Tag: David Cameron

  • David Cameron – 2015 Statement on National Security

    davidcameron

    Below is the text of the statement made by David Cameron, the Prime Minister, in the House of Commons on 23 November 2015.

    Introduction

    With permission, Mr Speaker, I would like to make a statement on the National Security Strategy and Strategic Defence and Security Review.

    Mr Speaker, our national security depends on our economic security, and vice versa.

    So the first step in keeping our country safe is to ensure our economy is, and remains, strong.

    Over the last 5 years we have taken the difficult decisions needed to bring down our deficit and restore our economy to strength.

    In 2010, we were ordering equipment for which there was literally no money.

    The total black hole in the defence budget alone was bigger than the entire defence budget in that year.

    Now it is back in balance.

    By sticking to our long-term economic plan, Britain has become the fastest growing major advanced economy in the world for the last 2 years.

    And our renewed economic security means that today we can show how we can afford to invest further in our national security.

    Growing threats to our security

    Mr Speaker, this is vital at a time when the threats to our country are growing.

    This morning I was in Paris with President Hollande discussing how we can work together to defeat the evil of ISIL.

    As the murders on the streets of Paris reminded us so starkly, ISIL is not some remote problem thousands of miles away.

    It is a direct threat to our security at home and abroad.

    It has already taken the lives of British hostages…

    …and carried out the worst terrorist attack against British people since 7/7 on the beaches of Tunisia…

    …to say nothing of the 7 terrorist plots right here in Britain that have been foiled by our security services over the past year.

    And of course, Mr Speaker, the threats we face today go beyond this evil death cult.

    From the crisis in Ukraine…

    …to the risks of cyber-attacks and pandemics…

    …the world is more dangerous and uncertain today than even 5 years ago.

    So while every government must choose how to spend the money it has available…

    …every penny of which is hard-earned by taxpayers…

    …this government has taken a clear decision to invest in our security and safeguard our prosperity.

    As a result, the United Kingdom is the only major country in the world today which is simultaneously going to meet the NATO target of spending 2% of our GDP on defence…

    …and the UN target of spending 0.7% of our GNI on development…

    …while also increasing investment in our security and intelligence agencies and in counter-terrorism.

    Mr Speaker, in ensuring our national security, we will also protect our economic security.

    As a trading nation with the world’s fifth biggest economy, we depend on stability and order in the world. With 5 million British nationals living overseas, our prosperity depending on trade around the world, so engagement is not an optional extra, it is fundamental to the success of our nation.

    We need the sea lanes to stay open and the arteries of global commerce to remain free flowing.

    So the strategy which I am presenting to the House today sets out a clear vision for a secure and prosperous United Kingdom, with global reach and global influence.

    At its heart is an understanding that we cannot choose between conventional defences against state-based threats on the one hand…

    …and the need to counter threats that do not recognise national borders.

    Today we face both and we must respond to both types of threat.

    So over the course of this Parliament our priorities are to deter state-based threats…

    …to tackle terrorism…

    …to remain a world leader in cyber security…

    …and ensure we have the capability to respond rapidly to crises as they emerge.

    And to meet these priorities we will continue to harness all the tools of national power available to us, coordinated through the National Security Council, to deliver a ‘full-spectrum approach’.

    This includes support for our Armed Forces…

    …counter-terrorism…

    …international aid and diplomacy…

    …and working with our allies to deal with the common threats that face us all.

    Let me take each in turn.

    Armed forces

    First, the bottom line of our National Security Strategy must always be the willingness and capability to use force where necessary.

    On Friday evening the United Nations Security Council unanimously agreed Resolution 2249…

    …calling on Member States to take “all the necessary measures” against ISIL in both Syria and Iraq.

    Mr Speaker, on Thursday I will come to this House and make a further statement responding personally to the Foreign Affairs Select Committee.

    I’ll make the case for Britain to join our international allies in going after ISIL at their headquarters in Syria, not just Iraq.

    And I will explain how such action would be one element of a comprehensive and long-term strategy to defeat ISIL, in parallel with a major international effort to bring an end to the war in Syria.

    But today I want to set out how we will ensure that our Armed Forces have the capabilities to carry out such a task…

    …and indeed any other tasks that might be needed in the years ahead.

    We will invest more than £178 billion in buying and maintaining equipment over the next decade…

    …including doubling our investment in equipment to support our Special Forces.

    And we will also increase the size of our deployable Armed Forces.

    In 2010 we committed to an expeditionary force of 30,000.

    Today I can tell the House that by 2025 we are increasing that number to 50,000.

    And as part of this, we will create two new strike brigades, forces of up to 5,000 personnel fully equipped to deploy rapidly and sustain themselves in the field.

    We will establish two additional Typhoon squadrons and an additional squadron of F35 Lightning combat aircraft to operate from our new aircraft carriers.

    We will maintain our ultimate insurance policy as a nation – our Continuous At Sea Nuclear Deterrent – and replace our four ballistic missile submarines.

    We will buy 9 new Maritime Patrol Aircraft, to be based in Scotland at RAF Lossiemouth. They will protect our nuclear deterrent, they will hunt down hostile submarines and they will enhance our maritime search and rescue. And we will buy at least 13 new frigates and 2 new offshore patrol vessels.

    These will include eight Type 26 anti-submarine warfare frigates.

    We will design and build a new class of light, flexible general purpose frigates as well.

    These will be more affordable than the Type 26, which will allow us to buy more of them for the Royal Navy…

    …so that by the 2030s we can further increase the total number of Royal Navy frigates and destroyers.

    Mr Speaker, not one of these capabilities is an optional extra.

    These investments are an act of clear-eyed self-interest to ensure our future prosperity and security.

    Counter-terrorism

    Second, turning to counter-terrorism, we will make a major additional investment in our world class intelligence agencies…

    …to ensure they have the resources and information they need to detect and foil plots from wherever they emanate in the world.

    So as I announced last week, we will invest £2.5 billion…

    …and employ over 1,900 additional staff.

    We will increase our investment in counter-terrorism police and more than double our spending on aviation security around the world.

    And I can tell the House today that we have put in place a significant new contingency plan to deal with major terrorist attacks

    Under this new operation, up to 10,000 military personnel will be available to support the police in dealing with the type of shocking terrorist attacks we have seen in Paris.

    We will also make a major new investment in a new generation of surveillance drones.

    These British-designed unmanned aircraft will fly at the very edge of the earth’s atmosphere and allow us to observe our adversaries for weeks on end…

    …providing critical intelligence for our forces.

    Mr Speaker, we will also do more to make sure the powers we give our security services keep pace with modern technology.

    So we will see through the draft Bill we have published to ensure GCHQ, MI5 and our counter-terrorism police continue to have the powers they need.

    Aid

    Third, we will use our formidable development budget and our outstanding Diplomatic Service to tackle global poverty, promote our interests, project our influence…

    …and address the causes of the security threats we face, not just their consequences.

    So alongside the Strategic Defence Review, I am also publishing our Strategy for Official Development Assistance.

    At its heart is a decision to refocus half of DFID’s budget on supporting fragile and broken states and regions in every year of this Parliament.

    This will help to prevent conflict – and, crucially, it will help to promote the golden thread of conditions that drive prosperity all across the world: the rule of law, good governance and the growth of democracy.

    The Conflict, Stability and Security Fund will grow to over £1.3 billion a year by the end of this Parliament…

    …and we will also create a new £1.3 billion Prosperity Fund – to drive forward our aim of promoting global prosperity and good governance.

    Building on our success in tackling Ebola, we will do more to improve our resilience and our response to crises…

    …identifying £500 million a year as a crisis reserve…

    …and investing £1.5 billion over the Parliament in a Global Challenges Research Fund for UK Science to pioneer new ways of tackling global problems like anti-microbial resistance.

    We will also invest £1 billion in a new fund for the research and development of products to fight infectious diseases, known as the Ross Fund…

    …and £5.8 billion in climate finance to play our part in helping poorer countries switch to greener forms of energy.

    Mr Speaker, taken together these interventions are not just right morally – they are firmly in our national interest.

    They mean that Britain not only meets its obligations to the poorest in the world, but can now focus our resources on…

    …preventing or dealing with the instability and conflict which impinge on our security at home…

    …investing at scale to create the economic opportunities that lead to long-term stability across the world…

    …and responding rapidly and decisively to emerging crises overseas.

    Acting on all of these fronts gives us greater influence in the world.

    Alliances

    Finally, Britain’s safety and security depends not just on our own efforts, but on working hand in glove with our allies…

    …to deal with the common threats that face us all, from terrorism to climate change.

    When confronted by danger, we are stronger together.

    So we will play our full part in the alliances which underpin our security and amplify our national power.

    And we will work with our allies in Europe and around the world…

    …as well as seizing opportunities to reach out to emerging powers.

