Tag: 2023

  • Robert Halfon – 2023 Speech at the Association of Colleges’ Annual Conference

    Robert Halfon – 2023 Speech at the Association of Colleges’ Annual Conference

    The speech made by Robert Halfon, the Minister for Skills, Apprenticeships and Higher Education, in Birmingham on 14 November 2023.

    Good morning, and thank you for that introduction.

    The Association of Colleges is an important voice for further education, and a key contributor to the work of the department. After a year in-post as Skills Minister, I’m delighted to be speaking today on how we are continuing to move skills to the centre of education.

    I first visited Harlow College shortly after being elected as an MP. Thanks to the vision of two exceptional leaders – including Karen Spencer, the current Principal – it has been transformed into one of the country’s leading colleges. I’ve now visited more than 100 times, as well as many other FE colleges, from Loughborough to Oldham, Waltham Forest to Stroud, and Telford to Gateshead. Seeing their facilities and focus on training students for success, helped me understand how FE colleges bring about social justice.

    FE colleges are places of social and economic capital, and I am proud to be their champion in government. From beginning on the backbenches, to chairing the Education Select Committee and my time as Skills Minister – everything I’ve done in Parliament has been to promote skills education and boost support for FE.

    I don’t hold a meeting, or comment on a ministerial submission without asking: “What about FE? What are we doing to help it thrive?”

    As my officials will tell you, further education does not get forgotten on my watch.

    I believe FE colleges are a key pillar of the Ladder of Opportunity, enabling people of all backgrounds to gain sought-after skills and good jobs.

    I’m really proud of what we’ve achieved over the last year. We saw more than 335,000 apprenticeship starts, with full figures for the academic year to be published shortly.

    To help colleges and providers accommodate these new apprentices, in March we distributed £286 million via the Capital Transformation Fund to enhance your facilities. In July we announced £185 million for the 2023-24 financial year, to drive forward skills delivery in further education. This will be followed by £285 million in 2024-25. It will allow colleges and other 16-19 providers to improve recruitment and retention of teachers in high-value technical and academic subjects. In fact I was delighted to receive feedback last month from a college Principal, who was able to give their staff a significant pay award following this announcement. Our investment recognises the importance of your work to the country’s future economic growth and prosperity.

    In order to look to what the future holds, I’d like to glance back to the past. Some of you may know that I’m a great admirer of many 20th Century American presidents. The obvious parallel with my life is that of Franklin D. Roosevelt – who despite being paralysed by polio, taught himself to walk short distances with leg braces and a cane.

    The great wartime president famously pitched his 4 universal freedoms in 1941 to persuade America to abandon non-interventionism and join the war effort.

    As I’m sure you know, those freedoms were: Freedom of speech, Freedom of worship, Freedom from want, and Freedom from fear.

    While I’m glad to say that further education does not face a comparable existential threat, Roosevelt’s freedoms got me thinking about what FE needs to thrive, and where its future lies. I think there are 4 challenges it will need to meet over the next few years. I will outline them here, along with the support government is providing to help the sector face these changes.

    The first challenge is fully resourcing the further education we know we need.

    Properly resourcing further education includes allowing colleges to focus on what you do best –teaching vital skills, rather than negotiating bureaucracy and red tape. I will make sure we deliver existing commitments to make things easier, such as bringing together multiple revenue and capital grants in a Single Development Fund. We have already simplified funding rates at Level 3 and below, and reduced the apprenticeship onboarding process by a third. Our Expert Provider pilot is exploring how to further simplify the delivery of apprenticeships, so that you can focus on growth and quality. I have asked officials to think radically about streamlining end-to-end funding processes, and would welcome your input on this.

    Deploying funding where it will hold most value for learners and businesses is really important. Last week we announced the Local Skills Improvement Fund allocations – more than £200 million for colleges and universities to offer training to address specific regional skills needs. Through Local Skills Improvement Plans, priority sectors are now able to steer funding towards the local skills provision needed to grow their workforce and the regional economy.

    Bringing about a skills revolution, where more people choose high-quality technical education, necessarily means more FE teachers. On top of the additional £470 million I previously outlined to help with recruitment and retention, we are also investing in a package of direct support for those entering the workforce. This includes the new measures linked to the Advanced British Standard. We are expanding the Levelling Up Premium to give eligible teachers up to £6,000 annually, after tax, in addition to their pay. That’s those in the first five years of their career, teaching key STEM and technical subjects in disadvantaged schools, and – for the first time – in colleges too.

    It is really significant that the Prime Minister mentioned these incentives in his speech to party conference, an arena where further education hasn’t frequently been acknowledged. When I say we are bringing FE to the centre of our policy plans, I mean it. I hate it when people call further education the Cinderella sector – but as in the story, Cinderella is now well on her way to joining the royal family. FE is central to the world class education system we wish to build.

    This brings me to the Advanced British Standard, and our second challenge: rolling-out T Levels while we develop this new, overarching qualification.

