Tag: 2024

  • PRESS RELEASE : UK, US and Australia sign supply chain resilience pact [September 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : UK, US and Australia sign supply chain resilience pact [September 2024]

    The press release issued by the Department for Business and Trade on 11 September 2024.

    The United Kingdom, United States and Australia sign Memorandum of Understanding on Supply Chain Resilience.

    On Monday 9 September 2024, the United Kingdom, United States and Australia signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) establishing a new trilateral collaboration that will strengthen strategic cooperation and address risks to critical supply chains.

    The MoU includes the establishment of the Australia-United Kingdom-United States Supply Chain Resilience Cooperation Group to cooperate on data sharing and joint action to build resilience in priority supply chains, enhancing our mutual ability to identify and address risks, threats and disruption to our critical supply chains.

    The Group will develop an early warning pilot focused on the telecommunications supply chain, essential for our global, digitised economies. By identifying and monitoring disruption risks to the telecommunications supply chain, this pilot will enhance all three countries’ knowledge of the vulnerabilities, criticality and residual risks. It will develop procedures for sharing this information and responding cooperatively to disruptions.

    Strengthening critical supply chains is vital for ensuring the stability and resilience needed to meet the UK’s growth mission. This agreement signifies a deepening of the important and historic relationship between the UK, US, and Australia and reinforces our mutual commitment to tackling supply chains challenges.

  • PRESS RELEASE : How we’re protecting renters [September 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : How we’re protecting renters [September 2024]

    The press release issued by 10 Downing Street on 11 September 2024.

    We’re giving greater rights and protections to people renting their homes.

    New laws will ban unfair no-fault evictions and help protect tenants from discriminatory treatment and poor living conditions.

    Our Renters’ Rights Bill will put an end to bad practices, such as landlords and letting agents forcing bidding wars to drive up rents, and unreasonable mid-tenancy rent increases often used to force out tenants.

    This Bill will overhaul the private rented sector in England, with the government determined to address the insecurity and injustice that far too many renters experience, by:

    Ending no fault evictions

    More than 11 million people in England live day in, day out with the knowledge that they could be uprooted from their home with little notice and no justification.

    Our new Bill will end Section 21 ‘no fault’ evictions for new and existing tenancies, giving all private renters security and assurance.

    The Bill will give renters much greater stability – so they can build lives in their communities, and reduce the risk of homelessness.

    What does the Bill do?

    The Bill will:

    • Abolish unfair no fault evictions
    • Ban rental bidding wars
    • Ban in-tenancy rent increases written in to contracts
    • Create a new Private Rented Sector Database to help landlords and tenants
    • Abolish rental discrimination on tenants with children or those in receipt of benefits
    • Apply Awaab’s Law to the private rented sector
    • Give tenants the right to request a pet
    • Apply a Decent Homes Standard to the private rented sector for the first time
    • Support quicker, cheaper resolution when there are disputes

    End bidding wars and mid-tenancy price increases

    We will empower tenants to challenge rent increases designed to force them out by the backdoor and introduce new laws to end the practice of rental bidding wars by landlords and letting agents.

    This Bill will crack down on those who exploit the housing crisis by forcing tenants to bid for their properties. Landlords and letting agents will be legally required to publish an asking rent for their property. They will also be banned from asking for, encouraging, or accepting any bids above this price.

    It’ll also ban in-tenancy rent increases written into contracts to prevent landlords implementing too high rents mid-tenancy, often to push out the current tenants. Under these reforms, landlords will only be allowed to raise the rent once a year, and to the market rate.

    Greater rights and protection

    The Renters’ Rights Bill will make it illegal for landlords to discriminate against tenants in receipt of benefits, or with children when choosing to let their property – so no family is discriminated against and denied a home when they need it.

    It’ll also apply ‘Awaab’s Law’ to the sector, setting clear legal expectations about the timeframes within which landlords must make sure homes containing serious hazards are safe.

    The new Bill will also give tenants the right to request a pet, which landlords must consider and cannot unreasonably refuse.

    It will also apply a Decent Homes Standard to the private rented sector. This will make sure that homes are safe, secure and hazard free.

  • PRESS RELEASE : The warring parties must ensure Sudanese civilians are protected: UK explanation of vote at the UN Security Council [September 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : The warring parties must ensure Sudanese civilians are protected: UK explanation of vote at the UN Security Council [September 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 11 September 2024.

    UK explanation of vote delivered by Ambassador James Kariuki, UK Deputy Permanent Representative to the UN, following the UN Security Council vote to renew the 1591 sanctions regime on Sudan.

    President,

    We welcome the adoption of this resolution renewing the 1591 sanctions regime, and we thank the U.S. for leading us in these negotiations.

    Let me make two points.

    First, the Sudanese people have suffered from this man-made conflict for over eighteen months. Last week the UN Fact-Finding Mission reported systematic human rights abuses are being carried out by both the RSF and SAF on Sudanese civilians on a daily basis, including sexual and gender-based violence, torture, mass civilian casualties and displacement, and the destruction of critical civilian infrastructure.

    With both sides continuing to believe that the solution to this conflict will be on the battleground, we urgently call on States to refrain from enhancing either side’s fighting capability. Instead, those who have influence with the parties must use it to bring them to the negotiating table.