    Conclusion

    Mr Speaker, history teaches us that no government can predict the future.

    We have no way of knowing precisely what course events will take over the next 5 years: we must expect the unexpected.

    But we can make sure that we have the versatility and the means to respond to new risks and threats to our security as they arise.

    Mr Speaker, our armed forces, police and security and intelligence services are the pride of our country.

    They are the finest in the world…and this government will ensure they stay that way.

    Using our renewed economic strength, we will help them to keep us safe for generations to come.

    And I commend this Statement to the House.

  • David Cameron – 2015 Statement to Parliament on Military Action in Syria

    davidcameron

    Below is the text of the statement made by David Cameron, the Prime Minister, in the House of Commons on 2 December 2015.

    Introduction

    Mr Speaker, I beg to move the motion on the order paper in my name and that of my Rt Hon Friends.

    The question before the House today is how we keep the British people safe from the threat posed by ISIL.

    And Mr Speaker, let me be clear from the outset, this is not about whether we want to fight terrorism, it’s about how best we do that.

    I respect that governments of all political colours in this country have had to fight terrorism and have had to take the people with them as they do so.

    And I respect people who come to a different view from the government and from the one I’ll set out in the House today, and those who vote accordingly.

    And I hope that provides some reassurance to Members right across the House.

    Mr Speaker, in moving this motion, I am not pretending that the answers are simple.

    The situation in Syria is incredibly complex.

    I am not overstating the contribution that our incredible servicemen and women can make.

    Neither am I ignoring the risks of military action nor am I pretending that military action is any more than one part of the answer.

    I am absolutely clear that we must pursue a comprehensive strategy that also includes political, diplomatic and humanitarian action.

    And I know that the long-term solution in Syria – as in Iraq – must ultimately be a government that represents all of its people and one that can work with us to defeat the evil organisation of ISIL for good.

    But Mr Speaker, notwithstanding all of this, there is a simple question at the heart of the debate today.

    We face a fundamental threat to our security.

    ISIL have brutally murdered British hostages.

    They’ve inspired the worst terrorist attack against British people since 7/7 on the beaches of Tunisia and they’ve plotted atrocity after atrocity on the streets here at home.

    Since November last year our security services have foiled no fewer than 7 different plots against our people.

    So this threat is very real.

    And the question is this: do we work with our allies to degrade and destroy this threat?

    And do we go after these terrorists in their heartlands from where they are plotting to kill British people or do we sit back and wait for them to attack us?

    In answering this question we should remember that 15 months ago facing a threat from ISIL in Iraq this House voted 524 to 43 to authorise airstrikes in Iraq.

    Since then our brilliant RAF pilots have helped local forces to halt ISIL’s advance and recover 30% of the territory ISIL had captured.

    On Monday I spoke to the President of Iraq in Paris and he expressed his gratitude for the vital work our forces are doing.

    And yet when our planes reach the border with Syria, a border that ISIL themselves do not recognise, we can no longer act to defend either his country – or our indeed country.

    Even when we know that ISIL’s headquarters are in Raqqah in Syria and it is from here that many of the plots against our country are formed.

    Mr Speaker, we possess the capabilities to reduce this threat to our security.

    And my argument today is that we should not wait any longer before doing so.

    We should answer the call from our allies.

    The action we propose to take is legal, it is necessary and it is the right thing to do to keep our country safe.

    And my strong view is that this House should make clear that we will take up our responsibilities rather than pass them off and put our own national security in the hands of others.

    Key questions to answer

    Now Mr Speaker, since my statement last week, the House has had an opportunity to ask questions of our security experts.

    I have arranged a briefing for all Members as well as more detailed briefings for Privy Councillors.

    I have spoken further to our allies – including President Obama, Chancellor Merkel, President Hollande and the King of Jordan.

    The King of Jordan has written in The Daily Telegraph today expressing his wish for Britain to stand with Jordan in eliminating this global threat.

    I have also listened carefully to the questions asked by Members on all sides of this House and I hope that Honourable Members can see the influence this House has had on the motion that stands before us.

    The stress on post-conflict stabilisation and reconstruction, the importance of standing by our allies, the importance of only targeting ISIL, not deploying ground troops in combat operations, to avoid civilian casualties, the importance of ceasefires and a political settlement, a commitment to regular updates to this House.

    I’ve drawn these points from across the House and put them in the motion because I want as many people as possible to feel able to support this action.

    In my remarks, I want to address the most important points raised and I will of course take as many interventions as I can.

    Mr Speaker, the key questions that have been raised are these.

    First, could acting in this way actually increase the risk to our security by making an attack on Britain more likely?

    Second, does Britain really have the capability to make a significant difference?

    Third, the question asked by a number of Members – including the Hon Member for Gordon – is why don’t we just increase our level of air strikes in Iraq to free up capacity amongst other members of the coalition, so they can carry out more air strikes in Syria.

    Fourth, will there really be the ground forces needed to make this operation a success?

    Fifth, what is the strategy for defeating ISIL and securing a lasting political settlement in Syria?

    And sixth, is there a proper reconstruction, post conflict stabilisation plan for Syria?

    I want to try in the time I’ve got available to answer all of these in turn.

    Isil or Daesh

    But before we get on to all these things, Mr Speaker, I want to say a word about the terminology we use to describe this evil death cult.

    Having carefully considered the strong representations made to me by the Hon Member for Gillingham and Rainham and having listened to many Members of Parliament from across the House, I feel it is time to join our key ally France, the Arab League, and other members of the international community in using as frequently as possible the terminology Daesh rather than ISIL.

    Because frankly this evil death cult is neither a true representation of Islam nor is it a state.

    Let me turn to the important questions.

    Could acting increase the risk to our security?

    First, could acting increase the risk to our security?

    This is one of the most important questions we have to answer.

    Mr Speaker, Privy Councillors and Members from across the House have had a full briefing from the Chair of the independent Joint Intelligence Committee.

    Obviously I can’t share all the classified material but I can say this.

    Paris wasn’t just different because it was so close to us, or because it was so horrific in scale; as different because it showed the extent of terror planning from Daesh in Syria and the approach of sending people back from Syria to Europe.

    This was if you like, the head of the snake in Raqqa in action.

    So it’s not surprising in my view that the judgement of the Chair of the Joint Intelligence Committee and the judgement of the Director General of the Security Service is that the risk of a similar attack in the UK is real and that that the UK is already in the top tier of countries on ISIL’s target list.

    So let me be frank, Mr Speaker.

    If there is an attack on the UK in the coming weeks or months, there will be those who try to say it has happened because of our airstrikes.

    I do not believe that would be the case.

    Daesh have been trying to attack us for the last year – as we know from the 7 different plots that our security services have foiled.

    The terrorist threat level to the UK was raised to severe last August in the light of the threat from Daesh, meaning an attack is highly likely.

    Eight hundred people – including families and children – have been radicalised to such an extent that they have travelled to this so-called caliphate.

    The House should be under no illusion: these terrorists are plotting to kill us, and to radicalise our children, right now.

    They attack us because of who we are, not because of what we do.

    But when it comes to the risks of taking military action the risks of inaction are far greater thank the risks of what I propose.

    Would British airstrikes in Syria really make a difference?

    Next, there are those who ask whether Britain conducting strikes in Syria will really make a difference.

    This is a question that came up.

    I believe we can make a difference.

    I told the House last week about our dynamic targeting about our Brimstone missiles, about the RAPTOR pod on our tornadoes, and the intelligence gathering work of our REAPER drones.

    But there is another way of putting this which I think is equally powerful.

    There is, of course, in the coalition a lot of strike capability but when it comes to precision strike capability – whether covering Iraq or Syria – last week, the whole international coalition had some 26 aircraft available.

    Eight of those were British tornadoes.

    So typically, the UK actually represents between a quarter and a third of the international coalition’s precision bombing capability.

    And we also have about a quarter of the unmanned strike capability flying in the region.

    So we do have a significant proportion of high precision strike capability.

    That’s why this decision is so important.

    So the argument I was making is one reason why members of the international coalition – including President Obama and President Hollande who made these points to me personally – they believe that British planes would make a real difference in Syria, just as they are already doing in Iraq.

    Why not just increase our level of airstrikes in Iraq?

    In many way, what I’ve just said I believe helps to answer the next question that some Members have asked about why we do not simply increase our level of air strikes in Iraq to free up other coalition capacity for strikes in Syria.

    We have these capabilities that other Members of the coalition want to benefit from.

    And it makes absolutely no sense to stop using these capabilities at a border between Iraq and Syria that Daesh simply do not recognise or respect.

    In fact, there was a recent incident in which Syrian opposition forces needed urgent support in their fight against Daesh.

    British tornadoes were 8 minutes away just over the border in Iraq, no-one else was close.

    But Britain couldn’t help, so the Syrian opposition forces had to wait 40 minutes in a perilous situation while other coalition forces were scrambled.