    When the ABS was announced, there was some concern that it had come to bury T Levels. What was the point of 3 years’ roll out, if T Levels were eventually going to be surpassed by something else? I’m here to tell you that one supports the other: T Levels will provide the backbone of the Advanced British Standard. We will continue to roll them out, with more to come in 2024-25.

    Technical education has undergone unprecedented reform over the last decade, and we will continue this programme to simplify the skills landscape and create a stronger set of qualifications than ever before. All of this puts T Levels in a better position than any current qualification. As I say, they will be the backbone of the occupational route of the Advanced British Standard – making them the most “future proof” option you can offer 16-19-year-olds.

    It’s thanks to all those pioneers here today, who championed T Levels from the start, that we can see a way to achieving a long held ambition: parity of esteem for technical and academic education. But we need your continued support. The best advocates for T Levels, who can demonstrate their benefits and versatility to upcoming year groups, are yourselves – Principals, tutors and teachers.

    I’ve really enjoyed meeting college staff who have welcomed the Advanced British Standard, and the breadth of education it will, for the first time, afford every young person. Thousands of T Level students have gone on to take apprenticeships, jobs with top employers and places at university. Now is the time to persuade the Year 11s visiting your open days to consider T Levels, and the life-changing opportunities they bring.

    The third challenge is to re-enforce further education as the Ladder of Opportunity for those who need it most.

    FE’s power lies in the difference it can make to the lives of people who need a leg-up.

    That’s why I’m so enthusiastic about it, and keen that this life-changing difference can reach as many as possible.

    The Lifelong Learning Entitlement will do just that, democratising access to student finance like never before. It is the most exciting opportunity for learners in a generation, opening up skills training to people who previously thought it wasn’t affordable or applicable to them.

    The LLE will transform FE when it launches in 2025. It will provide a loan entitlement equivalent to four years’ post-18 education (£37,000 in today’s fees) for use throughout people’s working lives.

    As well as conventional higher technical or degree level studies, it will be redeemable against  high-value modular courses, provided by FE colleges and universities.

    I think it’s hard overstate just how much flexible student finance will alter attitudes to retraining and upskilling. Like getting on and off a train, learners will be able to alight and board their post-school education when it suits them, rather than being confined to a single ticket. They can choose to build their qualifications over time, using both further and higher education providers. They will have real choice in how and when they study, enabling them to acquire life-changing skills to improve their employment options.

    The prospect of attaining good, skilled work will be in closer reach of everybody.

    And that opportunity is so important. My hero President Roosevelt knew this.

    When he spoke directly to the American people in 1937, he said:

    The inherent right to work is one of the elemental privileges of a free people. Continued failure to achieve that right and privilege by anyone who wants to work, and needs work, is a challenge to our civilization and to our security.

    Endowed, as our nation is, with abundant physical resources, and inspired as it should be with the high purpose to make those resources and opportunities available for the enjoyment of all, we approach this problem of reemployment with the real hope of finding a better answer than we have now.

    The LLE is that real hope of a better answer – that education can live up to its ideals by being available in the right way, at the right time, to those who need it most.

    The LLE has the power to light the proverbial touchpaper – to benefit learners, employers, and colleges alike. I hope it triggers significant new collaborations between businesses, colleges and universities. Your ongoing engagement is crucial to delivering this transformation of student finance, and ensuring it benefits as many people as possible.

    Further education students need just as much support to complete their studies and make a success of their efforts as undergraduates. In fact, they often need more – especially those from a disadvantaged backgrounds. The social justice of helping these students to succeed is a key pillar of the Ladder of Opportunity, and an absolute priority for me.

    That is why I am delighted to announce the appointment of Polly Harrow as the first Further Education Student Support Champion. She will act as a channel between the sector and government, driving a strategic approach to improving the experience of students at colleges. I look forward to working with her, alongside Shelagh Legrave the FE Commissioner, to bring your concerns to the heart of government.

    The 4th challenge we face is the future! The Fourth Industrial Revolution, Artificial Intelligence and the rising demand for green skills.

    AI is the acronym of the moment, but it will have a huge impact on our future – including the labour market. Lots of repetitive administrative tasks will be streamlined, but programmers and task managers will be still needed to build and manage the digital infrastructure. As with other automated systems, complementary human skills will ensure AI is used to greatest effect and to maintain quality outputs. FE will be a crucial part of this new dynamic, with its ability to adapt provision to meet the skills needs of local employers. We’re already seeing great examples of provision innovation, such as Basingstoke College of Technology’s new skills modules on using AI safely and productively.

    And some tasks will always require a human touch. The government’s transformative expansion of childcare is just one of the currents that run counter to the idea that human work is drying-up. Growing the Early Years workforce to deliver these reforms is a government priority, and presents a huge opportunity for colleges and learners. Now is the time to enter this expanding industry, with great training and progression routes.

    Green skills are another important aspect of the future labour market. They should be part of your skills offer – not just to arrest global warming, but to catch the global winds of economic change. The economy and the jobs market are shifting permanently in this direction, and your learners should have the training opportunities to capitalise on that. Harlow College, which I mentioned earlier, has two green training facilities – an advanced manufacturing centre for electric vehicles, and a renewable energy centre. They are already bringing sort-after skilled employment to people in my constituency.

