Tag: 2024

  • Keir Starmer – 2024 Speech at Labour Party Conference

    Keir Starmer – 2024 Speech at Labour Party Conference

    The speech made by Keir Starmer, the Prime Minister, on 24 September 2024.

    Thank you, Conference. And I do mean that from the bottom of my heart.

    Thank you Conference for everything you have done to fulfil the basic duty of this party – our Clause One – so we can return this great nation to the service of working people.  Thank you Conference.

    People said we couldn’t do it, but we did. And we did it together.

    And look at this now, a record-breaking conference. The biggest attendance ever in our history.

    And such a far cry from my first conference speech to a live audience of one – the camera man. Socially distanced, in an arts centre in Doncaster. Remember that? Don’t worry, most people don’t. Not even the camera man.

    But I bet you do remember the year after, Conference.

    In Brighton – three years ago. The turning of the tide. A fight for the heart and soul of this party.

    People said – we were going too far.

    People said – we were going too fast.

    They didn’t want to face the country.

    They wanted to go back to a comfort zone, take the easier road to nowhere, duck the challenge of change. But we stood firm, Conference. We stood together, Conference, and we won.

    So take pride in your victory.

    Take pride that Labour won in every single region of England.

    Take pride that Labour won in Wales.

    Take pride that Labour won in Scotland.

    But never forget that this opportunity is only here because we changed the party.

    Country first, party second – that isn’t a slogan. It’s the foundation of this project.

    A pact with working people we must fulfil to retain the privilege of serving their interests.

    On economic stability, national security, wealth creation, protecting our borders, rooting out Antisemitism, standing with NATO and Ukraine.

    The changes we made are permanent. Irreversible.

    And the work of service never stops. Country first, party second.

    But Conference, for many people in this city the speech they may remember was the one here two years ago. Because that’s when I promised, on this stage, that if I ever had the privilege to serve our country as Prime Minister one of my first acts would be to bring in a Hillsborough law – a duty of candour.

    A law for Liverpool.

    A law for the 97.

    A law that people should never have needed to fight so hard to get, but that will be delivered by this Labour Government.

    It’s also a law for the sub-postmasters in the Horizon scandal.

    The victims of infected blood. Windrush. Grenfell Tower.

    And all the countless injustices over the years, suffered by working people at the hands of those who were supposed to serve them.

    Truth and justice concealed behind the closed ranks of the state.

    And Conference, this is the meaning of Clause One. Because today I can confirm that the duty of candour will apply to public authorities and public servants, the Bill will include criminal sanctions, and that the Hillsborough law will be introduced to Parliament before the next anniversary in April.

    It’s work that shows how a government of service must act in everything it does.

    Our driving purpose. To show to the working people of this country that politics can be a force for good. Politics can be on the side of truth and justice. Politics can secure a better life for your family through the steady but uncompromising work of service.

    Because service is the responsibility and opportunity of power.

    The pre-condition for hope. The bond of respect that can unite a country, bind us to the politics of national renewal. Service doesn’t mean we’ll get everything right.

    It doesn’t mean everyone will agree. But it does mean we understand that every decision we take, we take together.

    And that it is our duty to the British people to face up to necessary decisions in their interest. And I mean Conference, you know me by now, so you know all those shouts and bellows, the bad faith advice from people who still hanker for the politics of noisy performance, the weak and cowardly fantasy of populism – it’s water off a duck’s back. Mere glitter on a shirt cuff. It’s never distracted me before, and it won’t distract me now.

    This is a long-term project. I never said otherwise, not even in the campaign.

    But Conference, make no mistake, the work of change has begun. The patient, calm, determined era of politics as service has begun.

    Planning – reformed.

    Doctors – back in theatre.

    New solar projects.

    New offshore wind projects.

    The onshore ban – lifted.

    Great British Energy – launched.

    One-word Ofsted judgements – ended.

    A Border Security Command.

    A National Wealth Fund – getting Britain building again.

    The Renters Reform Bill – stopping no fault evictions.

    And the Railway Services Bill – bringing railways back into public ownership.

    And we’re only just getting started.

    A crackdown on knife crime.

    A real living wage.

    A modern industrial strategy.

    A 10-year plan for our NHS.

    Devolution to our nations, regions and cities.

    The biggest levelling-up of workers’ rights in a generation.

    More teachers.

    More neighbourhood police.

    More operations.

    Rebuilding our public services.

    Change has begun.

    And every single one a necessary step on a longer journey. Five national missions that will deliver the higher growth, the safer streets, the cleaner energy, the greater opportunities, the healthier society that I know the British people want and need. The mandate that we won.

    But also something even more precious.

    Our economy – stabilised.

    The foundations of this country – fixed.

    Tory rot – cleared away.

    So brick by brick, we can build a new home.

    A better home.

    Built to last.

    Built with pride.

    But above all built together.

    A nation rebalanced so it once again serves the interests of working people.

    And through the power unleashed by that process, a renewal of who we are.

    A country that gives equal voice to every person.

    A country that won’t expect you to change who you are just to get on.

    A country that doesn’t just work for you and your family but one that recognises you, sees you, respects you as part of our story.

    A Britain that belongs to you.

    Because make no mistake that is the Britain we are building.

    ‘Change’ isn’t a few extra lines on a graph moving in the right direction.

    ‘Change’ isn’t a good Labour policy or two delivered while the broader settlement remains untouched.

    No, change must mean nothing less than national renewal.

    Not a return to old ways, nor a new path entirely.

    But a rediscovery, in the full glare of the future, of who we are.

    The trouble is, Conference, just as we found with the Labour Party four years ago, Britain is no longer sure of itself.

    Our story is uncertain.

    The hope – beaten out of us.

    There is pride – of course there is.

    Pride in our communities especially.

    And there is respect too, all around the world.

    Trust me nobody anywhere doubts that this is a great nation.

    A nation known for our creativity.

    Our artistic skill.

    Our scientific genius.

    And of course, our pragmatism.

    Qualities that, combined with the industry and pride of working people, have not just rewritten our own story but also that of the world.

    We could do that again.

    In fact, we must.

    Technology.

    Climate change.

    The ageing population.

    The movement of people.

    This is a time when great forces demand a decisive government prepared to face the future. We can see that again in the Middle East today. So I call again for restraint and de-escalation at the border between Lebanon and Israel. I call again for all parties to pull back from the brink. I call again or an immediate ceasefire in Gaza, the return of the hostages and a recommitment to the two state solution: a recognised Palestinian state alongside a safe and secure Israel.

    And that’s the message I will take to the UN General Assembly when I travel there later today. Alongside our steadfast support for Ukraine in the face of Russian aggression. And in this uncertain world, I also pay tribute to our armed forces for all they do to keep Britain safe.

    But Conference, strength in this dangerous world depends on strength at home.

    And yet look at our country. Look at our country. Do you see a Britain where people feel, with the certainty that they deserve, that the future will be better for their children? Because when I was growing up, that’s what we believed.

    People of a completely ordinary working-class background like mine, we took it for granted. We built our lives around it. But that is not the country we inherited in July. That confidence, that certainty, it’s brittle and fragile. And so we have to restore it. That is the mandate we won. The meaning of change.

    And it all comes back to that question. Can politics be a force for good in peoples’ lives? There’s no time to waste wondering why people think politics has failed.

    We have to show what it can do for their lives. Restore, after fourteen years of chaos, faith in the values that have always guided this nation.

    The stability, the moderation, the common sense. Keeping a cool head. Staying the course. Facing the future. The defiance of ambition. The determination of service.

    And above all, our faith, no matter the challenge, in practical solutions that work.

    Not the easy answers that may well move a crowd but do not move a nation forward.

    No, Conference. We know that way lies ruin. We have seen it in our party and we changed it. And for fourteen years, against our country’s best traditions, we have seen it in Britain. And now we must change that too.

    We must build a new Britain. Built from that age-old spirit of creativity and enterprise. The pride and ambition of working people. That, when matched by a government of service – a decisive government, a government prepared to use its power for justice, opportunity and equal respect – can deliver a Britan that belongs to you.

    A Britain that belongs to you.

    Because politics sees public service as a privilege. Not privilege as an entitlement to public service.

    A Britain that belongs to you.

    Because government is mission-driven and serious. Clear, measurable targets.

    Progress displayed publicly. So every single person in this country can judge our performance on actions not words.

    A Britain that belongs to you.

    Because we maintain our focus, at all times, on fixing those foundations for working people. Those five national missions – providing the security and control they need.

    But also protecting us from the whims of Westminster, making sure that we don’t get blown off course.

    And a Britain that belongs to you.

    Because we came together. And together we built it. Because this has to be a partnership. We won’t achieve our missions alone.

    I understand the power and responsibility of government. The way it can make or break a life. When you are Chief Prosecutor, when you look into the eyes of victims who have lost everything – parents whose daughter was raped and murdered, as I did with Penny and John – trust me, you learn about what government can and must do.

    But I also know from the campaigners who have inspired me.

    Pooja and Nikita Kanda. Figen Murray. People who fight tirelessly against murder and terrorism so no other family will suffer their awful pain.

    Nathaniel Dye. Who fights for a better NHS so no other person will suffer his fatal late cancer diagnosis.

    The families and survivors of Grenfell Tower.

    Whose dignity, for seven years, held up a mirror to this nation and asked us – do we really give everyone an equal voice?

    They have all shown that the difference between service and government – true service – is that service must listen to people far beyond the walls of the state and empower them to make our country better. Because trust me, that is without question the quickest way to clear away the Tory rot and build that Britain that belongs to you.