    Now that sort of delay, it endangers the lives of those fighting Daesh on the ground and frankly does nothing for our reputation with our vital allies.

    There is a much more fundamental answer as to why we should carry out air strikes in Syria ourselves.

    And it’s this.

    It is Raqqa in Syria that is the headquarters of this threat to our security.

    It is in Syria where they pump and sell the oil that does so much to help finance their evil acts.

    And as I’ve said, it is in Syria where many of the plots against our country are formed.

    Will there really be the ground forces to make the operation a success?

    Let me turn to the question of whether there will be the ground forces to make this operation a success.

    Those who say there aren’t as many ground troops as we would like and that they are not all in the right place, they are correct.

    We are not dealing with an ideal situation but let me make a series of, I think, important points.

    First, we should be clear what air strikes alone can achieve.

    We don’t need ground troops to target the supply of oil which Daesh uses to fund terrorism.

    We don’t need ground troops to hit Daesh’s headquarters, their infrastructure, their supply routes, their training facilities, their weapons supplies.

    It’s clear that airstrikes can have an effect, as I’ve just said, with the issue of Khan and Hussain.

    So irrespective of ground forces, our RAF can do serious damage to Daesh’s ability right now to bring terror to our streets and we should give them our support.

    As I said last week, the full answer to the question of ground forces can’t be achieved until there is a new Syrian government that represents all the Syrian people, not just Sunni, Shia and Alawite, but Christian, Druze and others.

    And it is this new government who will be the natural partners for our forces in defeating Daesh for good.

    But there are some ground forces that we can work with in the meantime.

    Last week I told the House that we believe there are around 70,000 Syrian opposition fighters who do not belong to extremist groups and with whom we can co-ordinate attacks on Daesh.

    The House will appreciate there are some limits on what I can say about these groups.

    Not least because I can’t risk the safety of these courageous people – who are being targeted daily by the regime, or by Daesh, or by both.

    But I know this is an area of great interest and concern for the House, so let me try and say a little more.

    The 70,000 is an estimate from our independent Joint Intelligence Committee based on a detailed analysis, updated on a daily basis, and drawing on a wide range of open source and intelligence.

    Of these 70,000, the majority are from the Free Syrian Army.

    Alongside the 70,000, there are some 20,000 Kurdish fighters with whom we can also work.

    Now I’m not arguing – this is a crucial point – I am not arguing that all of these 70,000 are somehow ideal partners. Some though, left the Syrian army because of Assad’s brutality and they clearly can play a role in the future of Syria.

    And that is actually a view that is taken by the Russians as well, who are prepared to talk to these people.

    And those figures do not include a further 25,000 actual extremist fighters in groups which reject political participation and any co-ordination with non-Muslims.

    So although they fight Daesh, they cannot and will not be our partners.

    But, Mr Speaker, there are ground forces who will take the fight to Daesh and in many cases we can work with them and we can assist them.

    Third, if we don’t act now, we should be clear that there will be even fewer ground forces over time as Daesh will get even stronger.

    My view, we simply cannot afford to wait.

    Is there a proper strategy?

    Let me turn to our overall strategy.

    Again I set this out in the House last week.

    But let me say a little more about each of the non-military elements – counter-terrorism, counter-extremism, the political and diplomatic process and the vital humanitarian work that my Rt Hon Friend just referred to.

    Our counter-terrorism strategy gives Britain a comprehensive plan to prevent and foil plots at home and also to address the poisonous extremist ideology that is the root cause of the threat that we face.

    As part of this I can announce today that we will establish a comprehensive review to root out any remaining funding of extremism within the UK.

    This will examine specifically the nature, scale and origin of the funding of Islamist extremist activity in the UK including any overseas sources.

    And it will report to myself and My Rt Hon Friend the Home Secretary next spring.

    Mr Speaker, I know there are some who suggest that military action could in some way undermine our counter-extremism strategy by radicalising British Muslims.

    So let me take this head on.

    British Muslims are appalled by Daesh.

    These women-raping, Muslim-murdering, mediaeval monsters – are hijacking the peaceful religion of Islam for their warped ends.

    As the King of Jordan says in his article today: these people are not Muslims they are outlaws from Islam.

    And we must stand with our Muslim friends here and around the world as they reclaim their religion from these terrorists.

    So far from an attack on Islam, we are engaged in a defence of Islam.

    And far from a risk of radicalising British Muslims by acting failing to act would actually be to betray British Muslims and the wider religion of Islam in its very hour of need.

    The second part of our strategy is our support for the diplomatic and political process.

    Let me say a word about how this process can lead to the ceasefires between the regime and opposition that are so essential for the next stages of this political transition.

    It begins with identifying the right people to put around the table.

    Next week we expect the Syrian regime to nominate a team of people to negotiate under the auspices of the United Nations.

    Over the last 18 months political and armed opposition positions have converged.

    We know the main groups and their ideas.

    And in the coming days Saudi Arabia will host a meeting for opposition representatives in Riyadh. And the United Nations will take forwards discussions on steps towards a ceasefire, including at the next meeting of the International Syria Support Group which we expect to take place before Christmas.

    The aim is clear as I’ve said, a transitional government in 6 months, a new constitution and free elections within 18 months so I would argue that the key elements of a deal are emerging.

    Ceasefires, opposition groups coming together, the regime looking at negotiations, the key players – America and Russia, Saudi Arabia and Iran and key regional players like Turkey all in the room together.

    And my argument is this, hitting Daesh doesn’t hurt this process, it helps this process which is the eventual goal.

    I set out for the House last week our support for refugees in the region and the extra £1 billion that we would be prepared to commit to Syria’s reconstruction and the broad international alliance that we would work with in that rebuilding phase.

    But Mr Speaker, let us be clear.

    People will not return to Syria, if part of it is under the control of an organisation that enslaves Yazidis, throws gay people off buildings, beheads aid workers and forces children to marry before they are even 10 years old.

    So we cannot separate the humanitarian work and the reconstruction work from dealing with Daesh itself.

    Is there a proper plan for post-conflict reconstruction?

    Let me turn in more detail to the plan for post conflict reconstruction to support a new Syrian government when it emerges.

    I have said we would be prepared to commit at least £1 billion to Syria’s reconstruction.

    The initial priorities would be protection, security, stabilisation and confidence-building measures including meeting basic humanitarian needs, such as education, health and shelter, and of course helping refugees to return.

    Now over time the focus would shift to longer-term rebuilding of Syria’s shattered infrastructure, harnessing the expertise of the international financial institutions and the private sector.

    As I said last week, we are not in the business of trying to dismantle the Syrian state, or its institutions.

    We would aim to allocate reconstruction funds against a plan agreed between a new inclusive Syrian government and the international community, once the conflict has ended.

    That is the absolute key.

    Conclusion

    Mr Speaker, let me conclude. This is not 2003.

    We must not use past mistakes as an excuse for indifference or inaction.

    And let’s be clear Mr Speaker, inaction does not amount to a strategy for our security or for the Syrian people.

    But inaction is a choice. I believe it’s the wrong choice.

    We face a clear threat.

    We have listened to our allies.

    We have taken legal advice.

    We have a unanimous United Nations Resolution.

    We have discussed our proposed action extensively at meetings of the National Security Council and Cabinet.

    I have responded personally to the detailed report of the Foreign Affairs Select Committee.

    We have a proper motion before the House.

    And we are having a 10 and a half hour debate today.

    Now in that spirit I look forward to the rest of the debate. I look forward to listening to the contributions of Members on all sides of the House.

    But I hope that at the end of it all, the House will come together in large numbers for Britain to play its part in defeating these evil extremists and taking the action that is needed now to keep our country safe.

    In doing so, I pay tribute to the extraordinary bravery and service of our inspirational armed forces who will once again put themselves in harm’s way to protect our values and our way of life.

    And I commend this motion to the House.

  • David Cameron – 2015 Statement on Muslim Brotherhood Review

    davidcameron

    Below is the text of the statement made by David Cameron, the Prime Minister, in the House of Commons on 17 December 2015.

    I have today laid before both Houses the main findings of the internal review I commissioned in the last Parliament to improve the government’s understanding of the Muslim Brotherhood; establish whether the Muslim Brotherhood’s ideology or activities, or those of individual members or affiliates, put at risk, damaged, or risked damaging the UK’s national interests; and where appropriate inform policy.

    The review involved substantial research and wide consultation including Muslim Brotherhood representatives in the UK and overseas, and an open invitation to other interested parties to submit written contributions.

    It is a complex subject: the Muslim Brotherhood comprises both a transnational network, with links in the UK, and national organisations in and outside the Islamic world. The movement is deliberately opaque, and habitually secretive.