    Our Skills Bootcamps have already seen 1000s of adults get a head start in sectors that need them, including green industries. Bootcamps currently offer flexible training in green construction, renewable energy, natural resources protection and green transport. I would encourage all colleges here today to apply for Skills Bootcamps funding and embrace this unique entry point for adult learners. Officials from the department are running a Bootcamps breakout session tomorrow, which I’d urge delegates to join!

    I want to finish by turning back to President Roosevelt, and his stirring address to Congress in 1941. Elsewhere in the speech he describes ‘equality of opportunity for youth and for others’ as an important part of a strong democracy.

    Many of you here today do so much to advance this measure of progress – working tirelessly to extend equality of opportunity to all your students. That to me is the true purpose of education:  to bring about social justice, so that everyone has the chance to improve their prospects, and contribute to society and the economy.

    I know we have much more to do, within a changing economic landscape – but I look forward working with you to accomplish it.

    Thank you, and I hope you enjoy today’s conference.

  • PRESS RELEASE : New bill gives police more powers to take zero-tolerance approach to crime [November 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : New bill gives police more powers to take zero-tolerance approach to crime [November 2023]

    The press release issued by the Home Office on 14 November 2023.

    A new Criminal Justice Bill will protect the public from ruthless criminals and empower the police to take a zero-tolerance approach to cut crime and keep neighbourhoods safe.

    The bill, introduced in the House of Commons today (14 November), will be focused on keeping violent criminals locked up for longer and making sure victims’ voices are heard.

    Measures in the bill will build on progress already made to keep our streets safer – such as the police’s commitment to pursue all reasonable lines of enquiry. Since 2010, violent crime is down 52% and domestic burglary by 57% in England and Wales.

    Through the bill, police will be given greater powers to retrieve stolen goods from thieves, such as mobile phones, without a warrant and technology used to steal cars including signal jammers parked outside houses will be banned.

    Officers will also be given more powers to stamp out anti-social behaviour and intimidation and crack down on drug-taking, with powers to test suspects for more drugs on arrest.

    Victims will be better protected from knife crime with police given new powers to seize, retain and destroy knives found on private property that are likely to be used in connection with unlawful violence. We are also creating a new offence of possessing a knife with the intent to use it violently.

    This will build on the government’s committed to take dangerous weapons off our streets, with 120,000 knives removed since 2019.

    Judges will also be given more powers to make horrific criminals attend court when their sentences are handed out to hear directly from victims and feel the weight of their crimes – if offenders refuse, they will face a further two years in prison.

    This bill will also add to our record better protecting women and girls and the Online Safety Act. Through the Criminal Justice Bill, the government will create a package of offences tackling taking intimate images without consent. This will cover acts such as downblousing and will make sure that police and prosecutors have the power to better tackle this type of behaviour.

    More vulnerable individuals will be helped off the streets and directed to appropriate support, with new powers for the police and local authorities to tackle nuisance begging – including criminals gangs who cause distress to the public by aggressively begging by cash points.

    Home Secretary James Cleverly said:

    The British people deserve to feel safe and secure going about their daily business knowing the government is here to protect them – this bill will reassure the public by giving the police more powers to do just that.

    It rightly puts neighbourhoods and communities first by tackling the scourge of knife crime, drugs, theft and anti-social behaviour – making sure the worst, most dangerous criminals are locked up for longer.

    My first job as Home Secretary is to protect the British public and taking a zero-tolerance approach to crime on every level is just one way I will be doing this.

    Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice, Alex Chalk KC said:

    Victims are not spectators in the criminal justice system; they must be core participants. The new Criminal Justice Bill will ensure offenders have to face up to the harm they have caused victims, and hear society’s condemnation through the judge’s sentencing remarks.

    The legislation continues our mission to keep more women and girls safe from violence and intimidation, building on our landmark Domestic Abuse and Online Safety Acts.

    The bill will also target hardened criminals and those who knowingly enable them by making sure our laws keep pace with their tactics and changing use of technology.

    This means templates used to make 3D printed firearms, pill presses, and vehicle concealments will be banned, alongside signal jammers used for car theft.

    Other measures contained in the bill include:

    • creating a statutory aggravating factor at sentencing for grooming behaviour,  to make sure those involved in grooming gangs receive the toughest possible sentences
    • boosting confidence in the police by providing for a duty of candour for policing and enabling provisions to allow chief officers of police forces the right to appeal the result of misconduct panels to the Police Appeals Tribunal
    • Strengthening Serious Crime Prevention Orders to make it easier for police and other law enforcement agencies to place restrictions on offenders or suspected offenders and stop them from participating in further crime
    • new powers to tackle economic crime by strengthening the tools available to law enforcement agencies including prohibiting possession or supply of SIM farms with no legitimate purpose
    • reforming confiscation powers used to strip convicted criminals of their proceeds of crime and extending the powers of law enforcement agencies to suspend domain names and IP addresses used for fraudulent purposes
    • creating a scheme whereby the government works with the financial sector to use monies in accounts suspended on suspicion of crime for projects to tackle economic crime
    • increasing the maximum penalty for the offences of possession, importation, manufacture, sale or supply of prohibited offensive weapons and of selling knives to those under 18 from six months to two years’ imprisonment, reflecting the severity of the offence
  • PRESS RELEASE : Food delivery companies urged to end unchecked account sharing [November 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Food delivery companies urged to end unchecked account sharing [November 2023]

    The press release issued by the Home Office on 14 November 2023.

