Tag: 2023

  • PRESS RELEASE : New expert panel to support victims after major disasters [March 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : New expert panel to support victims after major disasters [March 2023]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Justice on 1 March 2023.

    First ever ‘Independent Public Advocate’ to launch in England and Wales.

    • expert panel will support victims until the conclusion of all inquiries and inquests
    • fulfils government promise to deliver change in response to national tragedies

    Survivors and the bereaved families of major disasters like Hillsborough, the Manchester Arena bombing and the Grenfell Tower fire will receive new dedicated support in the future under plans unveiled by the government today (1 March).

    An expert panel will act to represent families as a new Independent Public Advocate ensuring that the voices of victims and their families are better heard, right from the immediate aftermath of a tragedy until all inquiries and inquests have concluded.

    The Independent Public Advocate will bring together a specialist panel of people appointed on their relevant expertise and on their experience of working with public authorities. This includes former social workers, ex-civil servants, retired doctors, emergency services, professionals with media experience and community leaders.

    The trained advocates will provide practical support to families, the bereaved and those who have suffered life-changing injuries including:

    • signposting them to vital financial, physical and mental health services such as Victim Support, the Homicide Service and any charities established as a result of a major disaster
    • providing them with regular updates about the investigation including helping them receive information at inquests or inquiries
    • making sure they understand processes and their rights, so they can fully participate in the investigation where there is a right for them to do so
    • advocating on their behalf to public authorities and government, providing a direct channel to voice concerns around the responsiveness of organisations such as the police or local councils

    Crucially, the Independent Public Advocate will be responsible for producing a report once all investigations have been completed and make recommendations to the government for improvements based on the experiences of survivors and the bereaved.

    Deputy Prime Minister, Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice, Dominic Raab said:

    We’re creating the Independent Public Advocate so that the survivors and bereaved of a major tragedy have practical support and are given a greater voice in seeking answers for the loved ones that they have lost.

    The IPA will empower the victims throughout any inquiry, make sure they are listened to, and get the support they need from day one.

    The intervention delivers on a previous manifesto commitment to create an Independent Public Advocate by the then Prime Minister Theresa May MP, which was welcomed by Bishop James Jones in his report into the experiences of the Hillsborough families. The creation of an IPA has also been championed by both Maria Eagle MP and the Rt Hon the Lord Wills in Parliament. The report called for greater representation for survivors and the bereaved in similar situations moving forward.

    The Rt Hon Theresa May, MP, said:

    I welcome the introduction of an Independent Public Advocate which was a commitment in our 2017 manifesto. I look forward to working with the government to ensure that it delivers the support needed in the aftermath of a public disaster so that families don’t have to go through years of struggle to get to the truth as happened after Hillsborough.

    Establishing a panel builds on this original commitment by making sure victims receive the best support possible from a range of different professions, backgrounds and geographical areas.

    In 2018, a government consultation highlighted that the various processes that take place after major disasters, such as the Grenfell Tower fire and the Manchester Arena bombing, can be overwhelming and complex for victims as they often involve multiple unfamiliar agencies.

    The Independent Public Advocate will directly address these issues by supporting victims through every aspect of the processes that follow a major disaster. It will also act as a crucial line of communication between victims and government so concerns are addressed quickly.

    It will be made up of multiple advocates, supported by a full-time permanent staff, so the Independent Public Advocate can respond quickly, effectively and at short notice. This will provide better support and resilience than a single advocate, especially where disasters involve large numbers of people.

    Advocates will be appointed by the Secretary of State for Justice, but critically the Independent Public Advocate will consult with and represent victims before any inquiry is set up. Victims will also be able to nominate community leaders as an advocate.

    Victims and families will be able to make representations to stand up or stand down the Independent Public Advocate following an incident.

    The Independent Public Advocate will also be able to recommend the government set up investigations quickly, such as a Hillsborough style panel inquiry.

    Legislation to create an Independent Public Advocate will be introduced shortly.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Scottish Secretary responds to GDP for Q4 2022 and December 2022 [March 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Scottish Secretary responds to GDP for Q4 2022 and December 2022 [March 2023]

    The press release issued by the Scottish Office on 1 March 2023.

    Alister Jack says PM’s pledge to halve inflation, reduce debt and grow the economy is vital in the face of global challenges.