    Since the authors completed their initial research in 2014, and during the course of the government’s examination of the findings, further allegations of violence carried out by supporters of the Muslim Brotherhood have surfaced, which the government will continue to investigate, taking action as appropriate.

    As the Muslim Brotherhood continues to evolve, so must our understanding of it. The findings have revealed much that we did not know but work will continue to ensure we keep up to date with developments.

    The government considers the following the most important findings.

    The Muslim Brotherhood’s foundational texts call for the progressive moral purification of individuals and Muslim societies and their eventual political unification in a Caliphate under Sharia law. To this day the Muslim Brotherhood characterises Western societies and liberal Muslims as decadent and immoral. It can be seen primarily as a political project.

    Parts of the Muslim Brotherhood have a highly ambiguous relationship with violent extremism. Both as an ideology and as a network it has been a rite of passage for some individuals and groups who have gone on to engage in violence and terrorism. It has stated its opposition to al-Qaida (AQ) but it has never credibly denounced the use made by terrorist organisations of the work of Sayyid Qutb, one of the Brotherhood’s most prominent ideologues. Individuals closely associated with the Muslim Brotherhood in the UK have supported suicide bombing and other attacks in Israel by Hamas, an organisation whose military wing has been proscribed in the UK since 2001 as a terrorist organisation, and which describes itself as the Palestinian chapter of the Muslim Brotherhood.

    Moreover, despite the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood’s public condemnation of violence in 2012/13 and afterwards, some of their supporters have been involved in violent exchanges with the security forces and other groups. Media reports and credible academic studies indicate that in the past 12 months a minority of Muslim Brotherhood supporters in Egypt have engaged alongside other Islamists in violent acts. Some senior leaders have publicly reiterated the Muslim Brotherhood’s commitment to non-violence, but others have failed to renounce the calls for retribution in some recent Muslim Brotherhood statements.

    Muslim Brotherhood-associated and influenced groups in the UK have at times had a significant influence on national organisations which have claimed to represent Muslim communities (and on that basis have had a dialogue with government), charities and some mosques. But they have also sometimes characterised the UK as fundamentally hostile to Muslim faith and identity; and expressed support for terrorist attacks conducted by Hamas.

    Aspects of the Muslim Brotherhood’s ideology and activities therefore run counter to British values of democracy, the rule of law, individual liberty, equality and the mutual respect and tolerance of different faiths and beliefs. The Muslim Brotherhood is not the only movement that promotes values which appear intolerant of equality and freedom of faith and belief. Nor is it the only movement or group dedicated in theory to revolutionising societies and changing existing ways of life. But I have made clear this government’s determination to reject intolerance, and to counter not just violent Islamist extremism, but also to tackle those who create the conditions for it to flourish.

    The main findings of the review support the conclusion that membership of, association with, or influence by the Muslim Brotherhood should be considered as a possible indicator of extremism.

    We will therefore keep under review the views that are promoted and activities that are undertaken by Muslim Brotherhood associates in the UK, in Arabic as well as English. We will consider whether any action under the Counter-Extremism Strategy or as part of our wider work may be appropriate, including action in line with the new engagement policy the government will develop to ensure central and local government does not inadvertently provide legitimacy or a platform for extremists. We will challenge extremists’ poisonous narratives and promote positive alternatives that show vulnerable people that there are better ways to get on in life.

    We will continue to:

    – refuse visas to members and associates of the Muslim Brotherhood who are on record as having made extremist comments, where this would be conducive to the public good and in line with our existing policy guidelines and approach to extremism in all forms

    – seek to ensure charities that have links to the Muslim Brotherhood are not misused to support or finance the Muslim Brotherhood instead of their lawful charitable purpose

    – strengthen liaison arrangements with international partners to ensure that allegations of illicit funding or other misuse of charities are robustly investigated and appropriate action taken

    – enforce the EU asset freeze on Hamas

    – keep under review whether the views and activities of the Muslim Brotherhood meet the legal test for proscription

    We will also intensify scrutiny of the views and activities that Muslim Brotherhood members, associates and affiliates (whether based in the UK or elsewhere) promote overseas. As our Counter-Extremism Strategy makes clear, insights from our overseas posts will help the government better understand drivers, networks and ideologies. We will continue to consult, and share information and analysis with, governments in the Middle East and North Africa as appropriate. We will then take further decisions and actions as needed.

  • David Cameron – 2016 Speech on EU Reform

    davidcameron

    Below is the text of the statement made by David Cameron, the Prime Minister, in the House of Commons on 22 February 2016.

    With permission, Mr Speaker, I would like to make a statement on the agreement reached in Brussels last week.

    But first let me say a word about the migration crisis which was also discussed at the Council.

    We agreed that we needed to press ahead with strengthening the EU’s external borders to ensure that non-refugees are returned promptly and back the new mission to disrupt the criminal gangs working between Greece and Turkey, who are putting so many people’s lives at risk.

    And I made clear that Britain will continue to contribute in all these areas and will step up contributions.

    Turning to Britain’s place in Europe, Mr Speaker, I have spent the last 9 months setting out the 4 areas where we need reform and meeting with all 27 other EU heads of state and government to reach an agreement that delivers concrete reforms in all 4 areas.

    Let me take each in turn.

    Financial protection

    First, British jobs and British business depend on being able to trade with Europe on a level playing field.

    So we wanted new protections for our economy to safeguard the pound, to promote our industries – including our financial services industries, to protect British taxpayers from the costs of problems in the eurozone and to ensure we have a full say over the rules of the single market, while remaining outside the eurozone.

    And we got all of those things.

    We have not just permanently protected the pound and our right to keep it, but ensured that we can’t be discriminated against.

    Responsibility for supervising the financial stability of the UK will always remain in the hands of the Bank of England.

    We have ensured that British taxpayers will never be made to bail out countries in the eurozone.

    We have made sure that the eurozone cannot act as a bloc to undermine the integrity of the free trade single market.

    And we have guaranteed that British business will never face any discrimination for being outside the eurozone.

    So, for example, our financial services firms – our number 1 services export employing over a million people can never be forced to relocate inside the eurozone if they want to undertake complex trades in euros, just because they are based in the UK.

    And these protections are not just set out in a legally-binding agreement.

    All 28 member states were also clear that the treaties would be changed to incorporate the protections for the UK as an economy that is inside the EU but outside the eurozone.

    We also agreed a new mechanism to enable non-eurozone countries to raise issues of concern – and we won the battle to ensure this could be triggered by one country alone.

    Of course, Mr Speaker, none of these protections would be available if we were to leave the EU.

    European competitiveness

    Second, we wanted commitments to make Europe more competitive, creating jobs and making British families more financially secure.

    Again we got them.

    Europe will complete the single market in key areas that will really help Britain.

    In services – making it easier for thousands of UK service-based companies like IT firms to trade in Europe.

    In capital – so UK start-ups can access more sources of finance for their businesses.

    And in energy – allowing new suppliers into our energy market – meaning lower energy bills for families across the country.

    We have secured commitments to complete trade and investment agreements with the fastest growing and most dynamic economies around the world including the USA, Japan and China as well as our Commonwealth allies India, New Zealand and Australia.

    These deals could add billions of pounds and thousands of jobs to our economy every year.

    And, of course they build on the deals we already have with 53 countries around the world through which Britain has benefitted from the negotiating muscle that comes from being part of the world’s largest trading bloc.

    Mr Speaker, of course country after country have said to me that of course they could sign trade deals with Britain.

    But they have also said that their priority would be trade deals with the EU.

    By their nature these EU deals would be bigger and better.

    And a deal with Britain wouldn’t even be possible until we had settled our position outside the EU.

    So Mr Speaker, for those members who care about signing new trade deals outside the EU, we would be looking at years and years of delay.

    Last but by no means least on competitiveness, one of the biggest frustrations for British business is the red tape and bureaucracy so we agreed there will now be targets to cut the total burden of EU regulation on business.

    This builds on the progress we have already made – with the Commission already cutting the number of new initiatives by 80% and it means that the cost of EU red tape will be going down, not up.

    Of course, if we were to leave the EU but ultimately achieve a deal with full access to the single market – like Norway – we would still be subject to all of the EU’s regulation when selling into Europe.

    As the former Europe spokesman for the Norwegian Conservative Party Nikolai Astrup said:

    If you want to run Europe, you must be in Europe. If you want to be run by Europe, feel free to join Norway in the European Economic Area.

    Migration

    Third, we wanted to reduce the very high level of migration from within the EU by preventing the abuse of free movement and preventing our welfare system acting as a magnet for people to come to our country.

    After the hard work of the Home Secretary we have secured new powers against criminals from other countries including powers to stop them from coming here in the first place, and powers to deport them if they are already here.

    We agreed longer re-entry bans for fraudsters and people who collude in sham marriages.

    And an end to the frankly ridiculous situation where EU nationals can avoid British immigration rules when bringing their families from outside the EU.