    Uber Eats, Deliveroo and Just Eat urged to end unchecked account sharing to protect the public.

    Food delivery firms have been urged by the government to conduct checks on all delivery drivers, to protect the British public and prevent illegal working.

    Immigration Minister Robert Jenrick has demanded Uber Eats, Deliveroo and Just Eat end the practice of unchecked account sharing, known as ‘substitutions’, by implementing stricter controls.

    Under the current model, food delivery companies allow account holders to substitute deliveries to multiple people who are not checked by the companies. This means customers have no way of knowing whether the person who hands over their order has been properly vetted, and the delivery companies do not know if the delivery driver has the right to work in the UK.

    In a letter from Minister Jenrick to online food delivery platforms (PDF107 KB2 pages) to each company, ahead of a meeting with them today (14 November), the Minister called for the practice to end, warning that the substitution business model is enabling illegal working, allowing exploitation and putting the British public at risk.

    Immigration Minister Robert Jenrick said:

    When someone orders a takeaway to their home, they deserve to know that the person arriving at their door has been properly vetted and is who they’re expecting.

    Unchecked account sharing places the public at risk, enables – and therefore encourages – illegal migration, and leads to the exploitation of workers. That’s why I’m calling on these companies to end the use of unverified substitution.

    We’re taking the action needed to safeguard the British public and prevent the scourge of illegal working. It is critical these companies work with us to achieve this.

    The government is calling on firms to introduce stricter vetting measures to make sure people representing each company are allowed to work in the UK, and do not have a criminal record.

    Immigration Enforcement teams have already ramped up action targeting illegal working in the food delivery sector, conducting over 250 enforcement visits and making over 380 arrests involving food delivery drivers so far this year.

    The Home Office has led engagement with Uber Eats, Deliveroo and Just Eat over recent months. In August, an agreement was secured with the businesses to strengthen existing recruitment processes and improve awareness of illegal working in the UK.

    The government will continue to work with the food delivery sector to build on this cooperation and prevent illegal working.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Funfair heir, Harry Jones, has prison sentence extended [November 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Funfair heir, Harry Jones, has prison sentence extended [November 2023]

    The press release issued by the Attorney General’s Office on 14 November 2023.

    Harry Jones, from Cradley Heath, Wolverhampton, had his 10-year term increased by four years after the Solicitor General referred his sentence as being unduly lenient.

    The court heard that Jones had fallen out with his colleague Daniel Tulley and the pair arranged a fight over social media.

    On 4 November 2019, Jones drove round to Tulley’s home in Bloxwich where he threatened his partner before tracking Tulley down on Clayhanger Road, Brownhills.  The incident culminated in Tulley being struck by a car and thrown off the bonnet when the vehicle stopped.

    Jones fled the scene without checking on Tulley who was left with serious injuries and in need of emergency brain surgery. He spent more than a month in hospital and has been left with serious long-term injuries.

    The Solicitor General, Michael Tomlinson KC MP, said:

    Harry Jones may have been a respectable local businessman but his actions that day were utterly deplorable. His personal dispute with Daniel Tulley has left him with severe long-term injuries which will impact his life forever.

    The court also took a dim view of Harry Jones’ heinous actions and have increased his prison term, sending a stark warning that leaving someone for dead has serious consequences.

    Harry Jones was sentenced to 10 years imprisonment at Wolverhampton Crown Court on 21 July 2023 for one count of grievous bodily harm with intent.

    On Tuesday 14 November the Court of Appeal increased Jones’s sentence to 14 years after it was referred under the Unduly Lenient Sentence scheme.

  • PRESS RELEASE : 44th Universal Periodic Review of human rights – UK statement on Bangladesh [November 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : 44th Universal Periodic Review of human rights – UK statement on Bangladesh [November 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 14 November 2023.

    Simon Manley, the UK’s Permanent Representative to the WTO and UN, delivered a statement during Bangladesh’s Universal Periodic Review at the Human Rights Council.

    Thank you, Mr President,

    The United Kingdom welcomes steps taken by the government of Bangladesh to promote and protect human rights, as well as its continued hosting of nearly 1 million Rohingya. We look forward to a free, fair, participatory, and peaceful national election next year.

    We recommend that Bangladesh:

    1. Take measures to guarantee a safe and transparent environment for civil society, human rights defenders and the media, ensuring that they can exercise their right to freedom of expression and assembly without fear of repercussions.
    2. Take steps to ensure the full independence of the judiciary from the Executive and Parliament.
    3. Continue working with partners at all levels to protect the rights of women and girls, empowering them to fulfil their potential and lead a healthy life, free from gender-based violence.

