Tag: 2023

  • PRESS RELEASE : The King and Queen will undertake a State Visit to Kenya [October 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : The King and Queen will undertake a State Visit to Kenya [October 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 11 October 2023.

    King Charles III and Queen Camilla will undertake a State Visit to Kenya, from Tuesday 31st October to Friday 3rd November 2023.

    King Charles III and Queen Camilla will undertake a State Visit to Kenya, from Tuesday 31st October to Friday 3rd November 2023, to celebrate the warm relationship between the two countries and the strong and dynamic partnership they continue to forge.

    The visit is at the invitation of President Ruto and comes as Kenya prepares to celebrate 60 years of independence. His Majesty’s first visit to a Commonwealth nation as King is therefore to the country in which Queen Elizabeth II’s reign began, having acceded to the throne in Kenya in February 1952.

    The King and Queen will visit Nairobi City County, Mombasa County and surrounding areas. Their Majesties’ programme will reflect the ways in which Kenya and the United Kingdom are working together, notably to boost mutual prosperity, tackle climate change, promote youth opportunity and employment, advance sustainable development and create a more stable and secure region.

    During the visit, Their Majesties will meet President Ruto and the First Lady as well as and other members of the Kenyan Government, UN staff, CEOs, faith leaders, young people, future leaders and Kenyan Marines training with UK Royal Marines. The King will also attend an event to celebrate the life and work of the Nobel Laureate the late Professor Wangari Maathai, together with Wangari’s daughter, Wanjira Mathai. The King and Queen’s programme will celebrate the close links between the British and Kenyan people in areas such as the creative arts, technology, enterprise, education and innovation. The visit will also acknowledge the more painful aspects of the UK and Kenya’s shared history, including the Emergency (1952-1960). His Majesty will take time during the visit to deepen his understanding of the wrongs suffered in this period by the people of Kenya. Together, Their Majesties will tour a new museum dedicated to Kenya’s history and will lay a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknown Warrior at Uhuru Gardens, as well as visiting the site of the declaration of Kenya’s independence in 1963.

    The King and Queen’s programme also will include:

    • Their Majesties will be greeted in Nairobi with a ceremonial welcome at State House and will each attend bilateral meetings – The King with The President and The Queen with the First Lady, before The President hosts a State Banquet at State House.
    • His Majesty will visit the United Nations Office at Nairobi, to learn more about the work of UN Habitat and the UN Environment Programme. UNON is the only UN Headquarters in the Commonwealth.
    • His Majesty will attend a technology showcase, meeting Kenyan entrepreneurs who are driving forward innovation in the country’s tech sector. Kenya has the third largest start up eco-system in Africa.
    • His Majesty will host a reception focussed on Kenya’s young people and future leaders across development, trade, media, the creative arts and environmental conservation.
    • Their Majesties will visit a Commonwealth War Graves Commission cemetery, joining British and Kenyan military personnel in an act of Remembrance, before hearing about the Commission’s recent work to ensure all those who supported Britain’s efforts in both World Wars are commemorated.
    • The King and Queen will visit Nairobi National Park to witness the vital conservation work being undertaken by the Kenya Wildlife Service, which is integral to Kenya’s thriving tourism industry.
    • Her Majesty, Patron of the equine welfare charity Brooke, will hear how the charity is working with the Kenya Society for the Protection and Care of Animals to rescue donkeys at risk and promote their welfare.
    • The King, as Captain General of the Royal Marines, and The Queen, will visit Mtongwe Naval Base in Mombasa. There, Their Majesties will witness Kenyan Marines, trained by the Royal Marines, demonstrating a covert beach landing, showing defence collaboration in action.
    • The Queen will meet survivors of sexual and gender-based violence, learning how they are supported and sharing her own insights from working in this area.
    • The King will meet faith leaders from Mombasa’s diverse community, hearing how they are working together to promote harmony amongst the city’s population.

    Notes to Editors

    Previous visits to Kenya

    The King has undertaken three previous official visits to Kenya, in 1971, 1978 and 1987. Both Their Majesties have also previously visited the country privately.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Defence Minister Baroness Goldie reaffirms UK commitment to the Philippines [October 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Defence Minister Baroness Goldie reaffirms UK commitment to the Philippines [October 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 11 October 2023.

    UK Defence Minister Baroness Goldie celebrates the relationship between the UK and the Philippines during her visit to Manila and Legazpi this week.

    Baroness Goldie will meet with Defence Minister Teodoro on Wednesday in Manila. They will discuss the strengthening UK – Philippines relationship and shared commitment to a free and open Indo-Pacific.

    Reinforcing the UK’s commitment to the region, the Ministers also discussed the UK’s recent Integrated Review Refresh and the importance of maritime security and upholding maritime law.

    The Minister will visit HMS Spey in Legazpi and attend the closing ceremonies of naval exercise SAMA SAMA, supporting international defence cooperation and the rules-based international order. HMS Spey will observe the joint PH-US maritime exercise, alongside Japan, Australia and Canada. Together with our allies, the UK is committed to freedom of navigation.

    HMS Spey, the greenest ship in the Royal Navy, is on a five-year operation to the Indo-Pacific region alongside her sister ship HMS Tamar. Working with partners, the ship is helping tackle security challenges and support nations to deal with the impacts of climate change.

