Tag: 2023

  • Michael Gove – 2023 Speech to the Convention of the North

    Michael Gove – 2023 Speech to the Convention of the North

    The speech made by Michael Gove, the Levelling Up Secretary, in Manchester on 25 January 2023.

    I want to begin my remarks by quoting from a prominent Manchester industrialist of the 19th century, Friedrich Engels.

    A spectre is haunting Europe. In our case it is the spectre of low growth.

    And it’s not just Europe.

    Since the financial crash of 2008 much of the developed world has been enduring the pain of stunted economic development.

    This pain has been visited on developed nations by a variety of factors.

    Now not every economy has been affected by all of these factors, but collectively they have held back growth across the West. And we have seen in different countries the over-financialisation of their economies.

    We’ve seen a naive trust in the ability of authoritarian regimes to be reliable partners.

    Corporate structures that have sometimes put executive reward ahead of capital investment.

    And of course bureaucratic reporting requirements that have sometimes elevated abstract goals that please pressure groups ahead of concrete gains that deliver for the poorest.

    We have also seen supply chains that lack resilience and in some countries education systems that lack rigor.

    And linking them all of these phenomena has been a preference among some policy-makers for models that appeal to theorists and think tanks rather than action rooted in real people and real places.

    Popular resistance to this model – unhappiness with the way it shifted influence to well-connected and often unproductive elites and moved resources and economic power abroad – lay behind big political shifts in the last ten years – not least Britain’s decision to leave the European Union.

    It was notable, though of course no surprise, that the strongest support for Brexit came from communities in this country that had suffered most over the years as a result of a failure to get real.

    The weaknesses in the model that those voters rejected have been more cruelly laid bare than ever in recent years.

    The Covid pandemic underlined just how exposed we have become to risk as a consequence of our economic reliance on regimes such as China for essential finished goods.

    The war in Ukraine has reinforced the significant additional risk to all of us of being reliant on authoritarian regimes for energy.

    Nations and political systems which I admire – such as Germany – have found their dependence on Russian energy to fuel manufacturing and Chinese markets to sell their goods have left them in severe difficulties.

    But there is no room for schadenfreude here.

    Quite the opposite.

    Because lying behind the 2016 vote was an awareness that our own economic model in the UK lacked – in every sense – real resilience.

    We’ve seen manufacturing declining over decades.

    Government, corporate and personal debt is too high.

    Energy supplies insecure.

    Transport networks have been deprived of investment.

    A workforce with huge talents and potential but without the right skills and qualifications.

    These weaknesses have been, across the UK, in the fullest sense, supply-side problems.

    We have had a problem with human capital because our labour market has been constrained by a lack of supply of suitably qualified workers trained in the UK, particularly those with scientific, mathematical and technical skills.

    The supply of finance capital – direct investment in productive industries – has also been limited by the structure and regulation of financial services.

    The supply of high value manufactured goods we produce domestically has been held back by both of the above factors – and that in turn has exacerbated our current account deficit, reduced the number of high-paying jobs for all communities and unbalanced the economy.

    Historically poor connectivity – both physical transport links and digital infrastructure – have added to our shared economic challenges.

    And past decisions on energy investment – perhaps most conspicuously with respect to nuclear power – have left us dependent on unreliable foreign partners not just for supplies but for engineering expertise and finance.

    These problems have been long-lasting and are deep-rooted.

    As has one of the most profound weaknesses in the United Kingdom’s political economy.

    The North-South Divide.

    The UK, as the IPPR reminds us today, has suffered more than any of our neighbours, friends and rivals from an enduring and entrenched geographical and social imbalance.

    Wealth, influence, innovation, high productivity firms, high wage jobs and high quality schools have been disproportionately concentrated in the south-east quarter of the country.

    None of that is intended to play down the vital importance to our economy of our capital city – probably the world’s single most attractive destination for investment. Quite the opposite. London is a priceless asset for all of us. And, as I shall go on to argue, it’s been a model in certain very specific ways.

    But we all know we cannot prosper fully as a state if we rely so much on one region – and within that region on one city.

    The UK economy has been like a football team with a star striker but a midfield that consistently struggles to get the ball upfield and a defence full of holes – and no forward – not even Lionel Messi – can do it on his own.

    Success depends on strength in depth.

    And that is what the UK economy has lacked for too long.

    We have been insufficiently resilient, inherently constrained by supply-side weaknesses and unequal in access to power, capital and investment.

    But while these problems have been holding Britain back for decades this Government is committed to tackling them head on.

    The Prime Minister has made clear the moral imperative of reducing inflation is heart of everything we do, because inflation reduces investment and he’s also made clear that he’s committed to generating sustainable growth across the country through innovation and enterprise.

    The Chancellor has outlined reforms to financial services to better support industry and manufacturing, and of course we have tax cuts like the super deduction which further incentivise investment in productive capital.

    The Foreign and Trade Secretaries are working to secure investment from abroad in those areas in the UK which have been overlooked and undervalued in the past.

    The Work and Pensions Secretary is addressing economic inactivity, focussing particularly on our most disadvantaged regions.

    The Education Secretary is tackling deprivation at root – shifting resource to where it is needed both geographically and in children’s life-cycles to extend opportunity.

    The Transport Secretary is investing in improved links between and within communities that have been neglected in the past.

    And the Business Secretary is directing record research and development money to historically under-funded regions to ensure the spark of innovation is nurtured across the whole country.

    I will say more about all of these initiatives in a moment.

    But two truths that are important to underline now.

    Growth relies on using all of these tools – not just the fiscal and regulatory weapons which are at Government’s disposal.

    And all these initiatives work best, most fruitfully and sustainably, when we are working in partnership with empowered, strengthened, economically ambitious local leaders who are our equal partners in our shared national endeavour.

    LEVELLING-UP – MORE THAN MONEY – MISSIONS, MAYORS AND MORAL PURPOSE

    Our Levelling-Up White Paper, published last year – outlined how this Government can bring all these factors and forces together. And in light of the events of the last twelve months, it is more important than ever as a guide to Government action. Recent economic challenges only underline how powerful is the analysis of the White Paper and how important are all of its actions.

    The White Paper lays out the steps necessary to improve our country’s economic performance – durably, resiliently and equitably.

    It complements the Prime Minister’s Mais Lecture and underpins the priorities that he set out in his speech on the Government’s agenda earlier this month.

    Read together, and reviewed alongside the policies that we are implementing and delivering on levelling up, they constitute a plan of economic action which is both radical and evidence-led – it is a Growth Strategy rooted in real people and real places.

    Other jurisdictions are also grappling with the challenge of years – indeed decades – of low growth. The US Government’s Inflation Reduction Act and the EU’s evolving response have provoked understandable curiosity and debate.

    But the Levelling Up White Paper preceded both of them – and in both diagnosis and detail it is just as ambitious.

    The White Paper outlines that sustainable economic growth relies on multiple interventions to create the environment in which private enterprise can flourish, innovation can take flight and new jobs can be created.

