Tag: 2023

  • PRESS RELEASE : 44th Universal Periodic Review – UK Review on Cabo Verde [November 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : 44th Universal Periodic Review – UK Review on Cabo Verde [November 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 7 November 2023.

    The UK delivered a statement during Cabo Verde’s Universal Periodic Review (UPR) at the Human Rights Council in Geneva.

    Thank you, Mr Vice-President,

    The United Kingdom welcomes steps taken by Cabo Verde to promote and protect human rights, such as improvement on action against gender-based violence. We urge the government to improve implementation of this legislation by increasing the number of cases taken to court and successful prosecutions.

    We recognise and praise the steps the government has already taken to tackle child abuse through a national network of organisations, including the government’s child protection body, the Institute for Children. We urge Cabo Verde to take further legislative action to protect children and reduce instances of such abuse.

    We recommend that Cabo Verde:

    1. Urge the National Assembly to debate and approve the anti-discrimination draft law presented by the National Commission on Human Rights and Citizenship in 2021.
    2. Improve prison conditions by increasing the number of officers and the use of alternatives to prison such as bail, home arrest, and plea bargaining, and improving sanitary conditions.
    3. Improve training for professionals in law enforcement and the judiciary to respond to sexual abuse of children and gender-based violence.

    Thank you.

  • PRESS RELEASE : UK and Austria commit to work closer on illegal migration and terrorism [November 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : UK and Austria commit to work closer on illegal migration and terrorism [November 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 7 November 2023.

    The UK and Austria have signed a statement today agreeing to closer cooperation on tackling illegal migration and terrorism.

    Home Secretary Suella Braverman met with Austrian Interior Minister Gerhard Karner in Vienna on 2 November to discuss the importance of partnership and international cooperation in the face of illegal migration, terrorism and transnational crime.

    The ministers agreed to work hand-in-hand to ensure public security and signed a joint statement to commit to:

    • exploring the principle of safe third country concepts to enhance regional migration management
    • engaging in a joint dialogue on illegal migration, including with relevant third countries of origin and transit
    • enhancing cooperation in combatting serious and organised crime by strengthening bilateral law enforcement and criminal justice links
    • intensifying their cyber security dialogue with a focus on preventing online radicalisation

    Speaking after the signing, Home Secretary Suella Braverman said:

    The global migration crisis is the challenge of our age, with the UK and the European continent seeing huge movements of people travelling illegally across our borders. This is placing an unprecedented burden on our communities and public services.

    Austria is a close ally in tackling illegal migration, and we have already begun sharing knowledge of our actions and strategies such as third country removals.

    This joint statement is a commitment to work more closely together to achieve our aims, and enhance our cooperation on a wide range of security challenges.

    Austrian Minister of Interior Gerhard Karner said:

    The UK has a lot of experience when it comes to processing asylum applications outside of Europe in the future. That was an important theme in my meeting with the Home Secretary in Vienna because Austria can benefit from this experience.

    We will continue to make a consistent effort for the EU commission to advance and enable such procedures outside of Europe.

    Following her meeting with Minister Karner, the Home Secretary also spoke to Jewish community leaders at the city’s main synagogue, reaffirming the UK government’s solidarity with the Jewish community following recent incidents of abuse, in particular this week’s arson attack at Vienna’s Central Cemetery.

    She visited the site of the 2020 Islamist terrorist attack, in which 4 civilians were killed, and laid a wreath to mark the anniversary. The Home Secretary also visited the Shoah Wall of Names memorial to pay her respects to Jewish victims of the Holocaust.

    The visit concluded with a tour of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime, to deepen ties on tackling fraud and organised immigration crime.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Progress of landmark UK-Japan treaties driven forward as Defence Secretary visits Tokyo [November 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Progress of landmark UK-Japan treaties driven forward as Defence Secretary visits Tokyo [November 2023]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Defence on 7 November 2023.

    The visit is the latest in a series of high-level UK-Japan bilateral engagements this year, driving progress on two major treaties.

    Driving forward advanced technology and cooperating closely to promote freedom and democracy is at the heart of the defence relationship between the UK and Japan, which Defence Secretary Grant Shapps hailed in a meeting with his counterpart in Tokyo.

    The Defence Secretary met his counterpart, Minister of Defense Minoru Kihara, for a series of meetings to further progress on two major treaties which will increase interoperability between the UK Armed Forces and Japan Self Defence Forces and cement our commitment to shared security.

    It follows the signing and implementation of the ground-breaking Reciprocal Access Agreement by the Prime Minister earlier this year, which will underpin our shared defence activity by enabling the UK and Japan to operate and exercise together more easily, as well as continued work on developing a framework agreement for the Global Combat Air Programme (GCAP).