    Mr Speaker, this agreement broke new ground – with the European Council agreeing to reverse decisions from the European Court of Justice.

    We have also secured a breakthrough agreement for Britain to reduce the unnatural draw that our benefits system exerts across Europe.

    We have already made sure that EU migrants cannot claim the new unemployment benefit, Universal Credit, while looking for work.

    And those coming from the EU who haven’t found work within 6 months can now be required to leave.

    At this Council we agreed that EU migrants working in Britain can be prevented from sending child benefit home at UK rates.

    This will apply first to new claimants – and then to existing claimants from the start of 2020.

    And we also established a new emergency brake so that EU migrants will have to wait 4 years until they have full access to our benefits.

    Mr Speaker, people said it was impossible to achieve real change in this area.

    And that a 4-year restriction on benefits was completely out of the question.

    And yet that is what we have done.

    And once activated, the emergency brake will be in place for 7 years.

    So if it begins next year, it will still be operating in 2024 and there will be people who won’t be getting full benefits until 2028.

    Mr Speaker, all along we have said that people shouldn’t be able to come here and get access to our benefits system straightaway.

    No more something for nothing.

    And that is what we have achieved.

    Mr Speaker, I’m sure the discussion about welfare and immigration will be intense.

    But let me make this point.

    No country outside the EU has agreed full access to the single market without accepting paying into the EU and accepting free movement.

    In addition, these new safeguards lapse if we leave the EU.

    Powers for UK Parliament

    The fourth area where we wanted to make significant changes was to protect our country from further European political integration and to increase powers for our national Parliament.

    Ever since we joined, Europe has been on the path to something called ‘ever closer union’.

    It means a political union. We’ve never liked it. We never wanted it.

    And now Britain will be permanently and legally excluded from it.

    The text says that the treaties will be changed to make clear that – and I quote:

    …the Treaty references to ever closer union do not apply to the United Kingdom.

    So Mr Speaker, as a result of this negotiation, Britain can never be part of a European superstate.

    The council also agreed that ever closer union, which has been referred to in previous judgements from the European Court of Justice does not offer a legal basis for extending the scope of any provision of the treaties or of EU secondary legislation.

    Mr Speaker, people used to talk about a multi-speed Europe.

    Now we have a clear agreement that not only are different countries able to travel at different speeds, they are ultimately heading to different destinations too. And I would argue that is fundamental change.

    We have also strengthened the role of this House and all national parliaments.

    We have already passed a Referendum Act to make sure that no powers can be handed to Brussels without the explicit consent of the British people in a referendum.

    Now, if Brussels comes up with legislation we don’t want, we can get together with other parliaments and block it with a red card.

    And we have a new mechanism to finally enforce the principle that – as far as possible – powers should sit here in Westminster, not in Brussels.

    So every year the EU now has to go through the powers they exercise and work out which are no longer needed and should be returned to nation states.

    In recent years we have also seen attempts to bypass our opt-out on justice and home affairs by bringing forward legislation under a different label.

    For example, attempts to interfere with the way the UK authorities handle fraud were tried under the guise of legislation on the EU budget.

    The agreements at last week’s Council ensure this can never happen again.

    Mr Speaker, the reforms we have secured will be legally binding in international law, and will be deposited as a treaty at the UN.

    And they cannot be unpicked without the agreement of Britain and every other EU country.

    And as I have said, all 28 member states were also clear that the treaties would be changed to incorporate the protections for the UK as an economy outside the eurozone – and our permanent exclusion from ever closer union.

    Mr Speaker, our special status means that Britain can have the best of both worlds.

    We will be in the parts of Europe that work for us, influencing the decisions that affect us, in the driving seat of the world’s biggest single market and with the ability to take action to keep our people safe.

    But we will be out of the parts of Europe that do not work for us.

    Out of the euro. Out of the eurozone bailouts.

    Out of the passport-free, no borders Schengen area and permanently and legally protected from ever being part of an ever closer union.

    Of course, there is still more to do.

    I am the first to say that there are still many ways in which this organisation needs to improve – and the task of reforming Europe does not end with last week’s agreement.

    Referendum

    But with the special status this settlement gives us, I do believe the time has come to fulfil another vital commitment this government made – and that is to hold a referendum.

    So, Mr Speaker, I am today commencing the process set out under our Referendum Act to propose that the British people decide our future in Europe through in-out referendum on Thursday 23 June.

    The Foreign Secretary has laid in both Houses a report setting out the new settlement that the government has negotiated.

    This fulfils the duty to publish information set out in section 6 of the European Union Referendum Act 2015.

    And as the Cabinet agreed on Saturday, the government’s position will be to recommend that Britain remains in this reformed European Union.

    Mr Speaker, this is a vital decision for the future of our country. And we should also be clear that it is a final decision.

    An idea has been put forward that if the country votes to leave we could have a second renegotiation and perhaps another referendum.

    Mr Speaker I won’t dwell on the irony that some people who want to vote to leave – apparently want to use a leave vote to remain.

    But such an approach also ignores more profound points about democracy, diplomacy and legality.

    This is a straight democratic decision – staying in or leaving – and no government can ignore that.

    Having a second renegotiation followed by a second referendum is not on the ballot paper.

    And for a Prime Minister to ignore the express will of the British people to leave the EU would not just be wrong, it would be undemocratic.

    On the diplomacy, the idea that other European countries would be ready to start a second negotiation is for the birds. Many are under pressure for what they have already agreed.

    Then there is the legality. I want to spell out this point very carefully. If the British people vote to leave there is only one way to bring that about – and that is to trigger Article 50 of the Treaties and begin the process of exit.

    And the British people would rightly expect that to start straight away.

    Let me be absolutely clear how this works. It triggers a 2-year time period to negotiate the arrangements for exit.

    At the end of this period, if no agreement is in place then exit is automatic unless every 1 of the 27 other EU member states agrees to a delay.

    And we should be clear that this process is not an invitation to re-join, it is a process for leaving.

    Sadly, Mr Speaker, I have known a number of couples who have begun divorce proceedings.

    But I do not know any who have begun divorce proceedings in order to renew their marriage vows.

    We should also be clear about what would happen if that deal to leave wasn’t done within 2 years.

    Our current access to the single market would cease immediately after 2 years were up.

    And our current trade agreements with 53 countries around the world would lapse.

    This cannot be described as anything other than risk, uncertainty and a leap in the dark that could hurt working people in our country for years to come.

    And this is not some theoretical question, this is a real decision about people’s lives.

    When it comes to people’s jobs, it is simply not enough to say that it will be all right on the night and we will work it out.

    And I believe that in the weeks to come we need to properly face up to the economic consequences of the choice to leave.

    Mr Speaker, I believe Britain will be stronger, safer and better off by remaining in a reformed European Union.

    Stronger – because we can play a leading role in one of the world’s largest organisations from within, helping to make the big decisions on trade and security that determine our future.

    Safer – because we can work with our European partners to fight cross-border crime and terrorism.

    And better off – because British businesses will have full access to the free trade single market, bringing jobs, investment and lower prices.

    Mr Speaker, there will be much debate about sovereignty – and rightly so.

    To me what matters most is the power to get things done for our people, for our country, and for our future.

    Leaving the EU may briefly make us feel more sovereign – but would it actually give us more power, more influence and a greater ability to get things done?

    If we leave the EU, will we have the power to stop our businesses being discriminated against? No.

    Will we have the power to insist that European countries share with us their border information so we know what terrorists and criminals are doing in Europe? No.

    Will we have more influence over the decisions that affect the prosperity and security of British families? No.

    We are a great country – and whatever choice we make we will still be great.

    But I believe the choice is between being an even greater Britain inside a reformed EU or a great leap into the unknown.

    The challenges facing the west today are genuinely threatening.

    Putin’s aggression in the east. Islamist extremism in the south.

    In my view this is no time to divide the west.

    When faced with challenges to our way of life, our values and our freedoms, this is a time for strength in numbers.

    And Mr Speaker, let me end by saying this.

    I am not standing for re-election.

    I have no other agenda than what is best for our country.

    I am standing here today telling you what I think.

    My responsibility as Prime Minister is to speak plainly about what I believe is right for our country.

    And that is what I will do every day for the next 4 months.

    And I commend this statement to the House.

  • David Cameron – 2016 Statement Following Cabinet Meeting on EU Council

    davidcameron

    Below is the text of the statement made by David Cameron, the Prime Minister, at Downing Street in London on 20 February 2016.

    Last night in Brussels I set out Britain’s new settlement with the European Union.

    This morning I have just chaired a meeting of the Cabinet in which I updated them on the special status we have secured for Britain.

    And the Cabinet agreed that the government’s position will be to recommend that Britain remains in a reformed European Union.

    Now I want to speak directly to the British people to explain why.

    We are approaching one of the biggest decisions this country will face in our lifetimes.