    Unless there are good schools with high standards, further and higher education institutions providing students with qualifications that employers value, unless there are effective transport links within and between towns and cities, unless there is fast and cost-effective digital connectivity and better access to finance capital for local firms in every part of the UK then growth cannot be maximised across all communities.

    And if course for those communities to be genuinely resilient, to attract and to retain the talent necessary to flourish, and to maintain economic competitiveness and generate further innovation, there need to be safe streets and ordered public spaces, an attractive natural environment and a beautiful built environment, cultural richness and respect for heritage – the civic infrastructure that reflects the pride people have in the place they call home.

    And the best way to ensure all these public goods are aligned is to have strong, accountable local civic leadership incentivised to work with every actor who can reinforce virtuous cycles.

    OUR MISSIONS – LONG-TERM AND HIGH AMBITION

    Our White Paper identifies the need for those changes and it sets out twelve national missions to ensure we take the steps necessary to embed growth in every community.

    And these missions include clear and stretching goals to eliminate illiteracy and innumeracy, to improve skills uptake, reduce health inequalities, upgrade transport networks, connect communities digitally, allocate R and D funding more strategically, tackle poor quality housing, improve wages and productivity, enhance pride in place and extend the programme of devolution we have been delivering and to which I am so committed.

    These missions all complement each other – by making it the central domestic task of Government to shift power, wealth and opportunity more evenly, more equitably across the country – and in so doing provide the foundations for durable economic growth.

    Now some have argued, in response to the White Paper, that it is not the role of Government to promote growth by acting in this way but by absenting itself.

    Well I am certainly no supporter of the State’s undesirable and inevitable and continuing expansion. But I am against ever lengthening welfare rolls, lives spent in dependency, children brought up without the exam passes that translate into jobs, health inequalities that will place growing future demands on the NHS, family breakdown, lawless public spaces, slum housing which makes its inhabitants ill and civic institutions in decay. All of these place greater pressure, sooner or later, on the public purse and they are affronts to the conscience that no Government can ignore. Which is why there is both a moral – and economic – imperative to levelling-up.

    And the experience of successful economic transformation demonstrates that growth is not secured by absent Government but by active Government.

    A Government that plays a strategic role, irrigating the soil for growth. As Mrs Thatcher did. Specifically in the Docklands.

    When the Thatcher Government took office in 1979 London’s Docklands were a derelict economic desert. Their economic rationale had gone as containerisation had taken shipping away from the historic wharves of Bermondsey and Poplar to new purpose built ports. Jobs had disappeared, housing was slum-level, schools were places of narrow horizons and fading hopes.

    The original vision for regeneration of the area – from the Treasury of the time – was simple. Just cut taxes and de-regulate and a thousand flowers would bloom in the dusty and contaminated soil of the Docklands. But while lower taxes and smarter regulation are certainly powerful ingredients in any growth package they just weren’t enough.

    Margaret Thatcher, and her then Industry Secretary Keith Joseph tasked the then Environment Secretary Michael Heseltine with bringing together a wider range of interventions through the London Docklands Development Corporation – land was assembled and remediated through Government agencies, new transport links were built, including the DLR and what was to become London City Airport, new housing was commissioned and in due course cultural, sporting and educational investment followed. The area thus irrigated became fertile ground for massive commercial investment. Government created the environment, the private sector created the jobs. London Docklands today is an economic success story – one of the most signal success stories we owe to Mrs Thatcher’s Government.

    And it is that spirit that animates our levelling-up policies, active government. And that spirit is there most vividly our plans for new Investment Zones. This country has no shortage of growth industries, whether in advanced manufacturing, renewable industries or life sciences. And we have no shortage of world-class universities, including here in Manchester.

    But where we have underperformed is leveraging the success of these industries and research to support growth across the whole country and particularly in communities in need of regeneration. That is my guiding mission for Investment Zones and we will shortly begin a process to identify Investment Zones in areas that need levelling-up.

    Our approach will be guided by three principles. First, that government cannot create clusters, but it can and has create the conditions for them to succeed. Second, success requires fiscal support, but also that wider range of interventions that we saw in Docklands, whether that’s land assembly, housing investment, transport infrastructure, or skills investment, in order to ensure we tackle the specific barriers in each cluster that hold back growth. And of course third, Investment Zones can only happen in partnership with strong local leadership.

    Our new Investment Zones are intended to deliver long-term change in the areas where they are established. And we recognise that the scale of our levelling-up ambitions means that we can’t accomplish all the economic strengthening and re-balancing that our nation needs overnight.

    That is why our missions in the White Paper are deliberately designed to extend beyond the life time of this parliament. They are not exercises in temporary amelioration or fiscal elastoplasts. This is a deliberately long-term economic plan.

    And nowhere is that more vividly demonstrated than in the scale of change, and the level of investment, that we have brought to devolution. We are reforming the shape and nature of Government itself – re-distributing power and influence within England to strengthen cities and communities outside London – with the North benefitting most of all.

    MOVING POWER AND MAKING MAYORS WORK

    Government itself has been re-shaped.

    In the past, a disproportionate number of the key decision-making roles within the UK Government and the Civil Service were located not just in the capital but in one postcode. That has changed on our watch. The Treasury has established a new campus in Darlington, staffed by senior officials and recruiting locally. The economic strategists of the nation now increasingly have those in manufacturing and the renewables sector as their neighbours not hedge funders and pressure groups.

    We have also established second headquarters for my own department in Wolverhampton, for the Cabinet Office in Glasgow and for the NHS in Leeds alongside establishing a Home Office centre of excellence in Stoke and a new cyber defence establishment in Samlesbury near Preston. So far 20,000 senior posts have been relocated in the Places for Growth programme with more to follow.

    While relocating central government decision-making is important, even more critical is empowering local decision-making through meaningful, durable, devolution.

    I hope I do not need to rehearse in front of this audience the benefits strong mayoral leadership has brought, most notably to Greater Manchester, the West Midlands and the Tees Valley. Before 2010 the only significant devolution in England had been in London. Now strong mayors in our major cities are acting as agents of economic growth.

    The impact of Ben Houchen’s leadership in the Tees Valley has been transformational. An airport revived and now a busy freight and passenger terminal, a new freeport regenerating thousands of acres and bringing tens of thousands of new jobs, further education colleges working more closely than ever with employers, a world-leading destination for investment in offshore wind and home to a new free school backed by the leading educationalists in the country, Tees-side is proof that putting economic development in the hands of an empowered and energised local leader works.

    Which is why today I’m delighted to back Ben with new powers, with the establishment of two new mayoral development corporations in Tees Valley to drive the regeneration of the town centres in Hartlepool and Middlesbrough, making a major contribution to levelling up and attract businesses and people back to these centres making them vibrant, safe, and pleasant places in which to live and work.