    Figures for Scotland’s onshore GDP in December 2022 and for the final quarter of 2022 have been published today.

    The economy grew by 0.1% during the period from October to December. For the month of December itself GDP is estimated to have fallen by 0.6% after remaining flat in November (0% change).

    Responding to the statistics, Scottish Secretary Alister Jack said:

    Our economy has proven to be more resilient than many feared, but there are still challenges ahead. That is why it is our priority to halve inflation, reduce debt and grow the economy.

    We are providing immediate vital support to ease the cost of living, providing help for those most in need by increasing benefits and pensions in line with inflation and raising the National Living Wage. This is in addition to extra help with energy bills and on top of an extra £1.5 billion for the Scottish Government to help support public services in Scotland.

    Sustainable growth for our long-term future is a priority. To make that happen, we’re investing more than £2.2bn levelling up communities across the country, including our hugely successful City and Regional Growth Deals. The two new Freeports announced for Scotland in January will boost trade and create high-quality jobs to benefit all of Scotland and the whole of the UK.

  • Grant Shapps – 2023 Speech at Norwegian Royal Plenary Session

    Grant Shapps – 2023 Speech at Norwegian Royal Plenary Session

    The speech made by Grant Shapps, the Secretary of State for Energy Security and Net Zero, in London on 1 March 2023.

    A little over 80 years ago, just before midnight, on Tuesday February 16th, 1943…

    A small team of Norwegian commandos, trained by the British Special Operations Executive in Scotland….. parachuted from an RAF plane onto a freezing mountain plateau in Telemark.

    Against overwhelming odds…..

    They managed to blow up part of the hydroelectric power plant at Vemork that had been taken over by the Nazis.

    Our Norwegian friends here will know, that it was the largest plant of its type in the world at the time – and a symbol of Norway’s status as an energy superpower.

    Not only was it the most audacious act of sabotage in modern military history..

    But because Vemork was mass producing heavy water used in the nuclear fission process…

    These heroes ended Hitler’s dream of building a nuclear bomb.

    Eight decades on, Britain and Norway still share the same special bond that made this extraordinary attack possible.

    Critical allies in standing up to aggression, most recently Putin’s evil war in Ukraine…..

    And we’re still committed to making the world a more secure place.

    Our bonds stretch back centuries; indeed, many British names and traditions bare the mark of the Norsemen and women who settled here many hundreds of years ago.

    Even our royal families are related – and it is a pleasure and honour to welcome His Royal Highness, Crown Prince Haakon to London today and – actually – back to London. After all, His Royal Highness studied here in London.

    I know that these ties will help us to continue working together as we speed up our transition to net zero…

    And build a green and prosperous future for all.

    Norway and Russia

    We are also hugely grateful for what you are doing today.

    Norwegian gas has been critically important in providing energy resilience to Europe this critical winter.

    Including for Britain – where it accounts for about a third of our current gas consumption.

    As we reflect on this year’s barbaric war in Ukraine, we have all been taught a valuable lesson.

    Never again must we allow our country to be held to ransom on energy as Putin has done.

    We must join together and utilise our flourishing renewables industries to defeat energy tyranny.

    Renewables

    Like Norway, we want to be smart about the way we think about our energy.

    And smart with the way we use our extraordinary renewable resources and green tech leadership.

    And as the UK works towards my goal of delivering the cheapest wholesale electricity prices in Europe by the middle of the next decade..

    …we can start to think about how best to nuture our energy industries for the long term.

    And like your fantastically successful sovereign wealth fund, we want to think about how we ensure the benefits of renewables are fed back into the economy – for the good of all.

    From offshore wind to carbon capture, utilisation and storage and to hydrogen..

    We will support these vital technologies, ensuring that they work seamlessly across borders.

    For example, our two countries need to work out the best use of the vast carbon storage capacity in the North Sea.

    And we need to ask how best we can work with other countries to increase CO2 trading across boundaries……. as well as working together on hydrogen.

    Indeed, I look forward signing after the speeches the expanded Memorandum of Understanding with Norway on Carbon capture and storage which will include closer collaboration on hydrogen.

    Conclusion

    Eighty years after that audacious Telemark raid we must join together and join forces once again…

    I know that our shared vision and our shared history will help us meet our big 21st century challenges:

    Energy security,

    Sustainability

    And affordability.

