connected.

    Our plan for social care and family care is a central part of our plan for the future Health Service.

    And remember – in turn, health and care both are key parts of our plan for the economy.

    The Conservatives broke our economy with their carelessness.

    Liberal Democrats will fix our economy with care.

    As we make our pitch to people, we need to show such real change is possible. We need to restore hope.

    For when you look at the harm these Conservatives have done to people, done to our country, one of their worst is this.

    Cynicism.

    When I speak to people on the doorstep or in my surgeries, I get a very clear impression of this.

    The idea that nothing can be done. That people in power don’t care. And won’t fix things.

    A sense of hopelessness.

    The toxic brew of incompetence, scandal and chaos served up by this Government has poisoned not only people’s view of the Conservatives, but their trust in politics as a whole.

    Frankly, it’s the only weapon the Conservatives have left: convince people to expect less from government.

    Now, there are two ways to respond to the widespread cynicism the Conservatives foment.

    One way is simply to accept it.

    That’s the path that the Labour Party sadly seems to have chosen:

    Lower your sights. Give up on really changing things. Make your pitch nothing more than “Not as bad as the Tories”.

    Half-heartedly oppose what the Conservatives are doing, and then shrug your shoulders and say “we’d pretty much do the same thing”.

    That’s one way of responding to it. But it is not the Liberal Democrat way.

    Our ambition for our country is much greater than that.

    Our faith in the British people is much stronger than that.

    Our path – the path we have always chosen – the path we walk today – is to confront that cynicism head on, and to offer people hope.

    Not with yet more platitudes and promises. Not by announcing another nebulous “mission” that’s immediately forgotten when the speech is over.

    No. By fighting for the big changes. The changes needed to restore people’s trust in politics and rebuild their confidence in our public services.

    And that starts with real political reform.

    Liberal Democrats have long known that Britain’s political system is broken.

    Millions of people – powerless and excluded. Robbed of their rightful say and unable to hold the powerful to account.

    And we’ve always fought to change that.

    But the Conservatives… Instead of fixing our broken politics, have shattered it into pieces.

    Their constant attacks on the rule of law and traditional British freedoms.

    Their betrayal of integrity, truth and honesty.

    Stuffing the Lords with Boris Johnson’s lackeys.

    Handing out billions in contracts to their cronies.

    One rule for them, another rule for the rest of us.

    And it wasn’t just Boris Johnson.

    Owen Paterson. Nadhim Zahawi. Matt Hancock. Dominic Raab.

    So much sleaze. So many scandals.

    No wonder people are cynical.

    Clearing it up is no small task.

    It will take more than tinkering around the edges.

    We need to transform the nature of British politics itself.

    To make it more relevant, engaging and responsive to people’s needs and their dreams.

    To bring together our great family of nations, instead of tearing it apart.

    And yes, at the heart of those reforms must be a fair electoral system.

    Proportional representation, so everyone’s vote counts equally.

    Because we know that the antidote to cynicism is not defeatism. It’s empowerment.

    Putting real power in every voter’s hands, to elect MPs who can’t take them for granted, who have to listen to their concerns, who must work hard for them.

    Real power to hold politicians properly to account when they fail to deliver.

    Real power to demand better schools and hospitals, affordable housing and safe communities, and a clean, healthy environment.

    That’s why fair votes is such an important part of the fair deal we’re fighting for.

    Empowering people at the ballot box is the only way to make the big changes we need as a country.

    It’s the only way to mend our broken politics, restore trust, and offer real hope.

    But when we listen to people, we get it: it is hard to hope right now.

    With everything we’ve been through, the years of Conservative neglect and the multiple crises we face.

    And with a terrible war still waging on our continent.

    It’s hard to hope.

    So I don’t blame anyone for feeling cynical.

    I blame the Conservatives for spreading cynicism – I don’t blame anyone for feeling it.

    But for myself, I’m still incredibly optimistic about our future as a country.

    Because everywhere I go, I see the amazing strength, decency and courage of the British people.

    And because my life has taught me that, no matter how tough things get, you can get through them. Brighter days can follow even the darkest.

    That was true for me as a teenager, and I know it’s true for our country today.