    To pay her respects to all those fallen, the Minister will lay a wreath at the Commonwealth War Grave in the American Cemetery in Manila. The CWGC work tirelessly to maintain cemeteries around the world to ensure that the fallen will always be appropriately remembered.

    UK Defence Minister, Baroness Goldie, said:

    The UK remains committed to our relationship with the Philippines, and I am pleased both to be visiting for the first time and to be the first UK defence Minister to visit in many years.

    I look forward to visiting Exercise SAMA SAMA, and discussing how the UK and the Philippines can deepen our defence cooperation as part of our shared commitment to a free and open Indo-Pacific.

    Baroness Goldie will discuss the UK’s enduring commitment to the Indo-Pacific and regional peace and security during her visit. The UK Government is committed to further strengthening ties with the Philippines.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Safety warnings to be provided to all patients with every valproate-containing medicine they receive under new law [October 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Safety warnings to be provided to all patients with every valproate-containing medicine they receive under new law [October 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department of Health and Social Care on 11 October 2023.

    Patients to receive the latest valproate safety information with every pack, following changes to the Human Medicines Regulations, 2012.

    Valproate-containing medicines will be dispensed in the manufacturer’s original full pack, following changes in regulations coming into effect on Wednesday, 11 October 2023. The Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) has today published new guidance for dispensers to support this change.

    Following a government consultation, this change to legislation has been made to ensure that patients always receive specific safety warnings and pictograms, including a patient card and the Patient Information Leaflet, which are contained in the manufacturer’s original full pack. These materials form a key part of the safety messaging and alert patients to the risks to the unborn baby if valproate-containing medicines are used in pregnancy.

    The changes follow a consultation on original pack dispensing and supply of medicines containing sodium valproate led by the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC), in which there was overwhelming support for the introduction of the new measures, to further support safety of valproate-containing medicines.

    A large majority of respondents to the consultation – 85% – agreed or strongly agreed with the requirement that the full-pack dispensing of medicines containing valproate in the manufacturer’s original pack will ensure patients always receive the safety information supplied on the label and in the Patient Information Leaflet.

    MHRA Chief Executive, Dr June Raine, said:

    “It is essential that all patients on valproate-containing medicines receive the latest safety information every time their prescription is dispensed. The changes in the law announced today ensure this happens. People’s situation may change, especially with regard to the possibility of pregnancy, so it is vital that the warnings about the harms of valproate are always brought to mind.

    “We are pleased to provide guidance to support the further strengthening of safety warnings around dispensing and we ask all dispensers of medicines containing valproate to consult the new guidance carefully.

    “It is very important that patients do not stop taking valproate-containing medicines without advice from a healthcare professional. If you are concerned about the risks, talk to your doctor, pharmacist or another healthcare professional.”

    Minister for Public Health, Maria Caulfield, said:

    “This safety information will help patients stay informed about risks of valproate, and I encourage all dispensers of valproate to consult the new guidance carefully.

    “This continues our commitment to listening and learning from the experiences of people impacted by valproate and their families and using what we hear to improve patient safety.”

    There is a significant risk of birth defects for unborn babies and developmental disorders in children born to women who take valproate-containing medicines during pregnancy. Because of these risks, prescribing to women and girls of childbearing potential must fulfil the conditions of the Valproate Pregnancy Prevention Programme which is designed to make sure patients are fully aware of the risks and the need to avoid becoming pregnant.

    The new legislation allows dispensers such as pharmacists to round the prescribed amount of valproate-containing medicines either up or down so that the patient receives only complete packs. The medicine must not be re-packaged into plain dispensing packaging.

    In rare cases, pharmacists can make an exception on an individual patient basis. This can only happen where a risk assessment is in place that refers to the need for different packaging. For example, the patient may need a monitored dosage system. In all these exceptional cases, the pharmacist must ensure that the patient is given the Patient Information Leaflet about valproate-containing medicine, and the pharmacist can explain why the patient is not receiving the manufacturer’s original full pack.

  • Wes Streeting – 2023 Speech to Labour Party Conference

    Wes Streeting – 2023 Speech to Labour Party Conference

    The speech made by Wes Streeting, the Shadow Health Secretary, in Liverpool on 11 October 2023.

    Nathaniel, it is truly an honour to have you with us here in Liverpool.

    When you came to see me in my advice surgery that Friday afternoon, I was moved by your spirit and your courage.

    Your determination to follow your great passions of music and education in the face of your terrible diagnosis blew me away.

    But I also felt a deep sense of injustice that I feel now.

    The injustice that the NHS didn’t reach you in time.

    The injustice that delay meant the difference between life and death.

    As a cancer survivor, it shakes me to my core.

    I owe my life to the NHS because it was there for me when I needed it.

    Not many people find themselves in a position to repay that kind of debt to the NHS.

    But I can.

    And I am determined to make sure that the NHS doesn’t fail people like Nathaniel anymore.

    It starts with gripping the crisis in front of us.

    7.7 million people waiting.

    The longest waiting lists ever.

    And the audacity of the fifth Conservative Prime Minister in 13 years blaming NHS staff for the Tories’ abysmal failure.

    Rishi Sunak – how dare you?

    There is a window of opportunity for negotiations before the next round of strikes takes place.

    A serious Prime Minister would take it.

    But this is his government in a nutshell

    – problems are there to be exploited, rather than solved.

    Meanwhile, patients are left waiting.

    That’s why a Labour government will take immediate action to cut waiting lists.