    And so change begins. Because there is another injustice hiding in plain sight in our streets. In every town and city in this country. People who were prepared to make the ultimate sacrifice for our nation. Who put their lives on the line to protect all of us, but who will not have a safe place to sleep tonight.

    We cannot stand by and let this happen anymore.

    And so today, I can announce that this government will respect that service.

    We will repay those who served us. And house all veterans in housing need.

    Homes will be there for heroes.

    And because we have started the hard yards of planning reform. Because we are facing up to decisions ignored for years. Because we are introducing new planning passports that will turbo-charge housebuilding in our inner cities.

    We can make the very same promise to other people at risk of homelessness.

    Young care leavers.

    Victims of domestic abuse.

    They will have the security they deserve.

    They will have a roof over their head.

    Because Britain belongs to them.

    And another thing Conference. Another promise kept.

    We said GB Energy – our publicly-owned national champion, the vehicle that will drive forward our mission on clean energy – we said it belonged in Scotland.

    And it does. But the truth is, it could only really ever be based in one place in Scotland.

    So today I can confirm that the future of British energy will be powered, as it has been for decades by the talent and skills of the working people in the Granite City with GB Energy based in Aberdeen.

    This is how the work of change happens. A decisive mission-led government, moving our country forward, step by step. Focused on a long-term plan.

    That first, we stabilise our economy. Second, we fix the foundation.

    And third, we build, with pride and determination, a Britain that belongs to you.

    But it will be hard. That’s not rhetoric – it’s reality.

    It’s not just that financial black hole. The £22bn of unfunded spending commitments, concealed from our country by the Tories.

    It’s not just the societal black hole.

    Our public services – decimated.

    Communities held together with little more than good will.

    It’s also the political black hole.

    Because the politics of national renewal, they’re collective.

    They involve a shared struggle.

    A project that says to everyone – this will be tough in the short-term, but in the long-term it’s the right thing to do for our country.

    And we all benefit from that.

    To coin a phrase: “We’re all in it together”.

    But that’s just it, isn’t it? People have heard it all before.

    And they listened. I ran a public service in the early days of austerity.

    People did everything asked of them to find a way forward.

    They did it in the pandemic, as well.

    Saved the lives of people they will never meet.

    All while their Government broke the very rules that they followed.

    And so people ask us now, as we seek patience in pursuit of national renewal: “What we will we get to show for it?”

    I understand that. After all, what they are used to is a lie. An act, a charade, a performance.

    You can call it populism – many people do. But I prefer to call it the politics of easy answers. Because at its core that’s what it is. A deliberate refusal to countenance tough decisions because the political pain is just too much to bear. Party first, country second.

    Take Rwanda – a policy they knew, from the beginning, would never work, was never supposed to work. £700m of your money, frittered away on something that was never a credible option because politically it was an easier answer.

    And just look at the difference you can make if you bring the curtain down on the show. A 23% increase in returns of people who have no right to be here, compared with last summer.

    But it’s not just Rwanda. It was the same story on everything.

    Energy security. The housing crisis. Telling people they’re tough on crime, without building enough prison places. Fourteen years of performance. Fourteen years of exploiting problems not solving them. Mining the pits of division. Searching them for conflict. Fixing your attention on those issues.

    Not on growth.

    Technology.

    Climate change.

    Public services.

    The ageing population.

    The cost of living crisis.

    Or any of the challenges that this country desperately needed to face up to.

    Well, those challenges are still here Conference. And we are facing up to them.

    But do not forget what they did and do not let them attempt to shift the blame because the state of our country is on them.

    Why must we release prisoners early? Because the Tories served themselves.

    Why are our public services on their knees? Because the Tories served themselves.

    Why is crime routinely unpunished? Our rivers polluted. Borders insecure. School roofs crumbling.

    Child poverty rampant. Nothing seems to work.

    Our public finances broken.

    Because for fourteen years the Tories performed the politics of easy answers rather than use the power of government to serve our country.

    Yet still those wounds of trust must be healed.

    Still that question calls to us, “What will we get to show for it?”

    So let me answer that directly and address anyone nervous about the difficult road ahead, because I know this country is exhausted by and with politics.

    I know that the cost-of-living crisis drew a veil over the joy and wonder in our lives, and that people want respite and relief. May even have voted Labour for that reason.

    So first, let me be clear.

    Our project has not and never will change.

    I changed the Labour Party to restore it to the service of working people and that is exactly what we will do for Britain.

    But I will not do it with easy answers.

    I will not do it with false hope.

    Not now, not ever.

    That is how we got here in the first place.

    So I know, after everything you’ve been through, how hard it is to hear a politician ask for more.

    But deep-down, I think you also know that our country does need a long-term plan and that we can’t turn back.

    The state of our country is real.

    However, I would also say this. This is a Government of Service. And that means, whether we agree or not, I will always treat you with the respect of candour, not the distraction of bluster.

    And the truth is that if we take tough long-term decisions now, if we stick to the driving purpose behind everything we do – higher economic growth so living standards rise in every community; our NHS facing the future – waiting lists at your hospital down; safer streets in your community; stronger borders; more opportunities for your children; clean British energy powering your home – then that light at the end of this tunnel, that Britain that belongs to you, we get there much more quickly.

    And look – I understand many of the decisions we must take will be unpopular.

    If they were popular – they’d be easy. But the cost of filling that black hole in our public finances, that will be shared fairly.

    We will get the welfare bill down because we will tackle long-term sickness and support people back to work. We will make every penny work for you because we will root out waste and go after tax avoiders.

    There will be no stone left unturned. No innovation ignored.

    And no return to Tory austerity. We will rebuild our public services, protect working people, and do this in a Labour way.

    And that is a promise.

    And if you can’t take that on faith, perhaps because you’re concerned about the winter fuel allowance, then I get that. As I say, if this path were popular or easy we would have walked it already.

    But the risk of showing to the world – as the Tories did – that this country does not fund its policies properly, that is a risk we can never take again.

    Stabilising our economy is the first step of this long-term plan.

    The only way we keep prices low, cut NHS waiting lists, and secure the triple lock so that every pensioner in this country – every pensioner – will be better off with Labour.

    But more broadly, I also say this. That as we take on those massive challenges the Tories ignored, the time is long overdue for politicians to level with you about the trade-offs this country faces.

    Because if the last few years have shown us anything, it’s that if you bury your head because things are difficult, your country goes backwards.

    So if we want justice to be served some communities must live close to new prisons.

    If we want to maintain support for the welfare state, then we will legislate to stop benefit fraud. Do everything we can to tackle worklessness.

    If we want cheaper electricity, we need new pylons overground otherwise the burden on taxpayers is too much.

    If we want home ownership to be a credible aspiration for our children, then every community has a duty to contribute to that purpose.

    If we want to tackle illegal migration seriously, we can’t pretend there’s a magical process that allows you to return people here unlawfully without accepting that process will also grant some people asylum.

    If we want to be serious about levelling-up, then we must be proud to be the party of wealth creation. Unashamed to partner with the private sector.

    And perhaps most importantly of all, that just because we all want low taxes and good public services that does not mean that the iron law of properly funding policies can be ignored, because it can’t. We have seen the damage that that does and I will not let that happen again. I will not let Tory economic recklessness hold back the working people of this country.

    And let me tell you something else I won’t let happen. I will never let a minority of violent, racist, thugs terrorise our communities.

    Look – I have always accepted concerns about immigration are legitimate.

    It is – as point of fact – the policy of this Government to reduce both net migration and our economic dependency upon it.

    I have never thought we should be relaxed about some sectors importing labour when there are millions of young people, ambitious and highly talented, who are desperate to work and contribute to their community.

    And trust me, there are plenty of examples of apprenticeship starts going down at the very same time that visa applications for the same skills are going up, and so we will get tough on this.

    But at the same time, we’ll also get our skills system right.

    We’ve got to give businesses more flexibility to adapt to real training needs and also unlock the pride, the ambition, the pull of the badge of the shirt that young people feel when building a future, not just for themselves but for their community.

    So we will introduce new foundation apprenticeships.

    Rebalance funding in our training system back to young people.

    Align that with what businesses really need.

    The first step to a youth guarantee that will eradicate inactivity and unemployment for our young people – once and for all.

    But Conference, whatever anyone thinks about immigration, I will never accept the argument made not just by the usual suspects, but by people who should have known better, who said that millions of people concerned about immigration are one and the same thing as the people who smashed up businesses.

    Who targeted mosques.

    Attempted to burn refugees.

    Scrawled racist graffiti over walls.

    Nazi salutes at the cenotaph.

    Attacked NHS nurses.

    And told people, with different coloured skin, people who contribute here, people who grew up here, that they should “go home”.

    No Conference – people concerned about immigration were not doing that because they understand that this country, this democratic country, is built on the rule of law.

    The ballot box.

    The common understanding that we debate our differences.

    We do not settle them with violent thuggery.

    And racism is vile.

    And Conference, so to those who equivocate about this, I simply say – the country sees you and it rejects you.

    And to those who say that the only way to love your country is to hate your neighbour because they look different, I say not only do we reject you, we know that you will never win. Because the British values we stand for, not just the rule of law, but a love for this country and our neighbours, the respect for difference under the same flag, that is stronger than bricks and you know it.

    It’s what you cannot stand about our country – our reasonable, tolerant country – but it is absolutely who we are.