    Our future is bright.

    Better days lie ahead for our country, and – Liberal Democrats – we know what must be done to reach them.

    Mend our broken politics. Put real power in people’s hands.

    Support people through this awful cost-of-living crisis.

    Save the NHS, fix care, and make cancer a top priority.

    Clean up our rivers and protect our precious environment.

    Build the economy of the future, lead the world, and spread prosperity and opportunity to all.

    This is our vision.

    These are our priorities.

    These are the big changes our country needs.

    So let me be crystal clear:

    Whenever the next election comes, every vote for the Liberal Democrats will be a vote to make these changes happen.

    And every Liberal Democrat elected to Parliament will fight tirelessly to make them happen.

    That is how we rebuild trust, restore hope and repair our country.

    So Conference,

    We have our policies.

    We have our priorities.

    And very soon, we will have our election.

    And I know you’re ready.

    I have seen you on the streets of Shropshire and the doorsteps of Devon.

    I have seen your determination and dedication, and it makes me so proud to be one of your number.

    And I firmly believe that, together, we are the strongest campaigning force in British politics.

    We have taken chunks out of the Blue Wall.

    We have made it start to crumble.

    So now let’s smash it for good.

    The British people are desperate for hope.

    The British people are desperate for change.

    The British people are desperate for a fair deal.

    And we are the ones who can make it happen.

    So let’s get to it!

    Thank you.

  • Anneliese Dodds – 2023 Speech to the Labour’s National Annual Women’s Conference

    Anneliese Dodds – 2023 Speech to the Labour’s National Annual Women’s Conference

    The speech made by Anneliese Dodds, the Chair of the Labour Party, in Liverpool on 7 October 2023.

    Thank you for that introduction, Angela.

    And thank you for all the great work you do for women, not least on the New Deal for Working People which will massively improve women’s working lives.

    Speaking of great work for women, wasn’t this a brilliant summer for women’s sport?

    The Lionesses’ amazing run to the World Cup final. The thrilling Women’s Ashes series. England reaching the Netball World Championship final.

    I want to congratulate these women for smashing through barriers in sport. And send my solidarity to Jenni Hermoso and her Spanish teammates.

    These women faced open misogyny in their moment of ultimate triumph and said: we won’t stand for it. Sisters, we stand with you.

    I also want to send my solidarity to the women of Ukraine and Afghanistan, who have showed such courage in the face of oppression, harassment and violence.

    And for those women and their children who have fled their home to seek refuge in our country – you are welcome here.

    Friends, we gather today for our first in-person women’s conference since 2019.

    The last four years have been immensely challenging.

    First Covid-19. Then the cost of living crisis.

    Thanks to the Conservatives, women paid the price for both.

    Who stood by while women bore the brunt of rising poverty before the pandemic?

    The Tories did.

    Who left women hundreds of pounds a year worse off today than they were in 2010?

    The Tories did.

    Who allowed the gender pay gap to rise?

    The Tories did.

    This is the cost of the Conservatives – and women can’t afford another five years of it.

    Politics is about priorities. And the Conservatives have deprioritised women.

    Just look at the ministerial merry-go-round in the Government Equalities Office.

    At our last women’s conference in March 2022, Liz Truss was Minister for Women and Equalities – remember her?

    By this time last year, ‘Lettuce Liz’ had replaced herself as Minister for Women and Equalities with Nadhim Zahawi – but never bothered to allocate him any responsibilities.

    Today Kemi Badenoch holds the role – a Minister who, when faced with the epidemic of violence against women and girls, soaring NHS waiting lists for women and the pernicious gender pay gap, is nowhere to be found.

    She does, however, have time to pursue her top priority – appointing a toilet tsar.

    And she’s supported in that vital work by Rishi Sunak, the former Chancellor who did nothing to help women brutally exposed to the cost of living crisis.

    Well, today I have a message for them both:

    You can’t try and claim ownership of women’s equality if your party has been failing women for thirteen years.

    It’s Labour that is the true party of women’s equality. The party of the Equal Pay Act. The party that supported women to exercise bodily autonomy with the right to choose. The party of the Equality Act. And so much more.