    We’ll provide an extra £1.1bn to help the NHS beat the backlog, with extra clinics at evenings and weekends

    – providing two million more appointments each year.

    Faster treatment for patients.

    Extra pay for staff.

    The first step to cut waiting lists and beat the Tory backlog.

    Paid for by abolishing the non-dom tax status, because patients need treatment more than the wealthiest need a tax break.

    We’ve also got to deal with the immediate crisis in NHS dentistry.

    Things are so bad that the number one cause of hospital admissions among children is tooth decay.

    People are pulling their own teeth out with pliers because they can’t get an NHS dentist.

    This is Dickensian.

    DIY dentistry.

    In 21st century Britain.

    That’s why Labour will deliver 700,000 extra appointments each year, get more dentists into the communities that need them most, and make sure that everyone who needs an NHS dentist can get one.

    But tackling the immediate crisis isn’t enough.

    It’s our mission to get the NHS back on its feet and fit for the future.

    Achieving our mission will take time, investment, and reform.

    Reform is even more important than investment.

    Because pouring ever-increasing amounts of money into a system that isn’t working is wasteful in every sense.

    A waste of money we don’t have.

    A waste of time that is running out.

    A waste of potential, because the NHS has so much going for it.

    Labour will never abandon the founding principles of the NHS as a publicly funded public service, free at the point of use.

    I make the case for reform not in opposition to those principles but in defence of them.

    I’m blunt about the fact that the NHS is no longer the envy of the world, not to undermine it, but to reassure people that we’ve noticed.

    I argue that our NHS must modernise or die, not as a threat but a choice.

    The crisis really is that existential.

    When I look at leading health systems across the world, the fundamental problem with the NHS becomes obvious.

    We have an NHS that gets to people too late.

    A hospital-based system geared towards late diagnosis and treatment, delivering poorer outcomes at greater cost.

    An analogue system in a digital age.

    A sickness service, not a health service.

    With too many lives hampered by preventable illness.

    And too many lives lost to the biggest killers.

    So be in no doubt about the scale of the challenge.

    Not just because as waiting lists rise, public confidence falls.

    But because in the longer term the challenge of rising chronic disease, combined with our ageing society, threatens to bankrupt the NHS.

    The Tories answer is all sticking plasters in the short term but an abandonment of the NHS in the longer term.

    As we saw in Manchester last week, the Conservative Party dances to the tune of Nigel Farage now.

    And the more they move to the right, the greater their threat to our NHS becomes.

    So it falls to us, the Party that founded the NHS 75 years ago, to rescue, rebuild and renew the health service today.

    Labour’s reform agenda will turn the NHS on its head.

    – From hospital to community.

    – Analogue to digital.

    – Sickness to prevention.

    A neighbourhood health service as much as a National Health Service, pioneering cutting edge treatment and technology, preventing ill-health, not just treating it.

    And what gives me hope are the people working with and for the NHS today, who are leading the way to that better future.

    There is nothing wrong with the NHS that can’t be cured by what’s right with the NHS.

    In Sussex, GPs work together providing specialist and urgent care in the community, allowing patients to see their regular family doctor, and giving them greater control over their own care.

    They’re preventing 4,000 patients from having to go to hospital every year.

    Primary care will be at the heart of Labour’s plan for the NHS – we’ll train thousands more GPs and cut the red tape that ties up their time.

    Labour will bring back the family doctor.

    Faced with the appalling effects of the pandemic on children’s mental health, schools in Bury are working with the NHS to deliver support.

    The number of children requiring mental health services has been cut in half.

    Every child struggling with their mental health should get the help they need.

    Labour will put mental health support in every school and hubs in every community, paid for by abolishing tax breaks for private schools.

    Politics is about choices. Labour chooses to give every child the best start in life, not just the privileged few.

    There is no solution to the crisis in the NHS that doesn’t include a plan for social care.

    We will grip the immediate crisis in social care, starting with the workforce, and I’ll have the best ally I could hope for

    – the former care worker turned Deputy Prime Minister, Angela Rayner.

    Together, Ange and I will deliver a New Deal for Care Workers.

    A workforce plan to address recruitment and retention, the professional status these remarkable people deserve, and the first ever Fair Pay Agreement for care professionals.

    The first step on our ten-year plan for a National Care Service.

    One of the biggest opportunities we have is the revolution taking place in medical science and technology.

    That revolution is happening here in Britain.

    We’re a world leader in life sciences.

    Home to some of the smartest tech entrepreneurs.

    Take Moorfields Eye Hospital, where artificial intelligence identifies signs of disease on scans, with an accuracy equal to world-leading experts.

    They spot conditions earlier and prioritise patients with the most serious diseases before irreversible damage sets in.

    The next Labour government will arm the NHS with state-of-the-art equipment and new technology to cut waiting times Our ‘Fit For The Future Fund’ will double the number of scanners in the NHS, so patients are diagnosed earlier, and treated faster.

    More than that – breakthroughs in genomics and AI mean that we’ll soon be able to predict and prevent illness in the first place.

    If we combine the care of the NHS, with the ingenuity of our country’s leading scientific minds, the NHS could once again be the envy of the world.

    At the heart of Keir’s mission driven approach is this idea:

    Transformation of the National Health Service must go hand in hand with a transformation of the health of the nation.

    A child born in Britain today should live to see the 22nd century.

