Tag: 2023

  • PRESS RELEASE : British business sizes up global trade wins as Malaysia and Chile join Indo-Pacific bloc [February 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : British business sizes up global trade wins as Malaysia and Chile join Indo-Pacific bloc [February 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for International Trade on 6 February 2023.

    UK business opportunities bolstered as Malaysia and Chile join the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP).

    • Malaysia and Chile ratify membership of CPTPP, bolstering the Indo-Pacific trade bloc worth a combined £9 trillion of GDP
    • The UK is working to become the first European member of the bloc this year with negotiations progressing well
    • British businesses can add Malaysia and Chile to the list of countries they could benefit from lower tariffs on exports to now they have joined CPTPP

    Malaysia and Chile have officially joined the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP), meaning British businesses will get better access and lower tariffs in the Malaysian and Chilean markets when the UK joins the dynamic trade bloc.

    Malaysia is one of the CPTPP members with which the UK does not currently have a bilateral free trade agreement. The UK and Malaysia both joining CPTPP will greatly increase the UK’s access to the Malaysian market and could boost the £2.9bn worth of exports we currently sell there annually.

    Chile was the first country to sign a trade deal with the UK after we left the EU which secured preferential access to each other’s markets. Chile remains one of the foremost champions of free and open trade in the Pacific region and is keen to deepen our trading relationship, which was already worth £1.5bn in 2021.

    Joining CPTPP will also provide opportunities for collaboration with Chile in areas such as fintech, green finance and cybersecurity, supporting innovation in our financial services sector and helping develop our countries as leaders of financial services.

    The UK is making good progress in negotiating our own accession to CPTPP. UK accession could mean more than 99% of UK exports to member countries become eligible for tariff-free trade.

    Minister of State for Trade Policy Greg Hands said:

    This is great news for UK businesses and global free trade. The Indo-Pacific has some of the most innovative and fast-growing economies in the world and closer ties with markets like Malaysia and Chile will demonstrate how our trade agenda is delivering for the whole of the UK.

    I’ve spent the last few days in the Asia-Pacific region to discuss our accession to CPTPP which will take the bloc from 12% to 15% of global GDP and will mean we are using our independent trading powers to bring a new, strong, persuasive voice to a network committed to free trade.

    Sheffield-based chilli paste manufacturer Mak Tok has been exploring Malaysia as a new potential market and is looking to license the brand and partner with a manufacturer in the country.

    Mak Tok rose to fame after showcasing its Malaysian chilli paste and sauces on Dragon’s Den. The business has been created around traditional Malaysian cuisine and already exports to other CPTPP member countries including New Zealand.

    The Department for International Trade (DIT) has supported Mak Tok on its exporting journey and the benefit of improved market access could mean they see increased opportunities to trade with Malaysia as joint members of CPTPP.

    Mak Tok Founder Will Chew said:

    Malaysia and its neighbouring countries have always been markets Mak Tok has been trying to penetrate. For the past few months, we have been working closely with our dedicated International Trade Advisor and the wider Department for International Trade (DIT) team on a strategy to establish those critical initial contacts in the region.

    Being a part of CPTPP will accelerate our conversations with potential manufacturing and distribution partners, which will generate a new revenue stream for the business, expand our market reach and increase the movement of our products.

    These key metrics will fuel the growth of Mak Tok by attracting new key investors in the Indo-Pacific region to help drive the brand even further.

    Founded in Bath in 1990, the Fine Cheese Co. export a range of traditionally made artisan cheeses from independent producers from across the UK. The product can currently be found in over 600 delicatessens, farm shops and independent retailers across the UK and thirty other nations across the globe, from Chile to Australia.

    Fine Cheese Co. Owner and Director, John Siddall, said:

    Having exported to the country since 2008, The Fine Cheese Co. is excited about the future opportunity of the Chilean market at the nation’s gourmet market expands.

    The most recent round of CPTPP negotiations, held in London in December, made good progress and the UK continues to engage in talks on both a bilateral and collective basis with CPTPP members.

    Joining CPTPP puts Britain at the heart of a dynamic group of countries, as the world economy increasingly centres on the Pacific region. As these economies grow, stronger trade links with these countries are crucial to benefiting from this growth.

  • Mark Harper – 2023 Speech to the Airport Operators Association Conference

    Mark Harper – 2023 Speech to the Airport Operators Association Conference

    The speech made by Mark Harper, the Secretary of State for Transport, on 31 January 2023.

    Introduction

    It’s a pleasure to be here, delivering my first aviation speech since becoming Transport Secretary.

    You could be forgiven over the last year for thinking you perhaps have heard ministers using that line before. It’s been frustrating, I know, for an industry eager to get on with the business of growth…especially after the devastating impact of of the Covid pandemic over the last few years.

    So let me start by thanking all of you, not just for the hard work airports continued to do amidst last year’s political and economic turbulence, and that’s turbulence which I’m very pleased that this government – led by this Prime Minister – has ended, but also for the collaboration I’ve seen in the face of ongoing strike action at our borders. And I know you’ve heard earlier from Phil Douglas, the Director General of Border Force. And my department and Border Force have been working very closely with airports to make sure we have resourcing available and we minimise the disruption to the travelling public from that industrial action.

    I would also like to acknowledge the recent unfortunate news about the collapse of Flybe and our thoughts are obviously with those affected. We’re working in the department with the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) to help the passengers affected to access alternative travel arrangements, and pointing staff to the support available from the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP).

    But I was also very pleased by the sector’s quick response not only with Ryanair, British Airways and EasyJet, stepping in with special fares for those passengers disrupted, but also the industry’s announcements around fast tracking recruitment processes, for the staff who sadly lost their jobs. All are actually welcome signs of a growing resilience within the sector and you’re focused on ensuring that you can retain and attract the skills and talent necessary for this industry to continue growing.

    It’s been 6 years since I was last in government. When I was last in government, aviation’s challenge wasn’t about whether it would grow….it was about by how much….and about whether the industry could keep pace with the rising demand. Pre-pandemic, we had the largest aviation sector in Europe with air transport and aerospace worth £22 billion to our national economy, providing nearly a quarter of a million jobs. Passenger numbers at UK airports had grown by over a third since 2009 and the eve of the pandemic saw the highest number ever.

    Recovery

    That conversation, however, quickly changed. And the last few years have been the toughest in this industry’s 100-year history. Where UK airports saw a 99% drop in passenger numbers at the height of the pandemic and globally, the sector faced a fall in passenger revenue of over £250 billion in 2021.

    Some of you may know that as a backbencher I watched that unfold. I led a group of MPs who wanted a balanced approach to COVID-19 restrictions. Outside of government, I felt one of the jobs of MPs was to hold the government to account, and ask tough questions about policy to make sure we made the right decisions. We did obviously have a duty to protect public health, but we also had a duty to business and workers. And the Prime Minister, while he was Chancellor, obviously put in a significant package of support for the economy.

    Every restriction introduced also needed a proper exit plan, so that we could safeguard both lives and livelihoods. And that was I think the right approach…and we put something like £8 billion into the aviation sector…and we moved further and faster than any other nation in re-opening our economy and borders as soon as it was safe to do so.

    Since then, and thanks to many in this room, we’ve managed to make sure that aviation, arguably the sector hardest hit by the pandemic, is showing robust signs of recovery. I know for example that Gatwick and Luton both will submit applications for modernisation and expansion programmes. Investments which represent a vote of confidence in aviation’s future. If approved, are set to generate significant benefits for passengers..

    We’re also seeing consistently busier airports and fuller flights, with passenger levels now at 85% of pre-pandemic levels. And where the industry struggled to meet this increased demand last year, the government stepped in, working with you to rebuild resilience.