    We’ll take no lessons on women’s equality from the Conservatives.

    Instead, we learn from those who actually delivered for women in government. Leaders like Harriet Harman, the architect of our Equality Act.

    Harriet is standing down at the next election after more than forty years as an MP. The Mother of the House. The second woman Leader of the Opposition. A woman who has done so much to advance women’s equality.

    Harriet, you have been a brilliant servant to our party and our country. I’m sure the whole hall will join me in thanking you for that service.

    Harriet’s achievements remind us of the progress we have made for women’s equality. And the need for strong women in Parliament to deliver it.

    Because as Harriet herself said: “There are some things only women MPs can do, and without women, they will not be done”.

    That’s why women’s representation in Parliament is so important. And why I’m so proud that Labour is the first political party to reach parity in terms of men and women MPs.

    A great example of how positive action works.

    Action that was taken by Labour. But opposed by the Tories. The same old story.

    And for 13 years this useless Conservative Government has failed to do anything to boost diversity in politics. So as usual, it is left to Labour to put that right.

    I can announce today that the next Labour Government will enact Section 106 of the Equality Act. We will require political parties to publish anonymised data on the diversity of their candidates – so that every party competing for elections to Westminster, to Holyrood or to the Senedd has a duty to demonstrate progress.

    The Conservatives could have done this years ago, but they didn’t have the guts. Only Labour will act to make politics more representative of the country we serve.

    To bring people with different experiences and backgrounds into Parliament, to do the things that only women MPs, Black, Asian and ethnic minority MPs, disabled MPs and LGBT+ MPs can do.

    Take the menopause. This is a condition that affects 51% of the population. If it happened to men, there would be outrage. Research. Policy solutions. And action. Instead, change has happened at a glacial pace.

    Six months ago, I started a national conversation about how we properly support women in their 40s, 50s and 60s.

    Women of our age do a lot, and complain little.

    We’re often holding down a job, going through menopause, caring for elderly parents, supporting older children and more. The pressure is immense – and our potential too often untapped.

    If women aged 50-64 had the same employment rate now as before the pandemic, they could be contributing up to £7 billion more to the UK economy – £7 billion worth of untapped contribution and creativity.

    It’s a tragedy that one in ten women experiencing menopause leave their jobs and 14% reduce their hours due to the lack of support in the workplace.

    The Conservatives don’t care about this. But Labour does – and that’s why I announced this year that Labour will require large employers to publish menopause action plans to support their women workers.

    It’s also why I can announce today that the next Labour Government will produce menopause workplace guidance to help women working for small and medium-sized businesses too.

    Conference, with the right support we can unleash the talent and creativity of women across our country. That’s good for women. Good for business. And good for the economy too.

    Because we know that women’s equality and economic growth go hand in hand.

    That’s why the last Labour Government legislated to support women to reach their full potential.

    Legislation like our Equality Act, which is still protecting women from discrimination in countless ways every day.

    The Conservatives will never understand that success is not achieved by pushing people down – but by pulling everyone up.

    For them, equality is just an afterthought or a fight to pick. But for Labour it is fundamental to who we are.

    That’s why it’s such an honour and a privilege to do this job. If Labour wins the next election, I will become the UK’s first ever Secretary of State for Women and Equalities, with a seat at the top table, dedicated to advocating for women in all their diversity in every Cabinet conversation.

    That alone though won’t be enough to give women their future back. To do that, we must harness the talent, creativity and brilliance of every woman in our country.

    How? With Labour’s mission-driven agenda for a better Britain.

    Because to deliver the highest sustained growth in the G7, we will create better workplaces for women.

    We’ll start with our New Deal for Working People. From flexible working to stronger equal pay rights to tackling workplace harassment and so much more, this will transform the lives of working women everywhere, including LGBT+, Black, Asian and ethnic minority, and disabled women.

    And we will tap into the talents of women of all ages, whether by supporting start-ups and female entrepreneurs or by bringing in that better workplace support for women experiencing menopause.

    We’ll also tackle the Gender Pay Gap, building on the findings of the review currently being led by Baroness Frances O’Grady, supported by Rachel Reeves, Angela and myself.