    These three goals need to become a mantra engrained onto our collective psyche so we can make the rest of this century a success for both our countries, and for the rest of the world.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Government announces a third year of support to help Hong Kongers settle into life in the UK [March 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Government announces a third year of support to help Hong Kongers settle into life in the UK [March 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities on 1 March 2023.

    • Organisations invited to bid for £2.6 million funding to deliver projects across the UK to help BN(O)s
    • Government’s Hong Kong BN(O) Welcome Programme renewed for third year
    • Continued funding for On Your Side, the hate crime reporting and support service for BN(O)s and all other East and South East Asian communities

    The government today (1 March 2023) announced a further year of funding for its Hong Kong BN(O) Welcome Programme for 2023 to 2024, to support Hong Kongers coming to live in the UK under the BN(O) visa.

    Today’s package will help individuals and their families on the BN(O) visa route to come and settle in the UK. Since its launch at the start of 2021, over 160,000 eligible Hong Kongers and their family members have chosen to take up this offer and applied for the BN(O) visa. They can start their new lives in the UK, free to live, work, and study, in virtually any capacity, on a pathway to citizenship.

    The Welcome Programme is announcing:

    • £2.6 million of funding for UK-wide and regional projects, inviting bids from voluntary, community and social enterprise (‘VCSE’) organisations.
    • Continued funding for the network of 12 Welcome Hubs across the UK, helping BN(O)s understand and connect to services in their local area.
    • Further funding for On Your Side, the reporting and support service for BN(O)s and all other East and Southeast Asian communities in the UK who experience or witness racism or any other form of hate*.
    • Further funding for English language classes, and destitution support if needed, provided through local authorities in England. Over 3,600 BN(O)s have been supported with English through this funding.
    • Continued updates to our dedicated GOV.UK page, including our Welcome Pack, available in English and Cantonese.

    Felicity Buchan, Minister for the Hong Kong BN(O) Welcome Programme said:

    BN(O)s have already become a vibrant part of the UK’s communities, making a fantastic contribution to our national life, and creating new businesses and social enterprises.

    Continuing our support reflects our commitment to our new friends and neighbours on the BN(O) route. We are proud that so many have chosen to make the UK their home.

    Since its launch in 2021, the British National (Overseas) (‘BN(O)’) visa route has been a success, with nearly 154,000 BN(O)s and their dependents granted their visa.

    In previous funding rounds, the Welcome Programme has funded VCSE organisations to support BN(O)s in areas such as employability, mental health and wellbeing, and social integration, making a huge difference to people’s lives.

    One such project is the Hong Kong Business Hub, supporting people in London and the North West of England, which provides professional coaching to entrepreneurs wanting to start their own businesses. After receiving professional coaching from the Hong Kong Business Hub, Rachel Tang and her partner secured a franchise deal to open their own bubble tea shop in London.

    Another is the Health for All group in Yorkshire and Humberside, which offer a range of services, including English language, employability, and housing support.

    One BN(O), who became involved as a volunteer at the Leeds-based organisation, said: “Volunteering at Health for All has helped me achieve my career goal. I like helping people with language needs, so I’m starting their interpreter course where I hope to help many others in the future.”

    The Welcome Programme has also funded UKHK (a project of Welcome Churches), which has been running Friendship Festivals across the UK to bring together BN(O)s and their new communities. So far they have run 14 festivals in cities including Manchester, Birmingham, Belfast, and Cardiff, sharing food, entertainment and local traditions from Hong Kong.

    If you are a BN(O) and want to find out more about the Welcome Programme, please see our dedicated GOV.UK page, available in English and Cantonese.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Denise Lewis Poulton appointed as Trustee of the National Heritage Memorial Fund and The National Lottery Heritage Fund [March 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Denise Lewis Poulton appointed as Trustee of the National Heritage Memorial Fund and The National Lottery Heritage Fund [March 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport on 1 March 2023.

    The Prime Minister has appointed Denise Lewis Poulton as Trustee and Chair of the Committee for Wales for a term of three years, from 6 February 2023 until 5 February 2026.

    Denise Lewis Poulton

    Denise Lewis Poulton is an experienced non-executive director, trustee and senior adviser to public, private and third sector bodies.