    For example, our passenger charter gave the public confidence to travel. We accelerated the vetting process to speed up staff recruitment. But that’s not all. Today (31 January 2023), I can confirm that slots rules will return to normal this summer. But we’re maintaining the safety net introduced during COVID-19 and airlines can hand back 5% of slots to help minimise last minute cancellations.

    And I know some of you are trialling next generation security, so that this new technology will better detect prohibited items, allowing passengers to pass through security more swiftly. Just some of the measures that will not only support the sector’s recovery, but help us turn recovery into renewal.

    Aviation Council

    What renewal looks like is the remit of the Aviation Council, which I will be launching tomorrow. The council brings the full force of industry and government to bear on 10 key issues. Setting the industry on course for long term success, ensuring aviation turns its back on an industrial model no longer fit for purpose and moves towards a more sustainable one, including modern infrastructure, cleaner energy and an increasingly diverse pool of skills and talent.

    So let me take each of those in turn.

    Modernisation

    On modernisation pre-pandemic, thousands of aircraft navigated a complex network of routes to operate safely in our airspace. Mapped in the 1950s, this network has struggled to deal with the surge in growth of modern air travel. Causing delays for passengers as planes circle airports waiting to land. It affects local communities which suffer from excess noise and pollution and ultimately, it increases costs for the industry.

    The CAA, last week, launched a refreshed version of its Aviation Modernisation Strategy, to strengthen and upgrade our invisible infrastructure in the skies.

    Modernisation will mean quicker and quieter flights, more choice and value for passengers, and futureproofing our airspace to allow safe access for drones and even spacecraft. Something I didn’t realise I had responsibility for before I started in this job, but having had the chance to authorise Spaceport Cornwall I realised that’s also under my responsibilities. That plan is wholeheartedly backed by the government and we’ve provided £9.2 million in funding to support airports throughout this change.

    Now I realise some in this room will be frustrated at the speed of progress. And while it’s right that any modernisation aligns with our world leading safety, security and environmental standards, the aviation minister will continue working closely with the CAA and airports involved to drive this forward.

    Decarbonisation

    A more efficient and cleaner airspace brings me onto arguably this industry’s greatest challenge – decarbonisation. At current rates, aviation will become one of largest carbon emitting sectors by 2050. I don’t support the view that aviation must decline to meet our climate goals. But it must now earn the right to grow by weaning itself off fossil fuels. It’s why we’ve developed the Jet Zero Strategy, which set a 2050 net zero target for the sector.

    An ambitious, yes, but the early signs are encouraging, particularly around the use of sustainable aviation fuels (SAF). Take Virgin Atlantic, who this year, thanks to government funding, will conduct the first ever net zero transatlantic flight. Its Rolls Royce Trent 1000 engines will be powered by cooking oils that otherwise would have gone to waste. It will be a remarkable achievement, demonstrating UK leadership in an area that could support over 5,000 jobs by 2035.

    Fuels are just one part of decarbonising the industry. Airports are also playing a crucial role, with many of you already setting ambitious net zero targets. We’ll soon publish our call for evidence on a 2040 target for net zero airport operations something David Silk will expand on when he speaks to you later today.

    Skills and talent

    Finally, let me turn to skills and talent. I recognise that the pandemic saw swathes of the workforce face disruption and the immediate priority is to retain that talent. Already, the aviation skills recruitment platform has helped over 1,500 people find jobs and training. But we cannot talk about building a sector fit for the future if our approach to recruiting talent remains stuck in the past.

    When I was growing up back where I came from in a working-class household in Swindon, a career in aviation was never suggested as an option for people from my background. And even today, too many people still feel parts of the industry are not for them. But I was talking this morning actually about a fantastic initiative about getting more apprentices involved. And one of the team I was speaking to had actually been to a school in my constituency, where they’ve had people becoming degree apprentices working in the aerospace sector in Gloucestershire. Actually, when you talk to those young people and you listen to what they’ve learnt about the sector, they are enthused, excited about joining what is an exciting sector focused on the future, with all the opportunities in front of them.

    But there are too many people who think the industry is not for them. Look at professional pilots – only 6% are women. It can’t be right that we discount half the population, half of the skills and talent available for the sector. Training providers are largely concentrated in the south-east and high training costs put off those from poorer backgrounds. In fact I heard recently from some youngsters who were very keen to join the industry and become pilots, but had no idea how they would make the finances work from the backgrounds from which they came. Many are unaware of the range of careers offered by the industry, including corporate roles, data analysis, engineering and IT.

    And ultimately, it’s the industry that will lose out, unable to meet the challenges ahead with a workforce lacking in diversity of thought and experience. Through our Generation Aviation programme, we’re starting to put this right. Our new cohort of Aviation Ambassadors, representing the brightest and best of the industry, will go into schools and local communities to share their experiences and try and enthuse more people to want to join this fantastic industry.

    And tomorrow, I’ll announce the winners of the £700,000 Reach for the Sky Challenge Fund. Each winning project will open aviation up to the breadth of talent across the country, from engineering and flying lessons aimed at those from poorer backgrounds, to increasing accessibility for people with disabilities. It’s vital we send a clear message that aviation is for everyone.

    Conclusion

    I started by talking about the pace of change over the past 6 years. The conversation moving from seemingly limitless growth, then to survival and over the past year, to recovery. Now we’re able to start a more optimistic, conversation about the future. About an industry no longer constrained by outdated practices, but modernising its infrastructure and operations. No longer the poster child for environmental decline, but committed to a future of sustainable flight and attracting talent from every background.

    These are just some of the areas where aviation has a golden opportunity to move from recovery to renewal and I look forward to working with all of you to make that happen.

    Thank you.

  • Neil O’Brien – 2023 Speech on Sudden Cardiac Death in Young People

    Neil O’Brien – 2023 Speech on Sudden Cardiac Death in Young People

    The speech made by Neil O’Brien, the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, in the House of Commons on 1 February 2023.

    I am grateful to my hon. Friend the Member for Scunthorpe (Holly Mumby-Croft) for securing this debate on such an important issue. I am extremely sorry to hear about Nathan and about Stephen and Gill and, indeed, about the constituents of the hon. Member for Merthyr Tydfil and Rhymney (Gerald Jones). I would very much welcome the meeting that my hon. Friend described with her constituents, and we will set that up.

    We recognise, though it is hard to understand, the devastation caused to families by the sudden cardiac death of a young person. Sudden cardiac death is an unexpected and sudden death that is thought to be caused by a heart condition.

    The implementation of genomic laboratory hubs across England provides an opportunity to explore the systematic introduction of post-mortem genetic testing for SCD. Seven NHS genomic medicine service alliances play an important role in the support of genomic medicine. Those NHS GMS alliances are supporting several transformation projects, including a national project with the NHS inherited cardiac conditions services, the British Heart Foundation and the country’s coroners.

    The project will test the DNA of people who died suddenly and unexpectedly at a young age from a cardiac arrest, and their surviving family can also be offered genetic testing to see if they carry the same gene changes. In addition, a pilot project based in the NHS South East Genomic Medicine Service Alliance is aimed at people who have had an unexpected cardiac arrest and survived. They will be offered a genomic test to enable access to treatment, and further genomic testing will be offered to identify immediate family members at risk if a gene change associated with a heart condition is found.

    As my hon. Friend the Member for Scunthorpe mentioned, screening programmes in England are set up on the advice of the UK National Screening Committee. These are not political decisions; they are decisions based on the best currently available evidence, and they determine whether the introduction of a screening programme would offer more good than harm. As my hon. Friend said, in 2019 the National Screening Committee reviewed the evidence to provide general screening, and concluded at that time that there was not enough evidence to support the introduction of a national screening programme.