    No – the debate is not about the worth of migrants. That is toxic and we must move beyond it. It’s about control of migration. It’s always been about control.

    That is what people have voted for time and again.

    And look – they weren’t just ignored after Brexit.

    The Tories gave them the exact opposite.

    An immigration system deliberately reformed to reduce control.

    Because, in the end, they are the party of the uncontrolled market.

    Now don’t get me wrong – markets are dynamic.

    Competition is a vital life force in our economy.

    This is a Labour Party proud to say that.

    We work hand-in-hand with business.

    But markets don’t give you control – that is almost literally their point.

    So if you want a country with more control.

    If you want the great forces that affect your community to be better managed.

    Whether that’s migration, climate change, law and order, or security at work.

    Then that does need more decisive government, and that is a Labour government.

    Taking back control is a Labour argument.

    It’s why I say we are rebalancing our country to serve working people.

    Because this is a question of balance.

    We can’t afford any more polluted rivers.

    We can’t afford any more Covid contracts.

    We can’t afford any more Grenfell Towers.

    We have to become serious and mission-led.

    Have to put respect and service deep in the bones of our institutions.

    That’s not a debate about investment or reform.

    It’s always been both.

    But again I have to warn you.

    Working people do want more decisive government.

    They do want us to rebuild our public services.

    And they do want that to lead to more control in their lives.

    But their pockets are not deep – not at all.

    So we have to be a great reforming government.

    Our NHS reformed so patients have more control over their health.

    Our energy system reformed so our country has more control over its security.

    Police and justice reformed, so communities have more control of their streets.

    Education reformed, so children have more control of their future.

    And our economy reformed with the unique force that is economic growth.

    Giving every community the breathing space, the calm, the control to focus on the little things they love in life, not the anxiety and insecurity we have now.

    Because we do need joy. We do need that in our lives.

    And one place that has always done that for me, Conference – I told you about it last year – it’s the Lake District. A place my Mum loved, not just because of what it meant to her – her determination to show she could walk in a place like that – but because of the beauty, everywhere.

    Last year I took my family to the old cottage where we used to stay in as children.

    So we walked up to the cottage and stood outside.

    It must have looked a little odd.

    And so the couple who now live there came out and they were lovely.

    And when we told them why we were there, they said come inside, go upstairs, take a walk down memory lane.

    So we did and we’re back outside, chatting.

    Then she stopped, suddenly, and said someone’s nicking your car. I said no – that’s the police moving the car.

    And that, that really confused her.

    Anyway – at this point her husband comes in.

    He said: “You haven’t clocked have you?”

    “He’s the Leader of the Opposition, a politician”.

    And she stops.

    She smiles.

    Laughs.

    And says politely – “oh, if I’d known that you were a politician, I’d have pushed you down the stairs when I had the chance!”

    The beauty of the Lake District and the heart of the British people, in a nutshell.

    But seriously, when you’re there walking around a place like Langdale Valley. When you can see the grass there every bit as green as it was fourteen years ago, it’s a reminder and an inspiration that yes things change and some things need to change.

    But some things do not.

    And the joy and wonder of our nation, the spirit of its people – the cleaners, drivers, small business owners, teachers, teaching assistants.

    The people who came out and cleaned the streets

    The brickies who rebuilt the broken walls in Southport.

    The backbone of this country.

    They are just as resilient as they were fourteen years ago.

    And no matter what loudmouths say on social media, their values are the same.

    So we will turn our collar up and face the storm.

    We will rise above the challenges that we’ve inherited.

    Because this is a country with fairness in the water, that believes in justice, and that wants working people to be respected.

    And also – for opportunities to be there for your children.

    Because Conference, one of the other things that gave me great joy as a kid – as well as the football, obviously – was the flute. Don’t think you were expecting that, were you.

    But seriously – the flute gave me so many opportunities. My first ever trip abroad was to Malta with the Croydon Youth Philharmonic Orchestra.

    And I’m sure everyone here will know the feeling of being drawn in by music.

    Getting lost in something bigger than yourself. Or being moved by a book, a painting, a play. Even now I turn to Beethoven or Brahms in those moments when, how to put it, the reviews aren’t so good. I’ve got some Shostakovich lined up for tomorrow.

    But these early encounters with art and culture, they change us forever, and we are brilliant at them in this country. Brilliant.

    But those opportunities don’t go to every child, do they?

    My brother – who had difficulties learning – he didn’t get those opportunities.

    Every time I achieved something in my life, my dad used to say: “Your brother has achieved just as much as you, Keir”.

    And he was right. I still believe that.

    But this is what we do in this country now, isn’t it?

    We elevate the stories of the individuals who go to the Guild Hall School of Music.

    The Prime Minister from a pebble-dashed semi.

    The working class few who do break through the class ceiling.

    I don’t blame anyone for that – I’m guilty of it.

    It gives people hope. It’s important to tell those stories.

    But it’s not everyone, is it?

    And we must remember everyone, Conference.

    Because everyone deserves the chance to be touched by art.

    Everyone deserves access to moments that light up their lives.

    And every child deserves the chance to study the creative subjects that widen their horizons, provide skills employers do value, and prepares them for the future, the jobs and the world that they will inherit.

    But more than that.

    Every child, every person, deserves to be respected for the contribution they make.

    My sister was a care worker in the pandemic. She’s still a care worker.

    Work that surely we know by now is so important for the future of this country.

    So Conference, wouldn’t it be great if this was also a country, where because of that contribution, that vital, life-affirming work, she could walk into any room and instantly command the same respect as the Prime Minister?

    Because those are my values.

    That is what I believe.

    And those are the values of the Britain that we will build.

    What will people get to show for it?

    They’ll get a country with its future back.

    Renewed by respect and service.

    Rebalanced towards the interests of working people.

    Confident in its values and story.

    Because together – we took action.

    Millions who feel better off, without just being told they’re better off by politicians.

    Going to the supermarket without a calculator, because the nation’s numbers now add up.

    More money in their pocket to do the things they love.

    And more faith in their public services because once again Labour rebuilt them.

    An NHS facing the future.

    More security and dignity at work.

    Town centres – thriving.

    Streets – safe.

    Borders – controlled at last.

    Clean energy – harnessed for national renewal.

    New homes, new towns, new hospitals, roads and schools.

    A new future for our children.

    That is what people will get, and mark my words – we will deliver it.

    People said we couldn’t change the party – but we did.

    People said we wouldn’t win across Britain – but we have.

    People say we can’t deliver national renewal – but we can and we will.

    We will stabilise our economy.

    Clear out the Tory rot.

    Fix the foundations.

    And deliver the mandate of change.

    A Britain built to last.

    Built with respect.

    And built with pride.

    Because together, we have shown.

    That Britain belongs to you.

    Thank you Conference.

  • Peter Kyle – 2024 Speech at Labour Party Conference

    Peter Kyle – 2024 Speech at Labour Party Conference

    The speech made by Peter Kyle, the Secretary of State for Science, Innovation and Technology, on 23 September 2024.

    Let me start by introducing the team: Chris Bryant, Maggie Jones, Feryal Clark, Callum Anderson, and for his first Labour Party Conference – Patrick Vallance.

    For 14 years, our country paid the price of a ConservativeGovernment.

    Growth stalled; opportunities shrank; public services atrophied; inequalities deepened.

    Of course, the Tories talked a good game about growth, but it was all mouth and no trousers.

    Well, it was in Boris’s case – in Rishi’s it was all mouth and shorttrousers!

    All across government we are clearing up their mess – in my department I’ve found projects worth millions announced by my predecessors, without a single penny put behind them.

    Talk is cheap. And it was a cheap Tory trick.

    But empty promises cost – they waste everyone’s time and effort, sap people’s energy and enthusiasm, and squander the opportunities for Britain to get ahead.

    The Conservatives liked to wrap themselves up in our country’s flag, but time and time again, one failed Prime Minister after another, they never lived up to the values it represents.

    That’s why Britain was crying out for change.

    Once again, it falls to Labour in government, to repair the damage done under the Conservatives.

    Just like Attlee and Wilson, Blair and Brown before them, Keir, Angela and Rachel are tasked with putting our divided, damaged, disunited Kingdom back together.

    So, change begins.

    Change requires us to put wealth creation and economic growth, at the core of our national endeavour.

    Because growing the economy is the route to better lives and life chances for working people.

    My predecessor, when she wasn’t libelling people and passing on the legal bills to the taxpayer, said that her number one priority was driving woke out of science.

    Well, conference, our number one mission is to be the partner scientists need to tackle disease, climate change and economic growth.

    It’s a massive task:

    From Artificial Intelligence to human life sciences;

    From addressing digital exclusion to widening full fibre internet connectivity;

    From promoting the employment opportunities, from new data-driven technologies to protecting children against potential online harms;

    From creating the digital centre of government, to spreading digital technologies across the NHS and public services.

    We have even got responsibility for Britain’s space programme – so for us it really is to infinity and beyond!

    But the scope of these responsibilities is dwarfed by the pace of technological change.

    Think about it, a little girl born today in Liverpool Women’s Hospital will live longer and healthier because of medicines discovered and developed, using Artificial Intelligence.

    Her life story will be told through a new generation of smartphone technology.

    Her memories will be made and recorded on new platforms, as she grows from teenager to adulthood.

    She is part of the new digital generation, and this latest revolution began before she was even born and will continue throughout and beyond her life.

    Her education and career prospects, her life’s journey, will be created and curated by a series of discoveries, as yet unknown.