    Currently a Non-Executive Director of S4C, the Welsh language television broadcaster and multi-media channel for Wales. She has served on the Boards of The Wallace Collection and the Welsh National Opera, as trustee of The Wessex Youth Trust and Cadwgan Buildings Preservation Trust and a Vice-President of The Hay Literary Festival.

    A corporate affairs and strategic communications specialist, during her career as a consultant Denise advised the Welsh Government and Senedd Cymru and a number of Welsh cultural, media and public sector organisations. Her executive career was spent in leadership roles in multi-national and FTSE telecom companies culminating in her role as Group Director of Corporate Affairs at Orange plc where she launched the brand in 22 countries worldwide and created and built an award-winning portfolio of arts, education and cultural sponsorship.

    Born in Adpar, Newcastle Emlyn, Ceredigion, Denise was educated at Llandysul Grammar School and King’s College, University of London. A Welsh speaker, she is passionate about harnessing the power of heritage, culture and the arts in regenerating communities in Wales and across the UK.

    Remuneration and Governance Code

    This position is remunerated at £20,749 per annum. This appointment has been made in accordance with the Cabinet Office’s Governance Code on Public Appointments. The appointments process is regulated by the Commissioner for Public Appointments. Under the Code, any significant political activity undertaken by an appointee in the last five years must be declared. This is defined as including holding office, public speaking, making a recordable donation, or candidature for election. Denise Lewis Poulton has not declared any political activity in the past five years.

  • PRESS RELEASE : The only thing Russia will achieve in Ukraine is dishonour, disgrace and defeat – UK statement to the OSCE [March 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : The only thing Russia will achieve in Ukraine is dishonour, disgrace and defeat – UK statement to the OSCE [March 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 1 March 2023.

    UK military advisor Ian Stubbs says that thousands of Russians continue to pay the price for the tactics of a desperate Russian military leadership.

    Thank you, Mr Chair. When Russia launched its brutal and illegal full-scale invasion of Ukraine a year ago, President Putin expected to succeed within a few weeks. Twelve months later, reports indicate that approximately 800 Russian soldiers a day are dying for his hopeless ambitions.

    Since November, we have seen Russian forces make an effort to advance on multiple fronts. However, with poorly trained and equipped mobilised reserves and convicts making up much of the mass, Russian forces have not been able to deploy effectively enough to break through. Any tactical gains Russia has managed have come at huge cost. Thousands of Russians continue to pay the price for their frustrated Russian military leaders, who have doubled down on flawed blunt edged attritional tactics in place of effective leadership.

    In the face of these setbacks, the Kremlin has adopted a strategy of long-range missiles strikes on critical national infrastructure which deliberately aim to spread terror amongst civilians in Ukraine. Many of these strikes by Russian forces have no military value. Russia’s continued violations of international law and increased targeting of civilians indicates systemic moral bankruptcy. It is a cynical and calculated strategy of wanton destruction. It is a strategy that will fail and another sign of the Kremlin’s desperation.

    In contrast, during Ukraine’s autumn counter offensive, Ukraine achieved significant momentum, pushing Russia out of the northeast and southern parts of the country. Ukraine has liberated over half of the territory Russia seized since 24 February 2022. Ukraine has also hugely increased its success in shooting down Russian missiles, and despite its overwhelming numerical advantage in aircraft, Russia still has not been able to achieve air superiority over Ukraine.

    Mr Chair, it is undeniable that President Putin badly miscalculated in Ukraine. And yet, his government officials and diplomats have repeatedly censored free speech and peddled disinformation to try and cover up his lies. And the lies continue.

    In this Forum on 26 January, our Russian colleague stated that Russia “has never set out to destroy Ukraine as a State”. That is blatantly false. On 25 November 2021, as Russia continued its build-up of pre-invasion forces, our Russian colleague called upon the West to “temper their ardour” and “prevent any further escalation, which could lead to lamentable consequences, including the collapse of Ukrainian statehood”. As Russia has rained down missiles on Ukraine – reducing entire cities, towns and villages to rubble, killing and injuring thousands of innocent civilians – it is all too clear to everyone who is threatening whose statehood.