    Research showed that the current tests were not accurate enough to use in young people without symptoms, because incorrect test results can cause harm by giving false reassurance to individuals with the condition who may have been missed by the screening test, while individuals without the condition may receive a false positive test result that could lead to unnecessary treatments. The review found that most studies for SCD were in professional athletes, whose hearts of course have different characteristics from those of the general population. Tests can work in different ways in different groups of people. That is why it is very important that research is gathered in a general population setting, as to base it on athletes would not provide a good indication of what would happen if we tested all young people under the age of 39.

    The UK NSC was due to review SCD in 2022-23, as my hon. Friend mentioned, but has been unable to do so for a variety of reasons to do with covid and competing priorities. I am unable to confirm this evening when the regular review of SCD will take place, but I am assured that it will take place as soon as constraints allow. I will write to my hon. Friend setting out more details very shortly, because I know how urgent it is to understand when that will happen.

    In 2022, the NSC’s remit was expanded to set up a research sub-group to keep abreast of ongoing research related to screening, and to identify research requirements and advice on mechanisms to address them. The committee has encouraged stakeholders to submit any peer-reviewed evidence it may have on incidence for review by the NSC via its early update process, but so far it has not received anything. My hon. Friend asked a series of detailed questions and made a series of very helpful suggestions about how we change the process. The NSC will doubtless have heard the issues that she has raised in this House, but I also undertake to raise directly with the NSC all her very constructive points.

    The consensus at present has been to focus on rapid identification of sudden cardiac death and automated external defibrillator use in people who suffer a cardiac arrest, in line with the NHS long-term plan. The Government continue to encourage communities and organisations across England to consider purchasing a defibrillator as part of their first aid equipment, particularly in densely populated areas. My hon. Friend the Member for Brigg and Goole (Andrew Percy) mentioned some of the excellent work that has been done in his local area on this front. At the end of last summer, the Government announced that all state-funded schools across England will receive at least one AED on site, with more devices delivered to bigger schools, boosting their numbers in communities across the country. In December, we also announced the community defibrillator fund, which gives communities matched funding and aims to install about 1,000 more defibrillators across the country. I know that many hon. Members in this House will want to take up that offer and are spearheading work to get more AEDs out into the community.

    To conclude the debate and start the process that we will be going through, I again thank my hon. Friend the Member for Scunthorpe for raising this hugely important issue. We have heard some truly heartrending stories this evening, and I thank all those involved in The Beat Goes On and other similar organisations for their hugely important work. I promise that this issue will continue to get our utmost attention as a Government.

  • Holly Mumby-Croft – 2023 Speech on Sudden Cardiac Death in Young People

    Holly Mumby-Croft – 2023 Speech on Sudden Cardiac Death in Young People

    The speech made by Holly Mumby-Croft, the Conservative MP for Scunthorpe, in the House of Commons on 1 February 2023.

    I am very grateful to have the opportunity to speak on a genuinely important issue. What I am about to speak about was brought to my attention by my constituents, Stephen and Gill Ayling, who are in the Public Gallery today. They experienced the very worst thing that could ever happen to a parent when, sadly, their son Nathan died at the age of 31 in February 2019. While I was not fortunate enough to have known Nathan, we were close in age and we both went to the same local school.

    Nathan lost his life to young sudden cardiac death after a problem with his heart went undetected all his life. Before his death, Nathan appeared fit and healthy. He played football and rugby regularly, and lifted weights and cycled. Stephen and Gill have previously described how they will never, ever be able to escape from the memory of when they found their son, who had died in his bed. As a parent myself, I cannot begin to grasp how utterly shattering that moment must have been. My condolences go out to them and to their family, and to all who knew and loved Nathan.

    In the wake of Nathan’s death, Stephen and Gill became involved with the charity Cardiac Risk in the Young, which provides heart screenings—I will come on to this later—for young people. Stephen and Gill founded a community group, The Beat Goes On, which is a wonderful name and a wonderful tribute to Nathan. As part of the group, Stephen and Gill raised £10,000 to fund private screenings on 10 and 11 January this year, providing tests for 186 young people in our community. Ten of those young people have been referred for further cardiac investigation. I commend them for all their hard work and put on the record my thanks, and the thanks of many in our area, for all they have done for our community in Scunthorpe.

    Last summer, I tabled a written question to ask the then Secretary of State for Health and Social Care what steps his Department was taking to increase the diagnosis rate of cardiac conditions in people aged 14 to 35. Once those conditions are diagnosed, it is often possible for them to be treated, either with pharmaceutical or surgical intervention or through lifestyle changes.

    In the Government’s response, I was informed:

    “Since July 2021, we have launched community diagnostic centres (CDCs) to increase diagnostic activity and reduce patient waiting times. CDCs offer checks, scans and tests in community and other health care settings and delivered over 880,000 diagnostic tests…This will support Primary Care Networks to increase the detection of conditions such as heart valve disease.”

    While that answer is good news for some people, I would welcome any assessment the Government have carried out of how helpful those diagnostic centres are in relation to heart conditions in young people specifically.

    I was also told:

    “The diagnosis of cardiac conditions is based on the presentation of symptoms, rather than the age range of the patient”

    or their genetic risk factors. That is a crucial point, and for young people it takes us to the crux of the problem. Research has shown that in 80% of cases of young sudden cardiac death, there were no prior symptoms of a heart defect; no opportunity was presented to step in and intervene and potentially save a young person’s life. As a result, families have lost sons, daughters, brothers and sisters—someone they loved.

    Doctors have raised with me their concerns about a completely symptom-focused approach to young people. Aside from the fact that the overwhelming majority of people who have this condition do not exhibit symptoms, my understanding is that the symptoms that GPs are trained to look for are breathlessness, heart palpitations, dizziness, chest pain and losing consciousness. Those are common symptoms that can be attributed to other ailments, many of which will be more common in young people. As such, GPs could potentially misdiagnose a heart condition, perhaps providing medication—for anxiety or depression, for instance—that could aggravate an undiagnosed condition.

    The best approach to take in healthcare is always a preventive one—a process that intervenes to stop someone suffering or dying. In cases involving young people, the best way to do this may be through proactive screening. The majority of conditions—but not all—associated with sudden cardiac death in the young can be identified on the basis of an electrocardiogram, or ECG, abnormality. That is the type of screening that Stephen and Gill, and other parents like them, and CRY fundraise and campaign for, sometimes resulting in follow-up tests. Approximately one in 300 people screened by CRY will be identified as having a potentially life-threatening condition, and one in 100 will be identified as having a condition that could cause significant problems by the ages of 40 or 50. Those conditions need to be monitored every three to four months, so that action can be taken when most appropriate.

    As my hon. Friend the Minister knows, in 2019 the UK National Screening Council recommended against a systematic screening programme for cardiac conditions in the young. There is set to be another review by the end of this year. I would like to speak briefly first on the previous review, and then on the future one.

    One of the reasons cited for not rolling out a screening programme was the continuing uncertainty over the true incidence rate of sudden cardiac death. To say that there was not a consensus on what that figure was would be a gross understatement. I cannot stress enough how important it is that we have accurate data on that issue, especially if it is influencing clinical or policy decisions.

    In preparation for this debate, I spoke to representatives from CRY. They said that, just on the basis of the number of autopsies they are performing at their centre for cardiac pathology each year, we are disastrously underestimating the full extent of the problem. I want my language to be very clear, so I repeat that they say that we are disastrously underestimating the full extent of the problem.

    In order to shed light on the issue, one of the stakeholders contributing to the review stated that it would be

    “very helpful if the review outlined more specific research recommendations, providing potential researchers with a framework of the characteristics of a project that could address the uncertainty.”

    I have spoken to others involved with the review, who advised me that that framework was not in place. I would be grateful if the Minister could urge the UK National Screening Council to provide clarity, so that we can get reliable data that we can use to make policy decisions. Without that, we risk having an unhelpful fog shrouding this issue; if we do not dispel it, we may lose more lives to undiagnosed heart conditions.