    I want them to be part of the healthiest generation that ever lived.

    That’s Labour’s ambition for children.

    And we will bring it to life by taking tough action against those who are cutting our children’s lives short.

    We will ban junk food ads targeted at children.

    Bridget’s breakfast clubs will provide every primary school pupil with a healthy, nutritious start to the day, making sure they have hungry minds, not hungry bellies.

    We’ll introduce supervised toothbrushing to keep kids’ teeth clean and keep them out of hospital.

    And to those in the vaping industry, who have sought to addict a generation of children to nicotine with flavours like rainbow burst and cotton candy ice, you have been warned,

    – a Labour government will come down on you like a ton of bricks.

    Back in January, I proposed going even further by outlawing the sale of cigarettes to the next generation altogether.

    Tory MPs said it was “nanny state”,

    “an attack on ordinary people and their culture”,

    They accused me of “health fascism”.

    Unfortunately for them,

    Labour is winning the battle of ideas, and where Labour leads Rishi Sunak follows.

    We’ll vote through the ban on selling cigarettes to kids, so that young people are even less likely to smoke than they are to vote Tory.

    Conference, those are just the first steps of what is needed.

    Our reforms will be fundamental and deep.

    They have to be if the NHS is to be there for us in the next 75 years, as it has in the last 75 years.

    The choice at the general election is clear.

    We can see the future with the Tories unfolding before our eyes.

    A two-tier health service, where those who can afford it go private and those who can’t are left behind.

    Our NHS reduced to a poor service for poor people.

    Our country viewed as the sick man of Europe.

    Labour has a different vision for our future.

    Where no one fears ill-health or old age.

    Where people have power, choice and control over their own health and care.

    Where the place you’re born or the wealth you’re born into don’t determine how long you’ll live.

    Where patients benefit from the brightest minds developing cutting edge treatments.

    And where children born in Britain today become the healthiest generation that ever lived.

    That’s Labour’s ambition for our country.

    To those who say that we’re all the same and that voting never changes anything, tell them:

    13 years of Conservative government have delivered the longest waiting lists and lowest patient satisfaction on record.

    13 years of Labour government delivered the shortest waiting times and the highest patient satisfaction in history.

    That’s the Labour difference.

    And when they ask what does Labour stand for, tell them:

    Two million more appointments a year to cut waiting lists.

    700,000 more appointments with NHS dentists.

    Mental health support in every school.

    Mental health hubs in every community.

    Double the number of scanners.

    The biggest expansion of NHS staff in history.

    More doctors, more nurses, more midwives.

    An NHS that’s there for you when you need it.

    Back on its feet and fit for the future.

    So let’s go out there and give Britain its hope back.

    Let’s give Britain its NHS back.

    Together, with Keir, let’s give Britain its future back.

  • Bridget Phillipson – 2023 Speech to Labour Party Conference

    Bridget Phillipson – 2023 Speech to Labour Party Conference

    The speech made by Bridget Phillipson, the Shadow Education Secretary, in Liverpool on 11 October 2023.

    Thank you, Jayne, and thank you, Conference.

    Growing up in the North East in the 1990s, it was teachers and support staff like Jayne, who not only gave me an amazing education, but in doing so, taught me so much about why education matters.

    They saw the value and worth, in each and every one of us.

    And I never forget, that I am standing here today, above all, because I was lucky.

    Lucky, to have a family filled with love.

    Lucky, to have a school that cared.

    And today I have the amazing good fortune, to be Labour’s Shadow Education Secretary, with a fantastic team of shadow ministers around me.

    Helen, Matt, Seema, Catherine, and in the Lords, Fiona, Debbie and Glenys.

    But Conference, it goes to the heart of all our values, that life should not come down to luck.

    That opportunity belongs to everyone.

    That the role of government is to extend opportunity – fundamentally to extend freedoms – to each of us, and to all of us.

    Freedom from fear, from ignorance, from illness.

    Freedom from insecurity, from injustice and from poverty.

    Freedom to achieve and to succeed, to learn and enjoy, to take part and to speak out.

    These are the opportunities which for 13 years, this government has ripped away.

    Those are the freedoms our children deserve, and it is the future which once again a Labour government will give them.

    Conference, I joined Labour not simply because I knew Britain could be better, not just because I shared Labour’s values. No.

    I joined Labour, 25 years ago this autumn, because I had seen what the Tories did to our country.

    Then as now, the public realm literally crumbling around the next generation.

    And because I saw with my own eyes, a Labour government making Britain better.

    Year by year, step by step. We did it then, and we will do it again.

    And just as life shouldn’t come down to luck, government cannot be left to chance.

    It’s why Keir has set out, the five missions we will take, from opposition into government.

    Because to be Labour is to believe, that the future is something we shape together, not face alone.

    Conference, our missions speak to that ambition, that determination, that faith in our collective strength.

    Rising growth. Falling crime. Healthier lives. Greener energy.

    And the greatest of all, a determination that for each of us, and for all of us, background will be no barrier to opportunity.

    And education is the key to that.

    Now, I don’t need to remind you, that we see every day, how 13 years of Conservative failure means children’s backgrounds aren’t just limiting their opportunities.

    It’s worse than that.

    Conference, for too many children, across too much of our country, their backgrounds are ravaging their opportunities, all their lives long.

    I tell you, it breaks my heart.