    Ben’s success deserves to be reinforced. As does that of the mayors in Greater Manchester and the West Midlands. While I will not always agree with Andy Burnham, indeed it would be fatal for his political career if I did. I must acknowledge that both Andy Burnham and Andy Street have used the mayoral model powerfully and effectively. Both recognise the mayor’s central role is economic development – driving growth. And the regeneration projects they’re delivering are turning derelict brown fields into nurseries of investment. The Greater Manchester Housing Investment Fund, for example, has seen £420 million worth of spending unlock an additional 5,150 homes across 40 sites in the city region.

    We are currently in talks with both Greater Manchester and The West Midlands to strengthen the hands of both mayors. We want to devolve even more housing funding, including exploring giving more control of the Affordable Homes Programme to West Midlands and Greater Manchester. At the moment London is the only mayoral authority controlling this budget and if we want more of the homes we need in the places where they are needed, regenerating those brownfield sites and driving growth, this devolution is vital and necessary.

    And as well as working with mayoral combined authorities to improve supply – to increase the quantity of new homes – I want to collaborate on improving the quality of existing homes.

    One of our key Levelling Up missions is driving up the standard of housing across the country – and making sure all homes are warm, safe and decent. Because we know poor housing kills.

    The tragic death of Awaab Ishak in Rochdale rightly reinforced the need for action. And improving quality of the homes in which every citizen lives is not only a Levelling Up mission but a personal mission for me. I have been inspired by the work of people like Dan Hewitt and Kwajo Tweneboa who have campaigned for tenants whose lives have been blighted by terrible housing conditions. So today we are going further in our drive to make every home a decent home and allocating £30m for Greater Manchester and the West Midlands to start making improvements in the quality of social housing.

    But while improving housing quality is a passion, it is, of course, one of multiple missions.

    Missions that extend across Government. The LU White Paper outlined powers we also plan to devolve which extend far beyond those directly within the control of my department.

    Which is why we are also looking to devolve more control over further and technical education, transport, trade, culture and employment support.

    And because accountability is key to effective delivery we will also improve the knowledge all voters have about the performance of all local leaders. Our new office for Local Government, OfLog, will produce detailed and precise comparison of delivery across local authorities and mayoral combined authorities. Value for money and effectiveness of service will be measured more effectively than ever before, monitored and analysed so we can learn from the best and support others to improve.

    I am delighted that Amyas Morse, Lord Morse, the former head of the National Audit Office has agreed to chair this new body – and my Department will launch a competition to find a Chief Executive to lead the organisation in the days ahead.

    And I am confident it will be another step in enhancing the role local leaders play in our political lives and in delivering economic growth. The greater scrutiny will not only further sharpen efficiency and spread learning it will, I know, show how successful devolution is, can and will be in the future.

    As well as deepening devolution we must also broaden it. We have already made huge progress in extending devolution across the North – with a new MCA bringing a mayor to North Yorkshire for the first time, and an extended deal coming this month for the North East worth 1.4bn. I’ve been clear that my ambition is to finish the job and to give all parts of England that want one, a devolution deal by 2030.  Soon 75% of the North will have a deal, with positive discussions in the remaining areas which I look forward to developing later this year.

    In the White Paper, we made clear we will return to that conversation in Cumbria – once we are through the important process of local government reform. And I also want to see devolution not only in Cumbria, but in Lancashire, in Cheshire & Warrington, and in Hull & East Yorkshire and look forward to picking up those conversations later this year with the leaders with the fantastic Levelling Up Minister Dehenna Davison, who has been so intimately involved in getting these deals over the line. Dehenna apologies for not being able to join you today, business in Westminster has kept her from being here – I know that for Dehenna as for me being kept in London is punishment not liberation.

    I am very conscious that the mayoral model has its critics and sceptics. I am particularly conscious that communities on the periphery of mayoral geographies sometimes worry that their needs can be overlooked. But I do not think there is a tension between Manchester’s success and Bury’s,  or Sunderland’s growth and Spennymoor’s,  or indeed Newcastle’s prosperity and Blyth’s regeneration. Attracting investment to magnet cities is a necessary part of reviving the economic fortunes of satellite towns.

    And indeed if we unlock the potential of our major cities then the whole country benefits. Improving the productivity of the nine UK second cities will add billions to the UK economy.

    But if every community within MCAs is to benefit to the full that means even more effective transport links within those communities. That is why mayoral deals involve specific funding for city region sustainable transport improvements, why we are backing MCAs in their bids to improve bus services and the White Paper commits us to helping other cities emulate Greater Manchester’s Bee Network and establish London-style integrated transport systems across their geographies.

    But there are communities geographically beyond the boundaries of mayoral combined authorities, and relatively distant from the faster growing cities, which also require specific, bespoke, attention. Coastal communities in particular, where economic change has meant the employment opportunities of the past have faded.

    Which is why in DLUHC we have developed partnerships with communities such as Blackpool and Grimsby to determine what direct action is required to drive growth. In these communities the quality of housing, the attractiveness of the town centre, poor educational standards and expectations and a feeling of local disempowerment have held back economic development. Which is why we are investing directly in improving housing quality, regenerating the urban heart of towns, unblocking transport bottlenecks, improving technical and further education and strengthening civil society.

    In Blackpool we have recently invested £30 million to help the council acquire public land necessary for the effective re-modelling of the town centre and, just last week, £40 million from the Levelling-Up Fund was deployed to help create a new higher education campus – the multiversity – which will provide more high quality courses designed in collaboration with local employers.

    The allocation of Levelling-Up Fund investment last week attracted lively comment across the country. And the more people discuss levelling-up, the happier I am. But it is important to bear in mind that the £2.1 billion allocated last week was just a small fraction of our overall spend on levelling-up. And the Fund is specifically designed to complement the many other policies, and the significant additional spending, outlined in the White Paper. I don’t apologise for a moment for using vehicles like the Levelling Up Fund to invest additional Government money in communities outside MCAs, such as in Blackpool, Accrington, Workington, Cleethorpes, and Ashfield. We are active, engaged, committed across the country.

    The LUF of course adds to the significant increase in local government spending announced in the spending review, and, of course, of our £2.6bn UKSPF over £625m is going directly to local authorities in the North.

    And it further complements the further additional funding mayoral combined authorities have secured through their devolved investment funds totalling some £8bn so far – growing to £12bn in spending power through all the new devolution deals concluded last year – and indeed builds on the billions already allocated through Towns and High Street funds and indeed the first round of LUF spending last year.

    And I can confirm that there will be a further round of investment from the Levelling-Up fund after the March budget, alongside more capital funding for MCAs and further support for local government.

    I am always open to discussion about how we can further refine how we deliver funding for levelling-up, and give local communities more control. And while I believe a competitive process in allocating funding can help drive innovation and ensure rigour in delivery I do recognise that there is a need to reduce the bureaucracy involved in the many repetitive bidding processes which have grown up over time. Which is why I am working with the Chancellor to simplify funding allocations and extend local government autonomy. Again, more detail will follow the March Budget.