    Similarly, there are questions about testing accuracy. Some stakeholders have asked for more specific research recommendations. In particular, it is really important to specify the test, or group of tests, that would enable simultaneous screening for all the potential causes of sudden cardiac death. Again, I ask the Minister to push for those recommendations to be laid down, so that the scientists can get on with the job that they do best.

    Looking forward to the next review, I would be grateful if the Minister confirmed a timeline for when this will be completed and when we should expect the findings to be published. It is important to note that several other countries are steps ahead of us when it comes to proactive screening programmes, and, although I appreciate that these might be out of scope of the review, I do think it would be a missed opportunity not to raise them. Several American sporting bodies—

    Gerald Jones (Merthyr Tydfil and Rhymney) (Lab)

    I congratulate the hon. Lady on securing this debate. My goddaughter, Sophie Pearson, passed away in 2006 at 12 years of age from cardiomyopathy. Sophie’s parents spent many years helping to raise awareness and raise funds. I congratulate the hon. Lady on the work that she is doing and hope that the awareness that she is raising today will go some way in supporting families and avoiding unnecessary deaths of young people.

    Holly Mumby-Croft

    I am terribly sorry to hear what the hon. Gentleman said, and I thank him for his intervention.

    Let me continue on the sporting aspect. Italy has introduced pre-participation screening. Although I appreciate that there are issues with extrapolating the data to the non-athletic population, one study in 2006 did show that screening led to an 89% fall in sudden cardiac death in that cohort.

    I know that every Member in this House will be united in wanting to reduce the number of young people dying from undiagnosed cardiac conditions, and expanding access to the screening available will help to reduce that.

    Andrew Percy (Brigg and Goole) (Con)

    I thank my hon. Friend for giving way and pay tribute to her constituents who are with us today for doing so much to raise funding for screening in our area. She is talking about the important issue of screening, particularly in relation to young people and sporting activities. Is it not also important that we ensure that sports facilities have access to defibrillators for when cardiac arrests take place? She will know that, through North Lincolnshire Council, scores of defibrillators have been funded across our area. With the Government announcing a £1 million fund to expand defibrillators, is it not important that that fund also takes into account sporting clubs and the issue around young people and sudden cardiac arrests?

    Holly Mumby-Croft

    I thank my hon. Friend for his intervention. I know that he is very well placed to have a view on this matter through his work as a first responder in our community—something that he has been doing for a number of years—so I listen very carefully to him when he raises points around health and care.

    I would be grateful if the Minister pushed the points that I have made in relation to the review, with scientists and stakeholders calling for more research to be done. I would also be immensely grateful if the Minister found time—I know that he is incredibly busy—to meet Stephen, Gill and myself to talk about this issue. That would be very much appreciated.

    That takes me to the last point that I wish to make, which is once again to thank Stephen and Gill for the work that they have done. Their experience, and Nathan’s experience, was a tragic one. Despite that, they have managed to do fantastic work in our community. I know that, along with me, everyone that they have helped through screening, such as those 10 people who have been referred for further testing, will be extremely grateful to them. I often say in this House, Mr Deputy Speaker, that we have many people to be proud of in Scunthorpe. The work that Stephen and Gill are doing puts them very firmly in that category, and I want to be clear today that they have both my support and my thanks.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Households, businesses and organisations off the gas grid to receive energy bill support over the coming weeks [February 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Households, businesses and organisations off the gas grid to receive energy bill support over the coming weeks [February 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy on 6 February 2023.

    £200 payments for off grid households start today, while businesses off the grid are expected to receive £150 payments by 10 March.

    • £200 energy bill support to begin arriving with households off the gas grid across Great Britain
    • businesses using alternative fuels will also start receiving £150 credit on bills– with payments expected to be delivered by 10 March
    • new figures show £3 billion in government support has been paid out to businesses and public sector organisations in just over 3 months to support them this winter

    From today households across Great Britain who don’t use mains gas for heating will start receiving £200 towards their energy bills as the Alternative Fuel Payment (AFP) scheme launches. Most will get the £200 AFP automatically as a credit on their electricity bill but some customers will need to apply for the support later this month.

    Nearly 2 million households who use alternative energy sources such as heating oil, biomass and liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) to warm their homes will receive the support which was doubled to £200 last year.

    The vast majority, including many homes in rural areas, will get it automatically through their electricity supplier as a credit on their bill throughout February. A small minority of customers, such as those living in park homes or on static houseboats with no direct energy supplier, will need to apply to receive the payment through an online portal that will launch later this month.

    Meanwhile from Wednesday, energy suppliers will also be able to start making payments to businesses and both public and voluntary sector organisations that use alternative fuels to heat their buildings. A credit of £150 will be provided to eligible customers across the UK through the Non-Domestic Alternative Fuel Payment scheme (ND-AFP). Suppliers will deliver this support up to 10 March, with most customers expected to receive it later this month. There is no need to contact your supplier.

    This comes as new figures show that, thanks to the government’s Energy Bill Relief Scheme, £3 billion has been cut from business energy bills in just over 3 months – helping both private and public sector organisations from schools, to hospitals and pubs.

    Minister for Energy and Climate Graham Stuart said:

    Our main energy bill support schemes have seen millions of homes and businesses across the country get much needed help to cover costs, with figures today showing nearly £3 billion in government support has been paid out to business to date. Now we’re getting support to those remaining few that are off the gas grid and most difficult to reach.

    I am determined to see households and businesses of all stripes protected from global pressures this winter – whether that’s those living in a houseboat, park home or operating a rural hospital or school.

    That’s why we are kicking off payments of £200 to households using alternative fuel to heat their homes today – while businesses and organisations using alternative fuels will receive a boost of £150 in the coming weeks.

    Ministers are today warning households to stay vigilant to scams and only to enter their details on the government’s gov.uk website, which will provide all official communications, if applying for support. No one will be asked for information by any individual or organisation prior to this or outside of the portal. Those that require additional help when applying for support may wish to seek assistance from a family member or trusted friend.

    These schemes form part of a suite of energy bill support for domestic and non-domestic customers across the UK for winter 2022-2023.

    On the domestic side, the Energy Price Guarantee is saving a typical UK household £900 over this winter by reducing the unit cost of electricity and gas, while the Energy Bills Support Scheme provides a further £400 off electricity bills through a monthly discount of £66 or £67. So the average family is saving £1300 altogether while more vulnerable households have received £800 on top of that as well – making a £2100 saving.

    Businesses and other non-domestic customers are also benefiting from government support on a comparable basis. The Energy Bill Relief Scheme provides a direct subsidy of wholesale electricity and gas prices until the end of March, protecting jobs in charities and businesses alike. This will then be replaced by the Energy Bills Discount Scheme from April, which will offer universal support albeit at a reduced rate to protect the public finances.

  • PRESS RELEASE : UK takes major STEP towards near limitless, low-carbon energy [February 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : UK takes major STEP towards near limitless, low-carbon energy [February 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy on 6 February 2023.

    Science Minister George Freeman has announced the creation of a new delivery body for the UK’s fusion programme, named UK Industrial Fusion Solutions.

    • The government has established UK Industrial Fusion Solutions Ltd (UKIFS) to deliver a prototype fusion energy plant at West Burton in Nottinghamshire
    • the STEP prototype plant is due to complete construction by 2040, and aims to provide electricity to the grid from fusion energy
    • fusion energy could be a near limitless, low-carbon energy source, easing our path to sustaining net-zero and driving economic growth across the UK

    A future of abundant low-carbon energy without the need for fossil fuels could be in sight after Science Minister George Freeman today (Monday 6 February) announced the creation of a new delivery body for the UK’s fusion programme, named UK Industrial Fusion Solutions Ltd.