    But there is nothing inevitable about her story; about who benefits, how, and by how much, from this revolution.

    That is a choice.

    For progressives, our choice is to drive this change, whilst harnessing its immense power for the good of all.

    Failing to prepare for this change, is simply preparing to fail.

    Britain’s businesses and British workers cannot be left to sink or swim in the technological tsunami that is engulfing the world.

    I totally understand the concerns people have about the impact of these changes on their jobs, children, communities, and the whole of society.

    Our task is to recognise these concerns: mitigate where possible; upskill where necessary; reskill where appropriate; and regulate when essential.

    Every Industrial Revolution challenges the traditional structures of the society it impacts.

    In the 1860s and 70s, MPs’ concerns about the speed of locomotives, meant they introduced a 2 mile an hour speed limit, and someone to walk in front waving a red flag;

    In 1896 the National Anti-Vaccination League opposed the introduction of vaccines for public health;

    In the early 20th Century, the Horse Association of America opposed the introduction of the tractor.

    Some opposed the development of nuclear energy in the 1960s, as they do with solar and wind power today.

    Some of these concerns might seem silly now but, they were real and substantial then.

    If those generations had decided that the price of progress was too high, society would have remained poorer, slower, dirtier and sicker.

    Today we need to harness these opportunities, they need not be a threat, any more than the train or the tractor.

    From vaccines to clean power, resisting the opportunity cost of conservatism is the real price of progress.

    The challenge is to harness technology for good, to make change work for the good of all. That’s why we are fully implementing the Online Safety Act, to improve online safety for everyone, especially the most vulnerable.

    It’s why we are making the AI Safety Institute a statutory body, alongside identifying and realising the massive opportunities of AI for pupils and teachers, workers and students, scientists and researchers, NHS staff and patients too.

    It’s why we are working to make Britain the most attractive place to invest, start-up and grow businesses in science and technology.

    Because that’s the most sustainable route to wealth creation, opportunity generation, secure employment and economic growth.

    And it’s why we are determined to tackle digital exclusion.

    The opportunities of this technological revolution must be available to everyone.

    It must be more fairly shared between men and women, regardless of age, ethnicity, ability and social class, and across all regions and nations of our country.

    Securing these advances for all, is a modern progressive project that can, over time, make our communities cleaner, greener, safer and fairer too.

    Our task is to lay the foundations for the security, prosperity and opportunity of the digital generation.

    To make Britain the best place to live and work, for people to build their homes and families, the very best that Britain can be;

    Where no-one goes to bed hungry because our economy grows too slowly;

    Where no-one is denied the treatment and care they need, because the technology they rely on is outdated or inadequate;

    Where our country’s reputation is no longer shaped by the shame of food banks, but by the potential of state-of-the-art databanks, AI and supercomputer technologies.

    That is the modern Britain of hope and optimism, of ambition and fulfilment, of discovery and diversity, of opportunity and security that we seek to build.

    For that little girl in that Liverpool maternity unit, and for all of Britain’s digital generation, that change starts right now, right here, with this Labour government.

  • Jonathan Reynolds – 2024 Speech at Labour Party Conference

    Jonathan Reynolds – 2024 Speech at Labour Party Conference

    The speech made by Jonathan Reynolds, the Secretary of State for Business and Trade, on 23 September 2024.

    Conference,

    I stand here before you today,

    proud to be your Secretary of State for Business and Trade.

    Proud to be a part of the most working class Cabinet in British history.

    And proud of the pro-business, pro worker platform that was fundamental to our success at the election but which will be even more fundamental to our success in Government.

    No-one should be in any doubt, we campaigned as a pro-business party and we will govern as a pro-business party.

    Because we know that we cannot deliver for the British people, unless we turn around the low investment, low productivity, low growth economy which we have inherited.

    And we cannot do that, unless we work in partnership with business to bring about the change we need.

    And my ask of all of you, is not just to support that agenda, but to actively stand with me and this Labour Government, as we work day and night, to again give people the work, and the wages and the prosperity, and the living standards that everyone in Britain needs, and everyone in Britain deserves.

    Because Conference, the task is urgent.

    What I found, when I walked through the door of my Department on the 5 July was a mess left by Conservative ministers – who had simply ceased to govern.

    Just like the Downing Street parties they threw, they expected someone else to come in and clear up after them

    The Conservative overspending – that £22bn black hole in the Treasury reserve – put at risk things that could not be more important to the British people: money for the steel industry, compensation for postmasters.

    And vital decisions, on everything from shipbuilding to automotive, simply not taken.

    They were deferred, they were left for us to deal with.

    If people ask me for an example, of what a pro-worker, and pro-business agenda looks like:

    I point out to them that over the last decade the unions in this room have actually fought harder for British industry, than the Conservative Party did!

    Nowhere have we seen that more, than in steel.

    I’d like to thank Community, and GMB, and Unite, for working with me to improve the deal for the workforce at Port Talbot.

    I’ll always be the first to say, I wish we could have done even more.

    But I can tell you working together with the unions we have done more for steel in two months, than the Conservative Party did in 14 years.

    I am always aware, of just how consequential the decisions I make are,

    That they touch the lives of a great many people.

    And understanding that, is what being a Government of service is all about.

    And we have already begun the work to deliver that change.

    Implementing our plan for small business: where previous governments talked about ending late payments – we have taken the action needed to ensure companies pay on time

    And we aren’t just tackling issues like business rates, but removing the wider barriers that speak to the heart of local economies.

    Making our high streets safe and vibrant once again including new measures to stop violence against shop workers and turning around derelict town centres.

    It means delivering on our Industrial Strategy, so we win a great share of investment in the UK of the industries that will contribute the most to our future growth.

    It means having a trade strategy, that resets our relationship with the EU whilst also building new trade opportunities around the world.

    And conference, alongside those things, we cannot deliver change without delivering our New Deal for Working People.

    Now Conference, you may have seen, the Conservative Party, they don’t like our plan to make work pay.

    And while it is ironic to hear the same people who have been asleep on the job for the last 14 years complain about other people’s working patterns.

    Didn’t we hear the same arguments against the Minimum Wage?

    So when they stand up in a few years’ time trying to claim credit for the work the Labour movement did to advance the rights of working people: don’t you let them forget what side of history they were on.

    Because we know when it comes to the Conservative Party the British public have already availed themselves of the right to switch off.

    Conference, I will always make the case that many businesses in Britain model fantastic best practice, and they invest in their workforce, whether it’s offering shared parental leave, or support for carers.

    And we are going to make Britain more competitive and more investible.

    But our mission is not just for growth, but for growth that everybody benefits from.

    So Conference, I put it to you:

    Where a person has worked, a regular number of hours for some time, they should have the right to a contract that reflects those hours.

    And where a person has worked somewhere for two years, they do deserve protection from being unfairly dismissed.

    And that most of all, where a person goes out to work, not only do they deserve to be fairly paid for that work. But what every business also needs, are customers who have some money in their pocket, some spending power, and that means, over time, moving towards a Britain where everyone earns a real living wage.

    Conference, the task ahead of us is a big one.

    It will be difficult at times.

    No one else can change this country.

    So I say let’s accept the challenge and get on with the job.

    And if you feel, the same drive, the same passion, the same energy, and most of all, the same hope, that I feel, everyday, as your Secretary of State I am telling you we can build a Britain, not just of good work and good wages, but of dignity, respect, and opportunity.

    The Britain that we have always believed in, the Britain we have always strived to build,

    Conference, together, for the first time in years, our pro-business, pro worker government gives us the chance to do exactly that.

    And I promise, as your Secretary of State, I will work every single moment I have.

    to make that happen.

    Thank you Conference.

  • Rachel Reeves – 2024 Speech at Labour Party Conference

    Rachel Reeves – 2024 Speech at Labour Party Conference

    The speech made by Rachel Reeves, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, on 23 September 2024.

    Conference, thank you.

    This time last year, I stood on this stage and I made a commitment.

    I promised that we would get Britain building again.

    Repair our NHS.

    And power growth in every part of Britain.

    Today, after fourteen wasted years, I stand here as your Chancellor of the Exchequer, ready to deliver on that commitment.

    At this conference, we welcome more than 200 new Labour MPs – members of the most diverse Parliament in our country’s history.

    Labour winning for the very first time, in sears like South-East Cornwall, the Isle of Wight, Aldershot, Banbury and Basingstoke; in Hexham, Altrincham, and the Ribble Valley.

    And Labour is back, in the service of communities that we never should have lost.

    In our port, coal, steel and mill towns. From Bolsover, Bassetlaw and Grimsby to Hartlepool, Rother Valley, Newton Aycliffe, and Bridgend.

    And Conference, in Edinburgh, in Glasgow, across the central belt and out in the Western Isles, Labour is back in Scotland too.

    So let me pay tribute to the people in this hall who made that difference.

    Those who stayed and fought through the hard years.

    Those who came back to our party under Keir’s leadership.

    And those who joined us for the first time.

    You helped change our party and you gave us this priceless chance to change our country for the better.

    To all of you – a huge thank you.

    In this hall one year ago, I stated my intention.

    That the next time I addressed you, I would do so as the first female Chancellor of the Exchequer.

    Today, Conference, you can consider that a promise fulfilled.

    Eight hundred years of the post of Chancellor of the Exchequer has existed.

    Every one, a man.

    On the fifth of July this year, we made history.

    Every woman watching this will know no matter how high you climb, how hard you work, how qualified you are, there will always be moments when you are reminded some people still do not believe a woman can get the job done.

