Tag: Boris Johnson

  • Boris Johnson – 2022 Comments on Agreement with Qatar

    Boris Johnson – 2022 Comments on Agreement with Qatar

    The comments made by Boris Johnson, the Prime Minister, on 24 May 2022.

    Today’s announcement of up to £10bn in new investment from our Qatari friends is another vote of confidence in the UK’s brilliant businesses and cutting-edge industry. The new UK-Qatar Strategic Investment Partnership will create quality job opportunities across the country in key sectors, delivering on our vision of economic growth through trade and investment.

    Qatar is a valued partner for the UK, supported by Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad’s leadership. We had a rich discussion on the issues that matter to both of our countries, including boosting the economy, ensuring regional stability and improving energy security following Russia’s appalling invasion of Ukraine.

  • Boris Johnson – 2022 Comments on Public Transport Plans

    Boris Johnson – 2022 Comments on Public Transport Plans

    The comments made by Boris Johnson, the Prime Minister, on 24 May 2022.

    As the Elizabeth Line opens to the public, we know it’s not just Londoners that will reap the rewards, but the whole country – because better transport grows the economy, levels up opportunity and creates jobs.

    Just last week, official figures showed that under this Government unemployment has fallen to the lowest level in nearly half a century, just 3.7 per cent – which shows our drive to get people into jobs is working.

    And we’re going further and faster to ensure that by investing in infrastructure right across the UK, our massive transport projects will get the nation firing on all pistons again as we recover from the pandemic.

  • Boris Johnson – 2022 Comments on Anthony Albanese Becoming Prime Minister of Australia

    Boris Johnson – 2022 Comments on Anthony Albanese Becoming Prime Minister of Australia

    The comments made by Boris Johnson, the Prime Minister, on 21 May 2022.

    Congratulations to Anthony Albanese on your election as Prime Minister of Australia.

    Our countries have a long history and a bright future together. As thriving likeminded democracies we work every day to make the world a better, safer, greener and more prosperous place.

    As we reap the rewards of our comprehensive Free Trade Agreement, the AUKUS partnership and the unmatched closeness between the British and Australian people, we do so knowing that the only distance between us is geographical.

    I look forward to working with Prime Minister Albanese in the weeks, months and years ahead as, together, we tackle shared challenges and demonstrate the importance of our shared values.

  • Boris Johnson – 2022 Speech at the Opening of the Cabinet Meeting

    Boris Johnson – 2022 Speech at the Opening of the Cabinet Meeting

    The comments made by Boris Johnson, the Prime Minister, on 17 May 2022.

    Good morning, everybody.

    Thank you very much.

    The crucial duty of our Government is to make our communities safer, which is what we are doing.

    That’s why we put, of the 20,000 police that we promised at the 2019 election, we’ve already put 13,576 on the streets.

    They are bringing down neighbourhood crime and that’s a great thing to see. But we’ve got more to do.

    We want to make sure our streets are safer and we will round up those county lines drugs gangs with Project ADDER, taking the criminals off the streets, stopping the deaths of young people from knife crime and gun crime.

    But what we’re also doing is making sure that we give everybody the confidence that we are on their side when it comes to the law and their experiences of crimes – particularly crimes of sexual and domestic violence – and we want to see more prosecutions for those who engage in such crimes.

    We want to see more rapists brought to justice.

    I’m pleased to see the facts. Several of you across the table have been working very, very hard and we are starting to see progress.

    This matters deeply to me. It matters to our government.

    It’s vital to every person, it’s vital to every woman and every girl in the country that we get this right and I want to see more progress on that.

    But there’s another reason why it’s so vital to bring down crime by making sure that our streets are safe, which is integral for our project for uniting and levelling up.

    It is only when you have safe streets and you have safe communities, that you get the confidence of business to invest and drive jobs and growth and that it is absolutely critical now as we deal with the aftermaths of COVID and we help people with their current costs and we take the economy through a difficult patch.