    Thank you.

  • PRESS RELEASE : 44th Universal Periodic Review of human rights – UK statement on Russia [November 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : 44th Universal Periodic Review of human rights – UK statement on Russia [November 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 14 November 2023.

    Simon Manley, the UK’s Permanent Representative to the WTO and UN, delivered a statement during Russia’s Universal Periodic Review at the Human Rights Council.

    Thank you, Mr President

    Where does one start? Since the last UPR, Russia’s repression at home has intensified, enabling its oppression overseas, not least the continuing atrocities in Ukraine, many of which the Commission of Inquiry and OHCHR consider amount to war crimes.

    The UK recommends that Russia:

    • Cease the forcible transfer and deportation of Ukrainian children to Russia and within the temporarily Russian-controlled territories of Ukraine; and immediately returns all affected Ukrainian children.
    • Release all those detained on political grounds, such as Alexei Navalny, or for opposing the war, including Vladimir Kara-Murza.
    • Repeal legislation that enables its crackdown on anti-war protest, independent media and civil society.
  • PRESS RELEASE : Scottish Secretary responds to Labour Market stats for Nov 2023 [November 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Scottish Secretary responds to Labour Market stats for Nov 2023 [November 2023]

    The press release issued by the Office of the Secretary of State for Scotland on 14 November 2023.

    Alister Jack says measures to remove barriers to work are effective, with a near record number of people on company payrolls in Scotland.

    Scottish Secretary Alister Jack said:

    Our employment record remains strong and our reforms are working – with a near record number of people on company payrolls in Scotland, up 23,000 from this time last year.

    Bolstered by our direct investment in Scotland of £2.5 billion from our levelling up agenda, we are on track to halve inflation and grow the economy for long-term prosperity right across the UK.

    Additional information:

    • Measures from the UK Government’s £3.5 billion investment in removing barriers to work are making a difference – including the mid-life MOT for over-50s and increasing the amount that can be claimed for childcare by those on Universal Credit.
    • The ONS has published a regional breakdown on payrolled employees. The estimates for Scotland show that the number of payrolled employees rose by 0.9% compared with October 2022, a rise of 22,654 employees to 2,456,355.
    • The number of payrolled employees in Scotland was up 3.7%- since February 2020, a rise of 87,660 employees.
    • Pay estimates for Great Britain show that annual growth in regular pay (excluding bonuses) in Great Britain was 7.7% in July to September 2023, slightly down on the previous periods, but is still among the highest annual growth rates since comparable records began in 2001.
    • In real terms annual growth for total pay rose on the year by 1.4%, and regular pay rose on the year by 1.3%.
  • PRESS RELEASE : British Prime Ministers who returned to government [November 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : British Prime Ministers who returned to government [November 2023]

    The press release issued by 10 Downing Street on 14 November 2023.

    David Cameron became the latest former British Prime Minister to serve in a government led by another PM this week.

    There is no fixed role for former British Prime Ministers once they leave office, and many have remained as Members of Parliament or returned to serve in governments led by others.

    This week, David Cameron was appointed Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs, making him the latest former Prime Minister to return to Cabinet under a different Prime Minister.

    He served as Prime Minister from 2010 to 2016, leading Britain’s first coalition government in nearly 70 years before forming the first majority Conservative government in the UK for almost two decades.

    Now, he becomes Foreign Secretary – making him the first former Prime Minister to serve in the position after Sir Alec Douglas-Home, who took up the role from 1970-1974.

    Here are some of the past Prime Ministers who returned to Cabinet after their premiership.

    See David Cameron’s first Cabinet meeting as Foreign Secretary with Prime Minister Rishi Sunak here.

    Alec Douglas-Home

    After his four-seat defeat to Harold Wilson at the 1964 general election, Douglas-Home returned to join Edward Heath’s Cabinet as Foreign Secretary in 1970.

    He was an unexpected Prime Minister and did not originally seek the position before being elected in 1963. He served for 363 days, and his government is remembered for overseeing the abolition of resale price maintenance.

    Neville Chamberlain

    Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain stood down as Prime Minister after coming under attack from all political sides after the failure of the British efforts to liberate Norway.

    Following his resignation in May 1940, Chamberlain remained leader of the Conservative Party and acted briefly as Lord President of the Council, with ministerial responsibility for the Privy Council Office.

    The Privy Council advises on the exercise of prerogative business and certain functions assigned to The King and the Council by Acts of Parliament.

    Soon after standing down as Prime Minister, he was struck down with bowel cancer, forcing him to resign from Winston Churchill’s coalition government and as leader of the party. He died shortly after his resignation.

    Arthur Balfour

    Arthur Balfour was Prime Minister for three years before defeats in the Commons and in by-elections led to his resignation in December 1905.

    He continued to lead his party until 1911 and would go on to serve as a Cabinet Minister for eleven years during and after the First World War.

    In 1915 he became First Lord of the Admiralty – the government’s most senior advisor of naval affairs – in the wartime coalition. He became Foreign Secretary in David Lloyd George’s coalition in 1916, and for the greater part of the 1920s he was Lord President of the Council in Stanley Baldwin’s government.