    Whether to remain in a reformed European Union – or to leave.

    This choice goes to the heart of the kind of country we want to be. And the future that we want for our children.

    This is about how we trade with neighbouring countries to create jobs, prosperity and financial security for our families.

    And it is about how we co-operate to keep our people safe and our country strong. I know there will be many passionate arguments over the months ahead.

    And individual Cabinet Ministers will have the freedom to campaign in a personal capacity as they wish.

    But my responsibility as Prime Minister is to speak plainly about what I believe is right for our country. I do not love Brussels. I love Britain.

    I am the first to say that there are still many ways in which Europe needs to improve – and that the task of reforming Europe does not end with yesterday’s agreement.

    And I will never say that our country couldn’t survive outside Europe.

    We are Great Britain – we can achieve great things.

    That is not the question in this referendum.

    The question is will we be safer, stronger and better off working together in a reformed Europe or out on our own. I believe we will be safer in a reformed Europe, because we can work with our European partners to fight cross border crime and terrorism.

    I believe Britain will be stronger in a reformed Europe because we can play a leading role in one of the world’s largest organisations from within, helping to make the big decisions on trade and security that determine our future.

    And I believe we will be better off in a reformed Europe because British businesses will have full access to the free trade single market, bringing jobs, investment and lower prices.

    Let me be clear. Leaving Europe would threaten our economic and our national security.

    Those who want to leave Europe cannot tell you if British businesses would be able to access Europe’s free trade single market or if working people’s jobs are safe or how much prices would rise.

    All they are offering is risk at a time of uncertainty – a leap in the dark.

    Our plan for Europe gives us the best of both worlds.

    It underlines our special status through which families across Britain get all the benefits of being in the EU, including more jobs, lower prices and greater security.

    But our special status also means we are out of the parts of Europe that don’t work for us.

    So we will never join the Euro, we will never be part of Eurozone bailouts, never be part of the passport-free no borders area, or a European Army or an EU super-state.

    Three years ago I committed to the British people that I would renegotiate our position in the European Union and hold an in-out referendum.

    Now I am delivering that commitment.

    You will decide.

    And whatever your decision, I will do my best to deliver it.

    On Monday I will commence the process set out under our Referendum Act.

    And I will go to parliament and propose that the British people decide our future in Europe through an in-out referendum on Thursday 23rd June.

    The choice is in your hands.

    But my recommendation is clear.

    I believe that Britain will be safer, stronger and better off in a reformed European Union.

  • David Cameron – 2016 Statement Following European Council

    davidcameron

    Below is the text of the statement made by David Cameron, the Prime Minister, following the meeting of the European Council to discuss giving the UK special status in the EU.

    Within the last hour I have negotiated a deal to give the UK special status in the European Union.

    I will fly back to London tonight and update the Cabinet at 10am tomorrow morning.

    This deal has delivered on the commitments I made at the beginning of this renegotiation process.

    Britain will be permanently out of ever closer union – never part of a European superstate.

    There will be tough new restrictions on access to our welfare system for EU migrants – no more something for nothing.

    Britain will never join the Euro. And we have secured vital protections for our economy and full say over the rules of the free trade single market while remaining outside of the Euro.

    I believe it is enough for me to recommend that the United Kingdom remain in the European Union – having the best of both worlds.

    We will be in the parts of Europe that work for us, influencing the decisions that affect us in the driving seat of the world’s biggest market and with the ability to take action to keep people safe.

    And we will be out of the parts of Europe that don’t work for us.

    Out of the open borders. Out of the bailouts. Out of the Euro. And out of all those schemes in which Britain wants no part.

    Let me set out the details of exactly what we have agreed and why.

    I began this negotiation to address the concerns of the British people.

    Today all 28 member states have signed up to concrete reforms in each of the 4 areas I set out.

    British jobs and British business all depend on being able to trade with Europe on a level playing field.

    Financial protection

    So our first aim in these negotiations was to get new protections for countries like ours which are in the single market but not in the euro.

    Let me take you through what we have secured.

    We have permanently protected the pound and our right to keep it. For the first time, the EU has explicitly acknowledged it has more than one currency.

    Responsibility for supervising the financial stability of the UK remains in the hands of the Bank of England, so we continue to keep our taxpayers and our savers safe.

    We have ensured that British taxpayers will never be made to bail out countries in the Eurozone.

    We have ensured that the UK’s economic interests are protected. We have made sure that the Eurozone cannot act as a bloc to undermine the integrity of the free trade single market.

    And we have guaranteed British business will never face any discrimination for being outside the Eurozone.

    For example, our financial services firms can never be forced to relocate inside the Eurozone if they want to trade in euros, just because they are based in the UK.

    And not only are these rules set out in a legally-binding agreement, we have also agreed that should the UK, or another non-Euro member state, fear these rules are being broken they can activate an emergency safeguard, unilaterally, to ensure they are enforced.

    Let me be clear, because there has been a big debate about this.

    Britain will have the power to pull this lever on our own.

    European competitiveness

    Our second aim in these negotiations was to make Europe more competitive, so we create jobs and make British families more financially secure.

    We have secured a declaration outlining a number of commitments in this area.

    For the first time, the European Union will now say competitiveness is – and I quote – “an essential objective of the union.”

    This is important because it goes to the very heart of what Europe should be about.

    It means Europe will complete the single market in services.

    This will make it easier for service-based companies including IT firms to trade in Europe.

    Nowhere will this be more of an opportunity than in the UK where thousands of service companies make up two thirds of our economy.

    It could add up to 2 per cent to our economy each year.

    That’s a real improvement.

    The European Union will also complete the single market in capital.

    This will mean UK start-ups will be able to access more sources of finance for their businesses and it will also present new opportunities for the UK financial services industry.

    Europe will now also complete the single market in energy.

    This will allow more suppliers into the UK energy market, lowering bills and increasing investment across the continent.

    That’s a real improvement too.

    In addition, we have secured commitments from Europe to complete trade and investment agreements with the fastest growing and most dynamic economies around the world including the USA, Japan and China as well as our Commonwealth allies India, New Zealand and Australia.

    These deals could add billions of pounds and thousands of jobs to our economy every year.

    And because I know one of the biggest frustrations with Europe, especially for small businesses, is the red tape and bureaucracy we have also got Europe to introduce targets to cut the total burden of EU regulation on business.

    That means that, from now on, the cost of EU red tape will be going down, not up.

    Migration

    Our third aim in these negotiations was to reduce the very high level of migration from within the EU by preventing the abuse of free movement and preventing our welfare system acting as a magnet for people to come to our country.

    In this respect, we have secured the following:

    New powers against criminals from other countries – including powers to stop them coming here in the first place, and powers to deport them if they are already here.

    Longer re-entry bans for fraudsters and people who collude in sham marriages.

    And an end to the ridiculous situation where EU nationals can avoid British immigration rules when bringing their families from outside the EU.

    We have also secured a breakthrough agreement for Britain to reduce the unnatural draw that our benefits system exerts across Europe.

    We have already made sure that EU migrants cannot claim the new unemployment benefit, Universal Credit, while looking for work.

    And those coming from the EU who haven’t found work within 6 months can now be required to leave.

    Today we have established a new emergency brake so that EU migrants will have to wait 4 years until they have full access to our benefits.

    This finally puts an end to the idea that people can come to our country and get something for nothing.

    The European Commission has said unambiguously that Britain already qualifies to use this mechanism.

    And it won’t be some short-term fix. Once activated this brake will be in place for a full 7 years.

    We have also agreed that EU migrants working in Britain can no longer send child benefit home at UK rates.

    The changes will apply first to new claimants.

    And, after intense negotiations, we have ensured that they also will apply to existing claimants, from the start of 2020.

    I came here to end the practice of sending child benefit overseas at UK rates.

    Both for current and future claimants.

    And I’ve got them both.

    Powers for UK Parliament

    Our fourth aim in these negotiations was to protect our country from further European political integration and increase powers for our national Parliament.

    Ever since we joined, Europe has been on the path to something called Ever Closer Union.

    It means a political union.

    We’ve never liked it. We’ve never wanted it.

    And today we have permanently carved Britain out of it, so that we can never be forced into political integration with the rest of Europe.

    The text of the legally binding agreement sets out in full the UK’s position.

    It says that the treaties will be changed to make clear – and I quote: “…the Treaty references to ever closer union do not apply to the United Kingdom.”

    Let me put this as simply as I can: Britain will never be part of a European superstate.

    We have also put power back in the hands of Westminster and other national parliaments.

    A new red card will mean that the UK Parliament can work with others to block unwanted legislation from Brussels.

    And at long last we have an agreement that, wherever possible, powers should be returned to member states and and we have a new mechanism to make this a reality.

    Every year the EU now has to go through the powers they exercise and work out which are no longer needed and should be returned to nation states.