    That is why cutting crime is integral to our economic mission as well.

    Making our streets safer is absolutely vital.

    May I just say – on that point – that today I am very pleased to see that unemployment is now at the lowest level it has been since 1974 and to borrow a phrase from the Chancellor of the Exchequer…our plan for jobs is working.

    Crime crime crime is what we want to focus on.

    Making our streets safer.

    Thank you very much.

  • Boris Johnson – 2022 Comments on Government’s Beating Crime Plan

    Boris Johnson – 2022 Comments on Government’s Beating Crime Plan

    The comments made by Boris Johnson, the Prime Minister, on 17 May 2022.

    While neighbourhood crime and serious violence is falling, the sad reality is that too many people are still growing up in communities blighted by criminals. That is why this government is determined to crack down on violence and restore confidence in our justice system, in order to truly level up the country.

    Through our Beating Crime Plan, we are putting thousands more police on our streets, getting tougher on violent criminals and cracking down on county lines drugs gangs – so that everyone can have the security and stability that comes from having safer streets.

  • Boris Johnson – 2022 Article in the Belfast Telegraph on the Way Forward in Northern Ireland

    Boris Johnson – 2022 Article in the Belfast Telegraph on the Way Forward in Northern Ireland

    The article written by Boris Johnson, the Prime Minister, and issued as a press notice by Downing Street on 16 May 2022.

    I am visiting Northern Ireland today at a time of considerable political change. The Assembly elections brought forth a new generation of voters and representatives who are confident and optimistic about the future.

    The Northern Ireland of today does not see itself as a post-conflict society but one that is maturing into a story of sustained success. One in ten of the population were not born here. Local people have thrown open their doors to those fleeing Ukraine. A sizeable portion of the electorate were not even born in 1998. They are at ease with change, and at ease with each other.

    The Northern Ireland of today is a place that has rediscovered the manufacturing verve that once made it the biggest shipyard in the world. Harland & Wolff is cutting steel again. Belfast is host to some of the world’s most innovative companies in biotechnology and the creative industries, and the No1 international investment location for US cyber security firms.

    This means Northern Ireland contributes a huge amount to the rest of the UK. When the pandemic hit, it was a County Antrim diagnostic company, Randox, that was at the forefront of the UK’s Covid testing regime. Today, I will visit Thales, the high tech company which has played a vital role in the defence of Ukraine.

    But there is more to be done to level up this place with the rest of the UK. If NI’s productivity grew to match the UK average by 2030, its goods exports could be around double the level recorded in 2020. The Government will do its part with record investment, funding and the new City Deals. But I know from my time as Mayor of London that there is no substitute for strong local leadership. I will tell party leaders today that this progress will be stalled without a functioning Assembly and Executive.

    Restating our commitments

    In a time of change, against the backdrop of European war and a cost of living crisis, I also want to use my visit today to affirm some core principles about the UK Government’s approach to Northern Ireland.

    Thirty-two years ago, the then Secretary of State for Northern Ireland made a speech which many see as playing an important role in the initiation of the peace process.

    Peter Brooke argued that Britain had “no selfish strategic or economic interest” in Northern Ireland. Not no strategic or economic interest – but no selfish strategic or economic interest.

    It was a concept that became a pillar of the peace process – the basis of “rigorous impartiality” and “the principle of consent”, from the Downing Street Declaration of 1993 to the Belfast Good Friday Agreement itself.

    Times have changed, at home and overseas. But our commitment to these principles is as strong as ever.

    Equally I want to be clear that this Government is not neutral on the Union.

    Indeed I was heartened to hear that Sir Keir Starmer made clear in a recent interview here that the Labour Party under his leadership would campaign for the Union, should there ever be a border poll.

    There should be nothing controversial or surprising about that.

    The Government’s commitment to the Union is above politics.

    It was proved – with no politics attached – during the pandemic, with one of the fastest vaccine roll-outs in the world. It was proved – with no politics attached – by the remarkable furlough scheme that kept so many businesses and families afloat.