    We also recall the importance of today’s renewal of the arms embargo on Darfur.

    Second, President, we welcome today’s reaffirmation of the importance of the warring parties ensuring the protection of civilians. International humanitarian law is the cornerstone of our efforts to protect civilians during armed conflicts, and its principles must be rigorously upheld and enforced in Sudan.

    The UK will continue to press all parties on this matter.

  • PRESS RELEASE : UK Foreign Secretary and US Secretary of State in Kyiv in first ever joint visit, as David Lammy announces over £600 million worth of support for Ukraine [September 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : UK Foreign Secretary and US Secretary of State in Kyiv in first ever joint visit, as David Lammy announces over £600 million worth of support for Ukraine [September 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 11 September 2024.

    Foreign Secretary David Lammy is visiting Kyiv today, with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, to demonstrate Western support for Ukraine’s fight against Russian aggression.

    • Foreign Secretary David Lammy is visiting Kyiv today [11 September], with US Secretary of State, Antony Blinken, to demonstrate Western support for Ukraine’s fight against Russian aggression
    • together, they are 2 of the first to meet with new ministers
    • the UK announces at least £242 million of funding to support Ukraine in the face of relentless Russian attacks, and the deployment of $484 million of fiscal support and military equipment deliveries

    Foreign Secretary David Lammy and US Secretary of State Antony Blinken will reiterate united UK and US support for Ukraine in a joint visit to Kyiv today. This is the first ever joint visit by a UK Foreign Secretary and a US Secretary of State, highlighting the UK and US’s unshakeable resolve to support Ukraine.

    The pair were seeing first-hand the enduring resilience of Ukraine’s defence of its borders and independence and were due to meet with President Zelenskyy, and Foreign Minister Sybiha, becoming the first foreign ministers to meet with their new counterpart.

    In his first visit as Foreign Secretary, Mr Lammy will announce at least £600 million worth of support to Ukraine against Putin’s illegal invasion. The Prime Minister Keir Starmer committed to £3 billion a year of military support for Ukraine for as long as needed earlier this year.

    This confirms the £242 million announced for 2024 to 2025 for immediate humanitarian, energy and stabilisation needs as well as support to reforms, recovery and reconstruction. As Russian missile and drone attacks continue to kill civilians and destroy vital infrastructure, the commitment will ensure support to the most vulnerable in Ukraine, as well as support for longer-term economic, reconstruction and energy needs.

    The Foreign Secretary also announced the intention to deploy $484 million worth of loan guarantees for World Bank lending before the end of the year, to bolster Ukraine’s economic stability. It will support vital public services, including keeping schools and hospitals open, paying civil servants, and funding pensions. The loan guarantee, delivered by the World Bank, is the second deployment of the $3 billion package the UK committed at the Ukraine Recovery Conference in London last year.

    Foreign Secretary David Lammy said:

    The UK’s support to Ukraine is unwavering. Our commitment of over £600 million worth of support is the latest installment in our enduring support to Ukraine. This will provide vital support to Ukrainians as they continue to endure relentless Russian attacks.

    It is a privilege to be one of the first to meet my new counterparts. The bravery and resilience of the Ukrainian people is inspiring. Alongside the United States, we are committed to giving Ukraine what it needs to resist Russia’s illegal invasion. Their fight for freedom, liberty and democracy is also a fight for British security, European security, and global security. With the US, we stand firmly with Ukraine for as long as it takes.

    This year’s bilateral funding includes £100 million of humanitarian funding which will support the most vulnerable Ukrainians, including those living in communities at the frontline of relentless Russian attacks and those displaced to neighbouring countries and communities. This includes helps to evacuate, emergency responses to Russian missile attacks across Ukraine, and life-saving help for displaced persons.

    A further £20 million will double this year’s support to essential repairs and protection to the power network, restore access to vital power supplies and strengthen Ukraine’s energy infrastructure. Ongoing UK support has funded rooftop solar panels to power hospitals, back-up generators to keep the lights on, and power generation equipment in Kharkiv and Odesa. As Ukrainians continue to live through black-outs, and vital services are left without power, UK support to bolster Ukraine’s energy system will Ukraine keep the lights on.

    £40 million will fund stabilisation and early recovery, to ensure Ukraine not only wins the war, but can make a head-start on winning the peace. This funding includes vital assistance to Ukraine to resist Russian aggression, support to stabilise newly liberated territories, and funding to support work to hold those responsible to account for war crimes committed in Ukraine.

    Whilst in Kyiv the Foreign Secretary was due to attend the International Crimea Platform’s annual summit to demonstrate international unity in condemning Putin’s illegal annexation of Crimea 10 years ago. The UK and international partners are united in efforts to restore Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity.

    The Foreign Secretary will also announce the first investment into Ukraine by British International Investment (BII), the UK’s development finance institute under the G7 initiated Ukraine Investment Platform. This £30 million of support to the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD)’s Trade Facilitation Programme will support trade flows of critical goods, including food, in Ukraine. This is the first allocation of funding of the £250 million of capital to BII that the UK announced at the Ukraine Recovery Conference in London last year.