    In recent years we have also seen attempts to bypass our opt-out on justice and home affairs by bringing forward legislation under a different label.

    For example, attempts to interfere with the way the UK authorities handle fraud but under the guise of legislation on the EU budget.

    With today’s new agreement we have made sure this can never happen again.

    Likewise, we have established once and for all in international law that Britain’s national security is the sole responsibility of the British Government – so, for instance, we will never be part of a European Army.

    These are significant reforms.

    Further reforms

    But I have always said that if we needed to go further to put Britain’s sovereignty beyond any doubt, then we would.

    So in addition to these changes, I will shortly be bringing forward further proposals that we can take as country, unilaterally, to strengthen the sovereignty of Britain’s great institutions.

    The reforms that we have secured today have been agreed by all 28 leaders.

    And I thank them for their patience, for their good will, for their assistance, for all the work that we’ve done, not just in the last 48 hours, but in all the months since the election last year.

    The changes will be legally binding in international law, and will be deposited at the UN.

    They cannot be unpicked without the unanimous agreement of every EU country – and that includes Britain.

    So when I said I wanted reforms that are legally binding and irreversible – that is what I’ve got.

    And the council was also clear that the treaties will be changed in 2 vital respects.

    To incorporate the new principles for managing the relationship between countries inside and outside the Eurozone and to carve the UK out of ever closer union.

    I believe the changes we have secured as a country fulfil the objectives I set out in our manifesto at the last election.

    And I think they do create a more flexible Europe more of a “live and let live” arrangement that recognises one size does not fit all.

    But of course, there is still more to do.

    I am the first to say that there are still many ways in which this organisation needs to improve.

    The task of reforming Europe does not end with today’s agreement.

    Far from it. This is a milestone on a journey, not the end point.

    And let’s be clear, there’s absolutely nothing in this agreement that stops further reform taking place.

    For as long as we stay in the European Union, Britain will be in there driving forward the single market bearing down on regulation, championing the cause of free trade and helping to ensure that the Europe remains open to the world and robust for instance in the face of Russian aggression.

    Referendum

    But with this new agreement I believe the time has come for me to fulfil the promise I made when I stood for a second term as Prime Minister.

    So tomorrow I will present this agreement to Cabinet.

    And on Monday I will make a statement to Parliament and commence the process set out under our EU Referendum Act, to hold a referendum on Britain’s membership of the European Union.

    The British people must now decide whether to stay in this reformed European Union or to leave.

    This will be a once-in-a-generation moment to shape the destiny of our country.

    There will be many passionate arguments made over the months ahead.

    And this will not be a debate along party-political lines.

    There will be people in my party – and in other parties – arguing on both sides.

    And that is entirely right. This is an historic moment for Britain. And people must be free to reach their own conclusion.

    And in the end this will not be a decision for politicians.

    It will be a decision for the British people.

    And we will all need to look at the facts and to ask searching questions of what either choice would really mean.

    Simply being in Europe doesn’t solve our economic problems – far from it.

    I have always been clear about that – just as I have always opposed Britain joining the Euro.

    But turning our back on the EU is no solution at all.

    And we should be suspicious of those who claim that leaving Europe is an automatic fast-track to a land of milk and honey.

    We will all need to step back and consider carefully what is best for Britain, and best for our future.

    Whatever the British public decide I will make work to the best of my abilities.

    But let me tell you what I believe.

    I do not love Brussels. I love Britain.

    And my job – the job of the British Prime Minister – is doing all in my power to protect Britain’s interests.

    So when it comes to Europe, mine is a hard-headed assessment of what is in our national interest.

    We should never forget why this organisation came into being.

    Seventy years ago our countries were fighting each other. Today we are talking.

    And we should never take that cardinal achievement – peace and stability on the continent – for granted.

    Even today our world is an uncertain place with threats to our security and existence coming from multiple quarters. This is a time to stick together; a time for strength in numbers.

    Like many, I have had my doubts about the European Union as an organisation. I still do.

    But just because an organisation is frustrating it does not mean that you should necessarily walk out of it, and certainly not without thinking very carefully through the consequences.

    The question that matters for me as Prime Minister is what is best for my country.

    How, as a country, are we stronger, safer and better off?

    This is something I have given a huge amount of thought.

    Future of Britain’s relation with Europe

    And now we have this new agreement, I do believe the answers lie inside a reformed European Union.

    Let me explain why.

    First, Britain will be stronger remaining in a reformed Europe than we would be out on our own because we can play a leading role in one of the world’s largest organisations from within, helping us determine our future.

    Yes there are frustrations and no, we don’t always get our way.

    But time and again British leadership at the top table gets things done whether it’s imposing sanctions on Russia and Iran, or tackling people smuggling in the Mediterranean.

    Because the truth is this.

    Throughout our history, our strength as a nation has come from looking beyond our shores and reaching out to the world.

    And today the EU, like NATO and the UN, is a vital tool Britain can use to boost our nation’s power in the world and multiply our ability to advance Britain’s interests, to protect our people, sell our goods and services, generate jobs and a rising our people’s standard of living.

    Britain has always raised her eyes to the horizon and today we are energetically seeking new markets in India and China – from south-east Asia to Latin America – in the finest go-getting traditions of our nation.

    But that is not a substitute for doing the same right next door to us – on the continent of Europe.

    We can, and should, have the best of both worlds.

    That is one reason why our closest friends outside Europe – from Australia to New Zealand, the US to Canada – want us to stay in the EU. We should listen to them.

    People who want us to leave would take us out of this position of influence and they can’t tell you what that would mean for Britain’s ability to advance our interests.

    Second, I profoundly believe the British people will be safer remaining in a reformed Europe than we would be out on our own.

    Let me tell you why.

    We will always depend on NATO as the bedrock of our nation’s defence.

    But today we face a myriad of threats to our security, from terrorism to organised crime, from human trafficking to cyber attacks.

    We defeat these threats by working together, by the closest possible co-operation between countries, especially with our closest neighbours in Europe.

    Let me give you one example from the way we share information.

    When terrorists tried to bomb London for the second time in 2005 one of the culprits fled to mainland Europe.

    Because of the European Arrest Warrant we could bring him back in a few weeks.

    Previously that could have taken years.

    So when I say we are safer, I really mean it.

    By contrast, those who want to leave can’t tell you whether and how this co-operation would continue or how long it would take to attempt to replicate these arrangements with each European country one by one.

    Third, Britain will be better off remaining in a reformed Europe than we would be out on our own because British businesses will have full access to the free trade single market of 500 million people.

    This brings jobs, investment, lower prices and financial security to our country.

    Those who want to leave can’t tell you if we would still have access to this free trade single market, or on what terms.

    They can’t tell you how long it would take to get a new agreement with 27 countries.

    That could mean years of uncertainty for our economy – for our children’s future.

    And let’s be clear: if we were to leave, it’s not in Europe’s interests to give us all the benefits of membership without any of the responsibilities.

    Look at Norway and Switzerland.

    Neither have as much as access to the single market. And neither have any say over its rules.

    And yet they both still have to pay into the EU budget.

    And they both have to accept migration from within the EU.

    Of course, as I have said, the EU isn’t perfect.

    There is a need for further and continuing reform.

    But the UK is best placed to do that from the inside.

    Our plan for Europe gives us the best of both worlds.

    It underlines our special status through which we will be in the parts of Europe that work for us keeping full access to the EU’s free-trade ‘single market’, which makes us better off and the Europe-wide co-operation on crime and terrorism that makes us more secure.

    But we will be out of the parts of Europe that don’t work for us.

    We will never join the Euro.

    And we will never be part of Eurozone bailouts, the passport-free area, the European Army or an EU super-state.

    As I have said, I’m not saying that Britain couldn’t survive outside Europe.

    But after nearly 6 long years of difficult decisions and hard work by the British people, our economy has turned a corner.

    In an uncertain world, is this really the time to add a new huge risk to our national and economic security?

    I do not believe that is right for Britain.

    I believe we are stronger, safer and better off inside this reformed European Union.

    And that is why I will be campaigning with all my heart and soul to persuade the British people to remain in the reformed European Union that we have secured today.

  • David Cameron + Nick Clegg – 2010 Joint Press Conference

    davidcameronold

    Below is the text of the joint press conference held with David Cameron and Nick Clegg on 12 May 2010.

    Prime Minister:

    Good afternoon, everyone, and welcome. On the steps of Downing Street yesterday evening, I said that Nick and I wanted to put aside party differences and work together in the national interest. Since I set out that aim, both our parties have given their full backing to our coalition agreement, a Liberal Democrat-Conservative Government that we have negotiated.

    This is the first coalition Government in Britain for 65 years. It will be an administration united behind three key principles: freedom, fairness and responsibility. It will be an administration united behind one key purpose. That is to give our country the strong, stable and determined leadership that we need for the long term.