    Last week, our Russian colleague again pursued the tired false narrative that Russia is the victim and NATO the aggressor. I would remind our Russian colleague that the facts tell a different story: NATO didn’t invade Ukraine. Russia did. Before Russia’s illegal annexation of Crimea in 2014, there was no NATO Enhanced Forward Presence.  In response to Russia’s use of military force against Ukraine, NATO deployed four multinational battlegroups to the Baltic States and Poland in 2016.  These and NATO’s subsequent deployments to protect its members are a direct result of Russia’s aggressive actions in 2014 and its full-scale invasion of Ukraine last year.  Russia, and only Russia, is responsible.

    Mr Chair, those complicit in the Kremlin’s unprovoked aggression and those who peddle its blizzard of lies to hide the truth from the Russian people should be ashamed. Putin’s war of choice has led the Russian people into a quagmire and turned Russia into an international pariah. The only thing Russia will achieve in Ukraine is dishonour, disgrace and defeat.

    Ukraine will win. It can rely on continued steadfast support from the UK and other partners. We remain unwavering in our commitment to the principles of the UN Charter. We will keep the promises we have made to the Ukrainian people and will give them all the help they need, for as long as it takes, until Ukraine prevails. Giving Ukraine the support it needs to defend itself and push Russia out of its sovereign territory is the swiftest and only path to a just and lasting peace. Thank you.

  • PRESS RELEASE : UK and Singapore Ink New Green Economy Framework, Bolstering Energy and Climate Collaboration [March 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : UK and Singapore Ink New Green Economy Framework, Bolstering Energy and Climate Collaboration [March 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 1 March 2023.

    The Government of the United Kingdom and the Government of the Republic of Singapore have signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to establish a bilateral Green Economy Framework.

    The Government of the United Kingdom and the Government of the Republic of Singapore have signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to establish a bilateral Green Economy Framework. This agreement, a first-of-its-kind for the UK, was signed during a virtual call between the Department of Energy Security and Net Zero’s (DESNZ) Secretary of State, The Rt Grant Shapps MP, and Singapore’s Minister-in-charge of Trade Relations from the Singapore’s Ministry of Trade and Industry (MTI), Mr S Iswaran, on 1 March 2023.

    Building on the successful UK-Singapore Free Trade Agreement and Digital Economy Agreement, the innovative UK-Singapore Green Economy Framework combines elements of climate, economic and trade policy. This will enable both countries to achieve national decarbonisation targets in alignment with the Paris Agreement while enhancing energy security and promoting green growth through new investment, job creation and export opportunities. This collaboration will take place across three key pillars: green transport, low carbon energy technologies, and sustainable finance and carbon markets.

    Expanding on the UK’s legacy of our successful COP26 Presidency, and Singapore’s COP-honed expertise facilitating the negotiations on international rules for carbon trading, the ambition of this government-to-government agreement is to facilitate more collaboration between UK and Singapore industry and academic partners. This will result in new commercial pilot projects, trade and investments, and research and innovation. The Framework will be implemented through different mechanisms, including government policy dialogues, business matchmaking, industry workshops, and research partnerships.

    Secretary of State for the Department for Energy Security & Net Zero Grant Shapps said:

    The war in Ukraine has demonstrated the vital importance of shoring up our energy security, and moves towards ever-greater energy independence.

    Today’s agreement with Singapore – the first of its kind in the UK – will make the most of the expertise and innovation of both our countries.  It will help us move towards greener, home-grown alternatives to fossil fuels like renewables, creating high tech jobs and businesses of the future and, ultimately, bringing down costs for consumers.

    British High Commissioner to Singapore Kara Owen said:

    Today marks a very significant milestone for the UK-Singapore partnership as we sign an innovative and real-world focused UK-Singapore Green Economy Framework. The framework will help both the UK and Singapore work towards their ambitious net zero targets and contribute to the development of a vibrant green economy private sector ecosystem that can have an impact beyond our two shores.

    In action, this Framework will leverage the UK and Singapore’s strengths in areas like low carbon technology, shipping and finance to deliver long-term sustainable policy, regulation and technical solutions and projects between our private sector and academic communities.

    Singapore is an important partner to the UK in working towards a sustainable and net zero future. With significant and ever-growing investments in UK’s renewable energy sector, the UK-Singapore Green Economy Framework will further strengthen our existing, long-term collaboration by creating new growth opportunities for both countries.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Armed forces parliamentary scheme group visits British forces in the Falklands Islands [March 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Armed forces parliamentary scheme group visits British forces in the Falklands Islands [March 2023]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Defence on 1 March 2023.