    The Defence Secretary has also today confirmed, as part of the Government’s commitment to ramp up and speed up deliveries of military support for Ukraine, that support announced in April – including air defence missiles, equipment for F16 fighter jets, AS90 self-propelled guns and spare barrels, military boats, and maritime guns – have now been delivered.

    On top of this, the Defence Secretary has today also announced that hundreds of additional air defence missiles, tens of thousands of additional artillery ammunition rounds, and more armoured vehicles will be delivered to Ukraine by the end of the year.

    Defence Secretary John Healey MP said:

    This government’s support for Ukraine is ironclad. On our second day in office I promised President Zelenskyy we would speed up UK deliveries of military aid – and we are delivering on that commitment.

    Russia’s indiscriminate attacks on Ukraine’s people and infrastructure, often far behind the front line, highlights the urgent need to continue stepping up our support to Ukraine. So I am pleased to confirm additional aid will reach Ukraine by the end of this year.

    Meeting with my Ukrainian counterpart in London last week and with 50 nations at the Ukraine Defence Contact Group in Germany, I made clear that UK support will continue for as long as it takes. We stand united in the face of Putin’s illegal war. The defence of the UK and Europe starts in Ukraine.

    John Healey made the commitment to speed up deliveries on his second day as Defence Secretary when he visited Odesa and spent the afternoon with President Zelenskyy.

    Background

    • since February 2022, the UK has provided £695 million on bilateral non-military support, alongside $2.5 billion in fiscal support (loan guarantees), which will rise to $5 billion by 2027
  • Bridget Phillipson – 2024 Speech on Fixing the Foundations of Opportunity

    Bridget Phillipson – 2024 Speech on Fixing the Foundations of Opportunity

    The speech made by Bridget Phillipson, the Secretary of State of Education, at the Carlton House Terrace in London on 10 September 2024.

    Thank you so much. I’m so pleased to be here with you today at the launch of such an important report.

    And the temptation with reports like these, the ones that deal in international comparisons, is to try and score cheap political points by doing each other down.

    But I think that’s a mistake. They are a chance for collaboration, not competition. Partnership, not rivalry.

    Educational standards, opportunity itself, is a shared global endeavour. I want countries to come together to educate our children to form, not just the citizens, but the society of tomorrow.

    And so I’d like to thank the OECD for this excellent report. And I’d also like to thank the Sutton Trust for hosting us today.

    And I know that Sir Peter Lampl – you are stepping down as chair soon.

    And I know that you’ve spent the last quarter of a century campaigning tirelessly to level the playing field where it comes to access to education and career opportunities, so that no young person is held back by their background.

    So thank you for all that you have done, Peter. I was going to wish you a happy retirement from your role, but it sounds like you’ve got lots of plans lined up and lots that you intend to achieve in the months and years to come.

    I’m an optimist. So I want to be positive, but I do have to be honest about the inheritance of a new government.

    And as data published today shows, around a third of children leaving primary school do not meet the expected standard in reading, writing and maths following assessment.

    There are pockets across our country where only every other child is leaving primary school meeting the expected standard in reading, writing and maths.

    Lurking beneath all of these separate challenges is a common denominator of distress: child poverty – the stain on our society that has seeped into the fabric of far too many families.

    One in 10 pupils in this country miss at least a meal a month because their parents can’t afford to buy food.

    Back in August I visited a sixth form college in Manchester for level 3 results day.

    And during that visit I sat down with teachers to listen to their reflections on what it is to be a teacher today.

    One told me that he had been a teacher for over a decade. But in that time his job had changed beyond all recognition.

    With more and more kids bringing out of school issues into the classroom, his role had expanded.

    The children’s need for pastoral support took up so much more of his time.

    More and more children were prevented from learning in his lessons because they were hungry, or because of other problems at home.

    Despite that teacher’s best efforts, going far beyond his job description, the life chances of those children were shrinking.

    As politicians we like to talk about our own story.

    But proud as we may be of that, too often the story of why some of us make it to stand on platforms like this today, while others never get that chance, is not one of hard work and talent.

    It’s one of luck, and all too often of bad luck.

    That’s the story for those children in that teacher’s classroom in Manchester, and thousands of other classrooms across the country.

    The ones arriving too hungry to learn.

    The ones arriving too tired to concentrate.

    The ones arriving not having done their homework because they don’t have a quiet space at home.

    Whereas others arrive ready and raring to go – and in the evenings they go back to homes where they are encouraged to continue learning, where their education is prized.

    Nowhere is the stickiness of these disparities clearer than in the persistence of poverty, infecting generation after generation.

    It takes five full generations for families in poverty just to reach average pay in the UK.

    And in today’s Britain, it’s the luck of your background, rather than how hard you work, that all too often delivers success.

    And the British people know it: three in four of adults agree that a person’s background influences their outcomes in life.

    The foundations of opportunity in Britain may be rotten.

    But aspiration – that desire to achieve and to succeed – is in rude health.

    It isn’t just the reserve of the wealthy, even if the opportunity to fulfil those aspirations remains rationed to a lucky minority.

    Working people want to know that success belongs to them, to look into the eyes of their children and grandchildren and tell them that if they work hard, they’ll be able to get on and have a good life.