    The UK and Japan are each other’s closest security partner in Europe and Asia respectively, a commitment reaffirmed in the Hiroshima Accord announced by PM Sunak and PM Kishida on the margins of the G7 Summit this summer.

    Defence Secretary Grant Shapps said:

    Amid increasing tension and instability across the world – it is more clear than ever that the threats we face are global, and it’s particularly important we strengthen our relations with our international partners and allies.

    In my meetings with Minister Kihara, we discussed how to further deepen our cooperation through these two landmark treaties and reaffirmed our commitment to building a truly next-generation combat aircraft through GCAP.

    Despite the distance between us, the UK and Japan stand closer together than ever before in support of peace, stability, and the rules-based international order.

    Foreign Secretary James Cleverly has also been in Japan for a meeting of the G7 and both UK ministers joined their Japanese counterparts for a combined meeting, during which shared security interests such as support for Ukraine in its defence against Putin’s illegal invasion and condemnation of the Hamas attack against Israel, were discussed.

    The UK remains the only European partner to have a bilateral exercise on Japanese soil, and the Army and Japanese Ground Self Defense Forces (GSDF) are currently planning Exercise Vigilant Isles 2023, which will see more than 150 UK personnel deploy to Japan this month – further demonstrating the UK’s commitment to the Indo-Pacific region, as set out through this year’s refreshed Defence Command Paper.

    At sea, persistently deployed Offshore Patrol Vessels HMS Tamar and HMS Spey have enabled the UK to operate closely with Japan and regional partners to promote maritime security.

    Work between the UK, Japan, and Italy continues on developing GCAP, which will futureproof our Combat Air sectors and deliver enhanced investment in our people and technology, deepening integration of supply chains. It will bring together defence and security expertise from across our three nations to strengthen our defence industrial base and secure high skilled jobs.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Treaty on Conventional Armed Forces – UK condemns withdrawal [November 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Treaty on Conventional Armed Forces – UK condemns withdrawal [November 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 7 November 2023.

    The UK has issued a statement in response to Russia’s withdrawal from the Treaty on Conventional Armed Forces in Europe.

    The UK has criticised Russia’s decision to withdraw from the Treaty on Conventional Armed Forces in Europe, a landmark element of Europe’s post-Cold War security architecture.

    Foreign Secretary James Cleverly said:

    We unequivocally condemn Russia’s decision to withdraw from the Treaty, the latest in a line of Russian efforts to undermine strategic stability and the Euro-Atlantic security architecture.

    Russia’s unilateral withdrawal undermines reciprocity, which lies at the heart of the CFE Treaty. This is a destabilising move for the integrity of the Treaty and to continue to implement the Treaty would suggest that we think that the Treaty continues to operate as intended. This is plainly not the case.

    In response to Russia’s move, the UK, alongside its Allies has decided to suspend its participation in the Treaty and to work with likeminded nations to develop and implement voluntary stabilising measures.

  • PRESS RELEASE : World Trade Organization General Council – UK Statement [November 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : World Trade Organization General Council – UK Statement [November 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 7 November 2023.

    The UK spoke on a number of agenda items at the WTO General Council on 1 November 2023.

    Item 2: Reform and TRIPS

    Thank you, Madam Chair.

    Madam Chair, you said we should not really get into the detail of reform, as we will cover that this afternoon, so I will try not to. One point to pick is the point about deconflicting meetings which I know is so important for so many smaller delegations. It is one that we have brought forward in our own proposals and I think it is one that we need to keep on thinking about to ensure that we are a genuinely inclusive organization, not just in words but in deed.

    Let me just say a quick word about TRIPS. My Swiss colleague has set out in substance far more eloquently than I could and I endorse every word he has said.

    I want to acknowledge first of all the continued efforts of our TRIPS Chair and let me welcome her efforts and the Secretariat’s to move our discussions forward. Let me also acknowledge the arrival of the report from the US ITC. Like others I’m sure we are still analysing the information that is contained in that report but for us it reaffirms the importance of known issues, including on this issue, including the role of voluntary licenses where the UK issued a paper, in increasing affordability and access to COVID-19 products and technologies globally. I hope everybody has seen our paper on this which looks at how we can build on that in future pandemic preparedness.

    I just wanted to recognise that access issues go well beyond intellectual property and that considering broader factors in reactors should help us as we look at whether the decision that we took back at MC12 should indeed be extended to therapeutics and diagnostics. Let me also just encourage my fellow members, particularly those from developing countries and LDCs, to come to us to give us their thoughts on our paper, share their national experiences and challenges that they have faced in voluntary licensing and technology transfer partnerships, so that we can try and take forward our work in a structured and collaborative manner.