    But millions of women in our party, in our trade unions and in every walk of life, beat back those doubts.

    I’m here today because I worked hard, yes.

    But most of all, I’m here because of the efforts of those who went before me.

    Trailblazing women like Jennie Lee, Barbara Castle, and our friend, our inspiration, Harriet Harman.

    And I’m here because of thousands of women, many of you in the hall today, who broke down barriers and defeated low expectations to pave the way for the rest of us.

    I am a Labour Chancellor because of that collective endeavour.

    I am the first woman Chancellor because of that collective endeavour.

    And that collective endeavour does not stop here.

    It falls to me, and to our generation of Labour women, to follow in the footsteps of those who went before us. To write the work of all women back into our economic story. To show to our daughters and our granddaughters that they need place no ceiling on their ambitions.

    That is the Britain we’re building.

    That is the Britain that I believe in.

    But Conference, why is it that the British people put their trust in us for the first time in five general elections?

    It is because, thanks to Keir’s leadership, we left no stone unturned to show that Labour is the party of economic responsibility and the party of working people.

    We were elected because, for the first time in almost two decades, people looked at us – looked at me – and decided that Labour could be trusted with their money.

    That is more than a political choice, or a single line in any manifesto.

    It is about our values.

    Because we saw what happened two years ago what happens when governments play fast and loose with the public finances: when the prices of food, energy and housing soar, it is working people with mortgages, rent and bills to pay who suffer the consequences.

    I will not take that risk.

    I will repay the trust that people put in us.

    Trust is hard earned – and is easily squandered.

    Just ask the Conservatives.

    They paid the price for their incompetence, their dishonesty, their rule breaking.

    We’ve had years of division and decline that left working people worse off, not just in the heaviest defeat in their party’s history, but the heaviest defeat for any governing party in British history.

    And Conference I can tell you – today I am so proud that our women’s Parliamentary Labour Party is bigger than the entire Conservative parliamentary party.

    And so, where will the Conservative Party go next?

    What a clash of the titans their leadership contest has become.

    The former Home Secretary who called the Rwanda scheme “batshit” and, of course, is now pledging to bring it back.

    The former Immigration Minister, who found himself too right-wing to work with Suella Braverman.

    The “moderate” candidate, the former Security Minister, who says he “acts on his principles” – previously demonstrated by backing Liz Truss to be Prime Minister.

    And then there’s the former Business Secretary who claims she “became working class” at the age of sixteen.

    But Conference, the Tories’ failure was not just because they were incompetent or deluded.

    Not just because they put party before country – though, of course, both of those are true.

    It is because they do not understand the world as it is today.

    They do not understand the premium on economic stability, in an uncertain world.

    They do not understand that, in our new age of insecurity, government cannot just get out of the way and leave markets to their own devices.

    Instead, the Tories cling to the discredited trickle-down and trickle-out dogma that a strong economy can be built through the contribution of just a few people, a few parts of the country, or a few industries.

    Their ideas choked off investment, opened wide gaps between different parts of the country, and it suffocated growth and living standards.

    We will not make those mistakes.

    Yet, when their ideas were found wanting, what did they do? They doubled down.

    Never forget what the Conservatives did: two years ago today, in their clamour to cut taxes for the richest, they crashed the economy, sent mortgages spiraling, and put pensions in peril.

    You will hear many things at their conference next week.

    But you won’t hear an apology.

    No apology for the cost of your mortgage.

    No apology for crumbling classrooms and rising waiting lists.

    No apology for mismanaging our public finances, degrading our institutions, and crashing our global standing.

    They do not care.

    And they have learned nothing.

    So be in no doubt, given the chance, they will try and do it all over again.

    Only we, only the Labour Party, can stop them.

    So we must have no complacency.

    A relentless focus on the priorities of the British people.

    And iron discipline.

    We cannot give them that chance.

    So let’s resolve together today that we will not give them that chance.

    Now, I know that you are impatient for change. I am too.

    But Conference, because of that legacy left by the Conservatives, the road ahead is steeper and harder than we expected.

    You don’t need to take my word for it.

    Figures released only on Friday showed another month of record borrowing.

    Debt at one hundred percent of GDP.

    That is the inheritance that they left, in black and white.

    In my first weeks at the Treasury, the true extent of the Tories’ irresponsibility was revealed to me: £22 billion of spending plans, this year, that the previous government did not disclose.

    Which they had no plan to pay for and which they had covered up from Parliament and from the British people.

    Departments had been allocated money which they were spending, but which did not exist.

    The money was not there.

    A £22 billion black hole – which, if not tackled now, will pose risks for years to come.

    That included more than £6 billion overspend on the asylum system – including their failed Rwanda policy.

    Almost £3 billion on rail projects.

    The nation’s reserve – intended for genuine emergencies – set to be spent three times over only three months into the financial year.

    They were reckless.

    They were irresponsible.

    And they acted in that way, not because they believed it was right for our country – but because they believed it might rescue their party from defeat.

    They promised solutions that they knew could never be paid for.

    Roads that would never be built.

    Public transport that would never arrive.

    And hospitals that would never treat a single patient.

    They showed no regard for ordinary, working people.

    And they did not care about the consequences.

    It was made clear to me that failure to act swiftly could undermine the UK’s fiscal position – with implications for public debt, mortgages and prices.

    And so, I took action to make the in-year savings necessary.

    We are reviewing plans for new hospitals, promised by the Conservatives, but which they did not budget for.

    We cancelled road and rail projects, promised by the Conservatives, but which they did not budget for.

    And I made the choice to means test the winter fuel payment, so that it is only targetted at those most in need.

    I know that not everyone – in this hall, or in the country – will agree with every decision I make.

    But I will not duck those decisions. Not for political expediency. Not for personal advantage.

    Faced with that £22 billion black hole that the Conservatives left this year and with the triple lock ensuring that the state pension will rise by an estimated £1,700 over the course of this Parliament, I judged it the right decision in the circumstances we inherited.

    I did not take those decisions lightly.

    I will never take the responsibilities of this office lightly.

    And I will never take lightly the trust of voters who have been burned too often by politicians who put ideology, party and self-interest over the interests of the British people.

    And so, we must deal with another Tory legacy.

    Conference, I know how hard people work for their money.

    Taxpayers’ money should be spent with the same care with which working people spend their own money.

    And so, one year ago, I promised you that this Labour government would wage a war on Tory waste.

    It has begun.

    I pledged that we would aim to halve government consultancy spend – and we have already announced savings this year.

    I pledged that we would cut down on the excesses of Tory ministers’ private air travel – and we have already cancelled the £40m contract for Rishi Sunak’s VIP helicopter.

    And I pledged that we would act on the carnival of waste and fraud that took place during the COVID pandemic.

    Billions of pounds of public money handed out to friends and donors of the Conservative Party.

    Billions more defrauded from the taxpayer.

    More than a billion pounds spent on PPE that either did not arrive or was not fit for purpose.

    All under the cover of the greatest crisis of my lifetime.

    On entering government, we found £674 million of contracts in dispute, where we inherited a recommendation from the previous government that any attempt to reclaim that money should be abandoned.

    The Tories simply did not care.

    But Labour will not stand for it.

    I will not stand for it.

    So: as I promised, we are appointing a Covid Corruption Commissioner.

    It could not be more urgent.

    And I have put a block on any contract being abandoned or waived until it has been independently assessed by that Commissioner.

    I won’t turn a blind eye to rip-off artists and fraudsters.

    I won’t turn a blind eye to those who used a national emergency to line their own pockets.

    I won’t let them get away with it.

    That money belongs in our police, it belongs in our health service, and it belongs in our schools.

    And Conference, we want that money back.

    Next month, I will deliver the first budget of this Labour government.

    The first Labour budget in fourteen years.

    And because I know how much damage has been done in those fourteen years, let me say one thing straight up: there will be no return to austerity.

    Conservative austerity was a destructive choice for our public services – and for investment and growth too.

    Yes, we must deal with the Tory legacy – and that means tough decisions.

    But I won’t let that dim our ambition for Britain.

    So, it will be a budget with real ambition.

    A budget to fix the foundations.

    A budget to deliver the change that we promised.

    A budget to rebuild Britain.

    And my budget will keep our manifesto commitments.

    Every choice we make will be within a framework of economic and fiscal stability.  You’d expect nothing less.

    We said we would not increase taxes on working people, which is why we will not increase the basic, higher or additional rates of income tax, national insurance, or VAT.

    And we will cap corporation tax at its current level for the duration of this Parliament.

    Conference, as promised, we will extend the Energy and Profits Levy on oil and gas producers to invest in homegrown energy here in Britain.

    We will end the non-dom tax loopholes.

    And we will crack down on tax avoidance and tax evasion.

    That is the difference that a Labour government will make.

    We are already delivering on that last promise to cut down on tax avoidance and tax evasion.

    Strengthening the powers of HMRC, under the leadership of the Exchequer Secretary James Murray and recruiting 5,000 new tax compliance officers.

    Because this government will not sit back and indulge the minority who avoid paying the taxes that they owe.

    And Conference, we will enact another manifesto commitment.

    Because I know every parent has aspiration for their children. And I know the strain that our state schools have been under.

    This government will introduce VAT on private school fees, to invest in our state schools.

    It is the fair choice, the responsible choice, the Labour choice, to support the 94 percent of children in state schools.

    That is the Britain we’re building.