    So this government is on an urgent mission to make that a reality once more…

    … an urgent mission to fix the foundations of opportunity

    … to restore the heritage of hope passed from generation to generation.

    It can be done.

    But to do it we must eradicate child poverty from our society.

    That’s why I came into politics, that’s why I’m proud to be leading the new government’s child poverty taskforce as co-chair, together with the Work and Pensions Secretary.

    Work has already begun, we held our first meeting of the taskforce last month, and we’ll publish our strategy in the spring.

    I’m glad to see that the theme of today’s report is equity in education.

    Tackling child poverty is one piece of the puzzle – and it’s a top priority for this parliament. But fixing the foundations of opportunity demands equity in education too.

    For this new government, it means high and rising standards across the length and breadth of education:

    Not for some of our children, but for all of our children

    Not in some of our schools, but in all of our schools

    Not just in London and the south east, but right across our nation

    Every village, every town, every city on the map. Every child, every young person, every adult in this country.

    And to do that we need great teachers – the ones who inspire, who guide, who shape the futures of all of their students.

    They are vital to our opportunity mission, so we’re restoring teaching as the profession of choice for the very best graduates and recruiting 6,500 new expert teachers.

    That’s why we’re giving teachers and school leaders a 5.5% pay award, starting this academic year.

    Great teachers in every classroom – that’s one way we’re fixing the foundations of opportunity.

    But our opportunity is about parents as well as children – it’s about families.

    We need to get early education and childcare right – so that all children get the very best start in life and all parents get the power to pursue their careers.

    But, as your report shows, the gap in enrolment in childcare between rich families and poor families in the UK is one of the biggest in the OECD.

    So how can we spread opportunity more widely?

    Part of the answer does lie in the childcare rollout.

    And I’m delighted that last week hundreds of thousands of working parents started receiving 15 funded hours for their young children for the first time.

    And I was pleased to confirm that the 2025 childcare commitment to increase this to 30 funded hours will go ahead.

    We have worked tirelessly this summer alongside childcare providers to deliver the promises government made, because trust in government is vital.

    That of course means being open about the scale of the challenge to roll out this commitment in full.

    It won’t be simple. It won’t be easy.

    But I will work with our parents and workforce to see it through.

    All of early years education is vital for our mission, not just childcare.

    Those first steps into education are so important for a child’s life chances.

    And the sad truth is that a significant part of the attainment gap is already baked in by the age of 5.

    But what happens next in a child’s life, what they are taught in the classroom, is vital too.

    So we are bringing together expert education leaders and staff in an expert-led review to help us deliver a cutting-edge curriculum fit for the future.

    True equity in education requires breadth and depth, and ours has been thin and shallow for too long.

    A foundation in reading, writing and maths, yes.

    Of course.

    But let’s go further. I want every child in our country to benefit from the wonders of music, sport, art and drama.

    A curriculum that reflects the issues and diversities of our society, ensuring that every child is represented.

    Never compromising on standards in the basics.

    Quite the opposite.

    That’ll be the strength with which we drive high and rising standards for all of our children.

    Those standards must be for each and every child.

    When they slip, it’s not middle-class parents who miss out – they can pay for tutors to pick up the slack.

    It’s the children without support at home who fall further behind.

    To deliver those standards in all our schools we need an accountability system that is fit for purpose.

    A system built on support, and focused on driving improvement at the earliest point.

    High standards, not high stakes.

    Broad and rich, not narrow and reductive.

    And last week I took the first steps to reform accountability. I announced the end of single headline Ofsted grades for state-funded schools, with immediate effect.

    Instead, a clearer, broader, more transparent report card approach, in place by September ‘25.

    Equity in education, from early years up to university and beyond, is the seed for opportunity in our society.

    We can’t focus just on one part of the system, one area of the country, one group of people.

    We can’t let excellence in education be the reserve of a lucky few.

    It has to be for all, for everyone, forever.

    Now I said before that I’m an optimistic person. And even given the challenge ahead, I am optimistic.

    I believe that this country’s best days lie ahead of us; that our country with its proud history can have a brighter future yet.

    September signals the end of summer, but a new beginning for education.

    The work to fix the foundations, to build a new nation of opportunity, has now begun.

    Thank you.

  • Diana Johnson – 2024 Speech at the Police Superintendents’ Conference

    Diana Johnson – 2024 Speech at the Police Superintendents’ Conference

    The speech made by Diana Johnson, the Crime and Policing Minister, in Kenilworth on 10 September 2024.

    Hello everyone and thank you for having me.

    Given this is my first time addressing your conference, I’m tempted to ask you to take that into account, particularly in the Q+A.

    But having spent much of my time before the election asking uncomfortable questions as chair of the Commons Home Affairs Committee, including to ministers and policing leaders, I guess I need to get used to the roles being reversed.

    But – seriously speaking – my time in that role gave me a window into your world. The engagement we had with police bodies, including the PSA, helped to strengthen my understanding of the realities and challenges of policing today.