    ENGINEERING LASTING CHANGE

    The budgets my department allocates to local authorities have levelling-up at their core. But it is not just DLUHC that is a levelling-up department. Every Government department is committed to our mission. We are committed to using every tool at our disposal to drive economic development.

    It’s why we’re increasing public investment in Research and Development to £20 billion a year, with Grant Shapps ensuring that more of this funding is spent outside the South East. This includes significant investments in the North already – £222m for a prototype fusion power plant in Nottinghamshire and £22m for fusion technology in Rotherham, helping both become growing hubs for Net Zero; and £15m for innovation pilots in Tees Valley and Liverpool.

    Our future depends on catalysing industrial investment. Whether it’s battery technology, improved power transmission networks, more efficient renewables infrastructure, carbon capture and storage, hydrogen, AI and robotics, the synthetics revolution, gene-editing, modern methods of construction, metallurgical and materials technology, zero-carbon aviation, quantum computing, drone development or a plethora of other new and evolving technologies, the future will be shaped by high-value manufacturing and of course the North is at the crucible of the growth of high-value manufacturing.

    Our national resilience and strength depends on our embrace of these opportunities. And as Gavin Rice of the Centre for Social Justice has reminded us in a brilliant new study earlier this month – high value manufacturing is the route to higher employment, higher wages and higher national productivity.

    But one factor which has held back the investment we all want to see has been sclerosis in the planning system for the major projects which drive significant growth. That is why we will shortly deliver the next stage of our drive to accelerate the process of securing planning consent by making sure that we publish an action plan which will set out reforms to the Nationally Significant Infrastructure Projects regime. This will streamline and speed up the consenting process, it will boost investor confidence in major infrastructure and it will help the Government to improve energy security, achieve Net Zero and deliver better transport connectivity.

    This reform to the planning process stands alongside the reforms to financial services outlined by the Chancellor in Edinburgh last year which will make finance work better for industry and bring growth back home.

    And to make the most of these opportunities we need a workforce equipped with the technical skills new industries require. One of the unheralded successes of the last twelve years has been the growth in the number of students leaving schools with exactly the skills required – especially high quality science and maths qualifications.

    But I am very aware that the benefits of educational reform have – so far – accrued disproportionately to students in the South, and especially in London. That is why we are supporting the best MATs to grow and extend their opportunities across the North. Star Academies Trust have already shown the way with new academically ambitious free schools being established in Preston; Blackburn; and Bradford.

    Good schools, indeed great schools, act not just as springboards for existing students – they also contribute to improving the attractiveness of communities for inward investment and incoming talent.

    And that is because the quality of life within communities is as important as any other factor in the alchemy of success. And that’s why we’re increasing funding through the Arts Council in culture outside London and it’s also why we are strengthening our new Community Ownership Fund which enables local people to take back control of assets that have been degraded by others in a way which that community has been left disempowered by. And our Community Ownership Fund, working with Andy, was able to give supporters of Bury the chance to take back control of Gigg Lane and there are other initiatives that the Community Ownership Fund will be supporting in the future.

    But as well as reinforcing success we also need to be even more energetic in tackling those factors which mar the quality of life for too many communities.

    RESTORING CIVIC MORALE –  A MORAL MISSION

    That means focussed action on high street dereliction and greater zeal in countering anti-social behaviour.

    Vandalism and grafitti, drug-taking and dealing, vehicle crime and the intimidation of women and girls – all are more likely to flourish in the hollowed-out heart of communities where neglect has slowly taken hold. The Broken Windows phenomenon is a cliche in the discussion of crime and anti-social behaviour. But it is a cliche because it is true. The unoccupied and unloved become the disused and derelict and where care in every sense is absent chaos finds an opportunity.

    This is why we will shortly publish an action plan on anti-social behaviour. Our determination and ambition is high. We will have stronger, tougher enforcement, swifter delivery of immediate justice with those who damage local assets deployed to repair them, and investing in young people and the activities available to them.

    Alongside those tools we will tackle public drug-taking, including the use of nitrous oxide, and support enhanced community policing with better use of data and faster responses to complaints.

    THE GUIDING MORAL PURPOSE

    Driving faster, and fairer, economic growth go together. A nation only succeeds when it mobilises every citizen’s talent and potential. But that can only happen through local and central government, civil society and the private sector all playing their part.

    And it will always and everywhere be the private sector that creates the new jobs on which economic growth, and individual fulfilment depend.

    But for the private sector to grow, for the Promethean spirit of entrepreneurs to take wing, we do need to ensure that our society, its institutions and all our communities are included in a common national enterprise.

    That is what our levelling up strategy does. It places the innate value of every single citizen at the heart of economic decision-making. It refuses to accept that any life, community or region cannot be made to flourish and to contribute to a greater national renewal. It places greater national resilience, and economic autonomy, within a framework of strengthened civic institutions and stronger local pride. It sees in rigorous education, the route to leading in the high value manufacturing industries of the future. It attacks economic inactivity and upholds local loyalties. It cherishes earning and belonging.

    National in scope, local in delivery, economically ambitious, socially just, politically central and morally urgent – that is what our levelling up strategy means for this Government.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Dangerous driver, Luis Fernando Balcazar Soto, will spend longer in prison [January 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Dangerous driver, Luis Fernando Balcazar Soto, will spend longer in prison [January 2023]

    The press release issued by the Attorney General’s office on 25 January 2023.

    A dangerous driver who caused the death of 31-year-old Sophie Strickland will serve a longer prison sentence after the Solicitor General Michael Tomlinson KC MP presented the case at the Court of Appeal.

    In the early hours of 10 July 2022, Luis Fernando Balcazar Soto, 25, lost control of the vehicle he was driving and collided with a rickshaw which was parked at the side of the road.

    The passenger in the rickshaw, Sophie Strickland, suffered catastrophic injuries as a result, and despite the best efforts of the emergency services she was pronounced dead at the scene of the crash.

    The driver of the rickshaw, Tanvir Ahmed, survived but was left with life-changing injuries.

    At the time of the crash, Balcazar Soto, from South East London, was driving with a passenger he was prohibited from contacting under the terms of a Restraining Order.

    He was driving up to nearly twice the speed limit prior to the crash and was found to have alcohol in his system when arrested.

    On 1 November 2022, Balcazar Soto was sentenced to 9 years and 9 months’ imprisonment at Southwark Crown Court for causing death by dangerous driving, causing serious injury by dangerous driving, breach of a Restraining Order and breach of a suspended sentence.

    His sentence was then referred to the Court of Appeal by the Solicitor General as Unduly Lenient.

    On 25 January 2023 Balcazar Soto’s original sentence was quashed and substituted by a total sentence of 12 years and 9 months’ imprisonment.