    Lastly, a number of colleagues this morning have said that not taking a decision will be a real issue for this organisation. I think that there is something worse than not taking a decision and that is taking the wrong decision for this organisation, for the intellectual property which is the basis for our innovative economies, and taking the wrong decision for our future pandemic preparedness.

    Thank you.

    Item 3: Work programme on Small Economies – Report by the Chairperson of the Dedicated Session of the Committee on Trade and Development

    Thank you very much Chair.

    We wanted to come in quickly to recognize the importance of this issue. We really wanted to welcome the excellent Small Economies evidence sharing session and to thank the Chair, the Secretariat and everybody that inputted to the session.

    We are also looking forward to the opportunity to review the draft ministerial decision on this issue at the upcoming session.

    Thank you very much.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Law Commissioner appointed [November 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Law Commissioner appointed [November 2023]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Justice on 7 November 2023.

    The Lord Chancellor has approved the appointment of Professor Alison Young as the Law Commissioner for Public Law and the Law in Wales for 5 years from 18 March 2024.

    The Law Commission was created by the Law Commissions Act 1965 with the role of keeping under review the law of England and Wales with a view to its systematic development and reform. The Law Commission promotes the reform of the law to make it clearer, more modern and more accessible. The Commission’s projects bring real benefits to the public, businesses or other organisations affected by old, complex and out-of-date law.

    Appointments to the Law Commission are made by the Lord Chancellor and are regulated by the Commissioner for Public Appointments. This appointment has been made in line with the Governance Code on Public Appointments.

    Biography

    Professor Young is the Sir David Williams Professor of Public Law at the University of Cambridge, and a Fellow of Robinson College. She is also an academic associate at 39 Essex Chambers and an Emeritus Fellow of Hertford College, Oxford.

    Before joining the University of Cambridge, Professor Young studied for a Law (with French) degree at the University of Birmingham, spending a year at the Université de Limoges. She then completed the BCL and D Phil at Hertford College, University of Oxford. She spent three years as a Tutorial Fellow at Balliol College, Oxford, before returning to Hertford as a Fellow in Law and later Professor of Public Law at the University of Oxford.

    Professor Young has not declared any political activity.

  • PRESS RELEASE : £2.2 billion in Cost of Living Payments paid by DWP over the last eight days [November 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : £2.2 billion in Cost of Living Payments paid by DWP over the last eight days [November 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Work and Pensions on 7 November 2023.

    99% of households already eligible for the second Cost of Living Payment have been directly paid £300 by the Government.

    • The payments are the second of up to three worth up to £900 in 2023/24 for those eligible.
    • Those remaining will continue to be automatically paid between now and 19 November by DWP.

    More than seven million households across the UK have been paid a £300 Cost of Living Payment, a £2.2 billion cash injection made by the Department for Work and Pensions in just eight days.

    This means the vast majority of already eligible households have received the support in just eight days of the rollout starting, equating to over a million payments on each day they were made.

    The payment is the second of up to three Cost of Living Payments being made this financial year, illustrating the Government’s commitment to supporting low-income families with financial pressures.  These payments will all be tax-free, will not count towards the benefit cap, and will not have any impact on existing benefit awards.

    Global inflationary pressures have seen the Department for Work and Pensions step in to provide unprecedented cost of living support, with billions of pounds sent directly into low-income households’ accounts over a matter of days.

    This comes alongside work to deliver on the government’s five priorities, including halving inflation and growing the economy, ultimately helping put more money in people’s bank accounts.

    Mel Stride, Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, said:

    Getting this vital money to over 7 million people across the UK in just eight days shows our determination to give people greater financial security as we work to halve inflation, bring costs down, and boost people’s bank balances.

    In the long term, the best way to secure financial security is through work, and thousands of Work Coaches in Jobcentres across the country are on hand to help people find a job, enhance their skills, and reap the benefits of work.

    Chancellor of the Exchequer Jeremy Hunt said:

    Christmas can put a strain on people’s finances which is why this £300 will be a welcome boost for millions of families.

    But we must tackle the root cause of higher bills by halving inflation this year and by sticking to our plan, we’re on track to do so.

    The Cost of Living Payments, spread across 2023/24, are worth up to £900 for those on means-tested benefits. The first payment was made in April and May of this year, with the next one to come by Spring 2024.