    And one thing I also just wanted to let you know was that I’ve been an MP for 19 years, and one of the very best things I have ever done as a member of parliament was the Police Parliamentary scheme, where I got the opportunity to spend 24 days with my local police force, Humberside, and it gave me a real opportunity to see what was happening on a kind of day-to-day basis for police officers. And I remember doing the kind of early morning shift, and I did nights, and I went out on public order, and I went out with the dogs, and it was just fascinating. So, I’m really pleased I did that, and I have that experience now I’m a Police Minister. So I want to say as well, as the Home Secretary just did, I want to say a heartfelt thank you to all of you.

    From the most routine acts of policing to national-scale operations and painstaking investigations, you make an immeasurable contribution to our society.

    And I do also want to say a few words about the summer disorder. And as you know, it has been an incredibly busy few weeks for this government, since the general election, and the events of the summer have left us all, I think, with much to reflect upon.

    The attack in Southport rocked that community to its core and the impact was felt around the country.

    For three little girls to lose their lives is just unspeakably horrific, and my thoughts are of course with their loved ones. I cannot begin to imagine the anguish they are going through.

    I want to take the opportunity to express my sincere gratitude to every officer involved in responding to that terrible incident. They showed tremendous courage in the most difficult of circumstances, and their actions saved lives.

    We all know what came next; at a time when we should have been focused only on supporting those affected by the attack in Southport, and allowing the urgent police investigation to get under way, we instead found ourselves responding to an outbreak of widespread violent disorder.

    The various incidents around the country have been catalogued in extensive detail so I will not get into a new blow-by-blow account.

    I will simply say that the hijacking of those poor families’ grief at that time was utterly shameful…

    …as was the violence directed towards police officers working to maintain order and protect the community.

    The immediate priority was to get back control of the streets and restore order.

    That’s why the Prime Minister and Home Secretary made clear from the beginning that you had our unqualified support in taking all necessary action to quell the disorder.

    And we sent the message loud and clear that anyone involved in criminality should expect to be caught and face the consequences of their actions.

    The swiftness of the response by policing and the wider criminal justice system was fundamental to getting the situation under control and restoring order.

    As part of the national mobilisation plan coordinated by NPoCC, more than 40,000 officer shifts were worked by public order officers over that 10-day period, with over 6,600 public order officers deployed on one day alone. Rest days, as you know, were cancelled and additional hours were worked.

    The fact that arrests were being made within hours and convicted offenders behind bars facing prison time within days not only showed we were serious when we said there would be a price to pay for criminality on our streets, but it also demonstrated to the law-abiding public that this behaviour will not be tolerated.

    So, I want to echo the Home Secretary’s words of enormous thanks to everyone across policing for your tireless efforts during what was an exceptionally difficult period.

    But I also want to say this: I’m appalled that new figures revealed today show that assaults on our women and men in uniform are still far too high.

    Even preceding the violent disorder of this summer – assaults on police officers are up, with a quarter of those incidents resulting in injury.

    The Home Secretary was right to call this a ‘stain on our society’ and to say that it will not be tolerated.

    So, we recognise your service and your sacrifice.

    Whether it’s responding to violent disorder, running towards danger, attending emergencies or investigating serious crimes, we know that the heroic daily work of the police exerts a huge strain on officers and their families.

    That’s why we will always support you, as you support your teams to serve our communities.

    It’s why we support the Police Covenant and why we are determined to work with you to ensure it delivers for all officers, staff and volunteers, recognising that wellbeing and mental health support is vital in maintaining a healthy and engaged police workforce who can effectively serve and protect the public.

    Turning now to the safer streets mission, which the Home Secretary referred to, I think it’s clear that those unacceptable attacks on the police speak directly to this Government’s wider Safer Streets mission.

    And that is to restore respect for the rule of law on British streets, including restoring respect for the police, which has sadly been eroded over many years.

    To do that, we will ensure that you have everything you need to get back to tackling the issues that matter most to the public.

    Too many town centres and high streets across the country have been gripped by an epidemic of anti-social behaviour, theft and shoplifting, which is corroding our communities and cannot be allowed to continue.

    There are thousands of incredible police officers and support staff doing an admirable job. But we do have to face the reality that there are still too many victims of anti-social behaviour who feel that when they call the police, no one listens, no one comes and nothing is done.

    Our neighbourhoods and police forces have suffered enough after a decade of decline, and this government will help restore neighbourhood policing, with skilled, resilient and dedicated local cops.

    We must rebuild these bonds of trust and respect between the police and local communities that have always been so central to our proud British tradition of policing by consent.

    That’s why we will implement a new Neighbourhood Policing Guarantee, restoring patrols to town centres, recruiting thousands of additional police personnel, and ensuring every community has a named local police officer to turn to.

    And as part of that plan, I can announce today that the government has agreed initial funding to support the College of Policing in rolling out a specialist new training programme for neighbourhood officers.

    The Neighbourhood Policing Programme Career Pathway will focus on anti-social behaviour, community engagement and problem solving and equip neighbourhood officers with the skills, knowledge and confidence they need to build local relationships and to tackle the issues that damage communities the most.

    Every community deserves local officers who understand what is needed to keep them safe, and with this new training and our Neighbourhood Policing Guarantee, we will deliver the change our towns and villages are desperate for.