    The Solicitor General Michael Tomlinson KC MP said:

    Today all my thoughts are with the family and friends of Sophie Strickland, whose life was so tragically cut short by the criminally dangerous driving of Luis Fernando Balcazar Soto. I want to pay tribute to Sophie’s family, who have shown immense strength and courage during such a desperately difficult time.

    I referred this case to the Court of Appeal and chose to personally present it because I believed the original sentence was Unduly Lenient. I’m pleased that the court has ordered Luis Fernando Balcazar Soto serve a prison term which is a more appropriate reflection of the dreadful harm that he has caused.

  • PRESS RELEASE : £4.6 million UK Government funding for North Lanarkshire [January 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : £4.6 million UK Government funding for North Lanarkshire [January 2023]

    The press release issued by the Office of the Secretary of State for Scotland on 25 January 2023.

    £30 million going to seven new regional projects across the UK to boost innovation in decarbonising roads.

    Future roads could be built using asphalt made from grass cuttings and ‘carbon capturing’ cement, supported by £30 million UK Government funding awarded to seven innovative, net zero projects.

    North Lanarkshire is one of the schemes spread across the UK to have been awarded funding today through the Live Labs 2: Decarbonising Local Roads competition. The programme supports projects led by Local Highways Authorities focused on tackling the long-term decarbonisation of highways infrastructure, such as streetlights, and transforming local authorities’ approach to decarbonising roads.

    Building a decarbonised road network requires materials that can stand up to the requirements and are innovative in combating carbon emissions. North Lanarkshire Council’s project will look to create a centre that will develop a materials testing programme to identify and deploy the latest tech for road construction, in addition to testing and deploying recycled materials from other industries to build roads.

    UK Government Minister for Scotland John Lamont said:

    It’s great to see Scottish expertise leading the way in developing innovative solutions for our drive to net zero.

    Sharing £30 million UK Government investment with six other projects, North Lanarkshire Council – working with partners such as the Society of Chief Officers of Transportation in Scotland, Clackmannanshire Council, Ayrshire Roads Alliance and Heriot Watt University – will use its £4.6 million allocation to help the UK become a global leader in making road networks green.

    The testing they’ll carry out – including investigating how waste destined for landfill can be recycled – will help reduce the carbon footprint from the production, transportation and maintenance of road surfaces, signage, crash barriers and kerbs.

    Roads Minister Richard Holden said:

    The UK is a world leader in technology and innovation and we must use that strength to drive decarbonisation and the next generation of high-tech jobs that go alongside it. We are supporting this vital agenda to help level-up through £30 million funding for ground-breaking projects and boosting regional connections to support growth. The Government is determined to create good, well-paid jobs – via innovation and investment across the UK – as we accelerate the road to net zero.

    Councillor Jim Logue, Leader of North Lanarkshire Council said:

    North Lanarkshire Council, Transport for West Midlands and partners are delighted to be collaborating to create the UK Centre of Excellence for Materials Decarbonisation. This is an enormously important and innovative programme with a major focus on decarbonising all road types, changing how our sector works and reducing our impact on the environment, while meeting our collective objective for a net zero future.

    We aim to be leaders in the UK in this field and the reference point for the promotion and knowledge share for decarbonisation in highways materials. As we progress, we hope to provide national standards for other public services and a tangible exportable asset for the UK.

    Live Labs 2 is designed to ensure innovations are shared across the whole of the UK and bidders were encouraged to create partnerships across the public and private sector, and academia. As such, North Lanarkshire’s winning project successfully showed to be working across the four interconnected themes:

    • A green carbon laboratory: Examining the role that non-operational highways ‘green’ assets can play in providing a source of materials and fuels to decarbonise highway operations, for example, using biomass from green waste to create alternative fuels and asphalt additives.
    • A future lighting testbed: Researching the future of lighting for local roads to determine what is needed in the future and how they can be further decarbonised.
    • A UK centre of excellence for materials: Providing a centralised hub for research and innovation that would help test construction materials and their use.
    • Corridor and place-based decarbonisation: Working to create decarbonisation across specific, wider regions and corridors covering both urban and rural areas.

    Live Labs 2 is funded by the Department for Transport (DfT) and organised by The Association of Directors of Environment, Economy, Planning & Transport (ADEPT), which represents ‘directors of place’ who are responsible for providing day-to-day services, such as local highways, as well as strategic long-term delivery.

    Mark Kemp, President of ADEPT, said:

    Tackling the carbon impact of our highways’ infrastructure is critical to our path to net zero but hard to address, so I am pleased that bidding was so competitive. Live Labs 2 has a huge ambition – to fundamentally change how we embed decarbonisation into our decision-making and to share our learning with the wider sector to enable behaviour change. Each project will bring local authority led innovation and a collaborative approach to create a long-lasting transformation of business as usual.  I am looking forward to the opportunity to learn from our successful bidders and taking that into my own organisation.

    This programme follows the previous and successful Live Labs 1, a £22.9 million innovation programme that focused on adoption of digital technology across local roads.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Statement from the Quad Syria Envoys [January 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Statement from the Quad Syria Envoys [January 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 25 January 2023.

    Representatives of France, Germany, the United Kingdom, and the United States met in Geneva with UN Special Envoy Geir Pedersen on January 24.

    We reaffirmed our steadfast support for UN Special Envoy Geir Pedersen’s efforts to reach a political solution to the Syrian conflict in line with UN Security Council Resolution 2254.

    We expressed our firm commitment to the implementation of all aspects of UNSCR 2254, including a nation-wide ceasefire, the release of any arbitrarily detained persons, free and fair elections, and the need to build conditions for the safe, dignified, and voluntary return of refugees and internally displaced persons, consistent with UN standards.

    UNSCR 2254 remains the only viable solution to the conflict, and we look forward to working with partners in the region and opposition to engage fully under this framework, including the reciprocal step-for-step process, through the UN Special Envoy to ensure that a durable political solution remains within reach.

  • PRESS RELEASE : JCVI advises an autumn COVID-19 vaccine booster [January 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : JCVI advises an autumn COVID-19 vaccine booster [January 2023]

    The press release issued by the UK Health Security Agency on 25 January 2023.

    In its interim advice to government on the coronavirus (COVID-19) vaccination programme for 2023, the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI) has advised that plans should be made for those at higher risk of severe COVID-19 to be offered a booster vaccination this autumn (2023).

    The JCVI also advised that for a smaller group of people, such as those who are older and those who are immunosuppressed, an extra booster vaccine dose in the spring should also be planned for. Advice regarding the spring 2023 COVID-19 programme will be provided shortly.

    Emergency surge vaccine responses may be required should a novel variant of concern emerge with clinically significant biological differences compared to the Omicron variant.

    Professor Wei Shen Lim, Chair of COVID-19 vaccination on the JCVI, said:

    The COVID-19 vaccination programme continues to reduce severe disease across the population, while helping to protect the NHS.

    That is why we have advised planning for further booster vaccines for persons at higher risk of serious illness through an autumn booster programme later this year.