    We will make Britain a clean energy superpower, ensuring women benefit from the good, new jobs the transition will create.

    We will build an NHS fit for the future to support women with their health and wellbeing, from cutting gynaecology waiting lists to delivering better access to mental health support.

    And we will incentivise continuity of care in maternity services to reverse the shameful increase in women dying in childbirth – and set a target to close the shocking gap that leaves Black women four times more likely to die while giving birth.

    We will deliver safer streets, homes, and workplaces – and use every lever to halve the level of violence against women and girls, making this a government-wide strategic commitment.

    We will make hatred against women the hate crime we know it to be, and strengthen existing laws so that hate crimes against LGBT+ and disabled women attract the same, tough sentences.

    We will break down barriers to opportunity at every stage by enacting the socio-economic duty in the Equality Act and introducing a Race Equality Act to tackle the structural racial inequality that scars our society.

    And we will oppose any Conservative attempt to undermine Labour’s Equality Act, and protect and uphold it in government.

    Sisters, this is Labour’s plan for women.

    To put women at the heart of our mission-driven agenda for government.

    To provide every woman with a fair shot at life, in every part of our country.

    To give women their hope, their optimism and their future back.

    Thank you.

  • Angela Rayner – 2023 Speech to the Labour’s National Annual Women’s Conference

    Angela Rayner – 2023 Speech to the Labour’s National Annual Women’s Conference

    The speech made by Angela Rayner, the Deputy Leader of the Labour Party, in Liverpool on 7 October 2023.

    Good morning Ladies of Liverpool!

    It is an honour to stand here today, as your Deputy Leader, and look out at so many inspiring women.

    Let’s face it – sometimes it’s tiring being a woman in this world.

    Especially under a Tory Government!

    But that is why it falls upon us to continue the work the last Labour government started, standing side-by-side, so that all of us succeed in battling inequality, together.

    I want to start today with a story.

    Picture the scene.

    A baby boy is born.

    Destined for Eton, or Harrow or Winchester.

    Then PPE at Oxford.

    When he walks into the Houses of Parliament he feels no imposter syndrome.

    Only the feeling that he is home. He is exactly where he should be.

    He doesn’t struggle to make his voice heard.

    No hesitation to steal a well-made point and call it his own.

    On the other side of the country, a girl is growing up on a council estate. In poverty.

    Taught that women do certain things, and men do others.

    To put everyone else first.

    Overlooked, undervalued, underestimated.

    She’ll never walk in the corridors of Westminster.

    It’s not the place for her.

    Only that isn’t what happens.

    She joins a union.

    She learns the power of workers coming together… to fight for more.

    A Labour Government introduces the minimum wage. She can afford more than one meal a day.

    A Labour government builds council houses. She gets the keys to her first home, to stability.

    A Labour government introduces the equal pay act. She gets a pay rise – enough so she can save.

    A Labour government builds a sure start centre at the end of her road, where she learns how to be a good mum. She meets other young mums and they find power in each other.

    And in the end, that girl goes from her council estate to the parliamentary estate!

    Conference, like so many of us in this room today, I wouldn’t be standing here today without a Labour government.

    Labour is the Party of equality. Of the Equality Act. Of Equal Pay. Of Sure Start.

    I’m proud to say that in the Labour Party today, we now have more women MPs than men.

    With Rachel’s eyes fixed on being the first woman Chancellor.

    We are turning the tide of history.

    But the battle isn’t won. There still aren’t enough women around the table.

    It is not enough for us to cling onto our seats and celebrate the fight it took to get us here.

    You only need to look at the horrific acts of powerful men abusing young women and hiding in plain sight.

    This is why the next Labour government will fight for every girl in this country to have a bright future.

    To stand up for every woman.

    To break the glass ceiling and the class ceiling.

    Our New Deal for Working People will make work more family friendly, crack down on unfair pay and improve access to justice for those discriminated against at work.

    And as I was pleased to announce today Labour would properly tackle sexual harassment at work

    A shocking two-thirds of young women have been sexually harassed at work. This must change.

    That’s why the next Labour government will amend the Equalities Act to introduce a legal duty for employers to take all reasonable steps to stop sexual harassment before it starts.