    It is partly because of the Belfast Good Friday Agreement that the benefits that accrue from being part of the fifth largest economy in the world need not be a source of controversy, or eternal debate in political life.

    They just exist, like Samson and Goliath on the Belfast skyline. They are the structural facts of economic life here, welded even more tightly by the rapid evolution of a high-skilled and high-tech economy.

    Embracing change

    But nor is there some perfect constitutional clockwork version of how the Union should be. Northern Ireland has always been a place in its own right, in which governance has been contested, broken, re-imagined and carefully nurtured.

    Those arrangements continue to evolve. And far better, I think, is the Northern Ireland of today in which people look any way they want (north-south, east-west, or both) – depending on their identity, and their family, and their economic interests.

    In today’s debates about Brexit and the Protocol, let us embrace that hybridity. Let us make it work.

    We stand above all else for the 1998 Agreement. Its three strands. Its commitment to harmonious relations across all these islands.

    We do so, first and foremost, as co-signatories and as co-guarantors. And as partners of the Irish Government.

    And we do so, next, with a commitment to work with the democratically elected parties in Northern Ireland, whom I see will today.

    That means abiding by the rules that have previously been agreed, including those around the title of First Minister.

    So I want to repeat my congratulations to Sinn Fein as the largest party. Respect for the rights and aspirations of all communities are an essential part of the Belfast Good Friday Agreement.

    And I think it is testimony to the path that Sinn Fein have taken from 1998 that Michelle O’Neill is now awarded the position of First Minister. I have no doubt we will work together well.

    But it is equally clear that the balance on which the Northern Ireland institutions have been built has not been fundamentally transformed by these elections.

    The unionist and nationalist blocs are largely matched, as they have been at every election since 1998, with the unionist electorate remaining slightly larger. Unionist parties performed well in the recent election, affirming overwhelming support for power-sharing on the basis of consent.

    The most significant development in recent years has been the growth of a third grouping in Northern Ireland, represented by the Alliance Party – to whom I also pay tribute. They are an important voice in the new Northern Ireland but also, let’s be clear, a party which stuck to its principles in a darker and more difficult past.

    Taken together, what the election results tell me is that the basis for successful power-sharing and stability is actually enhanced. Whichever way you cut it, there is a large majority for making Northern Ireland work.

    And every single party and MLA has heard the same message from their constituents.

    Focus on everyday issues. Schools. Hospitals. Cost of Living.

    So it is time for all of the local parties to get back to Stormont. Elect a Speaker. Create an Executive. Get back to work.

    Unique responsibilities on the British government

    But the 1998 Agreement bestows other commitments on the British Government that go beyond its position as a co-guarantor.

    One of those is to take difficult decisions: to assume a burden of responsibility, and indeed unpopularity, when consensus cannot be reached.

    That is why we will deliver on three pre-existing commitments in the coming weeks.

    We will take forward the Language and Culture Package agreed as part of the New Decade New Approach agreement, thereby addressing an issue that has prevented the formation of the Executive in the past.

    We will intervene to ensure that women and girls have access to abortion services in Northern Ireland that are their legal right, following the failure of the Executive to deliver this.

    And this week we will introduce into Parliament new measures to deal with the legacy of the past. These are different from those in our Command Paper last year. We have listened to many people in recent months and reflected on what we heard. Dealing with the past will still require difficult decisions but there will be no blanket amnesty. Immunity will only be available to those who co-operate and prosecutions could follow for those who do not.

    Addressing the issues with the Protocol

    In the international agreement that sits alongside the Belfast Agreement, as the sovereign government of Northern Ireland the UK also assumes specific responsibilities that go beyond its role as co-guarantor.

    To protect the “economic rights” of the people of Northern Ireland. And to ensure “just and equal treatment for the identity, ethos and aspirations of both communities”.

    We must admit that those commitments have sometimes been difficult to navigate through Brexit.