    Fusion energy has the potential to transform our world, by delivering near limitless, safe and low-carbon energy across the globe for generations to come.

    It also represents a burgeoning industry in which the UK is already a world-leader, as demonstrated by the record-setting results from experiments conducted at the UK’s Joint European Torus (JET) facility last year, with the potential to not only power the world but deliver vast economic growth across the country.

    On the visit to the future site of the UK’s first prototype fusion energy plant at West Burton, Nottinghamshire, the Science Minister urged energy companies and investors to recognise the vast potential fusion energy could have for both the UK and the wider world.

    The Spherical Tokamak for Energy Production (STEP) plant will be constructed by 2040 to demonstrate the ability to use fusion energy to generate electricity for the UK grid.

    Magnetic confinement fusion, the approach to generate fusion that will be demonstrated in STEP, occurs when a mix of two forms of hydrogen are heated to extreme temperatures – 10 times hotter than the core of the sun – fuse together to create helium and release huge amounts of energy.

    The energy created from fusion can be used to generate electricity in the same way as existing power stations. Fusion is many million times more efficient than burning coal, oil or gas and the raw materials needed to provide the fuel for fusion are readily available in nature. However, a number of significant technical hurdles remain, which the STEP programme is set up to address.

    The STEP programme intends to pave the way to the commercialisation of fusion and the potential development of a fleet of future plants around the world, driving forward the UK’s global leadership in this innovative sector.

    The announcement comes shortly after a major breakthrough for fusion in the US where the US National Ignition Facility in California conducted fusion experiments which released more energy than was put in by the lab’s enormous, high-powered lasers, a landmark achievement known as energy gain.

    Science and Innovation Minister George Freeman said:

    Fusion energy now has the potential to transform our world for the better by harnessing the same process powering the sun to provide cheap, abundant, low-carbon energy across the world.

    The UK is the world-leader in fusion science and technology, and now we are moving to turn fusion from cutting edge science into a billion-pound clean energy industry to create thousands of UK jobs across the UK, grow exports and drive regeneration of this former coalfield site through a fusion innovation cluster in Nottinghamshire.

    That’s why I’m delighted to announce the creation of Industrial Fusion Solutions as the vehicle for industrial development and deployment of this technology as a new clean energy source in the coming decades.

    Professor Sir Ian Chapman, UKAEA Chief Executive, said:

    The establishment of Industrial Fusion Solutions will enable STEP to accelerate its journey towards delivery of electricity from fusion energy to the grid. The new body, which will be formed over the next 18 months, will be established as a programme delivery organisation, driving performance and pace and engaging industry in this endeavour.

    Alongside the establishment of the new organisation, we are beginning to map out our future skills requirements and, as part of this, we are committing to the development of a STEP Skills Centre at West Burton. This will enable us to provide as many opportunities as possible to people across the area.

    We look forward to working with people in the region to develop our ambitious plans and realising broader social and economic benefits.

    The new organisation will be a company limited by shares established to work together with industry to deliver the prototype plant by 2040. Recruitment for the Chair of UKIFS launches soon.

    As part of the visit, Science Minister George Freeman also announced an immediate commitment to create the STEP Skills Centre at West Burton, a major boost during National Apprenticeship Week. He also spoke with local apprentices currently working at the UKAEA Culham campus, and key local stakeholders.

  • David Lammy – 2023 Speech at Chatham House

    David Lammy – 2023 Speech at Chatham House

    The speech made by David Lammy, the Shadow Foreign Secretary, at Chatham House in London on 24 January 2023.

    Thank you, Chatham House, for hosting me here today.

    This institution is an encapsulation of Britain in the world — at its best.

    A trusted force for good.

    Universally respected.

    Globally networked and influential.

    But we meet at a time when Britain feels lost and disconnected in a world that is more divided than at any time since the fall of the Berlin Wall.

    Three major trends are shaping the foreign policy landscape the next Labour government plans to inherit.

    The first is that we are in a new age of geopolitical competition.

    We see it in the bloody war on our continent.

    We see it in a world economy splitting into blocs.

    As global competition between the United States and China shapes our century.

    And regional powers make the contest multipolar.

    From the vast collective bloc of the EU to more assertive middle powers in the Middle East throwing their weight around.

    The second major trend is weaponised interdependence.

    The ties that bind us together are now also driving fragmentation – trade, industry, energy, migration, the internet.

    And new technologies from Artificial Intelligence, to Automation, Quantum and Biotech risk being used as tools of authoritarian power.

    Less a new order.

    More a new polarised disorder.

    Third is the trend I will focus on most today.

    There has been a blurring of the distinction between foreign and domestic policy.

    As President Biden has said, “there’s no longer a bright line” between the two.

    In a world this interdependent foreign policy has become domestic policy.

    And domestic policy has become foreign policy.

    We can see this in every village, town and city across the UK.

    Most of you know me as the MP for Tottenham in North London.

    But it is less known that I spent much of my childhood in Peterborough studying at a state boarding school.

    It is easy to see the impact of global trends in Tottenham.

    But the impact of the world on Peterborough has been just as transformative.

    I went back a couple of years ago to have lunch with Clive and Cathy, the parents of my school best friend.

    Over tea in their bungalow, they told me how at home they felt in Peterborough when they were young.

    Now, they feel powerless as their grandchildren struggle to find decent jobs.

    The industrial workplaces of the past not yet replaced by the green jobs of the future.

    They feel like their community has been eroded.

    As neighbouring families moved out.

    And they tell me they feel too insecure on their street to walk home at night.

    As the tentacles of international criminal gangs have reached into their neighbourhood.

    This is not just down to domestic policy failures in policing, housing and education.

    But a failure of the Conservative government to grasp the impacts of foreign policy, globalisation and economic change on all our communities.

    Leaving not only families, but us as a nation feeling lost — and disconnected.

    Principles

    To help communities like Peterborough, Labour’s foreign policy must adapt.

    And meet these three tectonic shifts fragmenting the world with three unifying principles.

    The first is that British foreign policy must seek to take back control.

    The Conservatives were right about that.

    But they were fundamentally wrong to think it means going it alone.

    In the modern world, we maximise our influence by reconnecting Britain with our allies and partners.

    The second is that our foreign policy must put pragmatism over ideology.

    Making decisions based on what will advance the British public’s security and prosperity.

    Not the ideological purity of the ERG.

    And the third is that our foreign policy choices must be made for the many, not the few.

    Putting the consumer, before the fossil fuel company.

    The small business owner, before the hedge fund manager.

    The NHS patient, before the tax exile.

    The test that lies behind each of these principles is simple.

    Will our choices help hard-working families in a more dangerous world where the borders between foreign and domestic policy are breaking down?

    Redefining the FCDO’s mission

    The lack of purpose in Britain’s foreign policy stems from both bad choices and institutional dysfunction.

    We have left the EU but not yet found a new, settled and confident place in Europe.

    Our country’s reputation for the rule of law has been badly damaged.

    Our leadership in development has been squandered.

    The foundations of our defences have been weakened.

    Our soft power has been corroded and our climate leadership forsaken.

    It is, I am afraid to say, a dismal record.

    I take no pleasure from saying that.

    We all have a stake in the success of our country.

    And a future Labour government will inherit the consequences of these choices.

    It will fall to us to rebuild the foundations of our influence in the world.

    My vision is of a “Britain Reconnected”.

    Secure at home and strong abroad.

    A confident country, outside of the EU but a leader in Europe once again.

    A reliable partner, a dependable ally and a good neighbour.

    NATO’s leading European power.

    A development superpower once more.

    At the vanguard of climate action.

    Driving forward the industries of the future for Britain.

    A diplomatic entrepreneur.

    And a country that keeps its word.

    In government, we will announce a new mission statement for the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office designed around five clear goals.