    It starts with our smallest children.

    The Tories have committed to slashing staffing and standards in early years childcare, and they have no plan for early education at all.

    And as children grow, when school begins, the gaps widen just as the curriculum narrows.

    Because for our children, the teachers aren’t there, aren’t qualified, or it isn’t their subject. The buildings are turning to dust.

    Just on Friday, we found out the Conservatives had botched next year’s schoolsbudget. By a staggering £370 million.

    The mess that the next Labour government is going to have to sort out in education simply beggars belief.

    Conference, every parent wants the best for their children. Every parent. Not just those who can afford it.

    Aspiration and ambition are for everyone, and so too must be excellence and opportunity.

    And I understand why parents worry about the education that the Tories are prepared to offer our children.

    Parents want their children to read and write, to master maths.

    But they want a lot more than that.

    They want their children to learn about the joy of life too: to delight in music, to enjoy sport, to experience the beauty of art, and to know the wonder of science.

    They want their children confident, ready to speak up and speak out.

    They want them to carry a love of learning, right throughout life, that sets them up to achieve and thrive.

    Conference, I want those standards, those expectations, those dreams, for every child.

    Because I worry that for too many children, the fire that education should kindle in every mind, it doesn’t start, or it doesn’t catch.

    The Prime Minister talks about extending maths to 18.

    But if young people hate maths at 16, it’s just too late.

    These problems need to be tackled early, not left to fester.

    Apprenticeships down. Qualification reforms, botched then junked. A levy on employers that doesn’t deliver for companies or communities, for individuals or for our economy. Other people’s children. Our children, not theirs.

    Again, with universities.

    Degrees are for their children, not ours: it’s never their kids’ choices or chances, that they’re keen to wind back.

    Student debt for nurses, for young people starting out, looking to buy a home and build a family – not their problem. Other people’s children.

    The Education Secretary has made their ethic her motto: “nothing to do with me”.

    Conference, I tell you, we will change every part of it, and we will change it for good.

    In every part of our system, in every year of children’s lives, in every corner of our country, Labour will be the party of high and rising standards.

    Conference, we know what the private schools lobby think of our ambition. They were arrogant enough to write it down. ‘Chippy’.

    And if they or anyone else doubt my determination to deliver on our dream, then I have a message for them.

    Chippy people make the change that matters. I will make the change that matters.

    Together we will make the change the matters.

    We will end the tax breaks that private schools enjoy to deliver high and rising standards, in every school for every child.

    Now, Conference, our ambition starts, as education starts, at the beginning of all our lives: our childcare system must be about life chances for children, as well as work choices for parents.

    That is why I am determined that new investment in childcare comes with ambitious reform, to ensure early education is available in every corner of our country for every family and every child.

    To drive up standards for our youngest children and lift up the amazing people who support and teach them.

    It’s why we’ll end restrictions on councils delivering childcare.

    It’s why today I’m announcing that Sir David Bell, former primary school teacher, and former Chief Inspector of Schools, will lead Labour’s work, to develop the Early Years Plan.

    The next generation deserve, to bring high and rising standards, for the workforce we need, for the qualifications they’ll have, for the settings where it’ll happen, for the education they’ll give, to deliver our ambition for a modernised childcare system, supporting families from the end of parental leave to the end of primary school.

    Conference, high and rising standards cannot just be for families who can afford them.

    I want them for my children. For your children. For all of our children.

    That’s why as children start at primary school, we’ll deliver breakfast clubs to start each day, funded by closing tax loopholes for the global super-rich.

    It’s why we’ll roll out early interventions to transform children’s speech and language skills, and tackle the attainment gap, in settings across our country.

    It’s why, we’ll bring in the School Support Staff Negotiating Body, because we know it’s support staff, as well as teachers, who will deliver the change our children need, and Labour will value and respect them just as much.

    And it’s why I’m proud to tell you today, that we’ll tackle our chronic cultural problem with maths, by making sure it’s better taught at six, never mind 16.

    The last Labour government began a revolution in reading standards, a revolution still unfolding in our schools.

    It’s past time, we brought that same focus to maths.

    One in four of our children leave primary school without the maths they need. That is a disaster.

    Maths is the language of the universe, the underpinning of our collective understanding.

    It cannot be left until the last years of school.

    I am determined that Labour will bring maths to life for the next generation.

    Better training for teachers to teach, with confidence and success.

    Better standards for our children, so they’re set up to succeed.

    Because be it budgeting or cooking, exchange rates or payslips, maths matters for success.

    And I want the numeracy all our young people need – for life and for work, to earn and to spend, to understand and to challenge, I want that to be part of their learning right from the start.

    Conference, high and rising standards.

    A richer curriculum woven through with speaking, listening and digital skills.

    Through every subject and year of school.

    It’s why we’ll invest in more teachers, in careers guidance, in mental health support, in work experience,

    For all our children, in all our schools.

    And we’ll deliver those standards not by ending inspection, but by improving it.

    With annual inspection for the issues that matter most.

    And we won’t stop there, because education doesn’t end there.

    We’ll change the way students pay for their time at university, so none of our young people, fear the price they’ll pay for the choice they’d like.

    And after 13 years of drift, Labour will create Skills England to bring leadership and ambition to England’s skills system.

    A Growth and Skills Levy driving opportunity in every workplace.

    Technical Excellence Colleges right across our country.