    We insisted throughout that there would be no scenario in which a hard border would be allowed to emerge. And we have delivered that 100%, as we said we would, protecting in full the rights that were enshrined in 1998.

    We told the Irish Government that we would take special measures within the UK’s internal economy to protect their place in the EU single market. And we have done that.

    We committed to maintain the Common Travel Area and associated rights. It is another commitment that British Government has kept, even throughout the pandemic when so many restrictions were enforced.

    Seeking changes to the Protocol

    It is because of these complexities that the Protocol exists. It is why the Protocol was agreed in good faith. And it is why those who want to scrap the Protocol, rather than seeking changes, are focusing on the wrong thing.

    But there is no disguising the fact that the delicate balance created in 1998 has been upset. One part of the political community in Northern Ireland feels like its aspirations and identity are threatened by the working of the Protocol.

    And the Protocol involves other responsibilities which also need to be lived up to by all sides, including the commitment to protect the Belfast Good Friday Agreement in all its dimensions.

    We cannot allow the impression that one strand is deemed more important than others; or that EU custom codes – designed for vast container ships coming from Shanghai to Rotterdam, not supermarket lorries from Liverpool to Belfast – somehow trump everything else.

    We must remember that all parties to the Protocol made a commitment to be willing to revisit, adapt and change these arrangements over time – and to protect the internal market of the UK.

    In the absence of change, the prior commitments made by the British Government – to protect all three strands of the Belfast Good Friday Agreement, to protect economic rights and parity of esteem – are coming into sharper focus.

    Every unionist representative campaigned against the Protocol, as currently constituted. More importantly, every party, across the divide, seeks mitigations and change. None support a zealous zero risk approach to its implementation. None wants to see grace periods terminated, as the EU insist they must be in return for limited mitigations elsewhere. Some feel that their economic rights as members of the United Kingdom are threatened, which the 1998 Agreement is supposed to protect.

    The simple reason for this is that the East-West dimension – by far and away the principal artery in Northern Ireland’s economic life – is taking too much of the strain.

    Strand 3 of the Agreement, which promised the “harmonious and mutually beneficial development of the totality of the relationship among the people of these islands”, is not functioning as it must. And Strands 1 and 2 – of equal importance and mutually dependent – are now being negatively impacted too.

    Many things have changed since the Protocol was agreed. It was designed in the absence of a Trade and Cooperation Agreement and when it was unclear one would be agreed. It has not been adapted to reflect the realities of the TCA.

    It was designed before a global pandemic and a European war which has created a cost of living crisis on a scale not seen for half a century.

    For there even to be a question about the fast availability of medicines or medical testing in Northern Ireland (between two constituent parts of the same National Health Service) is incompatible with the post-Covid era.

    For the Chancellor of the Exchequer to say in his Spring Statement that people in Northern Ireland could not be granted the same benefits in terms of tax and VAT as those in the rest of the same country is a serious issue. It means that our ability to assist with post-Covid recovery and – moreover, the long-term economic development of Northern Ireland – is restricted.

    We have been told by the EU that it is impossible to make the changes to the Protocol text to actually solve these problems in negotiations – because there is no mandate to do so.

    We will always keep the door wide open to genuine dialogue. And we will continue to protect the single market – as it has been protected throughout the existence of the Protocol so far – and the open border with the Republic of Ireland which will always be of paramount importance.

    There is without question a sensible landing spot in which everyone’s interests are protected. Our shared objective must be to the create the broadest possible cross-community support for a reformed Protocol in 2024.

    I hope the EU’s position changes. If it does not, there will be a necessity to act. The Government has a responsibility to provide assurance that the consumers, citizens and businesses of Northern Ireland are protected in the long-term. We will set out a more detailed assessment and next steps to Parliament in the coming days, once I return from discussions with the local parties.

    In doing our part, we expect all elected representatives to get back to work and deliver for the people of Northern Ireland.

  • Boris Johnson – 2022 Statement on the Death of Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan

    Boris Johnson – 2022 Statement on the Death of Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan

    The statement made by Boris Johnson, the Prime Minister, on 14 May 2022.