    That is the Britain that I believe in.

    This budget will be a budget for economic growth.

    It will be a budget for investment.

    Because today we find ourselves at the very bottom of the G7 league table for economy-wide investment as a share of our GDP.

    And we must change that.

    Conference, I believe in a better Britain.

    A Britain of opportunity, fairness, and enterprise.

    I know that country has sometimes felt far off in recent years.

    As our growth, our productivity and family finances fall behind.

    But it doesn’t have to be that way.

    The British capacity for inventiveness, enterprise and old-fashioned hard work has not gone away.

    So believe me when I say – my optimism for Britain burns brighter than ever.

    My ambition knows no limits.

    Because I can see the prize on offer, if we make the right choices now.

    Stability is the crucial foundation on which all our ambitions will be built.

    The essential precondition for business to invest with confidence and for families to plan for the future.

    The Liz Truss experiment showed us that any plan for growth without stability leads to ruin.

    So we will make the choices necessary to secure our public finances and fix the foundations for lasting growth.

    Stability, paired with reform, will forge the conditions for businesses to invest and for consumers to spend with confidence.

    Growth is the challenge.

    And investment is the solution.

    Investment in new industries, new technologies, and new infrastructure.

    Let me put what we are doing into some perspective.

    If the UK economy had grown at just the average rate of other OECD economies under the Tories, our economy would be £140 billion larger today.

    That would have provided an extra £58 billion to invest in our public services without raising a single tax rate by a single penny.

    Revenue to invest in our schools, our hospitals, our police, and all our public services.

    And that’s not the limit of my ambitions.

    Because, with growth, we will create jobs that pay enough to raise a family on – for you and your children.

    Put real money in the pockets of working people.

    And wealth in all of our communities, that flows into vibrant high streets.

    This is how we’ll make Britain the best place to start and grow a business – whatever background you come from, wherever you grew up.

    Things built to last, and exported around the world are made here in Britain.

    This is how we’ll achieve what we promised – the five missions that will comprise a decade of national renewal.

    That is the Britain we’re building.

    That is the Britain that I believe in.

    During the election campaign, I visited businesses all over Britain.

    From historic brands seizing the opportunities of the future, to innovative start-ups at the cutting edge, to high street businesses breathing new life into their local communities.

    Our world-leading universities, creative industries, life sciences, tech companies and professional services.

    I see immense potential, everywhere I go.

    But for every success story, there is potential held back.

    Entrepreneurs struggling to access finance.

    High street businesses punished by our outdated system of business rates.

    Builders frustrated by a planning system which hands power to the blockers.

    Exporters tied up in red tape by a failed Brexit deal.

    Too many people out of work through chronic illness, waiting for treatment, or without the skills, training and security they need to fulfil their potential.

    And a welfare state that does not always incentivise work.

    Brilliant young people shut out of the opportunities they deserve.

    And whole industries held back by underinvestment or the lack of a real strategy for their future.

    So we must learn the lesson from the Tories’ failure.

    We must build for growth, in a changed world.

    In this age of insecurity, growth requires stability but not stability alone.

    It requires active government.

    And it requires the contribution of people in every part of Britain, not just a few.

    Where there are vested interests, outdated practices or institutional barriers obstructing productive investment – we will confront them head on.

    Where active government is called for, this government will act.

    And Conference, it is time that the Treasury moved on from just counting the costs of investments, to recognising the benefits too.

    So we are calling time on the ideas of the past.

    Calling time on the days when government stood back, left crucial sectors to fend for themselves, and turned a blind eye to where things are made and who makes them.

    The era of trickle-down, trickle-out economics is over.

    And so, I can announce that next month, alongside the Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds, we will publish our plans for a new industrial strategy for Britain.

    A strategy for driving and shaping long-term growth in our manufacturing and service sectors.

    A strategy to unlock investment, create jobs and deliver prosperity.

    A strategy to help break down barriers to regional growth, speed ahead to net zero and clean power by 2030, and build prosperity on strong and secure foundations.

    Because when I said that this Labour Party is proudly pro-business and proudly pro-worker – I meant it.

    This mission – for investment, for growth, for jobs – is why in a few weeks’ time, this government will be hosting a major international investment summit bringing together hundreds of business leaders, to send a simple message.

    That after years of instability and uncertainty, Britain is open for business once again.

    And this mission is why we will reform our pensions system; overhaul business rates; give power to our mayors and regional leaders; deliver a plan to get waiting lists down and people back to work; and forge a closer relationship with our neighbours in the European Union, while pursuing trade deals to open up new markets too.

    It’s why we launched a new National Wealth Fund, to invest in new and growing industries right across Britain.

    And it is why Angela Rayner and I have wasted no time in ripping out the blockages in our planning system so we can get Britain building again.

    You know, within 72 hours of taking office, we did more to unblock the planning system than the Conservatives did in fourteen years – including an end to the senseless Tory ban on onshore wind.

    And conference, we won’t stop there.

    Onshore wind to bring down your energy bills.

    New data centres, for good jobs in the industries of the future.

    And housing – for the decent home that every family deserves.

    That is the Britain we’re building.

    That is the Britain that I believe in.

    If you want to start or grow a business.

    If you want to export overseas.

    If you want to build in Britain but fear local opposition and delay.

    If you have felt the quiet desperation of jobs, opportunity and investment slipping away.

    Then be assured: your ambitions, your hopes, your future will not be held back any longer.

    I have promised this hall before that what you will see, in your town, in your city, is a sight we have not seen often enough in our country.

    Shovels in the ground.

    Cranes in the sky.

    The sounds and the sights of the future arriving.

    We will make that a reality.

    Jobs in the automotive industry of the future in the industrial heartland of the West Midlands.

    Jobs in life sciences, across the North West.

    Clean technology across South Yorkshire.

    A thriving gaming industry in Dundee.

    And jobs in carbon capture and storage, on Teesside, Humberside, and right here on Merseyside too.

    Wealth created, and wealth shared, in every part of Britain.

    That is the prize.

    That is the Britain we’re building.

    That is the Britain that I believe in.

    And Conference, because growth must be built by the many, its proceeds must be felt by the many too.

    And because of the indignity and insecurity that stems from the broken link between hard work and fair reward, we will deliver on another promise: a new deal for working people.

    With a ban on exploitative zero hour contracts; an end to fire and rehire; and a minimum wage which takes into account the real cost of living.

    So, at last, we will have a genuine living wage in our country.

    For dignity. For security. For growth.

    This Labour government will make work pay.

    That is the Britain we’re building.

    That is the Britain that I believe in.

    Within weeks of entering office, we faced another choice.

    We could accept the independent pay review bodies’ recommendations and give public sector workers their first above inflation pay rise in fourteen years.

    Or we could allow further industrial disruption to wreak havoc on our public services.

    Patients having hospital appointments cancelled.

    Parents unable to send their children to school.

    Key workers – the men and women who kept us safe during the pandemic – forced to pay the price for a crisis that they did not create.

    The Conservatives gave no guidance to the pay review bodies on affordability, nor did they budget for the recommendations they offered.

    And the Conservatives will deny that this was a choice that had to be made at all.

    They will claim that it was a viable strategy to let industrial action continue, to let a crisis in recruitment and retention spiral and let public services deteriorate yet further.

    That was not a choice I was willing to make.

    And it was not a choice that was in the national interest either.

    So, I am proud. I am proud to stand here as the first Chancellor in fourteen years to have delivered a meaningful, real pay rise to millions of public sector workers.

    We made that choice. We made that choice not just because public sector workers needed that pay rise.

    But because it was the right choice for parents, patients and for the British public.

    The right choice for recruitment and retention.

    And it was the right choice for our country.

    If the Conservative Party, if they want a fight about this.

    If they want to argue we should have ignored the independent pay review bodies.

    That public sector workers’ pay should fall further behind the cost of living.

    That ordinary families should pay the price of industrial action.

    If the Conservatives Party want a fight about who can be trusted to make the right choices for our public services and those who use them.

    Then I say bring it on.

    Public services that we can be proud of, once again with a Labour government.

    That is the Britain we’re building.

    And that is the Britain that I believe in.

    Let me tell you where I’m coming from.

    My mum and dad were primary school teachers.

    And I’m really proud of that.

    My mum was a special needs teacher at my school.

    And my dad was a headteacher at another local primary.

    I know how hard my parents worked.

    How dedicated they were.

    The long hours they both put in – my sister Ellie and I playing in my dad’s office while he worked late.

    And they had to do so in the face of a Conservative government that, in its every action, showed it didn’t care about kids in schools like theirs.

    Ordinary, comprehensive schools like the one I went to and the kids I grew up with.

    My mum and dad lived their values and they taught me the value of public service.

    Of hard work.

    Of giving something back to the community.

    I joined this party because of three words spoken in a conference hall in Blackpool twenty eight years ago: education, education, education.

    I joined this party because I believe that strong public services are the backbone of any decent society.

    Because I believe that people should rise and fall on their own merit, not on the circumstances of their birth.

    And because I believe that we do not have to choose between a fair society and a strong economy.

    I don’t want kids to succeed ‘against all odds’.

    I want them to succeed because they deserve it.

    Because the odds aren’t stacked against them.

    That’s the Britain that I want to live in – just like every other parent who wants the best for their kids.

    So I will judge my time in office a success if I know that at the end of it there are working-class kids from ordinary backgrounds who lead richer lives, their horizons expanded, and able to achieve and thrive in Britain today.