    Supers are the operational leaders, you know what is going on in  forces day to day, and we want to tap into your insight and expertise as we restore neighbourhood policing and crack down on corrosive crimes like anti-social behaviour and shoplifting, which will help to restore public confidence that there will be consequences for criminality in their communities.

    But to deliver on the promise of change we have made to the British people, we also need to crack down on the serious crimes that devastate lives and communities across the country.

    That is why we are acting to address the deadly cycle of knife crime by getting more dangerous weapons off our streets and preventing young people from being drawn into violent crime in the first place, with a radical new Young Futures prevention programme and early intervention for those at-risk.

    And it is why we have set out an unprecedented mission to halve violence against women and girls over the next decade, working right across government, as well as with the police and the criminal justice system, on everything from prevention work in schools, to pursuing dangerous perpetrators and to getting survivors the support and the justice they need.

    Underpinning all of this is an unwavering commitment to protecting our national security, and those working to counter threats from terrorism, hostile states or any other source, and they have our full and enduring support.

    Law enforcement has an instrumental role in delivering this ambitious mission. So as with neighbourhood policing, we will be looking to you and your teams to work with us so we can deliver real and lasting improvements for the public.

    As the Home Secretary has said to many policing colleagues since the election – we will not be politicians who just shout from the sidelines. We will work in lockstep with you to deliver change – championing your successes, recognising your sacrifices and, yes, of course, holding you to account and asking difficult questions along the way to ensure that progress is being made in every corner of the country.

    Because for this mission to be successful, it will be critical to secure and maintain the confidence of the people you serve.

    The vast, vast majority of officers I know are decent, hardworking and professional. When standards are not met or powers are abused, I know that you all feel it deeply and it undermines your excellent work.

    That is why, together, we have to ensure behaviour and cultures are beyond reproach, right across the system.

    In charting a new path, I know that none of this is easy. There are deep-rooted issues that need to be reckoned with.

    One thing we know for sure is that none of our goals will be achieved unless there is close alignment between government and policing.

    But with the Home Secretary’s knowledge and leadership, I wholeheartedly believe we can chart a new, successful way forward.

    And I know this because I have seen first-hand how dedicated the Home Secretary is to supporting each and every member of the policing family.

    I know how keenly she feels her responsibility to ensure you have the powers and tools to fulfil your critical functions.

    And I can assure you that when she says she wants to work with you to get British policing performance at its very best, she means it.

    As superintendents and chief superintendents, but also as police leaders, you have an important and rightful role to play in helping us deliver safer communities.

    You have a wealth of knowledge, insight and expertise that we absolutely want to tap into to help us deliver on our mission.

    Whether that’s about the threats you and your teams are tackling day in and day out, or about more strategic policing issues, we want to and we need to hear from you in shaping our approach.

    In conclusion, again I want to offer my thanks again to the PSA for all the work they do and for giving me the opportunity to address you today.

    As Policing Minister, I intend to be your voice within government.

    And I do want to champion your successes, understand your needs and support your teams.

    As the Prime Minister and Home Secretary have made clear, we are serious. We are very serious about tackling crime, rebuilding confidence and putting neighbourhood policing back at the heart of our communities.

    You and your colleagues will all have an integral part and role to play in that mission.

    And I know it’s not going to be delivered overnight.

    I’m conscious – I think I’ve been post about 11 weeks, so I know that you know this is going to take some time,

    But what I have seen in my short time in my role has given me a renewed confidence that we will succeed.

    The dedication, the skill, the bravery, the willingness to make sacrifices…these are the core elements of British policing at its best and they have been on display in abundance over recent weeks.

    I will finish by saying how grateful I am to everyone across the service, and I very much look forward to working with you all as we strive to protect the public and make our country safer.

    Thank you very much for your time.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Government kick-starts plan to restore neighbourhood policing [September 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Government kick-starts plan to restore neighbourhood policing [September 2024]

    The press release issued by the Home Office on 10 September 2024.

    Specialist neighbourhood policing training will be rolled out across the country as the government kicks off its pledge to restore neighbourhood policing.

    With crimes that blight communities on the rise, like shoplifting, snatch theft and antisocial behaviour, the government has pledged to put thousands more neighbourhood police officers, community support officers and special constables are out patrolling streets and town centres.

    As a first step towards this goal, the Policing Minister will today announce nationwide rollout of a new training programme for neighbourhood policing officers developed by the College of Policing, to improve standards and consistency across forces.

    The Neighbourhood Policing Pathway, which is currently being trialled and based on evidence of what works, will help officers build on the core skills they need to tackle the issues communities face every day. This will include helping officers build relationships across local communities and give them the skills and confidence they need to solve issues that affect local residents.

    In a speech delivered at the Police Superintendents’ Conference today, Dame Diana Johnson, the Crime and Policing Minister said:

    Too many town centres and high streets across the country have been gripped by an epidemic of anti-social behaviour, theft and shoplifting which is corroding our communities and cannot be allowed to continue.

    There are thousands of incredible police officers and support staff doing an admirable job. But we have to face the reality that there are still too many victims of anti-social behaviour who feel that when they call the police, no one listens and no one comes.

    Our neighbourhoods and police forces have suffered enough after a decade of decline, and this government will help restore neighbourhood policing, with skilled, resilient and dedicated local cops.