    British parliamentarians visited the Falkland Islands this month to see what life is like for service personnel stationed in the South Atlantic region.

    As part of the Armed Forces Parliamentary Scheme (AFPS), a group of MPs and peers were received at the Mount Pleasant Complex (MPC) for four days.

    The visitors spent time with soldiers, sailors, and aviators at the British Forces South Atlantic Islands (BFSAI) base, which is administered by Strategic Command, to better understand the issues that affect the Armed Forces community.

    The trip started off with a tour of a Royal Navy vessel, HMS Medway, where the group met the Ship’s Company.

    Next, they spent some time with the newly-arrived Roulement Infantry Company, provided by the British Army’s 1st Battalion Scots Guards, on the Onion Ranges training area.

    There the group observed virtual and live firing demonstrations using rifles and pistols, before spending a night under the stars to try out night vision devices.

    Close to the heart of any Scots Guardsman, a battlefield study of Mount Tumbledown saw the party given an overview of the famous 1982 battle.

    Next on the agenda was a trip to the RAF’s 1435 (Typhoon) Flight, where they were shown around one of the fighter aircraft permanently stationed at MPC; the RAF then flew the group over the islands on an A400M Atlas transport.

    The party was also shown the Resident Sky Sabre Battery (RSSB), the British Army’s newest air defence system, at Poon Hill and observed the Bristow Search and Rescue (SAR) helicopters which work alongside the military.

    A meeting with local dignitaries in the territory’s capital, Stanley, concluded the AFPS visit to the Falklands and the hosting service personnel can reflect on a job well done.

  • Penny Mordaunt – 2023 Speech at the Edelman UK Trust Barometer

    Penny Mordaunt – 2023 Speech at the Edelman UK Trust Barometer

    The speech made by Penny Mordaunt, the Leader of the House of Commons, on 1 March 2023.

    Good morning, everyone and thank you all for turning up today to listen to me – although it is a mystery why.

    They could’ve asked a doctor, an engineer, a headteacher or a judge, to speak to you today.

    But no, the folks at Edelman have asked a politician to talk about trust.

    I’m not here as an endorser of my host’s research,

    nor its commercial organisation.

    I am not being paid to attend

    I’m here because they were kind enough to invite me and I believe trust matter, and trust-decay has real harm for our society and how it functions.

    Lose trust in democracy and democracy dies.

    Lose trust in capitalism and it fails too.

    The progress of humanity depends upon trust.

    Edelman have shown you the what, I want to talk about what we can do about it – not just in my profession, but all of us.

    Everywhere, national governments, parliaments and other authorities with their bureaucratised and traditional structures, are struggling to be effective and relevant in the modern world. And they have been steeped in scandal.

    Politicians share this timeline of trust decay with a cast of leaders from every walk of life. I will give you a quick recap.

    Since the turn of the century, we’ve learned that our leaders, rigged interests rates, laundered drug money, presided over an offshore banking system bigger than anyone thought possible,

    forced good companies into closure and destroyed pension funds as they themselves grew wealthier.

    Collectively, they oversaw an unprecedented destruction of wealth and the collapse of the financial system.

    They watched as life savings placed into investment funds set up by leaders of previously unimpeachable integrity turned out to be Ponzi schemes.

    They sold off reserves of gold to compensate for these exercises in corporate greed, while never once convicting a banker.

    Our spiritual leaders covered up sex abuse in the Church.

    Our charity leaders sexually abused the vulnerable.

    Our child welfare leaders have permitted child abuse.

    Our Police leaders have allowed predators to wear a uniform.

    Leaders of the automotive industry lied about emissions, were imprisoned, fled the country while out on bail and remain fugitives.

    The leaders of our water utilities polluted rivers then tried to cover it up.

    Global entertainment leaders have faced multiple allegations of sexual harassment and abuse.

    Britain’s leading broadcaster falsely accused political figures of being child abusers, while allowing actual abusers to commit crimes on their premises.

    Meanwhile, sporting leaders have been caught cheating and doping.

    Human rights lawyers have been struck off for misconduct and dishonesty.

    And the offshore tax operation thought to be a fraction of the UK economy, turned out to be a multiple of it.