    The Cost of Living Payments build on the significant cost of living support already provided to eligible households throughout 2022 – now worth an average of £3,300 per household over this year and last. We have also gone further by:

    • Increasing benefits in line with inflation, meaning more than 10 million working age families will see an average increase of around £600.
    • Maintaining the Triple Lock earlier this year to give around 12 million pensioners the largest ever cash increase to the State Pension.
    • Extending the Household Support Fund for another year in England to help families with essential costs with £1 billion of extra funding.
    • Increasing the National Living Wage by its largest ever cash amount for 2 million workers – worth over £1,600 to the annual earnings of a full-time worker – and committing to increase it to over £11 an hour from April 2024.
    • Cutting fuel duty by 5 pence and freezing the increase, worth £100 to the average driver this year.
    • Covering up to 85% of childcare costs for working households on Universal Credit, up from 70% under the legacy system – currently worth over £19,500-a-year for families with two or more children.

    Pensioner households will also receive £300 which will be paid as a top up to those eligible for the Winter Fuel Payment in November and December. Combined with the one-off Cost of Living Disability Payment earlier this year, some households will receive £1,350 in total.

    The small number of payments still outstanding will continue to be made between now and 19 November, and anyone eligible still waiting for a payment does not need to contact the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) before then. After this date, if someone thinks they may be missing a payment they are entitled to a form can be filled out on the gov.uk website to make a claim.

    In addition, eligible families, receiving tax credits only, will get their £300 Cost of Living Payment from HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) between 10 and 19 November with the payment reference ‘HMRC COLS’.

    While payments are made automatically, people must be receiving one of the eligible qualifying benefits during the specified period to qualify. Those who wish to check their entitlement to benefits should use a benefits calculator on Gov.uk to get a better idea of what they could receive.

    Further Information

    • The three means-tested Cost of Living Payments, worth up to £900 in total, is being delivered in three slightly different amounts, each relating to a specific qualifying period before the payment is made. This allows DWP to ensure support is targeted at those who need it and are eligible; to determine if a payee received the correct payments and identify the payment value; and to reduce the risk of fraud.
    • To get the £300 payment someone must (subject to a very limited exception explained below) have been entitled to a payment of a qualifying benefit as follows:
      • For Universal Credit, payment in respect of an assessment period ending between the 18 August and 17 September 2023
      • For all other DWP means-tested benefits, payment in respect of any day 18 August and the 17 September 2023.
      • For tax credits-only customers to be eligible they must have received a payment of tax credits in respect of any day in the period 18 August 2023 and the 17 September 2023, or later be paid in respect of any day in this period.
    • Those on DWP benefits other than Universal Credit who are entitled to less than 10 pence and meet all other qualifying criteria but who do not receive a benefit payment, will still receive a Cost of Living Payment.
    • Payment windows and eligibility dates for the remaining Cost of Living Payment will be announced in due course.
    • For constituency and local authority level breakdowns on payments, please visit www.gov.uk/government/news/first-2023-24-cost-of-living-payment-dates-announced
    • The £300 Pensioner Cost of Living Payment will be paid to all households in receipt of Winter Fuel Payments, in the same way as 2022/23 payments were made.
    • For more information on these payments, please visit www.gov.uk/guidance/cost-of-living-payments-2023-to-2024
    • For regional, constituency and local authority level breakdowns on payments, please visit www.gov.uk/government/news/first-2023-24-cost-of-living-payment-dates-announced
  • PRESS RELEASE : G7 united in response to conflicts in Middle East and Ukraine as Foreign Secretary travels to Japan [November 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : G7 united in response to conflicts in Middle East and Ukraine as Foreign Secretary travels to Japan [November 2023]

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

    The Foreign Secretary will be in Japan for the G7 Foreign Ministers’ meeting.

    • At the G7 James Cleverly will discuss situation in Middle East and preventing a damaging and destabilising regional escalation and further violence
    • Also on the agenda is collective support for Ukraine to defend itself against Russia’s illegal invasion and help secure a lasting peace
    • Foreign and Defence Secretaries meeting Japanese counterparts to strengthen security partnerships following signing of Hiroshima Accord earlier this year

    Arriving in Japan (Tuesday 7 November) for the G7 Foreign Ministers’ meeting, Foreign Secretary, James Cleverly will be addressing developments in the Middle East, including to prevent a damaging and destabilising regional escalation and further violence.

    At the G7 conference in Tokyo, the Foreign Secretary will meet G7 Foreign Ministers, including the Japanese Minister for Foreign Affairs Yōko Kamikawa, to also discuss the UK’s long-term commitment to the Indo-Pacific region.

    The G7 Foreign Ministers meeting will build on the G7 Leaders’ Summit, that took place in Hiroshima in May, with a clear agreement on military, diplomatic and economic tools being part of the Ukrainian counter-offensive.