    One – a Britain Reconnected to defend the UK’s Security, with strong armed forces and resilience against 21st century threats.

    Two – a Britain Reconnected to champion the UK’s Prosperity, and lead the industries of the future.

    Three – a Britain Reconnected for Climate Action, turning our response into an engine of growth.

    Four – a Britain Reconnected for International Development, helping to promote the UK’s security, health and jobs in the process

    Five – and a Britain Reconnected for Diplomacy, to re-establish the UK as a trusted, reliable and influential partner while protecting Britons abroad.

    Security

    Let me start with security.

    Whether you get your news from TV, or from scrolling through social media the public understand that we face a more insecure world than at any time since the heights of the Cold War.

    I visited Kyiv a couple of weeks before the invasion, to show our solidarity in the face of Russia’s imperialist threats.

    From the beginning of this crisis through to the recent decision to send Challenger tanks, the government has had Labour’s total support in providing Ukraine with the military, economic, diplomatic and humanitarian assistance it needs to defend itself.

    Britain is united on this.

    Whoever is in government, the UK will stand with Ukraine.

    For the long-haul.

    It was a Labour Foreign Secretary who was the driving force behind the creation of NATO 70 years ago.

    Today, as then, Labour’s commitment to NATO is unshakeable.

    That is why I visited Stockholm and Helsinki last year to show our support for their NATO ambitions.

    Our commitment to Britain’s independent nuclear deterrent is unambiguous.

    And we know the value in deepening our alliances beyond Europe too, be that with Australia through AUKUS or new defence cooperation with Japan.

    But it is in Europe – the first priority for our own security – where a Labour government would forge a new security approach.

    At present, our influence in Europe has waned.

    I felt this, recently, in Kosovo.

    Where I met with the Prime Minister, the President and the small group of British troops at the K-FOR base.

    From the Kremlin’s influence, to migration and organised crime — many of the forces threatening Kosovo are those threatening Britain too.

    But despite all the goodwill I felt towards Britain, from back when a Labour government led Europe in decisive action to stop ethnic cleansing — the Tories have left Britain on the sidelines.

    Locked out of a diplomatic process centred on the EU.

    There’s no doubt our heft could help.

    But to do that we must cement our traditional friendships.

    New initiatives like the European Political Community have real potential but they illustrate the way we have left others to do the running and take the lead.

    Europeans are more than just trading partners.

    We share security and fate in this changing world.

    In Kyiv, in Kosovo and with terrorism — right here at home.

    We need a Britain Reconnected for security.

    That’s why we will pursue a new UK-EU security pact to complement our unshakeable commitment to NATO.

    We will seek to institutionalise new cooperation across foreign policy through regular EU/UK summits and structured dialogue, both at the political and official level.

    And as my excellent colleague and friend, the Shadow Defence Secretary John Healey has said, we could negotiate new mechanisms for cooperation on hybrid threats between EU and UK defence industries.

    These specific areas of cooperation are a matter for negotiation.

    But from sanctions to energy security, and space capabilities and new technology, we can see how developing deeper connections with Europeans can make Britons stronger and safer.

    We need to think about security in a holistic way.

    Tanks, planes and ships matter as much as they ever have – but they are just the tip of the security iceberg.

    Today, conflicts are also waged by controlling energy prices.

    By using critical technologies or resources as bargaining chips.

    By cyberattacks and misinformation.

    By detaining foreign nationals.

    Threats are often in the grey zone.

    The Russian state murdering people on UK soil with a chemical weapon.

    Influencing operations against our democracy targeting Parliamentarians.

    These threats need a coordinated response.

    That is why today I am announcing that Labour will create a new joint FCDO-Home Office State Threats Cell.

    Working in partnership with the intelligence and security agencies to assess state threats, disrupt hostile actors, improve resilience in both government and the private sector, and coordinate with international partners.

    Labour will rebuild the foundations of our defence, lead in NATO, build new ties with Europe and strengthen Britain’s resilience

    Prosperity

    Next, I want to talk about prosperity.

    Because growing up poor in Tottenham in Thatcher’s Britain, I know the pain of living through a cost-of-living crisis.

    Every week I meet constituents still suffering from a lack of opportunity.

    And the indignity of choosing between eating and heating.

    Keir Starmer’s Green Prosperity Plan will reindustrialise the UK, supporting the creation of over 200,000 jobs over the next decade.

    But we are not alone in wanting to accelerate into green industries.

    China, the US, and the European Union taking steps to become green superpowers.

    China already has the largest market share in every stage of solar panel manufacturing.

    And the US has passed the landmark Inflation Reduction Act.

    I welcome efforts by other countries to accelerate along the path to net zero.

    But if we do not use our power smartly, we risk falling behind.

    That is why our £28 billion Green Prosperity Plan will help our many strengths such as our position as a world leader in wind power and our renewable research base to build political, scientific and commercial alliances to grow prosperity in the UK.

    And we will make Britain’s prosperity more resilient.

    Successive crises – from the pandemic to war in Ukraine – have demonstrated the vulnerability of international supply chains.

    As the transition from fossil fuels accelerates, dramatic industrial shifts are creating new demand for technology critical materials like cobalt and lithium.

    But where is the new diplomatic drive to reflect this shifting resourcing economy?

    We need to move rapidly to reduce our exposure to volatility and our vulnerability to geo-economic pressure.

    But Britain is falling woefully behind.

    US CHIPS legislation will provide $52bn in subsidies for US chip manufacturers.

    The EU CHIPs Act will provide €43bn.

    But the UK has put aside just £700,000 to commission a research project.

    And it still has not published its promised semiconductor strategy.

    Labour will publish one within our first Parliamentary session.

    Unconstrained globalisation has played a part in the turbulence we have seen in recent years.

    You can see this in Peterborough today.

    However, we must not let this deter us from the opportunities that globalisation can bring.

    That’s what I want for Peterborough tomorrow.

    Labour will drive up trade across the UK and harness the power of our Green Prosperity Plan to fuel exports and growth.

    We will build global alliances and partnerships, strike deals that deliver jobs and opportunity at home, while promoting prosperity and fairness around the world.

    Good jobs, strong growth, and real opportunities.

    A framework business can trust.

    But we will also ensure that global corporations pay their fair share.

    It is why Labour has led calls for a windfall tax on oil and gas profits.

    It is why we will bear down on tax havens and press other countries to put the global minimum corporate tax rate into domestic law.

    Any serious discussion about increasing prosperity in Britain must include the 15 trillion elephant in the room.

    The European market just across our shores.

    It has been a central principle of British strategy for centuries that we should never find ourselves isolated in our own continent.

    But that is exactly what this Government has done.

    It is time to put an end to what the Economist has called the ‘magical thinking’ of the Conservative Party.

    And that means, yes, recognising the damage the government’s bad Brexit deal has done to our economy.

    Investment down. Growth, sluggish or non-existent.

    45% of businesses say they are having difficulties trading with the EU.

    The number exporting to Europe has fallen by a third.

    In the middle of a cost-of-living crisis, this is a scandal.

    And the Labour Party is not afraid to say it.

    Reconnecting Britain to Europe, while remaining outside of the EU, will be a top priority of the next Labour Foreign Office.

    Keir Starmer has been clear.

    With Labour, Britain will not rejoin the EU, the Single Market or the customs union.

    But within our red lines, there is real progress we can make to increase trade with our neighbours and deliver prosperity at home.

    We will aim to fix the Tories bad Brexit deal to increase trade with Europe.

    Including by:

    • Fixing the Northern Ireland protocol.
    • Reducing friction on food, agricultural, medical and veterinary goods.
    • Strengthening mutual recognition of professional standards and qualifications to unlock trade in services.
    • Unblocking participation in the Horizon scheme to unleash research and development.
    • Using the 2025 TCA review to reduce barriers to trade.
    • And improving links between our students and universities.