    Other Prime Ministers who returned to serve in government include Lord John Russell, Viscount Goderich and the Duke of Wellington, who after two brief terms as Prime Minister served as a minister in Robert Peel’s government.

    Former Prime Ministers who have returned to government:

    • David Cameron.

    Premiership: 2010 to 2016

    Role: Foreign Secretary

    • Alec Douglas-Home

    Premiership: 1963 to 1964

    Role: Foreign Secretary

    • Neville Chamberlain

    Premiership: 1937 to 1940

    Role: Lord President of the Council

    • James Ramsay Macdonald

    Premiership: 1924 to 1924, 1929 to 1935

    Role: Lord President of the Council

    • Stanley Baldwin

    Premiership: 1923 to 1924, 1924 to 1929, 1935 to 1937

    Role: Lord President of the Council

    • Arthur Balfour

    Premiership: 1902 to 1905

    Role: First Lord of the Admiralty, Foreign Secretary, Lord President of the Council

    • John Russell

    Premiership: 1846 to 1852, 1865 to 1866

    Role: Foreign Secretary

    • Arthur Wellesley

    Premiership: 1828 to 1830, 1834 to 1834

    Role: Foreign Secretary, Leader of the House of Lords

    • Frederick Robinson

    Premiership: 1827 to 1828

    Role: Lord Privy Seal, President of the Board of Trade, President of the India Board

    • Henry Addington

    Premiership: 1908 to 1916

    Role: Home Secretary

    • William Cavendish-Bentinck

    Premiership: 1783 to 1783, 1807 to 1809

    Role: Home Secretary

    • Frederick North

    Premiership: 1770 to 1782

    Role: Home Secretary

    • Augustus FitzRoy

    Premiership: 1768 to 1770

    Role: Lord Privy Seal

    • William Cavendish

    Premiership: 1756 to 1757

    Role: Lord Chamberlain

    • Thomas Pelham-Holles

    Premiership: 1754 to 1756, 1757 to 1762

    Role: Lord Privy Seal

    Click here to find out more about the latest ministerial appointments

  • Lucy Frazer – 2023 Speech to the WeCreate Conference

    Lucy Frazer – 2023 Speech to the WeCreate Conference

    The speech made by Lucy Frazer, the Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport on 14 November 2023.

    Good afternoon everyone.

    I wanted to start with a huge thank you to all of you for making the time to be here today.

    Today isn’t just about celebrating all the things that make our Creative Industries special, but it is also about looking ahead to the future to see how we, together, can chart a course that keeps these crown jewels of our economy shining for years to come.

    And there’s no better place to look to that future than right here in Manchester.

    As somebody who grew up not too far away in Leeds, I remember Emmerdale, visits to the IMAX in Bradford, and the arrival of the Armouries.

    I soon learned at school that across the M62 Manchester was one of the cradles of the Industrial Revolution – a city dubbed ‘Cottonopolis’ in honour of its place at the epicentre of our thriving cotton industry in the 19th century.

    But Manchester – as you all will know – is also a thriving place for our culture.

    Oasis, Danny Boyle, Lowry.

    Creativity is part of the fabric of this city today.

    Just look at this venue we’re gathered here today in.

    The largest cultural investment in this country since the Tate Modern two decades ago.
    Built on a site already rich in creative history

    This is the former site of Granada Studios – which had hosted the Beatles’ first TV appearance and was home to Coronation Street.

    And now we have this incredible multi-purpose cultural hub that will welcome millions of guests a year, support thousands of jobs across the local creative economy and host hundreds of gigs, exhibitions and events every year.

    I was absolutely delighted to be here when it opened officially a month ago.

    It was clear then – and it’s still clear now – that this venue will be one of the focal points of a vibrant cultural scene in Manchester and the country for decades to come.

    When I was made Culture Secretary at the start of this year, I made growing those creative industries one of my main priorities.

    In the past decade or so, these industries have become one of our most powerful economic engines of growth.

    And if we can help more people across the country to discover and nurture their creative potential, then we will see our economy and wider society grow and grow and grow.

    Earlier this year we set out a long term plan for the future of the creative industries.

    The Sector Vision was developed across government and I’m delighted to be joined here today with Minister John Whittingdale and Viscount Camrose from DSIT, as well as  colleagues from the Departments for Education, and Business and Trade.

    The sector vision was developed jointly, as well as through government, with industry too through the work of the Creative Industries Council, who I met with this morning.

    And I want to work with each and every one of you to deliver on our Creative Industries Sector Vision.

    It’s a blueprint with three very simple aims:

    • to grow our Creative Industries by an extra £50 billion by 2030
    • to create a million extra jobs – all over the country – by 2030
    • and to deliver a Creative Careers Promise that harnesses the potential of young people and constructs a pipeline of talent into our creative industries.

    We’re already making progress towards those ambitious goals set out in our sector vision, unveiling millions in new funding to drive growth in our grassroots and scale ups and banging the drum for our creative careers.