    The Defence Secretary will also be holding bilateral meetings with his Japanese counterpart Minoru Kihara, and both UK ministers will later join their opposites for a combined meeting.

    In the 2+2 meeting they will discuss closer security and defence ties alongside support for Ukraine following Russia’s invasion.

    The Foreign Secretary will also attend a reception on enhancing relations between the people of the UK and Japan, with their respective Youth Mobility and Working Holiday Schemes being expanded by up to 500% to enable more opportunities for young people to gain a better understanding of our cultures and societies, through travel, work and life experience overseas.

    Foreign Secretary James Cleverly said:

    The UK and our allies are meeting to discuss the crisis in Israel and Gaza and avoiding further regional escalations.

    Alongside G7 partners, we’ll also be addressing other priorities ranging from Russia’s illegal war in Ukraine to climate change, economic security and global trade.

    Defence Secretary Grant Shapps said:

    The UK and Japan share many closely held values, including an enduring commitment to freedom and democracy, and it is an honour to visit Tokyo during such a milestone year for our defence relationship.

    We will be driving forward progress on two major defence and security treaties, which will protect both our peoples and bring our nations closer together than ever before.

    Six months on from the British and Japanese Prime Ministers agreeing the Hiroshima Accord the UK and Japan have made strong progress on its implementation.

    The Reciprocal Access Agreement has been brought into effect and both countries are now conducting more frequent, larger and more complex joint exercises – including VIGILANT ISLES 23 this November. The UK and Japan have also made progress on economics & trade and science & technology. We have agreed to cooperate as members of CPTTP, held our first strategic economic talks, progressed our AI commitments and cemented our collaboration on critical minerals.

    At the G7, the Foreign Ministers will also discuss the need to maintain collective support for Ukraine and how international support from the UK and other G7 partners can be used most strategically to help Ukrainian forces continue their progress on the battlefield and secure a lasting peace.

    The UK continues to support the Ukrainian government in the face of this assault on their sovereignty and territorial integrity. Alongside the international community we stand against this naked aggression and for freedom, democracy and the sovereignty of nations around the world.

  • Keir Starmer – 2023 Speech to the North East Chamber of Commerce

    Keir Starmer – 2023 Speech to the North East Chamber of Commerce

    The speech made by Keir Starmer, the Leader of the Opposition, on 3 November 2023.

    Thank you, Andrew.

    It’s such a pleasure to be here in such magnificent surroundings.

    And a privilege to have the opportunity to share our plans for growth with you.

    This is not the first Chamber of Commerce speech I’ve made this year.

    But it is the first time I’ve addressed the reigning UK Chamber of the year.

    So before I go any further – I’d like to congratulate you all on that.

    Because it’s no exaggeration to say that Labour’s ambitions for government, our most important mission.

    To get Britain building again.

    Grow our way out of the suffocating cost-of-living crisis.

    Will depend on your future success.

    Now, before you pulled up that fantastic palatial drive, some of you may have travelled here today along the A1, a road that is absolutely critical to doing business in this region – indeed for the whole the east side of England.

    But, as many of you will know, a little further up from here, between Morpeth and Ellington.

    There’s a stretch of the A1 that the Prime Minister has recently promised to upgrade. But there’s a catch.  Because he announced he would upgrade it in 2020, when he was Chancellor.

    Just like Theresa May’s Government did in 2017.  Just like David Cameron did in 2014. Just like the Conservative manifesto promised in 2010.

    It’s a metaphor for how our country’s been run for the past thirteen years. The cameras get called, the press releases written.

    All smiles for the photos, and then it’s back to Westminster.  Job done. Rinse and repeat.

    It’s a story you see right across Britain.

    Infrastructure projects – some with billions already committed. Businesses planning around them. Strategies – developed in rooms like this.

    But the projects and investment get stuck. Blocked, by objections, consultations, legal challenges, ballooning costs. Delays, delays, delays.

    Until in the end, it’s easier just to pack up and move on.

    We all know about HS2, a project the Conservatives couldn’t get built, even at the cost of £400 million per mile.

    That’s the most expensive railway in the world – ever.

    And I’m afraid to say that all the hallmarks of that project: the waste, the stagnation, the short-term sticking plaster politics. An inability to roll our sleeves up, and get things done that will actually grow our economy. Can be seen right across the country.

    I mean – right now, the number of businesses going under has soared to its highest level in years.

    And as you will all appreciate, every one is a personal tragedy.

    An ambition, a dream, an investment in a better future. Gone.

    Now I’m not here today to hit you over the head about this.

    You can see the country just as clearly as me.

    But next week is the King’s Speech. And we can already see that it will only bring more of the same.