    Skills not just for each of us, but for all of us.

    Training the generation ahead, to build the greener, safer, healthier future we need.

    Ours will be a government with not just vision, but drive. Not just a dream, but a plan.

    Conference, the difference between us and the Conservatives, it isn’t just about values, competence, ideas.

    It’s simpler: it’s all about hope.

    Not just hope for each of us, but hope for all of us.

    Hope for our society, and our country, as well as ourselves, and our families.

    Hope that our greatest days are yet to come.

    Conference, Labour will again bring hope to a new generation.

    Labour is the party for the future we all deserve.

    Thank you.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Major new package of support for Ukraine’s counter-offensive announced by Grant Shapps [October 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Major new package of support for Ukraine’s counter-offensive announced by Grant Shapps [October 2023]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Defence on 11 October 2023.

    The Defence Secretary will today announce a new package of support for Ukraine and the signing of further air defence contracts, procured through the International Fund for Ukraine.

    A new package of military support for Ukraine, worth more than £100m, will be announced by the Defence Secretary today. It will help its armed forces clear minefields, maintain its vehicles, and shore up defensive fortifications to protect critical national infrastructure.

    The support package, which will be provided using money from the International Fund for Ukraine (IFU), will be jointly announced today by the Defence Secretary and his counterparts from the IFU partner nations at a meeting of the Ukraine Defence Contact Group at NATO headquarters in Brussels.

    It comes as the final contract from the previously announced IFU package of air defence capability was signed, which will see more than £70m of capabilities provided to Ukraine – including the MSI-DS Terrahawk Paladin, a platform which can track and destroy drones and protect critical national infrastructure.

    The UK and Denmark launched the IFU in 2022 and the UK engages closely with Ukraine to procure capability that best meets the needs of its armed forces. Since then, five other nations have contributed to the IFU, demonstrating the unity and resolve of allies and partners in supporting Ukraine.

    Defence Secretary Grant Shapps said:

    During my recent visit to Kyiv, I assured President Zelenskyy that the UK’s support for Ukraine and their most urgent needs is unwavering.

    Today I am proud to announce that the UK, alongside our allies, is delivering on that promise with new contracts to provide Ukraine with critical air defence systems to protect civilians from Putin’s barbaric bombing campaign, and more than £100 million of new equipment pledged to give Ukrainian soldiers what they need to breach Russia’s deadly minefields.

    Today, the Defence Secretary attends his first meeting of the NATO-Ukraine Council, where ministers from member countries and Ukraine will discuss the ongoing international response to Putin’s illegal invasion.

    It provides an opportunity for the Defence Secretary to raise the UK’s concerns regarding the crisis in Israel and Gaza, the developing situation regarding reported damage to undersea infrastructure between Finland and Estonia, as well as the UK’s recent deployment to Kosovo in support of NATO’s peacekeeping mission.

    The announcement comes after the Prime Minister met President Zelenskyy at the European Political Community in Grenada last week. The Ukrainian President has said that air defence is Ukraine’s most critical capability need, and the Terrahawk Paladin will help deliver what Ukraine needs to protect its citizens from Putin’s indiscriminate campaign of missile strikes against civilian targets.

    This latest package will also provide crucial equipment to help Ukrainian soldiers cross minefields, bridging capabilities to assist with river and trench crossings, and heavy duty plant vehicles to destroy Russian non-explosive obstacles and help build defensive positions to protect Ukraine’s critical national infrastructure.

    Admiral Sir Tony Radakin, Chief of the Defence Staff, said:

    This new package of support is the latest in an unprecedented and sustained effort by 50 nations to give Ukraine the tools it needs to counter Russia’s aggression and recover what it has lost.

    This winter, Russia will seek to undermine the morale of the Ukrainian people and divide the international community, but in both cases Putin underestimates the strength and resilience of his opposition. If we stick together, and stay the course, then Russia will continue to lose, Ukraine will prevail and the rules that matter to global security will endure.

    Ukraine is now the most mined country on earth, which has provided the biggest obstacle in the path of Ukraine’s counter-offensive this year and mine clearing capabilities will be essential to the Armed Forces of Ukraine in pushing forward.

    Equipment from both the air defence package and mobility support package will arrive in the coming months, joining other IFU-funded equipment already in Ukraine, including around 100 uncrewed aerial systems.

    The IFU uses financial contributions from international partners to procure priority military assistance for Ukraine. This will ensure the continued supply of military support – lethal and non-lethal – to Ukraine through 2023 and beyond.

    To date, £785m has been raised through the IFU following contributions from the UK, Norway, Netherlands, Denmark, Sweden, Iceland and Lithuania.

    The IFU has recently expanded to include Lithuania on its Executive Panel, which is now formed by the UK and six other nations which provide oversight and assurance of the Fund, including the endorsement of capability packages.

  • PRESS RELEASE : UN Human Rights Council 54- UK Statement on Haiti [October 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : UN Human Rights Council 54- UK Statement on Haiti [October 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 10 October 2023.

    Statement for Interactive Dialogue with the High Commissioner on the interim report on Haiti. Delivered by the UK at the 54th Human Rights Council in Geneva.

    Thank you, Mr. Vice-President.

    Deputy High Commissioner,

    We thank you for your report and appreciate the continued cooperation of the Haitian authorities. We strongly support the Haitian people’s demands for security, stability and justice. Accordingly, we welcome the recent resolution of the United Nations Security Council authorising the deployment of a multinational security support mission led by Kenya.