    From Paris to Berlin and Dublin to Warsaw, we will rebuild bilateral relationships with key European partners.

    A modern Britain in a changing world must invest in partnerships beyond our traditional allies in Europe, North America and the Commonwealth.

    We will develop a new initiative to build dynamic partnerships with African nations, recognising that by 2050 one in four people will be from the continent.

    A Labour government will build on the government’s new commitment to the Indo-Pacific.

    China’s rising economic and political power is the most significant change in global affairs in the last three decades.

    And by 2050 Asia will comprise more than half of the global economy.

    So this is not about ‘tilting’ one way or the other.

    It is an essential response of the shifting centre of gravity in world affairs.

    Maintaining serious, long-term strategic approaches to this vital region.

    Climate

    And we need a Britain Reconnected for climate action.

    The UN warned recently that the world is on course for a catastrophic 2.8 degrees of warming.

    This would deliver an era of cascading risks as extreme heat, sea level rises, drought and famine become more frequent.

    It’s easy to dismiss the climate crisis as a problem for other parts of the world.

    But try to tell that to the courageous mother of Ella Kissi-Debrah.

    A nine-year-old girl from South East London, who was killed, in part, by the unlawful levels of air pollution near her home.

    Climate action is deeply intertwined with protecting Britain’s prosperity and security.

    Decarbonisation is now a vital national security imperative.

    The faster we can transition to clean power, the quicker we can undermine Putin’s war effort.

    Every solar panel is a shield to Putin’s aggression.

    Every windfarm a defence against dependency.

    And in developing our homegrown energy systems we can build the green jobs and transformational industries of the future.

    Climate action is not just the ethical choice.

    It’s the economic choice.

    The pro-business choice.

    The choice for growth.

    The choice for jobs.

    The choice for security.

    And the choice for communities like Peterborough.

    I am proud that the next Labour government’s foreign policy agenda will be centred on the climate emergency.

    Labour will push for climate action to become a fourth pillar at the UN.

    We will argue for the creation of a new law of ecocide to prosecute the widespread and intentional destruction of the planet.

    And, as my friend and great colleague Ed Miliband has outlined, we will build a clean power alliance, an ‘Inverse OPEC’ of developed and developing nations committed to 100% clean power by 2030.

    Development

    Before Christmas, in a speech to Christian Aid, I outlined in detail how a Labour government will modernise development.

    I told a story about how I became the first UK politician to go to the country since the government’s disastrous withdrawal.

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

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

    I’ve never felt more conviction in my belief that development is vital in the modern world.

    Tackling poverty and climate change, improving health and education around the world is not only the moral choice.

    It is the strategic choice, and in our common interest.

    A way to make the British public safer and reduce the drivers of conflict and migration.

    Our development policy must still aim at reducing global poverty.

    It should be proudly feminist, prioritising women and girls.

    With climate action and solidarity at the aid budget’s heart.

    But it must also have a new focus on partnership, mutual respect and shared interests.

    Take the example of the fair distribution of vaccines around the world.

    While Europeans were vaccinated many times over, much of the world waited for a first dose.

    This cannot happen again.

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

    Diplomacy

    As well as being proudly British and European, if I become Foreign Secretary I will not hide my trans-Atlanticism.

    The relationships I formed as the first Black Briton to study at Harvard Law school have matured into deep bonds with many who work in Washington DC.

    Back in 1997, when I was buried in legal textbooks, New Labour was just coming into office.

    There was deep excitement in the US about the UK.

    We were seen as a dynamic and forward-looking country.

    Most of all we were trusted as a reliable ally, which would uphold the rule of law and defend the international system.

    It pains me to say that when I visit the US these days, the chaos of the UK government is not seen as a joke, it is seen as a problem.

    What leaders in Washington think of the UK may seem distant for the public.

    But it matters to us all.

    It matters as we work with the US administration to maintain steadfast support for Ukraine and European security and tackle climate change.

    And it matters if we want a trade deal to benefit Britain’s economy.

    The final priority of the new Labour foreign policy must be diplomacy.

    Healing the rifts with the US that the Protocol fiasco has opened.

    Restoring our bond with Europe to counter shared challenges.

    Building on partnerships with a rising India and rapidly growing African nations.

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

    Visit the capitals of the developing world and it is glaringly obvious who is the key external driver of investment and construction: China.

    China’s rise is indisputably the greatest change in the global system in my lifetime.

    But China’s growth has been matched by greater repression at home and more assertive behaviour abroad – in Hong Kong and Xinjiang, Taiwan and the South China Sea.

    Meanwhile it has singled out allies – like Australia and Lithuania – for hostile treatment.

    And undermined the economic level playing field.

    The government is divided and inconsistent on China.

    Flip-flopping between tough talk and muddled actions.

    Labour will be strong, clear eyed, consistent.

    Beginning with a complete audit of the UK-China relationship.

    Based on a strategy of three Cs.

    Challenge, compete and, where we can, cooperate.

    Strong on national security. Standing firm on human rights.

    But engaging where it is in our interests to do so – on climate change, on trade and on global health.

    As a lawyer, and with a boss who is a lawyer, the rule of law will be at the heart of our approach to foreign policy.

    Britain’s record of respect for the rule of law has become tarnished.

    Through the Overseas Operations Bill, the Internal Markets Bill, the Protocol Bill.

    And two prime ministers fined for breaking the law.

    This record damages our moral authority and political credibility.

    It shows us as unreliable, making future agreements harder to reach.

    It serves the interests of those who want to weaken the rule of law.

    It is unbefitting of this great country.

    The rule of law is not a Labour or Conservative value.

    It is no exaggeration to say it is one of the great contributions our country has made to the world.

    No party owns it. No government should squander it.

    Britain should be a country that keeps its word.

    And let me tell you, with Keir Starmer KC as Prime Minister, it will be.

    International rules and multilateral institutions are needed more than ever.

    But these have come under growing strain.

    The UN Security Council hamstrung by the veto during perhaps the most blatant violation of the UN Charter since its creation.

    The WTO dispute settlement not functioning just as global trade becomes more contested.

    The World Bank failing in the face of the climate emergency.

    The WHO in need of reform before we face future pandemics.

    As we neglect multilateral institutions, China is intent on reshaping and in some cases replacing them.

    But I still believe that multilateralism – incremental and imperfect as it may be – remains vital.

    A Labour government will declare an open-ended campaign to reform the UN Security Council in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

    Meanwhile at the G20, Labour will push to make this crucial body for our multipolar world more effective.

    But while we hope to re-energise these institutions, we need to be prepared to operate beyond them.

    Labour would invest in AUKUS. Support our deepening security partnership with Japan.

    We would build new networks and revive those we have allowed to drift, like the E3 with France and Germany.

    To deliver this international effort, we need a strong Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office.

    Yet this government have overseen the unmanaged decline of this Great Office of State.

    And left the FCDO without the economic and industrial expertise to help navigate the challenges Britain faces.

    Contrast this with France, where the French Foreign Ministry is growing its budget, hiring more diplomats and moving towards the 0.7% aid target, not away from it.

    We need an FCDO ready for the challenges of the future.

    And energised by a clear sense of purpose, to focus the efforts of our brilliant diplomats, development professionals and intelligence agencies.

    This is where I want to end.

    I want to show you what Labour’s new approach looks like in a single policy: the fight against kleptocracy.

    I know this is an issue where Chatham House has led the charge.

    But the past year has laid bare a decade of chronic inaction against dirty money from Russia and other authoritarian states that has infiltrated this city.

    Money laundering has seen London homes become the bitcoins of kleptocrats, pricing out our frontline workers from their home.

    Corruption, bribery, and even financing of terrorist organisations.

    Here in the UK.

    This is not just a job for the police.

    This is foreign policy.