    A manifesto for the 14th year of Tory failure.  And the starting gun fired on the next general election.

    A choice, between a Conservative Party with no plan for the future. Hurtling down the only high-speed project it’s ever managed to build: the highway to British decline.

    Or the Labour alternative. A party that understands the potential that lies in regions like this. That has a plan to grow every corner of this country.

    Will work with you to get the North East building again.

    Get our future back, with a decade of national renewal.

    Because mark my words, Britain needs this King’s Speech to kickstart a big build.

    We need to focus on the real problems that face the businesses and communities of this region.

    That’s why a Labour King’s speech would rip up the red tape in our planning system that stops us building the infrastructure you need.

    Would establish a new generation of technical colleges – a plan for the higher skills you need.

    And would bring forward a modern industrial strategy. Work hand in glove with the private sector. Invest in the potential of regions like this. And win the race for the jobs of the future.

    That is the job of government as I see it.

    We have to provide the businesses, communities and people of this nation, with the conditions to succeed.

    A fundamental deal.

    That we serve the country, while you drive it forward.

    The Tories can’t do this.  Rishi Sunak is too weak to stand up to the blockers on his backbenches. Too haunted by the ghosts of Conservative imagination to see the country’s problems as you see them.

    So, if you’ll indulge me, I want to set out exactly how our plan would benefit your business.

    And grow the economy of this proud region in three steps.

    Step one, we will get the North East building again.

    We will take on the blockers that hold a veto over British aspiration.

    We will build one and a half million homes right across our Britain. With opportunities for first time buyers here in the North East.

    New infrastructure to support businesses, families and communities to grow. Roads, warehouses, grid connections, labs – all built quicker and cheaper.

    And with all that – a prize for your business.  A path to a stronger skills base, a happier workforce, more dynamism, more demand, more growth.

    I mean – let me just give you a couple of examples.

    The Thames Tunnel in East London. A project with a planning application thirty times longer than the complete works of Shakespeare. Sixty thousand pages.

    £800 million worth of taxpayers money spent without even breaking ground.

    Or take Sizewell C. A next generation nuclear power station in Suffolk. A £20bn project of national importance. Vital for British energy, security and independence.

    This one had forty-thousand pages of its planning application devoted to data on the environment.

    And yet it’s been held up in the courts on account of a ‘failure to assess the environmental impact’.

    I could go on and on and on. The examples are countless.  But as a country we can’t afford to go on. Not like this.

    Because the challenges this inertia creates for businesses and communities like yours, they’re enormous.

    It’s why our roads are so congested compared to other countries.

    Why millions are denied the security of home ownership.

    Why you can’t take up the opportunity of clean British energy.

    The cheaper bills that would reduce your cost base and protect us from the whims of tyrants like Putin.

    And yet, back in the 50s and 60s, we built the backbone of our entire motorway system, in less time than it’s taken to talk about the turning of that stretch of the A1 into a dual carriageway.

    The national grid was completed in about eight years.  Less time than it takes some entrepreneurs to get a grid connection, today.

    But you don’t even have to go back that far.

    The last Labour Government delivered High Speed One on time and under budget.

    So I have no time for Tory excuses – politics is about choices.

    Do you face up to tough decisions, or do you duck them?  That’s always been the test.

    So if you take only one thing away from here today.

    Let it be this. Wherever we find barriers to British success – we will bulldoze through them.

    New development corporations, new planning regimes for national infrastructure.

    Consequences for councils that drag their feet.

    Reforms to judicial review.

    Whatever it takes – we will find a way.

    No stone unturned. No detail overlooked. No fight ducked.

    Step two – a new direction for skills.

    Because a future must be trained as well as built.

    And the generation of young people that sacrificed so much during the pandemic – their potential must be backed.

    Seriously – the cost of inaction on this cannot be overstated.

    £120bn worth of economic output could be lost by 2030 if the needs of businesses are not met.

    So we will transform our further education system. With Technical Excellence Colleges. Colleges that will have a stronger link to their local economies.

    More connections to Local Skills Improvement plans.

    Universities, businesses, rooms like this, all around the table and setting the direction.

    And in doing so, grounding our education system more firmly, not just in young peoples’ aspirations, but also in the pride, the pull on the badge of the shirt.

    The ambition you feel, when building a lasting legacy for your community.

    So here in the North East, for example it could mean Technical Excellence Colleges that specialise in construction, health and social care, the clean energy revolution we want to see up and down the East Coast.

    Welders in the Tees Valley – I know there’s a skills shortage for precision welders here.

    And I’ve seen that in the Local Skills Improvement plan this Chamber wrote.