    These failings – personal and organisational – are nothing new.

    But today it seems it’s not just that things don’t work or that some people are wrong’uns.

    There are new layers to trust decay.

    The system feels rigged against you.

    Some are feeling economic shocks for the first time as has been pointed out.

    Consumers feel they have less power.

    Some pay a premium for being poor.

    Life has gotten more complex.

    It is harder to help,

    Harder to communicate – to share platforms, to cut through the noise. To understand the world around us, to feel invested and invested in.

    Harder not to feel overwhelmed in the face of existential and greyer threats.

    Or the dizzying pace of technological change.

    We have generational voids – young people are fixated on rewriting or tearing down the past because they don’t believe they have a future.

    Older generations want to stop the noise. Stop the constant change. The bull***t (as they see it). Stop their world being turned upside down. Stop their values and institutions being belittled and patronised. These changes, in their eyes, are a type of catastrophe. They have lost the stars to steer by as slowly, the constants and comforts of their youth have disappeared. The high street has been hollowed out. Their childhood heroes have been debunked and their past rewritten. Local has been replaced with national and international. They feel overwhelmed; their world has been Amazonked.

    So why this complexity and division?

    The spread of a consumer society partially explains this–providing ever more efficiently to our own personal preference. We now have very specific requirements about our food, our work, holiday destinations, cars, clothes, just about everything.

    In fact we express our economic franchise far more frequently than we do our political franchise. In politics, we get a chance to vote every five years but in economics we do so every hour of every day.

    The rise of the internet means we can join groups that appeal directly to our own beliefs. Extremism can find extremists all over the world. We’re far more connected internationally than ever before. We can find anything to believe in there and people frequently do.

    Then there is the growth in media, especially social media that commercially is dependent on conflict – we may have many shared values, but when did consensus ever sell popcorn? Now we have a media which is deliberately controversial and confrontational. We have commercialised conflict. We have specific commentators whose job is to stir things up and the simple truth is that harmony and contentment is not valued by the media.

    And nor is it universally popular amongst politicians too.

    These forces are all conspiring to make us feel more atomised.

    Previously, we were split by gender, sexual preference, profession, location, marital status, education, football club, religion or politics. We are now split further by whether we are vegan, FBPE, BLM,  Brexiteer or Remainer, nationalist or unionist, woke or non-woke. Zoomer or boomer.

    This complete atomisation means that people do not feel that their values are shared. At best, those with different opinions are abused. At worst, they are cancelled and demonised.

    ‘We’ have become a million types of ‘they’.

    When this happens, trust between groups breaks down.

    Some are genuinely afraid.

    Afraid of saying the wrong thing or of worse.

    Mental health suffered, for some this exhibits itself in a new vice of choice: the paranoia of conspiracy.

    Here a few recent gems that have appears on mainstream broadcast this past weekend:

    The air-raids in Ukraine are fake, and the sirens are sound effects applied by the Ukrainian government.

    Controversial traffic calming measures are not the product of an overbearing lib dem council but a global conspiracy to get us to eat insects.

    I am all in favour of livening up local authority transport committees, but there are limits!

    The Government is shortly going to start rationing food, and a food rationing app is in development. This is a conspiracy between the government and large food corporations.

    Presumably there will be unlimited access to turnips.

    And this exploitative monologue:

    “Are we simply to be fed on a diet of propaganda right down to the lies about health and food and the climate and war and biology and race until we are so unwell, confused, exhausted and anxious that we don’t notice when they pick the last penny out of our pockets and lock us down in a digital ghetto watched round the clock by cameras and listening devices we pay through the nose to carry in our own pockets. And the rationing of tomatoes.”

    And now it’s time for the weather.

    Such alarmist nonsense gains credibility from being sandwiched between credible broadcast anchors. People whose loyalties have historically been to their profession and craft.

    Falsehood and deep fakes sit alongside information and legitimate debate in your social media timelines.

    We can tell the difference though, right?

    • An opinion poll a few years ago by Hope Not Hate showed:
      • 30% of 25-30 year olds believed antisemitic tropes they saw online.
      • 31 % of that age group thought that Covid had been intentionally released as a deliberate depopulation plan by the UN or the New World Order’.
      • 29 % thought that the vaccine programme was an attempt to insert microchips into people.
      • 50% of people aged 25-34 believed that regardless of who is in government, there is a single group of people who secretly control events and rule the world together. 50%.