    We will very shortly also provide final advice on a spring booster programme for those at greatest risk.

    The 2022 COVID-19 autumn booster vaccination campaign commenced in early September last year. The most recent coverage data (15 January 2023) of the autumn booster programme in those aged 50 years and over is 64.5% and 82.4% in those aged 75 years and over. By the end of summer 2022, the coverage of the 2022 spring booster programme was 77.3% in those aged 75 years and over.

    Following high uptake rates for the initial (third) booster dose of COVID-19 vaccine in December 2021, further uptake has been low at less than 0.1% per week since April 2022 in all eligible people under 50 years of age.

    Similarly, uptake of primary course vaccination, which has been widely available since 2021, has plateaued in recent months across all age groups.

    As the transition continues away from a pandemic emergency response towards pandemic recovery, the JCVI has advised that the 2021 booster offer (third dose) for persons aged 16 to 49 years who are not in a clinical risk group should close in alignment with the close of the autumn 2022 booster vaccination campaign.

    In England, the closure of the autumn booster campaign and the first booster offer will be on 12 February 2023. We strongly encourage everyone who is currently eligible for a first booster and is yet to come forward to do so before the offer closes.

    Similarly, the JCVI is advising that the primary course COVID-19 vaccination should move, over the course of 2023, towards a more targeted offer during vaccination campaigns to protect those persons at higher risk of severe COVID-19. We strongly encourage individuals who have not had a primary course to come forward for their primary course before the offer closes.

    The JCVI keeps all advice under constant review and will revise it according to the latest data and evidence.

    In its 2023 statement, the JCVI also advises that research should be considered to inform the optimal timing of booster vaccinations to protect against severe COVID-19 for groups who are at different levels of clinical risk.

  • Anne-Marie Trevelyan – 2023 Speech at Asia House

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan – 2023 Speech at Asia House

    The speech made by Anne-Marie Trevelyan, the Minister of State at the Foreign Office, on 25 January 2023.

    Thank you Stephen, Michael, I am so pleased to be here at Asia House today. I was recalling that I thought I’d been here before, and then realised that I’d only been here virtually, so it’s lovely. I’m sorry for those of you who are virtual but it’s lovely to be actually here – the sense that we can gather once again and really share our thoughts and the work that you’re doing. At a personal level, it makes such a difference.

    We have got of course a phenomenal panel this morning, so many incredible experts and leaders around the world.

    So today, I really want to reaffirm the UK’s ongoing commitment to the Indo-Pacific region, highlight – I hope – some of our successes and explore the ways in which government and business can work more closely together. Making the UK’s Indo-Pacific strategy into a clean, economic and security reality, is partly achieved, of course, by businesses creating strong ties and achieving mutually beneficial partnerships, whilst they capitalise on all the UK has to offer – from the City of London, to our world class universities and of course our luxury brands.

    As the International Trade Secretary, I promoted UK trade and investment and built trade deals as frameworks for businesses. Now, as Minister for the Indo-Pacific I have the wonderful role of helping to smooth the road ahead so that you can forge these connections, both in the UK and across this great region. If rules, regulations or political decisions are getting in your way, I am here to help.

    So building those stronger partnerships in this region, is a top government priority, first set out, you will have noticed, in our 2021 Integrated Review. Our new Prime Minister and Foreign Secretary are currently refreshing this whole of government framework, which will set out how our Euro-Atlantic and our Indo-Pacific economies and security are inextricably bound together.

    We believe in a free and open Indo-Pacific. All states have the right to ensure their sovereignty. So competition should be managed in a way that minimises strain between great powers and doesn’t spill over into conflict.

    China remains incredibly important to the UK both as a trading partner and in tackling global challenges such as climate change. But we are clear-eyed on the need to respond to those systemic challenges which China may pose to our values and interests.

    The appalling, illegal invasion of Ukraine has underlined the interconnectedness of Europe and the Indo-Pacific, as brutally demonstrated by the global impact of the conflict on energy and food prices.

    As 60% of global shipping passes through the Indo-Pacific, and more than half of global growth is projected to come from the region by 2050 – though perhaps the report will tell me something even more impressive than that – the UK must have her strategic focus facing the region.

    So to ensure we can strengthen our resilience, and protect our security, we need to strengthen our partnerships with likeminded states. The Indo-Pacific is home to many who are – like the UK – committed to territorial integrity, freedom from economic coercion, and the open market.

    So how are we doing this in practice? One of the first actions of our ‘tilt’ was to secure ASEAN Dialogue Partner status, and we have now agreed our Plan of Action.

    The opportunity that our UK-ASEAN cooperation offers for UK business is vast. ASEAN as a bloc is competitive in manufacturing and our UK economy is highly complementary given the strength of our financial services.

    The UK government is actively supporting a pipeline of investment into business collaboration across a variety of sectors, including of course R&D. Last year the first UK-Singapore bilateral R&D call was launched, with £5 million of Innovate UK funding. Over 50 joint proposals were received, 90 projects are being funded, supporting businesses across all parts of the UK.

    The UK recognises ASEAN countries’ determination to maintain peace and prosperity across the region, because that’s how business and prosperity can thrive. We are working with Australia and the USA, to bring world-leading submarine technology to the Australian Navy through the AUKUS partnership, which will support their regional defence and security capabilities and commitments.

    I re-negotiated world class, modern and expansive free trade agreements and 2 new ones with Australia and New Zealand last year, and are working to conclude an FTA with India.

    We have new digital economy agreements with Singapore and Japan, making it easier for our companies to collaborate on tech initiatives and co-operate more closely in IT and telecoms. For example, building on recent successes like Rakuten’s decision to build a new 5G facility in the UK.

    We will be the first European country to accede to the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership – first off, are you impressed – CPTPP, for friends. This will not only give us access to a partnership with a joint GDP of £9 trillion, and remove tariffs on 95% of all goods traded, but we will also be able to share our legal expertise and our other professional services to help shape future trading rules.

    This is particularly important when we look to the current and future challenges of governance for artificial intelligence, the use of data and cyber security.

    Much of the innovation in these areas will come from the Indo-Pacific region, which is why the UK government is so keen to strengthen our collaboration across science, technology and R&D. One of our most successful collaborations is the Serum Institute’s partnership with Oxford University and AstraZeneca. As well as unlocking access to 5 million COVID-19 vaccines in the UK, it has led to an investment of £50 million in Oxford Biomedica and the opportunity to deliver their ground breaking Malaria vaccine, with the potential to save millions of lives.

    The recently-agreed Global Combat Air Programme, between the UK, Japan and Italy, will also push technological boundaries to deliver the next generation of fighter jets. This partnership will pool the expertise of our 3 countries to deliver cutting-edge defence technology.

    Innovation and collaboration are also imperative for tackling the biggest issue facing us all: climate change. The Indo-Pacific is on the frontline with many littoral communities threatened by rising seas, typhoons and millions at the mercy of drought. The UK is proud to be a global leader and convener on climate. Our businesses and universities are innovators and producers of renewable and low carbon services.