    I know you don’t want that plan gathering dust.

    You want it to drive the courses delivered at your local FE colleges.

    And that is exactly what we will guarantee.

    Because we want to end the years of businesses feeling hopeless about missing skills. Give you the tools to do something about it.

    You should have more say over how you invest in your workforce.

    And at the moment – as you well know – the Apprenticeship Levy simply isn’t flexible enough.

    Your hands are tied.

    Unable to deliver the full breadth of skills that you need.

    So we’d transform it into a new Growth and Skills Levy.

    Giving you more power over the training your money can buy.

    But it’s not just on you.

    Government has to step up as well.

    Too many young people are leaving education without basic skills…

    Maths, digital skills, communication and teamwork.

    Skills we know every business needs.

    So Labour would deliver higher standards in our schools.

    Every child taught by expert teachers…

    A broader curriculum.

    Real world maths from an early stage.

    Preparing the next generation.

    To make sure that they are ready for work and ready for life.

    That’s what ending the tax breaks on Private Schools will deliver.

    Opportunity for all.

    Skills for business.

    Growth for the nation.

    Finally – step three.

    A modern industrial strategy. On a statutory footing.

    Free from the whims and wreckage of Westminster.

    An emblem of our determination to move away from the stand-aside state that fails to set direction.

    If you go to the government website to find out about their industrial strategy.

    Scratched across the top is one word.

    I kid you not, ‘archived’.

    ‘Archived’.

    Doesn’t that just tell you everything?

    They think Britain’s days of high growth are over. But they’re not.

    Labour will get Britain growing again.

    Bring back industrial strategy.

    Provide the institution, the incentives and above all, the stability you need to invest in our future.

    Because in a world as riven with insecurity as ours, with challenges like climate change.

    Technologies like artificial intelligence. Scientific advances like gene editing. Constantly overturning the economic apple-cart.

    You need a government that gets involved. That rolls up it sleeves.

    That offers the hand of partnership in pursuit of the national interest.

    With clear fiscal rules – sound and followed rigorously.

    A British jobs bonus that will attract new investment to our industrial heartlands.

    Relight the fire of renewal in communities like this.

    And a new national wealth fund – that will stand with business.

    Work together to invest in the crucial infrastructure the North East desperately needs.

    The battery gigafactories that will protect electric car-manufacturing in Sunderland.

    The hydrogen and carbon capture technology that can provide an industrial future for Teesside.

    And the ports that can finally handle large industrial parts. So the East Coast can lead the world in offshore wind.

    This is what the King’s speech should be about.

    A national mission to get Britain building again. And grow our country from the grassroots.

    Because Britain needs a new business model.

    And, you will know, changing a business model is hard.  But this is our plan.

    A plan to expand the country’s productive capabilities. But at the same time, to change who benefits.

    A Britain where growth comes from regions like this.

    A Britian where growth serves regions like this.

    With infrastructure – built more quickly.

    Young people’s potential – backed.

    The jobs of the future in your town.

    The backbone of this country, once again, powering us forward towards national renewal.

    A Britain with its future back.

    Thank you.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Strike laws to be passed to protect vital public services over Christmas [November 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Strike laws to be passed to protect vital public services over Christmas [November 2023]

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

    Minimum service level regulations for rail workers, ambulance staff and border security staff will be laid in parliament to mitigate disruption and ensure vital public services continue if strikes are called, the government has announced today.

    • Minimum Service Levels legislation will be passed for rail, ambulance, and border security staff to mitigate disruption if strikes called.
    • Delivers on manifesto commitment to introduce minimum service levels for rail strikes.
    • Comes ahead of further consultations to introduce minimum service levels for education, other NHS staff, and fire services.

    Minimum service level regulations for rail workers, ambulance staff and border security staff will be laid in parliament to mitigate disruption and ensure vital public services continue if strikes are called, the government has announced today (Monday 6 November).

    The legislation brings us in line with countries like France, Italy, Spain, and the US where public services reliably continue during strikes. The International Labour Organisation also recognises Minimum Service Levels as a sensible solution to protect the public from serious consequences of strikes.

    The minimum service levels are designed to be effective and proportionate by balancing the ability to take strike action with ensuring we can keep our borders secure, supporting people to make important journeys including accessing work, education, and healthcare, and allowing people to get the emergency care they need.

    Earlier this year, the government consulted widely on proposals to introduce minimum service levels legislation across a range of sectors, under the Strikes (Minimum Service Levels) Act which received Royal Assent in July. The responses to these consultations have been published today with the legislation set to be laid in parliament tomorrow.