    That starts by taking the first steps to delivering on another manifesto commitment: our promise, led by the work of our Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson, to introduce free breakfast clubs in every primary school across England.

    Today I can announce that that will start in hundreds of schools for primary school-aged pupils from this April, ahead of the national rollout.

    An investment in our young people.

    An investment in reducing child poverty.

    An investment in our economy.

    And an investment so that, in years to come, we can proudly say that we left behind a Britain where the next generation has a chance to do better than those who came before it.

    Conference – that is the Britain we’re building.

    That is the Britain that I believe in.

    The work of change is only just beginning.

    And the stakes are high.

    Trust is a fragile thing.

    And we’ve seen the consequences when mainstream politics comes up short.

    It falls to us to show that politics can be a force for positive change.

    Not through words, but through action.

    Through progress towards that Britain of opportunity, fairness and enterprise.

    That is our task.

    That is my task.

    It comes with a great weight of responsibility.

    I embrace it.

    It will mean hard work.

    I am ready for it.

    The British people put their trust in us.

    And we will repay it.

    And when someone asks you – does this government represent me?

    When they ask – whose side are they on?

    You can tell them: when you work hard, Labour will make sure you get your fair reward.

    When barriers obstruct opportunity and investment is constricted, Labour will tear down those barriers.

    When working people have paid the price for the Tory chaos, while waste spirals and tax is avoided, Labour will act.

    And when the national interest demands hard choices, Labour will not duck them.

    We will make fair choices.

    For decent public services and the people who rely on them.

    For investment and opportunity in every part of Britain.

    For an end to the naysaying, the division, the defeatism.

    An end to the low investment that feeds decline.

    And an end to easy answers, the empty promises, and the Tory stagnation.

    Conference, you can tell them that we stand – that we will always stand – with working people.

    We changed our party.

    Let us now change our country.

    This is our moment.

    Our chance to show that politics can make a difference.

    That Britain’s best days lie ahead.

    That our families, our communities, our country need not look on while the future is built somewhere else.

    That we can, and we will, make our own future here.

    A Britain trading, competing, and leading in a changed world.

    A Britain founded on the talent and the effort of working people.

    That is the Britain we’re building.

    That is the Britain I believe in.

    Together, let’s go and build it.

    Thank you.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Statement by the Secretary of State on the official signing of Derry-Londonderry and Strabane City Region City Deal [September 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Statement by the Secretary of State on the official signing of Derry-Londonderry and Strabane City Region City Deal [September 2024]

    The press release issued by the Northern Ireland Office on 18 September 2024.

    The Secretary of State for Northern Ireland today signed the financial deal for Derry-Londonderry and Strabane City region, alongside Northern Ireland’s Executive Ministers.

    Speaking after the official signing of Derry-Londonderry and Strabane City Region City Deal, Secretary of State for Northern Ireland Hilary Benn said:

    I am delighted that the Derry-Londonderry and Strabane City Region City Deal is proceeding as planned, and proud to sign the deal on behalf of the UK Government.

    It’s going to provide support to so many important initiatives which will positively impact the lives of local people, including the regeneration of the waterfront in Derry, and of Strabane town centre.

    The digital and innovation projects which the UK Government is investing in through this deal will deliver a fantastic economic boost and opportunities for residents of the entire North West region.

    Exciting projects such as the £39 million new combined Cognitive Analytics and Digital Robotics Centre (CADRC), will deliver cutting-edge research and innovation.

    A new School of Medicine/ Personalised Medicine Centre will develop research capabilities at Ulster University’s Magee Campus, complemented by educational facilities at Altnagelvin Hospital campus.

    I congratulate everyone involved for their hard work and dedication over many years to reach this important milestone. I look forward to seeing the positive impact this investment will have on local people and businesses.

    Notes to editors:

    For the full Derry-Londonderry City and Strabane press release click here.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Russia’s illegal war continues to be a military disaster – UK statement to the OSCE [September 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Russia’s illegal war continues to be a military disaster – UK statement to the OSCE [September 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 18 September 2024.

    UK military advisor, Nicholas Aucott, says Russia’s illegal war suffers further setbacks as casualties mount, and it loses its first submarine in combat since the second world war.

    Thank you, Mr Chair. As we meet for the first regular session of this trimester, I want to reflect on the current military situation regarding Russia’s illegal war of aggression in Ukraine. It is now 2 years and 212 days since Russia conducted its full-scale invasion, a military action which Russia envisaged would be over in a matter of days. In that context, the current predicament can be construed as nothing less than a military disaster for the Kremlin.

    Since we last convened in a regular FSC session, Ukraine now controls up to 900 square kilometres of Russian territory in the Kursk Oblast. Ukraine has a clear right of self-defence against Russia’s illegal, unprovoked and barbaric invasion, and its actions are demonstrative of the ability of Ukraine’s armed forces to achieve strategic surprise and expose Russian weaknesses.

    At the military level, Ukraine’s effective use of manoeuvre warfare stands in stark contrast to Russia’s ‘meat grinder’ tactics. Russian casualties averaged 1187 a day in August. Contrast this to the daily rate of 544 Russian casualties in August last year, and 236 for the same month in 2022 and it paints a bleak picture for Russia’s military. Even more starkly, Russia has now lost more than 610,000 casualties (killed and wounded) in the prosecution of its illegal campaign.

    In the maritime domain, the campaign is faring little better for Russia. Despite having a considerably smaller maritime component, Ukraine has pushed much of the Russian navy eastwards from Crimea. Ukraine has damaged or destroyed a quarter of the Russian black sea fleet. This includes the destruction of the ‘Rostov-on-Don’, a $300M Russian submarine which was lost to Ukrainian action on 3 August, marking the first combat loss of a Russian submarine since the second world war. As in the land domain, this loss is a stunning Russian military failure.

    Russia’s illegal campaign was instigated without justification. This forum met repeatedly, prior to the full-scale invasion, in an effort to avert this deliberate act of aggression. As expected, the consequences of these actions have been a tragedy, but perhaps less expected, for none more so than Russia itself.

    Russia’s response so far has been to double down. It has turned to Iran and North Korea for the provision of weaponry as its own economy adopts a war footing, increasingly twisting it out of shape. Russia’s continued negotiation of deals for significant quantities of weapons from DPRK violates many UN Security Council resolutions, including ones that Russia itself voted for. Russia has also now procured ballistic missiles from Iran for the first time, representing a significant escalation that will only increase the suffering of Ukrainian civilians. Russia continues to issue threats, constructing a false narrative against NATO and the EU to suggest they are in some way responsible for Russia’s own illegal choices. Nobody compelled Russia to start this war and most participating states in this forum went to extraordinary efforts to try and prevent such a catastrophic course of action.

    If Russia wants peace, there is a simple way to end this ongoing pattern of destruction. Russia must cease hostilities in Ukraine and remove its forces from Ukraine’s internationally recognised territory. The United Kingdom, alongside its partners, will continue in its enduring support for Ukraine’s independence, sovereignty and territorial integrity. Thank you.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Chancellor: “Everyone can do something for women’s equality” [September 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Chancellor: “Everyone can do something for women’s equality” [September 2024]

    The press release issued by HM Treasury on 18 September 2024.

    Rachel Reeves leads government backing of the Invest in Women Taskforce, which aims to create one of the world’s largest investment funding pools aimed solely at female founders.

    • Celebration of female business leaders’ contributions to the economy at a reception in No.11 Downing Street, where Chancellor Reeves will set out her agenda for women in the economy
    • New data shows that venture capital fund managers who have signed up to the government’s Investing in Women Code are more likely to invest in female founders

    Female business founders to get the Chancellor’s backing as Rachel Reeves puts her weight behind the Invest in Women Taskforce – which aims to create one of the world’s largest investment funding pools for female founders – as she pushes forwards the government’s mission to grow the economy.

    The Invest in Women Taskforce is the successor to the Rose Review, an independent review of female entrepreneurship which found that a £250 billion boost could be added to the UK economy if women started and scaled their businesses at the same rate as men.

    Support for women and their contribution to the economy is a personal priority for Reeves as Britain’s first female Chancellor. The core aim of the Taskforce is to establish a funding pool of more than £250 million for female-founded businesses through private capital, making it one of the world’s largest investment funding pools aimed solely at female founders. As well as backing the Invest in Women Taskforce, the Chancellor will take an active role in steering its priorities and objectives as well as attending Taskforce meetings and events.

    To mark this and celebrate the key role played by female business leaders in all parts of the economy, on International Equal Pay Day, the Chancellor – in partnership with women’s rights charity the Fawcett Society – is hosting a reception in No.11 Downing Street this evening.

    At the evening reception, Chancellor Reeves will convene a group of female business leaders from across Britain’s foremost growth industries, such as financial services and technology as well as the creative sector.

    She will set out their importance to the government’s number one priority mission for growth and champion their part in its delivery. She also will set out her agenda for women in the economy, vowing to improve the economic opportunities available to women and close the gender pay gap once and for all. That includes strengthening rights at work and investing in childcare.

    Rachel Reeves, Chancellor of the Exchequer, said:

    It is a huge responsibility to sit in the Treasury as the first female Chancellor of the Exchequer and be able to use my position to improve life for women across the UK – one that I don’t take lightly.

    That includes ending the gender pay gap, strengthening rights at work and investing in childcare. And by backing the Invest in Women Taskforce we can establish one of the world’s largest dedicated investment funding pools for female-powered businesses, helping grow our economy.