    UK climate change partnerships are mobilising billions of pounds in green finance, including the UK’s Climate Action for a Resilient Asia Programme, which will support up to 14 million people to adapt to climate change.

    We are also supporting Vietnam and Indonesia, to deliver on their net-zero ambitions, through the Just Energy Transition Partnerships.

    With G7 partners, we want to support ASEAN and other countries to develop the future infrastructure that they need. To help achieve this, we have opened a new British International Investment regional hub, the UK government’s development investment arm, in Singapore. Through it we intend to invest up to £500 million in the region over the next 5 years. BII will partner with investors in the region to help these economies reduce emissions, protect the environment and adapt to climate change.

    We have a unique and compelling offer to the region, thanks to the skills, products and networks of our people, our businesses and our institutions. We are determined to maximise their impact and delivery to achieve our shared ambitions in the Indo-Pacific, and weave strong regional ties to create a secure and prosperous future for our children and generations to follow. So let us do all we can together to make them proud of the choices and commitments we make today to protect their world. Thank you.

  • Yvette Cooper – 2023 Speech on Missing Unaccompanied Asylum-seeking Children

    Yvette Cooper – 2023 Speech on Missing Unaccompanied Asylum-seeking Children

    The speech made by Yvette Cooper, the Shadow Home Secretary, in the House of Commons on 24 January 2023.

    The report from Sussex police is that one in four unaccompanied children in a Home Office hotel have gone missing—one in four—and that around half of them are still missing. It would appear from the figures the Minister has given that that means one hotel accounts for 40% of the missing children.

    A whistleblower is reported as saying:

    “Children are literally being picked up from outside the building, disappearing and not being found. They’re being taken from the street by traffickers”.

    Greater Manchester police warned that asylum hotels and children’s homes are being targeted by organised criminals. There is a pattern here. The gangs know where to come to get the children—often, likely because they trafficked them here in the first place. There is a criminal network involved and the Government are completely failing to stop it. They are letting gangs run amok. Last year, there was only one—just one—conviction for child trafficking, even though it is now believed to involve potentially thousands of British children, as well as the children targeted here.

    Where is the single co-ordinated unit involving the National Crime Agency, the Border Force, the south-east regional organised crime unit and local police forces to hit the gang networks operating around this hotel and across the channel? Why are the Government still refusing to boost the National Crime Agency? Why have they repeatedly ignored the warnings about this hotel and unregulated accommodation for 16 and 17-year-olds being targeted by criminal gangs?

    It is unbelievable that there is still no clarity on whether the Home Office or the council is legally responsible for these children. Will the Home Office now agree to immediately end the contract with this hotel and move the children out to safer accommodation? Will it set up a proper inquiry and team to pursue the links between organised crime, trafficking and the children in these hotels? This is a total dereliction of duty that is putting children at risk. We need urgent and serious action to crack down on these gangs, and to keep children and young people safe.

    Robert Jenrick

    I gave the figures the Home Office has at the start of this urgent question. Of the 4,600 unaccompanied children who have been accommodated in hotels since July 2021, 440 have gone missing at one point and 200 remain missing, so I am afraid the statistics the right hon. Lady quotes are not those that I have been given by the Home Office.

    On press reports that individuals have been abducted outside the hotel, those are very serious allegations. I specifically asked the officials who run the hotel whether they have seen evidence of that, and I also asked the senior leadership of Brighton and Hove Council. I have not been presented with evidence that that has happened, but I will continue to make inquiries. Senior officials from my Department are meeting the Mitie security team in the coming days to ask them whether they have seen any occurrences, whether the individual quoted in the press as a whistleblower raised issues with Mitie, and, if they did, why those issues were not subsequently passed on to the Home Office. The right hon. Lady has my assurance that I will not let the matter drop. I am also going to meet a number of staff who work at the site in the coming days to take their opinions and reflections.

    On the broader point the right hon. Lady makes about our policy, she is incorrect when she says the NCA is insufficiently financed. The Prime Minister announced at the end of last year that we would step up NCA funding. In fact, I visited the NCA just last week to be briefed on the work it is doing upstream throughout Europe and into Turkey, Iraq and a number of other countries. There is very significant activity happening to tackle the evil people-smuggling gangs.

    The problem the right hon. Lady has is that she does not support any of the measures the Government bring forward to stop the trade. She votes against every Bill we bring forward to try to address this challenge. There is nothing compassionate about allowing unsecure borders and allowing growing numbers of people, including young people, to cross the channel. She will have an opportunity to put her money where mouth is when we bring forward further legislation in the weeks ahead.

  • Caroline Lucas – 2023 Speech on Missing Unaccompanied Asylum-seeking Children

    Caroline Lucas – 2023 Speech on Missing Unaccompanied Asylum-seeking Children

    The speech made by Caroline Lucas, the Green Party MP for Brighton Pavilion, in the House of Commons on 24 January 2023.

    This is horrific. Vulnerable children are being dumped by the Home Office, scores of them are going missing, and I can tell the Minister that there is nothing “specialist” about these hotels. We are not asking him to detain children; we are asking the Home Office to apply some basic safeguarding so that we can keep them safe. Does he know how many have been kidnapped, trafficked, put into forced labour—where are they living, are they allowed to leave, are they in school? He should know because the Home Office is running these hotels. It has told me it is commissioning everything from social work to security, but it is still unclear whether it is prepared to take legal as well as practical responsibility.

    Meanwhile, these children are in legal limbo. I was told before Christmas that Government lawyers were deliberating over their ultimate legal responsibility. We need to know the outcome today: what is it? We need to know why successive Home Secretaries have played into the hands of criminal gangs.

    The Minister will talk of new money being given to local authorities, but where will they get the foster care capacity, which he knows is in seriously short supply? Brighton and Hove City Council has been raising concerns about the dangerous practice of using these hotels for 18 months, and as the hon. Member for Hove (Peter Kyle) has made clear on many occasions—I pay credit to him for his tireless work on this—it was entirely foreseeable that children were at risk of being snatched, abducted and coerced by criminals.

    Has the Minister taken up offers of help from charities working with children? What is the response to the migration watchdog’s finding that some staff in these hotels were not DBS—disclosure and barring service—checked? What role is the Children’s Commissioner playing? Why is not Ofsted inspecting these hotels regularly? Will he commit to publishing regular data on missing children—how long they have been missing, whether they are still missing, when they went missing? Where is the special operation to find the missing children? This feels like the plight of the girls in Rotherham who were treated like they did not matter and, frankly, it is sickening. Lastly, the use of these hotels must stop—when will that actually happen?

    The staggering complacency and incompetence from the Home Office are shameful. We need immediate answers and an urgent investigation, and we need to ask how many more children are going to go missing before we see some action.