    I felt this when I visited in Ukraine almost exactly one year ago, just before Putin’s tanks rolled in, as I sat with anti-corruption campaigners angry that Putin’s oligarchs could launder their dirty money in Mayfair.

    They want Britain to act.

    I see this in Brussels, where EU and UK officials have already been working together to coordinate sanctions policy. But are hamstrung by the Tories’ bad deal in how far they can cooperate.

    They want a Britain to work with.

    I hear this in Washington, where today my friends Senator Sheldon Whitehouse and Senator Jeanne Shaheen are calling for the United States, Britain and the European Union to join forces to create a new Transatlantic Anti-Corruption Council to coordinate the fight.

    Labour will answer their call — not whistle the other way.

    We will reconnect Britain.

    But the work will start at home.

    Conclusion

    We passionately believe in Britain.

    But feel the frustration of its disconnection everywhere.

    We can restore Britain’s influence and realise our potential.

    We have so much to build on.

    World-leading universities.

    Scientists are at the cutting edge of future technologies.

    Vibrant cultural industries that shape the global conversation.

    And home to some of the most dynamic service sectors in the world.

    But we cannot build on these strengths by going it alone.

    Under Labour Britain will be:

    Internationalist.

    Confident.

    And facing the future.

    A Britain Reconnected, for security and prosperity at home.

    Thank you.

  • PRESS RELEASE : We need to give carers a pay rise [February 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : We need to give carers a pay rise [February 2023]

    The press release issued by the Liberal Democrats on 5 February 2023.

    A major cause of the terrible NHS crisis afflicting our country is the crisis in social care. Thousands of people are stranded in hospital beds because there aren’t enough care workers to look after them at home or in a care home.

    Only two in five people are able to leave hospital when they are ready to do so, contributing to record-breaking waits in A&E and dangerous ambulance handover delays.

    Everyone in this country deserves high-quality social care when they need it. At whatever point of life we find ourselves in need of care, whether that’s in later life or, as is the case for an increasing number of people, during their prime working years, everyone should be able to live in dignity.

    Sadly that is not the case in Britain today. Social care services in this country are in such a state that people are not getting the care and support they need.

    Blame for this unfolding disaster lies squarely with this Conservative Government.

    Again and again they have broken their promises to reform social care.

    They pledged that no one would have to sell their house to pay for care and that they would not raise tax to do it. They promised to cap care costs and support our care workers.

    Yet they have dithered and delayed, coming up with weak excuses for their failures.

    They now talk about fixing the NHS. But that will prove impossible if they do not fix social care too.

    It is heart-breaking that millions of elderly and vulnerable people across the country are struggling to get the care they need and deserve. Our care homes are collapsing under the weight of years of broken Conservative promises.

    ED DAVEY, LEADER OF THE LIBERAL DEMOCRATS

    There’s no doubt that the list of necessary reforms to social care is long and the solutions complex. What is clear however is that any change will be completely ineffectual without enough social care staff to care for the vulnerable.

    But we face an uphill struggle to even get enough staff. The current number of vacancies in social care stands at 165,000 and is rising alarmingly. In the last year alone the number increased by 55,000.

    The reason is simple: care workers aren’t paid enough for the tough, skilled and important work they do. Many are paid less than even the lowest-paid jobs in most supermarkets and shops.

    Thankfully the answer to this problem is simple too: pay our hard working care workers a higher wage.

    That’s why the Liberal Democrats are calling for the introduction of a Carer’s Minimum Wage. We would pay £2 per hour more than the current minimum wage for all carers, meaning that by April this year hourly pay would be £12.42.

    A staggering 850,000 care workers would benefit from this increase in pay. And over 80% of them would be women.

    Social care needs serious solutions from a serious Government. But the Conservatives have shown time and again that they don’t care about social care. They don’t want to reform care, or pay carers better. They would have done it long ago if they did.

    The NHS needs more than warm words; it needs real solutions.A Carer’s Minimum Wage isn’t the silver bullet, but it’s a serious proposal that could make a big difference to patients and their families across the country.

  • PRESS RELEASE : ‘Kinship care is so important’, says Ed Davey [February 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : ‘Kinship care is so important’, says Ed Davey [February 2023]

    The press release issued by the Liberal Democrats on 4 February 2023.

    Each year, thousands of grandparents, aunts, uncles, siblings and family friends step up to support a child who is unable to live with their birth parents.

    Liberal Democrat MP Munira Wilson has introduced the Kinship Care Bill in the House of Commons. This bill calls on the Government to provide all friends and relatives who look after a child who cannot live with their birth parents with an allowance of at least £137 a week: the same level as for foster carers.

    Every child that goes into kinship care instead of local authority care could save the taxpayer more than £35,000 a year. Yet Government policy treats kinship carers as a Cinderella service, denying most of them the support received by foster carers or adoptive parents.

    Munira’s Kinship Care Bill would:

    • Provide a weekly allowance to all kinship carers at the same level as for foster carers;
    • Give kinship carers the right to paid leave when a child starts living with them;
    • Support the education of children in kinship care, such as by giving them Pupil Premium Plus funding and priority for their first choice of school.

    Liberal Democrats will stand up for carers, so we can provide their children with a better start in life, no matter their background.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Rishi Sunak’s first 100 days have left typical family £1,200 poorer [February 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Rishi Sunak’s first 100 days have left typical family £1,200 poorer [February 2023]

    The press release issued by the Liberal Democrats on 2 February 2023.

    A typical family has been left almost £1,200 poorer in the 100 days since Rishi Sunak became Prime Minister.

    Rishi Sunak’s first 100 days in office have been a crushing disappointment, with a worsening cost of living emergency and NHS crisis.

    The cost of Conservative chaos is hitting families who are seeing their incomes squeezed while local health services are stretched to breaking point.

    The new analysis by the Liberal Democrats has revealed that a typical squeezed middle household with a mortgage will have seen extra costs of £1,170 in the 100 days since Rishi Sunak became Prime Minister on 25th October.

    This is made up of £822 in extra mortgage interest payments, £132 in extra taxes due to the freezing of income tax thresholds and £216 in additional food bills.

    This is due to get even worse in April, when under government plans the average family will see energy bills go up by £500 a year. And it comes as the Bank of England has raised interest rates for the tenth time in a row, hitting mortgage borrowers with even higher repayment costs.

    The Liberal Democrats are offering a fair deal where families facing soaring mortgages and rents are offered emergency support, and where the energy price rise is cancelled. We will stand up for communities around the country being totally taken for granted by this Conservative government.

    “The Conservative Party is still mired in sleaze and chaos, with no proper plan to fix the challenges facing the country. They either just don’t care or don’t get it.”

    ED DAVEY

    The Liberal Democrats are calling for the typical energy bill to be maintained at £2,500 this April. The Government currently regulates energy costs for households through the Energy Price Guarantee, this was initially set at £2,500 for the typical household. In the Autumn Statement the government announced this would rise in April to £3,000 for the average household. Energy bills are currently more than double the £1,277 they were last year.

    The Liberal Democrats are proposing a new Mortgage Protection Fund, which would provide temporary grants to those most at risk of repossession – homeowners on the lowest incomes and those seeing the sharpest rises in mortgage rates. Anyone who sees their mortgage payments rise by more than 10% of their household income would get a grant to cover the cost of that rise for the next year, up to a maximum of £300 a month.

    The Liberal Democrats are also calling on the government to urgently bring forward the promised Renters Reform Bill to Parliament. This should include an immediate ban on no-fault evictions. There should be a moratorium on evictions on grounds of rent arrears, unless arrears exceed 6 months, a measure which was in place for 6 months in 2020-21. And the mandatory notice period given by landlords should be extended from the current 2 months to 6 months, a measure which was in place for 18 months in 2020 and 2021.