    But that’s not all.

    We’ll make misogyny a hate crime, toughen sentences for perpetrators of rape and stalking, and halve the level of violence against women and girls.

    Women suffering the awful symptoms of menopause at work will get the support they deserve.

    We will empower women entrepreneurs.

    And we’ll tackle the crisis in women’s health by training 7,500 more doctors and 10,000 more nurses and midwives each year.

    When it comes to building a better future for women – we won’t just talk the talk. We’ll walk the walk.

    Because our lives, our careers, our futures depend on it.

    We can’t continue down the path we are on.

    Women unsafe on Britain’s streets. Two-thirds of us harassed in our workplaces.

    We must get into government and build on the legacy of the last Labour Government. We must get into government and continue the fight for equality.

    And Conference, Labour must get into government to give that young girl living in poverty her future back.

    Now, without further ado.

    I want to introduce one of the most formidable women in our movement.

    She is working across our movement – the Shadow Cabinet, members and activists – to build on the legacy of the last Labour Government and empower women everywhere.

    Anneliese Dodds.

  • Benjamin Netanyahu – 2023 Statement on Attack on Israel

    Benjamin Netanyahu – 2023 Statement on Attack on Israel

    The statement made by Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli Prime Minister, on 7 October 2023.

    Citizens of Israel. We are at war, not an operation, not an escalation, a war.

    This morning Hamas launched a murderous surprise attack against the state of Israel and its citizens. We’ve been at it since early morning.

    I convened the heads of the security system, first of all I instructed to cleanse the settlements of the terrorists who had infiltrated – this operation is being carried out during these hours.

    At the same time, I ordered an extensive reserve mobilisation and a retaliatory war with a strength and scope that the enemy had never known.

    The enemy will pay a price he has never known. In the meantime, I call on all citizens of Israel to strictly obey the instructions of the army and the instructions of the Home Command.

    We are in a war and we will win it.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Rishi Sunak call with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of Canada [October 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Rishi Sunak call with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of Canada [October 2023]

    The press release issued by 10 Downing Street on 6 October 2023.

    The Prime Minister spoke to Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau this evening.

    Prime Minister Trudeau updated on the situation relating to Canadian diplomats in India.

    The Prime Minister reaffirmed the UK’s position that all countries should respect sovereignty and the rule of law, including the principles of the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations.

    He hoped to see a de-escalation in the situation and agreed to remain in contact with Prime Minister Trudeau on the next steps.

     

  • PRESS RELEASE : UK reinforcements arrive in Kosovo for NATO peacekeeping mission [October 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : UK reinforcements arrive in Kosovo for NATO peacekeeping mission [October 2023]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Defence on 6 October 2023.

    The first British soldiers of a two hundred-strong deployment arrived in Pristina today to reinforce NATO’s Kosovo Force (KFOR) peacekeeping mission.

    The deployment is based on a request by NATO’s Supreme Allied Commander Europe and comes after the violent attack on Kosovo Police on 24 September and increased tensions in the region.

    The soldiers from the 1st Battalion of the Princess of Wales’s Royal Regiment are joining a more than 400-strong British contingent already in Kosovo as part of an annual exercise. That contingent has remained in Kosovo to support stability. The peacekeeping force will include not only troops, but also hundreds of vehicles arriving by sea freight.

    Under NATO command, the forces will be available to conduct operations in accordance with KFOR’s mandate to maintain a safe and secure environment and ensure freedom of movement for all people in Kosovo.

    Defence Secretary Grant Shapps said:

    The UK is a leading NATO Ally. Within a few days, the UK has responded to NATO’s call for reinforcements and deployed 200 additional soldiers from the First Battalion Princess of Wales’ Royal Regiment for the Kosovo Force (KFOR). This shows the agility of the UK’s Armed Forces.

    As the best of the best, I know our soldiers will do the UK proud.

    NATO has been leading a peacekeeping operation in Kosovo since 1999 in accordance with its mandate under United Nations Security Council Resolution 1244. KFOR currently consists of more than 4,500 troops contributed by 27 NATO Allies and partners.