    I am deeply saddened to hear of the death of His Highness Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan, President of the United Arab Emirates and ruler of Abu Dhabi.

    He was a wise and respected leader who will be missed enormously. Through his work as President and Sheikh he has made a personal contribution to regional stability and conservation which will long be remembered. I know that the long and deep ties, which unite our countries, will continue and through our cooperation and friendship, we can ensure peace, prosperity and justice in the world.

    I would like to offer my sincere condolences to the people of the United Arab Emirates.

  • Boris Johnson – 2022 Comments on Delays in Visas to Fleeing Ukrainians

    Boris Johnson – 2022 Comments on Delays in Visas to Fleeing Ukrainians

    The comments made by Boris Johnson, the Prime Minister, at the Liaison Select Committee held on 30 March 2022.

    We are getting, already, sizeable numbers and I think that that is a good thing. Don’t forget: most Ukrainians want to be in the region. In an ideal world, they would like to go back to their homes. A lot of them, increasingly, now want to come to other European countries.

    They want to come to the UK, and that is quite right. We are opening our doors and opening our homes. The numbers are going up quite steeply now and I think they will continue to rise for a while to come. I think that is going to be a great thing. This country has a very proud record of welcoming evacuees.

    I do not want pointlessly to berate officialdom and blame people for being slow—that is too easy. We ask a lot of our officials and public servants. They have to balance some quite difficult objectives. We have just been hearing some really good questions about modern slavery, sexual trafficking, children, and about gangsters who might be trading in evacuees. You’ve got to be careful. Do not forget that the point I made on the first day in the House is that there will also be people coming from that war zone who may not be entirely who they say they are. We have had some cases, sadly, of that already.

  • Boris Johnson – 2022 Comments on Disinformation in Russia

    Boris Johnson – 2022 Comments on Disinformation in Russia

    The comments made by Boris Johnson, the Prime Minister, at the Liaison Select Committee held on 30 March 2022.

    One of the depressing things is the ruthlessness with which Putin tries to conceal the reality of what is happening from the Russian population. Genuinely, you can ring and talk to Russian friends and they will seriously dispute what is going on in
    Ukraine. I am afraid that people are very vulnerable to the lies that Putin is telling, and we have to be extremely energetic in exposing them.

    We have a Government information cell that has been going for some time to counter disinformation. You can imagine, Julian [Knight], the sorts of things that it tries to do. Our whole approach has been to try to be as frank with people as we possibly can about what we know and to demystify things. It was the UK and the US that were out there in the beginning saying, “There is a massive problem. There are 100 battalion tactical groups on the borders with Ukraine. We know this,” and we put it into the public domain.

    Similarly, when we got information about false flag operations, we immediately put it out into the public domain to try to fight the disinformation with as much exposure of the reality as we can. I think that is starting to have an effect. I think you are seeing signs now in Russia of people waking up to what’s going on.

  • Boris Johnson – 2022 Comments on the Future of Russia

    Boris Johnson – 2022 Comments on the Future of Russia

    The comments made by Boris Johnson, the Prime Minister, at the Liaison Select Committee held on 30 March 2022.

    We see all sorts of possible futures for Russia. But to get back to the point I wanted to make in answer to your first question, we have to keep this one simple. I have never seen a clearer case of right and wrong. This is about the flagrant violation of international law through the invasion of a totally innocent country. It is about helping the Ukrainians to protect themselves. That is something that unites the whole House of Commons, I hope, and certainly a large number of countries around the world. If we stick to that, we will not go wrong, because I think that the logical consequences, politically and militarily, speak for themselves—I am sure you will have thought it all through.

    When it comes to supporting wider civic society in Russia, supporting free media and a free internet, we do a lot of that already. We have just put another £4.1 million into supporting BBC Ukrainian and Russian services to help people get at the truth. We are doing a lot more to promote a proper understanding of what is going on.