    Robert Jenrick

    If the hon. Lady has not visited the hotel in her constituency, or indeed in her neighbouring constituency, I would be happy to organise that. I spoke with the chief executive and director of children’s services of Brighton and Hove City Council yesterday to ask for their reflections on the relationship with the Home Office and the management of the hotel. We have a good relationship with that council and I want to ensure that that continues.

    As regards the level of support provided in that hotel, and indeed others elsewhere in the country, it is significant. On any given day, there will be a significant security presence at the hotel. Those security guards are there to protect the staff and the minors and to raise any suspicious activity immediately with the local police. I have been assured that that does happen in Sussex. A number of social workers are on site 24/7. There are also nurses on site and team leaders to manage the site appropriately. So there is a significant specialist team provided in each of these hotels to ensure that the young people present are properly looked after.

    The report by the independent chief inspector of borders and immigration in October last year—I believe that Ofsted was involved in the inspection—did find unanimously that the young people reported that they felt safe, happy and treated with respect. Now, that does not mean that we have any cause to be complacent, because it is extremely concerning if young people are leaving these accommodation settings and not being found. I have been told that any young person leaving one of these hotels and not returning is treated in exactly the same way as any young person of any nationality or immigration status who goes missing anywhere else in the country and that the police follow up as robustly as they would in any other circumstances. That is quite right, because we have a responsibility to any minor, regardless of why they are here in the United Kingdom.

    Working with police forces and local authorities, we have created a new protocol, known as “missing after reasonable steps”, in which further action is taken to find missing young people. That has had significant success: I am told that it has led to a 36% reduction in the number of missing people occurrences. We will take further steps, as required, to ensure that young people are safe in these hotels and not unduly preyed on by the evil people smuggling gangs that perpetuate the trade.

    The key task ahead of us—other than deterring people from making dangerous crossings in the first place, of course—is to ensure that these young people are swiftly moved out of hotels, as the hon. Lady rightly said, and into more appropriate settings in local authorities. Since being in position I have reviewed the offer that we have for local authorities and significantly enhanced it. From next month—this has already been announced—any local authority will receive a one-off initial £15,000 payment for taking a young person from one of these hotels into their care in addition to the annual payment of about £50,000 per person. That is a significant increase in the amount of financial support available to local authorities.

    The hon. Lady is right to say that money is not the only barrier to local authorities, because there are significant capacity issues including a lack of foster carers, a lack of trained social workers and a lack of local authority children’s home places. Those are issues that the Department for Education is seeking to address through its care review. The best thing that any of us can do as constituency Members of Parliament who care about this issue is speak to our local authorities and ask them whether they can find extra capacity to take more young people through the national transfer scheme so that we can close these hotels or, at least, reduce reliance on them as quickly as possible.

  • Robert Jenrick – 2023 Statement on Missing Unaccompanied Asylum-seeking Children

    Robert Jenrick – 2023 Statement on Missing Unaccompanied Asylum-seeking Children

    The statement made by Robert Jenrick, the Minister for Immigration, in the House of Commons on 24 January 2023.

    The rise in small boat crossings has placed a severe strain on the asylum accommodation system. We have had no alternative but to temporarily use specialist hotels to give some unaccompanied minors a roof over their heads while local authority accommodation is found. We take our safeguarding responsibilities extremely seriously and we have procedures in place to ensure all children are accommodated as safely as possible while in those hotels. This work is led on site by personnel providing 24/7 supervision, with support from teams of social workers and nurses. Staff, including contractors, receive briefings and guidance on how to safeguard minors, while all children receive a welfare interview, which includes questions designed to identify potential indicators of trafficking or safeguarding risks. The movements of under-18s in and out of hotels are monitored and recorded, and they are accompanied by social workers when attending organised activities.

    We have no power to detain unaccompanied asylum-seeking children in these settings and we know some do go missing. Over 4,600 unaccompanied children have been accommodated in hotels since July 2021. There have been 440 missing occurrences and 200 children remain missing, 13 of whom are under 16 years of age and only one of whom is female.

    When any child goes missing, a multi-agency missing persons protocol is mobilised alongside the police and the relevant local authority to establish their whereabouts and to ensure they are safe. Many of those who have gone missing are subsequently traced and located. Of the unaccompanied asylum-seeking children still missing, 88% are Albanian nationals, with the remaining 12% from Afghanistan, Egypt, India, Vietnam, Pakistan and Turkey.

    As I have made clear repeatedly, we must end the use of hotels as soon as possible. We are providing local authorities with children’s services with £15,000 for eligible young people they take into their care from a dedicated UASC—unaccompanied asylum-seeking children—hotel, or the reception and safe care service in Kent.

    I fully understand the interest of the hon. Member for Brighton, Pavilion (Caroline Lucas), and indeed the whole House, in this issue and I am grateful for the opportunity to address it. I assure the House that safeguarding concerns are, and will remain, a priority for me and for my Department as we deliver the broader reforms that are so desperately needed to ensure we have a fair and effective asylum system that works in the interests of the British people.

  • Wes Streeting – 2023 Parliamentary Question on Charging for Access to NHS

    Wes Streeting – 2023 Parliamentary Question on Charging for Access to NHS

    The parliamentary question asked by Wes Streeting, the Shadow Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, in the House of Commons on 24 January 2023.

    Wes Streeting (Ilford North) (Lab)

    Labour founded the NHS to be free at the point of use, and we want to keep it that way. Given that the Prime Minister has advocated charging for GP appointments, and one of the Secretary of State’s predecessors has urged him to charge for A&E visits, will he take this opportunity to rule out any extension to user charging in the NHS?

    Steve Barclay

    I can see from your reaction, Mr Speaker, and the reaction of colleagues in the House, that that is a misrepresentation of the Prime Minister’s position. For the majority of its existence, the NHS has been run by Conservative Governments. We remain committed to treatment free at the point of use. That is the Prime Minister’s position and the Government’s position.

    Wes Streeting

    I note that the Secretary of State did not rule out any future extension of user charging, and I am sure that patients will have noticed too. Given that the chief executive of NHS England has said that the NHS needs to expand training; that many of the Secretary of State’s own Back Benchers are echoing Labour’s calls to double the number of medical school places; and that he has no plan whatsoever to expand NHS medical school training places, nursing and midwifery clinical training places, to double the number of district nurses qualifying, or to provide 5,000 more health visitors, is it not time for the Conservatives to swallow their pride, admit that they have no plan and adopt Labour’s workforce plan instead?

    Steve Barclay

    I am not surprised that the hon. Gentleman wants to misrepresent the Government’s plan, not least because his own plan is disintegrating before his own Front Bench. The hon. Member for York Central (Rachael Maskell), who spoke earlier, contradicted his point. Not only have the hon. Gentleman’s Front-Bench colleagues contradicted it; even the deputy chair of the British Medical Association has said that Labour’s plan would create higher demand and longer waiting times. I am not surprised that the hon. Gentleman does not want to talk about his own plans anymore; that is why he has taken to distorting ours.