    The UK contributes to the full spectrum of KFOR’s work, with two intelligence surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR) units deployed, UK staff officers assigned to the mission headquarters as well as a Strategic Reserve Force commitment, which currently rests with the Princess of Wales’s Royal Regiment. The UK commitment to KFOR was extended in May 2023 when the Minister for Armed Forces James Heappey announced the UK would continue to contribute to the NATO mission until at least 2026.

    The UK is also working closely with international partners to urge Kosovo and Serbia to de-escalate tensions and return to dialogue. The Prime Minister spoke to both President Vucic of Serbia and President Osmani of Kosovo, at the European Political Community meeting in Granada yesterday, encouraging de-escalation. Minister for Europe, Leo Docherty, is also due to meet Serbian and Kosovan Foreign Ministers in the Albanian capital today during a meeting of the Berlin Process, a forum focused on fostering increased regional cooperation in the Western Balkans. This builds on the work of Prime Minister’s Special Envoy to the Western Balkans, Lord Peach, who regularly engages with both Serbian and Kosovan stakeholders to promote regional stability.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Statement on the UK – U.S. SME Dialogues – California [October 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Statement on the UK – U.S. SME Dialogues – California [October 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Business and Trade on 6 October 2023.

    Statement follows the seventh meeting of the UK – U.S. SME Dialogues in Indio, California.

    On 5 October 2023, the 7th UK – U.S. SME Dialogue was held in Indio, California with over 70 UK and U.S. small and medium sized businesses and business organisations participating.

    The Dialogue was hosted by the Cabazon Band of Cahuilla Indians, and is convened by the Office of the United States Trade Representative, the Department of Commerce, and the Small Business Administration with the Department for Business and Trade.

    Since its inception in 2018, the UK – U.S. SME Dialogue has continued to bring together small and medium sized businesses on both sides of the Atlantic with UK and U.S. government representatives to explore the challenges and opportunities faced by SMEs looking to export across the Atlantic. SMEs are the backbone of the UK-U.S. trading relationship, and the Dialogue reflects the ongoing commitment from both countries to supporting and enhancing UK – U.S. SME trade.

    During the Dialogue, a series of panel discussions covered opportunities for SMEs looking to grow through UK – U.S. trade. Attendees discussed the opportunities for SMEs in services trade and opportunities in the green technology sector that can contribute to energy and climate solutions. SMEs also raised their concerns about the barriers they face in exporting and importing, including access to SME finance.

    A key focus of the Dialogue was how the UK and U.S. governments can support small businesses, including those owned by under-represented groups and women entrepreneurs, and those in disadvantaged communities, to take advantage of export resources. During the Dialogue, and following a commitment made at the 6th SME Dialogue 2022 held in Edinburgh, the UK announced the launch of updated resources that provide advice and support for SMEs wanting to export to the U.S.

    • Doing Business Toolkit: This toolkit contains advice, Top Tips and resources for SMEs looking to grow their business in the UK and export to exciting markets such as the U.S.
    • E-Commerce Toolkit: Advice for UK SMEs selling online to the U.S.
  • PRESS RELEASE : Appalling attacks on Hroza and Kharkiv: UK statement to the OSCE [October 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Appalling attacks on Hroza and Kharkiv: UK statement to the OSCE [October 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 6 October 2023.

    Ambassador Neil Holland says Russia’s latest attacks against Ukraine demonstrate the depths of depravity Russian forces are willing to sink to.

    Thank you, Mr Chair. When we met yesterday many of us spoke of Russia’s appalling attacks on civilians in Ukraine. We spoke of our concerns for the approaching winter and our determination to support Ukraine to succeed and prevail in the face of Russia’s aggression. It turned out that, even as we gathered in this room, Russia was instigating further unspeakable attacks in which civilians would bear the brunt of this horror.

    The village of Hroza has been added to the growing list of places which many of us have come to know for all the wrong reasons. Yesterday afternoon, in this small community, a café and grocery store were destroyed, killing at least 51 people including a child.