    We are doubling the number of areas in the Create Growth Programme, with almost £11 million additional funding which means we are able to provide targeted support to around 1,800 creative businesses so that they can access private investment and scale up.

    Thanks to this new funding, businesses in the East and West Midlands, West Yorkshire, Hull and East Yorkshire, the South West and the East of England will benefit from tailored workshops, mentoring and training to maximise creative potential.

    Greater Manchester has been delivering this programme and an earlier pilot, and it’s because of the success we’ve seen here in transforming local creative businesses that we are expanding it to other areas today.

    From today, we’re also launching applications to the £5 million Supporting Grassroots Music Fund to ensure support for the lifeblood of our world-leading music sector and cornerstones of our community.

    I am also pleased that today marks the beginning of Creative Careers Week – an initiative supported by my department to inspire the next generation to go into the creative industries so we can build that pipeline of talent and I welcome the many events happening across the country to encourage more young people to consider a job in these inspiring sectors.

    But most importantly today I am here to talk and to listen to you.

    Because we can only achieve our ambitions – this growth can only happen, these jobs can only be created, this pipeline of talent will only be sustained – if you are supported to maximise your potential.

    And that is what today is about.

    Some of you have been working with us already, whether that’s through our UK Global Screen Fund, The Create Growth Programme, the UK Games Fund or the UKRI Creative Clusters programme or our work with the Arts Council.

    It’s great to be joined by organisations such as Production Park, HOME, the Yorkshire Sculpture Park, but it’s also exciting to meet new organisations as well

    Today I want to be a call to arms to all of you to share your ideas with us in Government and to work with us to unlock the creative potential of our people and our businesses – particularly here in the North.

    This region is already a driver of growth across the UK economy with major employers, export intensive businesses that attract significant investment from overseas.

    We will never deliver on the goals we set out in the Creative Industries Vision without your businesses, your ideas, your imagination.

    Government, industry and academic leaders across the North are already forming a grand coalition to develop a new regional strategy – The Northern Creative Corridor.

    There’ll be new details about this exciting initiative announced tomorrow.

    And I also recognise that it’s a difficult time at the moment.

    The cost-of-living has been a bit of a perfect storm for the sectors you all represent and you’re all wrestling with different challenges: whether that’s the tight labour market, access to finance or the possible future impact of AI.

    But none of this should dampen our ambition.

    You know better than anyone else that the North of England emanates so much creativity and that, with the right conditions, creative businesses can flourish.

    So, I’d just like to end by one final thank you to all of you for being here today and for investing your time and energy in the future of our creative industries.

    I hope you find the sessions useful and that we can keep this partnership going long into the future.

    I mentioned earlier this venue is the biggest cultural investment from the Government since the Tate Modern.

    Today that venue is a global cultural icon, famous around the world.

    I and my Ministerial team can’t wait to work with you to make this venue and our Creative Industries in the North as big a success in the years to come.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Culture Secretary celebrates northern creativity in Manchester [November 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Culture Secretary celebrates northern creativity in Manchester [November 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport on 14 November 2023.

    • Culture Secretary hosts WeCreate conference in Manchester to meet with businesses in the creative industries and forge ahead with plans to grow creative industries by £50 billion by 2030
    • Six areas across England awarded share of £10.9 million to scale up hundreds of creative industry businesses, boosting access to private finance and business support
    • Grassroots music venues, promoters and festivals across England encouraged to apply for share of £5 million investment to help develop new audiences and income opportunities

    Hundreds of creative businesses will benefit from more than £10 million of targeted support to attract investment and create jobs as part of the Government’s goal to grow the creative industries by £50 billion by 2030.

    It comes as Culture Secretary Lucy Frazer brings together more than 140 cultural and creative businesses across film, TV, fashion, music and video games at the WeCreate conference at Aviva Studios in Manchester, to celebrate the success of the creative industries across the North of England and discuss how government and the sectors can work together to maximise their potential even further.

    Firms across Greater Manchester – such as Broaden Films and Scoop PR – have already benefited from the first round of the government’s Create Growth Programme. Today the Culture Secretary is doubling the areas covered by the programme, announcing six new areas that will receive a share of £10.9 million for targeted business support, bringing the total number of creative organisations expected to be supported by the programme to 1,800.

    The expansion of the Create Growth Programme will see creative businesses across Nottinghamshire, Hull and East Yorkshire, West Midlands, West Yorkshire, Devon and Hertfordshire supported to access private investment and scale-up advice – to turn today’s start-up founders into tomorrow’s CEOs.

    The Culture Secretary is also calling on grassroots music venues, recording studios, promoters and festivals to apply for grants of up to £40,000 to develop new revenue streams, make repairs and improvements, and enhance the live music experience for millions of gig-goers across the UK.

    Addressing creative industry leaders in Manchester, Culture Secretary Lucy Frazer is expected to say:

    Today is about not only celebrating all the things that make our creative industries special, but looking ahead to the future and how we, together, can chart a course that keeps these crown jewels of our economy shining for years to come.

    We’re already making progress towards the ambitious goals set out in our sector vision, unveiling millions in new funding to drive growth in our grassroots and scale ups and banging the drum for creative careers.