    This event gathers together some very powerful women but the truth is, everyone can do something for women’s equality – whether that’s supporting the women and girls in their lives with their ambitions or making their workplace a fairer playing field.

    With 5.5 million businesses driving the UK economy, entrepreneurship is the lifeblood of the UK’s economic growth. While women make up over 50% of the population, they represent only 21% of business owners, with less than 6% of active equity backed companies founded by women. The Invest in Women Taskforce, alongside other government initiatives including the Women in Finance Charter which encourages female representation in financial services, aims to change this.

    The event comes ahead of the International Investment Summit next month, at which the Chancellor is working to ensure there is strong female representation both in terms of agenda and attendance.

    The Department for Business and Trade has also published its annual Investing in Women Code report today, which finds that venture capital fund managers who have signed up to the Code are more likely to invest in female founders.

    The report also shows that the 250 signatories of the Code are leading the way in addressing the finance gap between male and female entrepreneurs. 32% of all venture capital deals made by Investing in Women Code signatories were in female-founded companies last year, compared to the market average of 28%, revealed in the latest report published today. This is the fourth year in a row that Code signatories have outperformed the wider market.

    The Investing in Women Code was founded in 2019 as a landmark government-led initiative in response to the Rose Review’s findings that a lack of funding was one of the most significant barriers to women seeking to effectively scale a business. It is a commitment from finance providers to female founders, with signatories now including the British Business Bank, British Private Equity & Venture Capital Association (BVCA), UK Business Angels Association (UKBAA), UK Finance, and Responsible Finance. Investing in Women Code signatories account for 40% of UK Business Angels Association angel investment groups and 47% of venture capital deals.
  • PRESS RELEASE : Lockdown generation consigned to the ‘scrapheap’ will get life-changing support into work, vows Minister [September 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Lockdown generation consigned to the ‘scrapheap’ will get life-changing support into work, vows Minister [September 2024]

    The press release issued by the Department for Work and Pensions on 18 September 2024.

    The ‘lockdown generation’ who’ve been consigned to the ‘scrapheap’ will get life-changing support through major reforms to get Britain working again, the Minister for Employment has vowed in her first speech since taking office.

    • Record number of young people out of work due to long-term sickness – up 29% since the pandemic – and nearly 900,000 not in education, work, or training.
    • We must move away from the obsession with welfare and boost employment with fundamental change, says Minister for Employment.
    • Get Britain Working White Paper will transform workplaces and help drive government’s national mission for growth.

    These changes will form a key part of the government’s mission to kickstart growth and spread prosperity and opportunity across the country, with the Prime Minister stating he wants the UK to have the highest sustained growth in the G7.

    Speaking at the launch of a report by the Institute for Employment Studies, Alison McGovern MP pledged to ‘turn the page’ on years of failure, saying there has been too much focus on welfare and social security and not enough on helping people into work – leaving a generation of young people abandoned in a broken labour market.

    She said the employment challenges the country faces now are similar to the mass unemployment of the past – with 2.8 million people out of work sick and over nine million people economically inactive – neither in work nor looking for work.

    Nearly 900,000 young people are not in education, employment, or training – up 74,000 on the year – while latest figures from the ONS show around 600,000 16-24-year-olds are unemployed, 63,000 more than pre pandemic.

    The sickness crisis amongst 16-24-year-olds has also worsened with a 29% increase in the number who are inactive and long-term sick – up from 184,000 before the pandemic to 237,000 in the most recent data, a record high.

    Minister for Employment, Alison McGovern said:

    The lockdown generation has been failed – consigned to the scrapheap because they have been denied the support and opportunities to find work, get into work, and get on at work.

    It’s truly shocking that we have businesses crying out for staff at the same time there are queues round the block for foodbanks – a dire situation that we’re determined to put right.

    The obsession with benefits management must end if we’re to bring about the change the country is crying out for, and that’s why we have a plan to get Britain working again.

    We’re going to set-up a Youth Guarantee to transform the lives of young people by providing work, apprenticeships and skills training to everyone who needs it.

    That is how we will deliver on our mission for growth across the country and ensure future generations are never abandoned by their government again.

    The IES report describes the UK’s employment service as ‘the least well-used in Europe’, arguing it often acts more as an extension of the benefit system. The organisation has called for a ‘clearer separation between employment support and social security delivery’.

    This comes as Minister McGovern set out plans to make a fundamental shift to active labour market policies that break down barriers to opportunity, tackle the root causes of inactivity and help deliver the Government’s ambition to reach an 80% employment rate.

    The government has taken immediate action to transform Britain’s workforce through Skills England, while plans to cut NHS waiting times will get Britain back to health and back to work.

    A Get Britain Working Again White Paper, to be set out in the Autumn, will outline plans to overhaul jobcentres, deliver a youth guarantee, and devolve powers to Mayors and local areas to deliver work, health, and skills plans.

    Additional Information

  • PRESS RELEASE : State-of-the-art armoured vehicle fleet supported under new contract [September 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : State-of-the-art armoured vehicle fleet supported under new contract [September 2024]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Defence on 18 September 2024.

    Thousands of UK military land vehicles will be maintained under a new £71 million contract, supporting the government’s growth mission by creating hundreds of jobs.

    The contract award to NP Aerospace was announced during the British Army’s Defence Vehicle Dynamic (DVD) event taking place at the vehicle testing grounds at Millbrook.

    Called the Conventional Vehicle Systems Spares and Post Design Services (CVSSP), the contract will be for spares and post design services for a range of legacy utility and combat vehicles and ancillary equipment, helping to create and sustain around 100 skilled jobs in Coventry.

    The contract will help to extend the life of the entire Land Rover fleet; Pinzgauer fleet; protected Land Rover; RWMIK and the Lightweight Trailer fleet. This will deliver greater value for money and fill the gaps of new vehicle programmes being delivered, maintaining capability in the interim.

    The contract will help to maintain a fleet of more than 15,000 land vehicles for the next 4 years by consolidating former individual contracts, providing a new single point of contact. The CVSSP contract will ensure that vehicle fleet availability is maintained at the required levels to meet operational and training needs.

    Minister for Defence Procurement and Industry, Maria Eagle, said:

    We will deliver a state-of-the-art combat vehicle fleet, ensuring our soldiers are equipped with cutting-edge firepower, protection, and mobility.

    This new contract will help to secure the future of these crucial capabilities, streamlining the processes involved in repairs and upgrades, while boosting UK economic growth at the same time.

    Also at DVD, the British Army’s future fleet of modern armoured vehicles – Ajax, Boxer and Challenger 3 – have been pictured together side-by-side for the first time. With more than 1,300 of the vehicles due for delivery before the end of the decade, they will provide world-leading reconnaissance, secured armoured transport, and the UK’s most lethal ever tank.

    The three types of armoured vehicles on display today will make up the Brigade Combat Teams of the future, providing the British Army with enhanced fighting power.

    With more than £11 billion investment, the pipeline of new armoured fighting vehicles is creating jobs, with Boxer alone protecting 400 jobs in the West Midlands, North East Wales and sustaining up to 1,000 nationally.

    Brigadier Matt Wilkinson from the Vehicle Support Team at Defence, Equipment and Support, said:

    We have a long-standing relationship with NP Aerospace, and I’m delighted that we are able to continue this partnership. Not only does it provide the best possible service to the Armed Forces, but it also aligns with the MOD’s future Land Industrial Strategy initiatives, including an evolution to Land Integrated Operating Services.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Protection zones around abortion clinics in place by October [September 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Protection zones around abortion clinics in place by October [September 2024]

    The press release issued by the Home Office on 18 September 2024.

    Safe access buffer zones will be in force around abortion clinics from 31 October to bring in stronger safeguards for women accessing services.

    Protection zones around abortion clinics will be in force from 31 October, as the government moves to bring in stronger safeguards for women accessing this vital health service.

    Safe access buffer zones will make it illegal for anyone to do anything that intentionally or recklessly influences someone’s decision to use abortion services, obstructs them, or causes harassment or distress to someone using or working at these premises. The law will apply within a 150 metre radius of the abortion service provider.

    Anyone found guilty of breaking the law will face an unlimited fine. The College of Policing and Crown Prosecution Service will publish guidance for police and prosecutors ahead of 31 October, to ensure there is clarity and consistency with the enforcement of the new offence.

    Safeguarding Minister Jess Phillips said:

    The right to access abortion services is a fundamental right for women in this country, and no one should feel unsafe when they seek to access this.

    We will not sit back and tolerate harassment, abuse and intimidation as people exercise their legal right to healthcare, which is why we have fast-tracked this measure to get it up and running without further delay.

    For too long abortion clinics have been without these vital protections, and this government is determined to do all we can do to make this country a safer place for women.

    Baroness Merron, Minister for Patient Safety, Women’s Health and Mental Health said:

    The safety and wellbeing of women accessing abortion services remains our priority. No women should feel scared or threatened when accessing these services, and it is only right they are protected from any abuse or harassment.

    This government will continue to work closely with NHS England, abortion providers and the wider sector to ensure that women have access to safe, high quality abortion services.

    The relevant zones also need to be on or next to a public highway or road, in an open space to which the public has access, or within the area of land attached to an abortion clinic, or in a location that is visible from any of those areas.

    The measure applies to any clinics and private hospitals that are approved under the Abortion Act 1967, and for any NHS hospital that has given notification in the current or previous calendar year that it has carried out abortions.

    Safe access zones were introduced through the Public Order Act 2023, following a free vote in Parliament that received cross-party support.