    The widespread human rights violations such as abductions, sexual violence and murder by armed gangs outlined in this interim report are alarming. The increasing number of internally displaced persons as a result of gang violence, the vast majority of which are women and children, is a further pressing concern.

    The UK stands in strong support of the vital work on human rights being carried out by the international community in Haiti.

    The Haitian government must fulfil its obligation to protect its citizens: gang violence against innocent civilians must end, and those responsible for these human rights violations must be held accountable.

    Deputy High Commissioner,

    We would like to ask whether you see opportunities for greater collaboration between the Haitian government, national and international entities in the response to the growing internal displacement crisis.

    Thank you.

  • PRESS RELEASE : The UK is committed to the stability and security of Iraq – UK Statement at the UN Security Council [October 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : The UK is committed to the stability and security of Iraq – UK Statement at the UN Security Council [October 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 10 October 2023.

    Statement by Deputy Political Coordinator Tom Phipps at the UN Security Council meeting on Iraq.

    Thank you President. Let me begin by extending the UK’s condolences to the families of all of those killed and injured in the tragic fire at Qaraqosh on the 27th of September.

    I’d also like to express thanks to SRSG Plasschaert and Ms Al-Jarahi for their briefings today, and in particular to Ms Al-Jahari for highlighting the vital issues of women’s rights and meaningful participation. I’d also like to express thanks to all the staff at the UN Assistance Mission in Iraq for the important work. The positive partnership between UNAMI and the Iraqi Government, and the Iraqi people and civil society, on issues from regional stability to women’s rights and participation, is playing a vital role in its success.

    The UK remains committed to supporting the Iraqi Government and the implementation of its ambitious reform agenda. In particular, we welcome the passing of the budget in June, a crucial step in delivering the Government’s priorities including on economic reform and energy diversification.

    President, we share the SRSG’s concerns about the Kurdistan region, and we urge the Kurdistan Regional Government to take all necessary steps to ensure that the planned elections take place on 25 February 2024 next year without further postponement. It is incumbent on all political parties to exercise unity, compromise and engage in constructive dialogue to ensure an electoral process which adheres to international standards and upholds the rights of all citizens, including women and minorities, to participate in the democratic process.

    President, we also welcome Iraq’s commitment to tackling climate change, including through ending gas flaring by 2030. Iraq’s exposure to multiple climate hazards, including floods, droughts and sandstorms, climate-related epidemics, and earthquakes makes this an important shared priority. Progress here will bolster Iraq’s security and we stand ready to support.

    We welcome the SRSG’s update on missing Kuwaiti and third-country nationals and missing Kuwaiti property. Regarding Khor Abdullah, we would like to strongly echo the point made by the SRSG. We welcome Prime Minister Sudani’s recommitment at High Level Week to international law and to the Resolutions of this Council, and like others we would like to recall in particular the importance of SCR 833. We look forward to the resolution of our standing issues through dialogue between Iraq and the Kuwaiti government.

    Finally, President, following the extension of UNITAD’s mandate last month, we are committed to ensuring that UNITAD’s legacy is preserved and that international efforts to deliver justice for Da’esh atrocities continue. Noting Iraq’s recent request, we will work closely with the Government of Iraq, the UN and this Council to improve evidence sharing arrangements in accordance with UNITAD’s Terms of Reference, as well as options for the future of UNITAD’s work.

    Once again, I’d like to renew the UK’s commitment to the stability and security of Iraq and to the essential role the Mission plays in support. Thank you.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Overseas Territories Attorneys General Conference [October 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Overseas Territories Attorneys General Conference [October 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 10 October 2023.

    Attorneys General of the British Overseas Territories meet to enhance cooperation on a number of wide-ranging issues.

    The Attorneys General of British Overseas Territories (Anguilla; the British Virgin Islands; Cayman Islands; Falkland Islands, South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands; Montserrat; and the Turks and Caicos Islands), Attorney General and representative of the Crown Dependencies of Guernsey and Jersey, a representative from the US Department of Justice and the Solicitor General for England and Wales alongside a delegation from the United Kingdom Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office met in Montserrat on 26th and 28th September for the 2023 Overseas Territories Attorneys General conference, to discuss a range of topics relating to the rule of law and administration of justice in the Territories and to enhance our mutual cooperation.

    The Hon. Sheree Jemmotte-Rodney, Attorney General for Montserrat together with Michael Tomlinson KC MP, the Solicitor General for England and Wales, chaired the conference. This gathering, the first in person conference since 2019 pre-COVID-19 pandemic, was an opportunity for the UK, Overseas Territories and Crown Dependencies Law Officers to exchange best practice and strengthen partnerships to support the delivery of priority issues.

    During the conference the delegates discussed cooperation on a number of important topics, including constitutional processes, maritime issues, recognition of same-sex partnerships/marriage, safeguarding, irregular migration, criminal justice and law enforcement. Part of the discussions included recent positive experiences with constitutional reform negotiations, noting the complexities of agreeing constitutional changes and the need to develop expertise and knowledge on this subject. The Overseas Territories welcomed the opportunity for further engagement with the UK Government in this area.