    Every community deserves local officers who understand what is needed to keep them safe, and with this new training and our Neighbourhood Policing Guarantee, we will deliver the change our towns and villages are desperate for.

    The College of Policing’s Neighbourhood Policing Programme Career Pathway focuses on problem solving the issues that affect local residents, like drug dealing or drug use in public places, nuisance behaviour on our streets which causes harassment and street drinking. It will also cover community engagement, supporting officers to build relationships which help to gather intelligence, cut crime and develop plans to address local issues. There is also specific training for those who lead neighbourhood teams.

    The most recent crime figures showed that 35% of people have experienced or witnessed anti-social behaviour in their local community in the last year alongside a 30% annual rise in shoplifting, which remains at a record high.

    Chief Constable at the College of Policing, Sir Andy Marsh, said:

    Dedicated training for neighbourhood officers by the College of Policing will help transform the service policing provides to local communities and help deliver trusted and effective policing that cuts crime and keeps people safe. This programme is based on years of evidence of what works and I’m confident it will make a real difference.

    This is a welcome investment by the government and the College of Policing, that will support dedicated and hardworking officers and staff to protect their communities, cut crime and rebuild trust and confidence.

    Good neighbourhood policing, which, at its core is about engaging with local people on local issues, is a vital part of any police force, if they are to be effective and help people feel safe.

    First launched in June, the training has been piloted in 11 forces, including Northumbria, North Wales, Derbyshire and the Metropolitan Police. When fully rolled out, the training programme will be available to police forces across the country to enrol any neighbourhood officer or PCSO on.

    The pilots are expected to finish at the end of March 2025, after which the training programme will be refined before being expanded across the country.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Steve Reed – Investors vital for water infrastructure, growth and jobs [September 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Steve Reed – Investors vital for water infrastructure, growth and jobs [September 2024]

    The press release issued by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs on 10 September 2024.

    Environment Secretary and Financial Secretary to the Treasury met with water industry investors today.

    The Government has today (10 September 2024) taken further steps to attract billions in private-sector investment into the water sector to rebuild broken water infrastructure and clean up Britain’s rivers, lakes and seas.

    A roundtable with water investors this afternoon was hosted by the Secretary of State for Environment, Food, and Rural Affairs Steve Reed and Financial Secretary to the Treasury, Lord Livermore in the City of London.

    Ministers discussed the importance of private sector investment into water companies and how they can work together to clean up our rivers, boost economic growth around the country by creating tens of thousands of jobs, and increase the resilience of our water supply that underpins every single home and business in the UK.

    This meeting follows the publication of the landmark Water (Special Measures) Bill last week that will deliver a strong, level regulatory playing field. This is part of the government’s work to create long-term stability and attract billions of private-sector investment into the sector.

    The discussion marks a step-change as the Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs repositions itself as a key economic growth department.

    Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Steve Reed said:

    With the new Government, the water sector will become one of growth and opportunity.

    Working with investors, we will attract billions in private-sector investment that is desperately needed to upgrade our broken water infrastructure and clean up Britain’s rivers, lakes and seas.

    Growth Minister Lord Spencer Livermore said:

    Private investment is at the core of how we grow our economy, rebuild Britain and make every part of the country better off.

    The water industry has a vital role to play which is why creating a stable and investable water sector is long overdue.

    The Global Infrastructure Investor Association represents more than 25 investors in the UK water industry. Chief executive Jon Phillips said:

    The roundtable was an important opportunity for the government to hear directly from private investors in the UK water industry. By working together we can attract the investment that is necessary.

    We fully support the government’s ambition to put the sector on a stronger footing.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Pooja Kanda’s story – Knife Crime Summit [September 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Pooja Kanda’s story – Knife Crime Summit [September 2024]

    The press release issued by 10 Downing Street on 10 September 2024.

    Pooja’s son Ronan was fatally stabbed in 2022. On Monday 9 September, Pooja attended the first annual Knife Crime Summit at Downing Street.

    Within seconds, my whole life was shattered.

    I miss talking to him. I miss hugging him, hearing his giggles, his laugh, his loud noise, his cheeky look in his eyes.

    It’s horrifying to know that a beautiful child of yours – a good person, a good human being – has been taken by something so cruel and for no reason. Because they mistook him for somebody else.

    On the evening of 29th June 2022, Ronan went to play snooker with his friend. It was the first time he’d gone out after finishing his GCSEs. It was a treat.

    I was out of the house at a meditation class. My neighbour, who was at the class with me, got a call. I got up, hearing the commotion.

    “What’s happened?” I asked.

    “There’s been a stabbing on our street, we need to get home,” she replied.

    I didn’t know then that it was my own child. You don’t think it can happen to you.

    I remember ringing Ronan, but he wasn’t picking up the phone. That’s not like Ronan – Ronan knows, he knows me, he knows to answer. But he didn’t.

    My husband was at home, so I rang him and asked him to go outside to find out what was happening. He told me that Ronan had popped out for five minutes to go to his friend’s house. We both agreed to phone Ronan to tell him to get home as soon as possible.

    My husband rang back crying.

    “It’s Ronan, Pooja. They’re saying it’s an Asian-Indian boy.”