    Being a government Minister, having attended Davos, I am clearly part of this group – and I am braced for a post speech social media pile on as to why I am an apologist for a global illuminati hell bent on ending humanity as we know it.

    As a former defence secretary and the UK Government’s former defensive cyber lead – I can testify there are enough organisations in the world trying to do us genuine harm, thank you very much, without us having to invent some.

    So how can we build trust?

    We need to recognise what is driving this.

    Conflict and division sells. It is a vice.

    Nothing new about that. It is why we all say we hate PMQs but thousands will be tuning in later today.

    But so much of the content I take issue with is not about debate. It is about profit. Attracting an audience which is addicted to such theories.

    Raise concerns about the harm being done and you are “one of them”, or a ‘free speech denier’.

    You’ll be told? ‘What is your problem? I was just asking the question, I just want to know what is your connection to the Rothchilds?

    Work in broadcasting and care about compliance and ethics? and you are and I quote, “Ofcom’s b**ch”.

    Division and disagreement is not bad.

    In fact I’d argue it is good. Its present does not make societies and communities weak. It makes them strong.

    We’ve just seen China does well on the lack of a trust gap. Nope not much division there.

    I don’t want to live in China.

    The UK is quite good at taking on and adopting new ideas partly because it listens to minority voices. The future always arrives as a minority. That’s sometimes where you can hear tomorrow.

    Because alongside different views and ideas there is a recognition of shared values.

    An understanding of what Freedom really means

    It is about rights but also responsibilities.

    Free societies need responsible adults.

    The value of free speech is not just in your freedom to say something, but also in our ability to listen and learn something. It is also the freedom to change your mind and the freedom to be uncertain.

    The absence of that freedom damages our ability to be effective, our wellbeing and we should never take that freedom for granted and we should recognise when it is under attack.

    We need new ways of helping people be digitally literate, and think critically.

    Government is acting on this:

    We are improving the effectiveness of the House of Commons.

    We have the Online Safety Bill and workstreams and the defending democracy task force.

    The Prime Minister is on a mission to restore trust, starting with clear priorities and accountability.

    He understands that trust is earned.

    But we recognise something else is required too.

    It is about the relationship between trust and values.

    You see, politicians spend a lot of their careers seeking the parenthesis.

    Searching for values that we share, that we care about.

    These might be the love of our families.

    The desire for health and prosperity.

    It might be the concern for our environment or our children’s future.

    A shared venture, a common project.

    What we all have in common.

    The future of Britain isn’t decided by politicians, it’s decided by the character of the British people. Their character is the national destiny.

    This fills me full of hope because I believe in the character of the British people. They’re sceptical. They don’t like bullies. They’re fair-minded. They’re thrifty. They don’t like greed. They like to help. They have a sense of humour. They are tolerant. They love freedom.

    My late friend Jo Cox said: “We have more in common than that which divides us.” Her words are freighted by the manner of her death. If the Commons had a motto it should be that.

    Politicians have an important role to play. We have convening power and we can, when we choose to, bring people together and we should.

    Before we find answers, we must find shared challenges.

    Common ground.

    Truths we know to be self-evident.

    Where you find common ground, you will find trust.

    Establishing shared values starts with being prepared to defend them.

    That is what we can do as politicians.

    It is what we must do as citizens.

    You see you need not trust the former but we all have to trust the latter.

    Thank you.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Ministers reappoint Mark Hoble to remuneration review bodies [March 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Ministers reappoint Mark Hoble to remuneration review bodies [March 2023]

    The press release issued by the Home Office on 1 March 2023.

    Ministers have approved a reappointment of a member of the Police Remuneration Review Body and the National Crime Agency Remuneration Review Body.

    Ministers have reappointed Mark Hoble to the Police Remuneration Review Body (PRRB) and National Crime Agency Remuneration Review Body (NCARRB). Mark has been reappointed for a second term of three years, from March 2023 to March 2026.

    The PRRB makes independent recommendations concerning the pay, allowances and conditions of police officers to the Home Secretary and the Northern Ireland Minister of Justice.

    The NCARRB makes independent recommendations to the government on the pay and allowances of NCA officers designated with operational powers.