    We understand that there is no family from Hroza left untouched by this horrific attack. As my Prime Minister said this attack has “demonstrated the depths of depravity Russian forces are willing to sink to.” Those responsible for such an abhorrent attack will face justice. To this end, we welcome the deployment of a field team by the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights to investigate the attack.

    In the early hours of this morning, the city of Kharkiv was dealt another brutal attack, this time on the city itself. It is reported that a 10-year-old boy was killed when a residential building was hit and more than 20 people were injured.

    The UK is appalled by the barbaric killing of civilians including children. Our thoughts are with the victims’ families and loved ones at this harrowing time.

    The UK and our international partners have met too many times in this room, to condemn Russia’s latest atrocities. We cannot allow such actions to become acceptable or normal. Each time we meet reinforces our strong commitment that those responsible will be held accountable. The UK remains unwavering in its support for the people of Ukraine, as they resist Russia’s brutal and unprovoked invasion. We are fully committed to working with our partners to support Ukraine to achieve a long lasting and sustainable peace in line with the UN Charter.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Court orders drug dealer, Joshua Poulton, spend longer in prison [October 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Court orders drug dealer, Joshua Poulton, spend longer in prison [October 2023]

    The press release issued by the Attorney General on 6 October 2023.

    A drug dealer who sold cocaine worth nearly half-a-million pounds before fleeing to evade arrest has his sentence increased after Court of Appeal intervened.

    Joshua Poulton (28), from Solihull, has had his 12-and-a-half year sentenced increased to 15 years and three months after the Solicitor General referred his conviction as being unduly lenient.

    The court heard that following the imprisonment of a relative, Poulton took a leading role in a drugs operation.

    Poulton employed two men to act as couriers and over seven weeks between October and November 2021, he sold at least 35kg of cocaine worth £470,000 to a number of organised crime groups.

    When Poulton realised the police wanted to arrest him, he fled the country travelling to several locations, including the Dominican Republic, Brazil, Portugal, and the United States.

    Poulton was later detained in Spain and extradited to the UK in December 2022 to appear in court.

    The Solicitor General, Michael Tomlinson KC MP, said:

    Illegal drugs harm our communities and are often a catalyst for other crimes. The offender was selling vast quantities of class A drugs, and I did not believe his sentence reflected the severity of his crimes.

    Thankfully the court agreed and in increasing his sentence, I hope this sends a warning to drug dealers that we will use all our powers to put a stop to your criminal enterprises.

    Poulton was sentenced to 12-and-a-half years at Birmingham Crown Court on 18 July 2023.

    On Friday 6 October 2023, the Court of Appeal increased Poulton’s sentence to 15 years and three months imprisonment after it was referred under the Unduly Lenient Sentence scheme.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Freedom of religion or belief (FoRB) remains a priority for the United Kingdom [October 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Freedom of religion or belief (FoRB) remains a priority for the United Kingdom [October 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 6 October 2023.

    At the Warsaw Human Dimension Conference 2023, the UK reiterates its commitment to Freedom of Religion or Belief.

    Madame Moderator,

    The right to freedom of religion or belief (FoRB) is a longstanding human rights priority for the UK. Conflict and insecurity are often rooted in intolerance and persecution on the grounds of religion or belief.

    In 2023 the UK hosted an international Ministerial conference on FoRB. During the conference, the UK announced new funding to support FoRB defenders as well as funding and expertise for countries prepared to make legislative changes to protect FoRB.

    Since the conference, we have continued to make this a priority in our work. We have worked with at the UN, G7 and in the OSCE, to promote FoRB. In June this year, the UN Security Council unanimously adopted a UK-UAE co-penned resolution on Tolerance and International Peace and Security, including wording on FoRB.

    The UK Prime Minister’s Special Envoy for FoRB, Fiona Bruce MP has chaired the International Religious Freedom or Belief Alliance (IRFBA) for the past two years, The Alliance has broadened its membership, growing to 45 members, friends and observers.

    The Alliance conducts regular joint advocacy on the cases of individual prisoners of conscience and has issued statements highlighting the issues facing religious minorities such as the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community, the Baha’i community and Jehovahs Witnesses, as well as those facing Jews and Christians.

    Our commitment to FoRB is unwavering, and we look forward to continuing our work with the OSCE.