    The perpetrators had stabbed him in his abdomen, 20 centimetres deep with a 20 inch Ninja sword. When he turned around, they stabbed him again with a Ninja sword that went through his heart. The blood was pouring out of his body.

    He tried running home, but he collapsed two doors away from his house.

    On my way from class, I remember asking my friend to drive me quicker and I jumped out of the moving car. Running towards the police taped area and begging the police officers to let me through, to let me hold my child.

    Even though the paramedics tried to operate to save him, my Ronan died on the very street he grew up. He didn’t stand a chance.

    An innocent child walking home. Murdered, just like that.

    In the court case, we found out how the online sale of these threatening bladed articles played a massive role in my son’s murder. Since then, we have been and will continue fighting for a ban on machetes, zombie knives, Ninja swords and other bladed weapons. There is no need for these deadly knives to be in our society. In the wrong hands they are lethal weapons.

    For each murder that happens, there have been clear failures in our system. Ronan’s murder happened because a Ninja sword was bought using a parent’s credit card with no ID checks. We also hear about the failures within the education system, within the policing system, within online sales and more. Now all these failures are being addressed so we can start correcting them.

    We’re going down the right path.

    If it takes a bit of time, so be it. But we need to understand that this needs to be dealt with from now on.

    I would like to thank Sir Keir Starmer, the Home Secretary Yvette Cooper, Idris Elba and my MP Pat McFadden. These are the people who are passionate about this issue and do want to make a difference. So, thank you to them.

    I feel very grateful to be here, so I can share my child’s story and can fight for him. I feel like there are other people who don’t get heard.

    What happened to Ronan should never have happened. My Ronan was a good, funny, humble, charismatic, intelligent and kind boy. He was every mother’s dream son.

    From his school, a mother approached me to tell me how Ronan stopped their child getting bullied – now that child remembers my child and was heartbroken to learn what had happened.

    He was a beautiful person and he was too good for this world. I apologise to him every morning for bringing him into this cruel world and not being able to protect him. So, this is my way of doing something for him.

    Ronan’s Law will be a strong move and bring, I hope, much-needed change. Banning these weapons should be the basic start to combatting knife crime.

    In my son’s memory, I have a tattoo on my arm of his heartbeat – the words underneath say: ‘Mom is proud of you, Ronan’ and his name is in his own writing. His mantra was to make me proud.

    I’d give my life today for Ronan, if I could. I wish I gave my heart to him to save him. Every child deserves to grow up safely and I wish my son had this opportunity. I am the proud mother of Ronan Kanda.

    I’m just a mother fighting for what’s right.

  • PRESS RELEASE : UK’s key allies come together to fight public sector fraud [September 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : UK’s key allies come together to fight public sector fraud [September 2024]

    The press release issued by the Cabinet Office on 10 September 2024.

    Australia, Canada, New Zealand and the United States join UK Government for counter fraud summit in London.

    • Senior government officials from UK’s closest intelligence allies meet to coordinate fight against fraud
    • Meeting, chaired by Cabinet Office Minister Georgia Gould, forms centrepiece of five day summit in London
    • Discussions will focus on fighting fraud committed during the pandemic, with the government currently recruiting a Covid Counter Fraud Commissioner

    Tuesday 10th September

    Cabinet Office Minister Georgia Gould will today convene senior officials from the UK’s closest intelligence allies to coordinate the fight against Covid fraud.

    The meeting of Five Eyes – an intelligence alliance between the UK, Australia, Canada, New Zealand and the United States – will help to identify ways governments have been successfully detecting, recouping and prosecuting fraud committed during the pandemic.

    Lessons learnt during today’s meeting will contribute to the ongoing work of the Public Sector Fraud Authority as it seeks to further support departments to prevent, detect and recover fraud and error.

    The meeting forms the centrepiece of the fourth summit of the International Public Sector Fraud Forum held this week in London.

    The Forum was originally set up by the UK Government in 2018 to encourage cooperation between the Five Eyes to reduce public sector fraud within member countries and across borders.

    This is also the first time the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) will attend the summit. The OECD’s Anti-Corruption and Integrity Division has collaborated with the Public Sector Fraud Authority to lead talks on the pivotal role of advanced analytics and artificial intelligence in fraud prevention.

    Today’s meeting comes as the UK Government redoubles efforts to tackle Covid fraud.

    The Chancellor of the Exchequer recently announced recruitment for a fixed term Covid Counter Fraud Commissioner to scrutinise contracts awarded during the pandemic and ensure that everything possible is done to recover money lost to fraud.

    Minister Gould, Parliamentary Secretary at the Cabinet Office, said:

    Criminal networks threaten governments around the world and don’t respect international borders, so it’s vital we work with our allies to keep public money safe.

    Through today’s meeting we will learn from our closest intelligence partners to help us redouble our efforts to track and recover public money lost to fraud during the Covid-19 pandemic.

    Mark Cheeseman, Chief Executive of the Public Sector Fraud Authority, said:

    In the modern world, the threat of fraud against public bodies is a known issue that requires collaboration.

    This week brings together leading experts from across partner countries to drive ourselves further in stopping those who attack the system dishonestly.