    The delegates welcomed the crucial role played by the Overseas Territories and Crown Dependencies in the implementation and enforcement of UK sanctions. Together, we are ensuring that sanctions legislation is operating effectively in our jurisdictions. Delegates agreed to exchange best practice and recommended the creation of a mechanism to facilitate an improved information sharing forum to help build capability and capacity.

    The delegates shared experiences on legislation permitting same-sex partnerships and noted the steps taken by most Territories on this topic. We continue to welcome and encourage engagement and dialogue with all of the Overseas Territories to ensure that legislation, including for same-sex couples, is compliant with our human rights obligations.

    Discussions on maritime issues included sharing information on delimitation, search and rescue and security. The delegates welcomed ongoing cooperation with the UK Maritime and Coastguard Agency, including on conventions.

    The delegates discussed the key issue of safeguarding, including the risk posed by technology, and legislative protections for vulnerable teens at risk of sexual grooming, and exploitation by adults in a position of trust. Delegates agreed to continue cooperation in this area to ensure the protection of those that are vulnerable in our societies. Furthermore, the discussion on criminal justice and law enforcement covered disclosure, legislation to protect the vulnerable, including sexual offences and domestic violence.

    The delegates shared their common challenges with irregular migration, including unlawful entry and repatriation costs.

    The UK Government and the Overseas Territories welcomed the opportunity to come together at the 2023 Attorneys General Conference. Delegates reiterated their joint commitment to cooperating to uphold the rule of law.

  • PRESS RELEASE : More funding to schools, hospitals and public buildings to lower energy use and save on bills, and cut carbon emissions [October 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : More funding to schools, hospitals and public buildings to lower energy use and save on bills, and cut carbon emissions [October 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero on 10 October 2023.

    Public sector organisations can now bid for a share of £230 million to help make low-carbon energy upgrades to their buildings.

    • £230 million made available to schools, hospitals, leisure centres and other public buildings in latest round of funding
    • Grants will allow schools, hospitals and other public buildings to install low-carbon heating and energy efficiency measures
    • More than 1,000 buildings have already received upgrades helping them save thousands of pounds on energy bills

    More schools, hospitals and other public buildings will be able to reduce energy use, save on bills and cut carbon emissions for the long-term through the latest round of funding from the Public Sector Decarbonisation Scheme.

    From today (Tuesday 10 October), public sector organisations can bid for a cut of £230 million of government funding to support significant low-carbon energy upgrades to their buildings, ranging from heat pumps and solar panels, to new energy efficiency measures such as insulation and low-energy lighting.

    The opening of the latest bidding process coincides with the 3-year anniversary of the scheme, which has so far allocated more than £2 billion to almost 1,000 public sector organisations across England, helping them reduce energy bills and carbon emissions in the long term.

    Today’s funding marks another step in the government’s pragmatic and proportionate approach to reaching net zero, by scaling-up energy efficiency of buildings across the country and supporting the switch to more low-carbon heating.

    The commitment follows significant progress the UK has already made towards reaching net zero – cutting all emissions by 48% between 1990 and 2021, which is faster than any other G7 country. Decarbonising the public sector with low carbon heating and energy efficiency measures is also expected to save the public sector an estimated £650 million per year on average to 2037.

    Lord Callanan, Minister for Energy Efficiency and Green Finance, said:

    We are a world-leader when it comes to reducing carbon emissions – and for us to reach our goal of net zero by 2050, we want to help public bodies like schools and hospitals to do their bit.

    We’ve made fantastic progress so far, helping more than 1,000 schools, hospitals and leisure centres. Today’s funding will now help even more organisations across England bring their bills down, while also cutting their emissions.

    The funding, announced today, has been made available through Phase 3c of the scheme, with organisations able to spend the money allocated in the 2024 to 2025 financial year – on top of further funding for 2025 to 2026.

    Organisations that have benefited from a share of more than £2 billion under the scheme over the past 3 years include:

    •  University Hospitals Coventry and Warwickshire NHS Trust have saved £54,500 on their annual energy bill thanks to a new air source heat pump at the Hospital of St Cross in Rugby and new solar panels and pipework insulation
    • Staffordshire County Council have installed air source heat pumps and solar panels at the new Kingston Centre in Stafford. The school will also receive new energy efficiency measures, including a building energy management system, LED lighting, double glazing, roof insulation, cavity wall insulation, and pipework insulation. This is due to save them £79,700 on their annual energy bill
    • Upper Norwood Library and the Waterloo Action community centre in the London Borough of Lambeth will see their energy efficiency improved – saving the council £5,200 on their annual energy bill. Air source heat pumps were installed at both sites, alongside LED lighting, double glazing, insulation and building energy management systems. Solar panels have also been installed at the Waterloo Action community centre

    The Public Sector Decarbonisation Scheme aims to support the government’s commitment to reduce emissions from public sector buildings by 75% by 2037, compared to 2017 levels, as first set out in the 2021 Heat and Buildings Strategy.

    Ian Rodger, Director of Programmes at Salix, said:

    Salix is delighted to be delivering the next phase of the Public Sector Decarbonisation Scheme to support public sector bodies in their net zero transformation journey. The scheme is empowering organisations across England to make significant reductions in their carbon footprint from heating public buildings.

    The huge enthusiasm for the scheme shows how much public sector bodies care about their carbon emissions and Salix is proud to be able to support them with finance and technical support to achieve their ambitions.

    To apply for funding public sector bodies should visit: Public Sector Decarbonisation Scheme: Phase 3.