    For border security, the regulations will apply to employees of Border Force and selected HM Passport Office staff where passport services are required for the purposes of national security. The laws will set out that border security services should be provided at a level that means that they are no less effective than if a strike were not taking place. It will also ensure all ports and airports remain open on a strike.

    For train operators, it will mean the equivalent of 40% of their normal timetable can operate as normal and, in the case of strikes that affect rail infrastructure services, certain priority routes can remain open.

    Minimum service level regulations for ambulance workers will ensure that vital ambulance services in England will continue throughout any strike action, ensuring that cases that are life-threatening, or where there is no reasonable clinical alternative to an ambulance response, are responded to.

    Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said:

    We are doing everything in our power to stop unions de-railing Christmas for millions of people. This legislation will ensure more people will be able to travel to see their friends and family and get the emergency care they need.

    We cannot go on relying on short term fixes – including calling on our Armed Forces or civil servants – to mitigate the disruption caused by strike action.

    That’s why we’re taking the right long-term decision to bring in minimum service levels, in line with other countries, to keep people safe and continue delivering the vital public services that hard-working people rely on.

    Where minimum service level regulations are in place and strike action is called, employers can issue work notices to identify people who are reasonably required to work to ensure minimum service levels are met.

    The law requires unions to take reasonable steps and ensure their members who are identified with a work notice comply and if a union fails to do this, they will lose their legal protection from damages claims.

    Last year, we raised the maximum damages that courts can award against a union for unlawful strike action. For the biggest unions, the maximum award has risen from £250,000 to £1 million.

    Transport Secretary, Mark Harper said:

    For too long, hard working people have been unfairly targeted by rail union leaders – prevented from making important journeys, including getting to work, school or vital hospital appointments.

    Minimum Service Levels will help address this by allowing the rail industry to plan ahead to reduce disruption for passengers while ensuring workers can still exercise their ability to strike.

    An improved service on strike days will allow passengers to continue with their day-to-day lives and support businesses, particularly in the hospitality sector.

    Earlier this year, we accepted the independent pay review bodies recommendations in full, providing a fair pay deal for all public sector workers.

    An agreement between the government and Agenda for Change unions earlier this year saw over one million NHS staff receive a 5% pay rise along with one-off awards worth over £3,000 for the typical nurse or ambulance worker.

    For rail workers, there remains a fair and reasonable offer on the table which several unions have already accepted, one which would deliver competitive pay rises of 5% + 4% pay increase over two years.

    Home Office staff in delegated grades including Border Force staff have been provided with a pay award averaging 4.5% with an additional 0.5% targeted at the lower grades.

    Home Secretary Suella Braverman said:

    We must never allow strike action to compromise our border security or cause significant disruption to passengers and goods at our borders.

    The Armed Forces have commendably stepped up to fill vital roles during recent industrial action, but it would be irresponsible to rely on such short-term solutions to protect our national security.

    The minimum service levels announced today will ensure a fair balance between delivering the best possible service to the travelling public, maintaining a secure border and the ability of workers to strike.

    The government continues to recognise the crucial role of NHS staff and remains committed to working constructively to end any disruption for patients, and there are currently no live strike mandates relating to ambulance trusts. However, strikes have already had a significant impact on patients, NHS staff and efforts to cut waiting lists – including over one million postponed appointments and procedures.

    The Department of Health and Social Care is currently seeking evidence on expanding the scope of minimum service levels to cover other urgent and emergency hospital-based services which could include nurses and doctors. The consultation is set to close on the 14th of November.

    Health and Social Care Secretary Steve Barclay said:

    Patients must be protected and strikes in ambulance services could put the lives and health of the public at risk, given their essential role in responding to life threatening emergencies.

    While voluntary agreements between employers and trade unions can still be agreed ahead of industrial action, these regulations provide a safety net for trusts and an assurance to the public that vital emergency services will be there when they need them.

    We will continue to take steps to protect patient safety and ensure health services have the staff they need to operate safely and effectively, no matter the circumstances.

    The Education Secretary has committed to introduce minimum service levels on a voluntary basis should an agreement be reached with the education unions. If a voluntary arrangement cannot be agreed, a consultation will be launched on introducing minimum service levels in schools and colleges. Separately, the Department has also committed to launching a consultation on introducing minimum service levels in universities.

    The Department for Business and Trade recently consulted on a new draft statutory Code of Practice on the ‘reasonable steps’ a trade union should take to meet the requirements set out in the Strikes (Minimum Service Levels) Act 2023.

    They will also launch a consultation on removing regulation 7 across all sectors which prevents employment businesses supplying agency workers to cover the duties normally performed by a worker who is taking part in an official strike or other industrial action. These will be published in due course.