    From 2010 to 2019, the creative industries grew more than one and a half times faster than the wider economy and in 2021 they generated £108 billion in economic value. In 2021, they employed 2.3 million people – a 49% increase since 2011. The Government has identified the creative industries as one of five priority sectors to deliver future growth and the Creative Industries Sector Vision set out an ambition to grow these sectors by £50 billion by 2030.

    As part of the work to reach this ambition, the WeCreate conference will include a panel discussion on how business and government can work together to maximise investment in the creative industries, as well as a discussion about the adoption of emerging tech in order to drive growth and the challenges and opportunities which AI brings to this.

    The conference will be attended by key organisations in the creative industries from across the North of England, including Wakefield Production Park, the Royal Armouries Museum and the Manchester Film Festival, as well as national organisations such as Pinewood Studios, Channel 4 and the British Fashion Council.

    The Culture Secretary is launching a new round of the Supporting Grassroots Music Fund, which has been expanded to ensure grants reach more parts of the grassroots industry, including rehearsal and recording studios, promoters, festivals and venues hosting electronic music. The broader eligibility criteria reflects the wide range of spaces and skills that are needed to help musicians perform and thrive.

    Darren Henley, Chief Executive of Arts Council England, said:

    This investment by the UK Government and Arts Council England reaffirms our commitment to supporting this hugely important part of the music industry. People value the opportunity to develop and express their creativity, and the grassroots music sector excels at allowing communities to design and develop creative and cultural activity where they live.

    We hope this new funding will continue to address the needs of the sector and empower it to carry on offering high-quality live music experiences for audiences across the country.

    A pipeline of skills is key to industry growth, and the WeCreate conference comes at the beginning of this year’s Discover! Creative Careers Week, with digital resources and over 70 in-person and virtual events in more than 270 schools and colleges across the country to introduce the next generation of creatives to different sectors, job roles and career pathways. This builds on support from the Local Skills Improvement Fund – announced last week – to improve creative skills training, deliver new creative courses and invest in new facilities and equipment across West Yorkshire, Berkshire, Hampshire, Hertfordshire and London.

    It will see Calderdale College in Halifax, West Yorkshire, receive £1.2 million to establish a state-of-the-art creative skills hub in Halifax, which will develop and deliver new digital courses covering the latest digital technologies being used across theatre, film, TV, music and video games. Meanwhile, North Hertfordshire College will receive £485,000 to develop courses that meet the skills needs of the film and production industries, and deliver industry-standard equipment for film and media projects.

    Notes to editors

    Create Growth Programme

    The Create Growth Programme, delivered by Innovate UK, was extended with new funding as part of the government’s vision for the creative industries announced earlier this summer, taking the fund’s total to £28.4 million. The funding will enable businesses to better monetise their ideas, access resources and attract private investment to scale up and maximise their potential. Businesses will be able to get access to relevant workshops and masterclasses as well as one-to-one mentoring with industry experts. The programme also provides support for hiring and scaling up and investment training programmes.

    The six areas awarded funding today as part of the £10.9 million expansion of the Create Growth Programme are:

    • Nottinghamshire
    • Hull and East Yorkshire
    • West Midlands
    • West Yorkshire
    • Devon
    • Hertfordshire

    The amount of funding each area will receive is not set and depends on the individual area’s business needs and the number of businesses that apply for grants and support. More details will become available as the programme progresses.

    Since launching in 2022, the programme has funded support for businesses across six regions to help local companies like Broaden Films, a Manchester-based video production company, which has been able to host its own entertainment festival, start building a new sustainable studio and work with more clients as a result of the support.

    The six areas already participating in the Create Growth Programme are:

    • Greater Manchester
    • Leicestershire
    • West of England, and Cornwall and Isles of Scilly
    • East Anglia
    • North East
    • Kent and the South East

    Supporting Grassroots Music Fund

    England’s grassroots music industry can now apply for grants from the £5 million Supporting Grassroots Music Fund, managed by Arts Council England (ACE). Grants of up to £40,000, available until March 2025 and delivered through National Lottery Project Grants, will help recipients do things like improve lighting and sound equipment, pay for repairs, and produce more live streamed content to diversify their income and build new audiences.

    Since ACE launched the original Supporting Grassroots Live Music Fund in 2019, more than £9 million has been invested in over 450 projects. For example, music venue Komedia in Bath received £44,000 to help improve their sound and lighting equipment, while The Smokehouse in Ipswich received £15,000 to help them book a more diverse range of artists, and offer local artists opportunities to play alongside established names.

    More information about the Supporting Grassroots Music Fund can be found on the Arts Council website.

    Creative skills

    The seven creative projects receiving a share of £165 million from the Local Skills Improvement Fund are being led by:

    • Sparsholt College, Hampshire
    • Hertford Regional College, Hertfordshire
    • North Hertfordshire College, Hertfordshire
    • Havant and South Downs College, Hampshire
    • Activate Learning, Berkshire
    • West Thames College, London
    • Calderdale College, West Yorkshire