    In the days and weeks ahead, we will together be setting out in greater detail the aims and the values of our partnership and the full policy programme of our coalition Government. Today, we want to say just a few words about how we plan to work together and the significance of what we have achieved in coming to this agreement.

    This morning, as part of the process of establishing the new Government, I have been working to appoint the Cabinet. Later today, I will be chairing the first meeting of our National Security Council and Nick Clegg will be at my side. There are five Liberal Democrat Secretaries of State in Cabinet working hand in hand with Conservative colleagues to address the big challenges that Britain faces. Starting with Nick Clegg as Deputy Prime Minister, Liberal Democrats will be represented at every level of government. I think this is a sign of the strength and depth of this coalition and our sincere determination to work together constructively to make this coalition work in our national interest.

    We have a shared agenda and a shared resolve to tackle the challenges our country faces, to safeguard our national security and support our troops abroad, to tackle the debt crisis, to repair our broken political system and to build a stronger society. We understand that we are not going to beat these problems overnight. In particular, no Government in modern times has ever been left with such a terrible economic inheritance. Today’s unemployment figures are another sign of the human cost of the economic mistakes of the past decade. So we know there will be difficult decisions ahead but, working together, I know we can take the country through those difficult times to the better times that I believe lie ahead.

    But today, we are not just announcing a new Government and new ministers; we are announcing a new politics. A new politics where the national interest is more important than the party interest, where cooperation wins out over confrontation, where compromise, where give and take, where reasonable, civilised, grown-up behaviour is not a sign of weakness, but a sign of strength. One of the major problems of the last few years has been a chronic short-termism in government. With this coalition Government and this coalition agreement that we have for five years, we can act for the long term and make the major decisions for our country’s future. That is the true significance of this coalition. It can be an historic and seismic shift in our political landscape. It can demonstrate in government a new progressive partnership, believing in enterprise, markets and fiscal responsibility, committed to civil liberties and curbing the power of the state, passionate about building a green economy, determined to build the Big Society where families and communities are supported and strengthened and eager to make sure that the Big Society is matched by big citizens, where power is taken from the politicians and put in the hands of people as we embark on a recasting of our political system.

    Our Liberal-Conservative Government will take Britain in an historic new direction, a direction of hope and unity, conviction and common purpose. I am delighted to be standing here with the new Deputy Prime Minister. The two of us together leading this historic, Liberal Democrat-Conservative administration. I would like, now, to invite him to speak to us on what I think is a remarkable and very welcome day. Nick.

    Deputy Prime Minister:

    Thank you, David. We have just been through an election campaign and now we have a coalition. Until today, we were rivals; now, we are colleagues. That says a lot about the scale of the new politics that is now beginning to unfold. This is a new Government and it is a new kind of government, a radical reforming Government where it needs to be and a source of reassurance and stability at a time of great uncertainty in our country too.

    David has spoken about many of the challenges we all face: the economy, still struggling to get to its feet; the public finances, in a mess; our troops, engaged in a difficult and lasting conflict that requires resolution; our society, still scarred by too much unfairness and inequality; our politics, not yet recovered from the hammer blows of recent months. At a time of such enormous difficulties, our country needed a strong and stable government. It needed an ambitious Government determined to work relentlessly for a better future. That is what we have come together in this coalition to provide.

    This is a Government that will last, not because of a list of policies, important though they are, not because it will be easy. There will be bumps and scrapes along the way. We are different parties and we have different ideas. This is a Government that will last despite those differences, because we are united by a common purpose for the job we want to do together in the next five years. Our ambition is simple and yet profound. Our ambition is to put real power and opportunity into the hands of people, families and communities to change their lives and our country for the better.

    For me, that is what liberalism is all about: ensuring that everybody has the chance, no matter who they are or where they are from, to be the person they want to be and live the life they want to live. You can call it ‘fairness’. You can call it ‘responsibility’. You can call it ‘liberalism’. Whatever words you use, the change it will make to your life is the same. You will have the opportunities you crave: fairer taxes; better schools; a fair, green economy with growth that lasts; clean, open, plural politics that I hope, once again, you can put your faith in to deliver the help and the change you need.

    I want this to be a bold, reforming Government that puts fairness back into Britain, a Government that restores our faith in what a healthy, strong society can achieve, a Government that takes power away from politicians, as David said, and gives it back to you, a government that hands back your liberties and your privacy, building a nation where parents, pupils and patients can shape our schools and hospitals, where fine words on the environment are finally translated into real action, where social mobility becomes a reality for all where the great British traditions of tolerance and fairness are restored. I came into politics to change politics and to change Britain for good. Together, that job starts today. Thank you.

  • David Cameron – 2010 Speech at the Department of Business, Innovation and Skills

    davidcameron

    Below is the text of the speech made by David Cameron, the Prime Minister, on 13 May 2010.

    Thank you very much. It’s great to be here. The very first Department of State I ever walked into as a junior researcher over 20 years ago was actually the DTI – I think I walked through that door over there. The ministerial team in those days included talents as diverse as Alan Clark and Eric Forth, so if that coalition can work together, this one certainly can!

    I wanted to come here first for some very good reasons. First of all, we face huge economic challenges, and I think it’s so important, as Vince has just said, that we really demonstrate that this country is open for business; that we want to promote trade overseas; we want to get our economy moving; and we want to get our banks lending. I see this as a big economic department with a huge task in front of it, and I want all of you to work together to help deliver that.

    In doing so, you’ve got an incredibly talented team of ministers. Vince Cable is an absolute star in terms of economic policy and economic thinking; he’s demonstrated that over the last few years in parliament. To bring him together with David Willetts, who is also known as ‘two brains’ – you’ve got two ministers so far, and there are more to come this afternoon I promise you. But you already have some of the top talent that is available in parliament, to make a great success of this.

    The more I think about the endeavour, on which we have embarked, the more excited I become. Because this coalition government, if we can make it work – and I believe we can – is a five-year government; and one of the things that everyone says about our economy is that we need to make more long-term decisions. I think we have an incredible opportunity to make long-term decisions for the good of our economy, for the good of our country. In doing so, I will try, as Prime Minister, to do something else that hasn’t always happened in the past, and that is to appoint good ministers and keep them in post for a decent period of time. The average length of ministerial life, I think, is around one year and three months; we have got to do better than that when we have these big challenges in front of us.

    Two last things. Yes, this is a coalition government, but in many ways, all governments are a coalition – a coalition between politicians and civil servants. I want us to do better than has been done before, in making sure that coalition really works. Part of that is about respecting the work that civil servants do. Having worked as a special advisor 20 years ago, having watched government over the last 20 years, I know that the British Civil Service is an incredible machine. It requires, of course, the right coordination, the right leadership, the right combination with politicians. But it is a great machine. Where else in the world can you see a transition to government be so smooth and so effective, even when you’re putting together a political coalition?

    I am expecting great things of you in this department. The economic challenge we face is the biggest we have faced over the last 40 years. We have two big economic departments, the Treasury and BIS; we have great political leadership, I believe, in both. I want you all to get down to work, to make sure we send out a big signal: this country is open for business. We want to get the economy growing, get the banks lending, and make sure that we build a strong and, as Vince said, a more balanced economy for the future.

    So today is a day to receive your new ministers; there will be three more talented ministers turning up very shortly. Tomorrow is the day to roll up your sleeves and get down to work, to help us build a strong economy here in the UK. Thank you very much indeed.

  • David Cameron – 2016 Speech in Hamburg

    davidcameron

    Below is the text of the speech made by David Cameron, the Prime Minister, in Hamburg, Germany on 12 February 2016.

    Mayor Scholz, it’s a great honour to be here in Hamburg, at this, the oldest feast in the world.

    And it’s also a huge pleasure to be here with my good friend Chancellor Merkel.

    When Angela said she wanted to take me out for dinner in the city where she was born I had no idea she would go to so much trouble.

    In making my first visit to this historic city, let me also pay tribute to a great son of Hamburg.

    Chancellor Helmut Schmidt believed deeply in the Hanseatic tradition of service to others.

    His dedication was an example to us all.

    And he will always be remembered for his leadership in a defining era for Germany and for Europe.

    My first visit to Hamburg also provides an opportunity to celebrate the many historic ties between Britain and this wonderful city.

    Hamburg has the reputation of being Germany’s most British city.

    And it is certainly true that Britain has made its mark here.

    The official representative of the British merchants sat as a guest of honour when these banquets began over 600 years ago.

    And today, at the annual Queen’s Birthday Party, the citizens of Hamburg enjoy British food, British music and – more often than not – British weather.

    And this is just part of a far wider cultural exchange between our countries.

    You gave us Goethe, Handel, and Christmas trees. We gave you Shakespeare, the Beatles and – let’s be frank about it – far too many World Cups!

    You gave us a German to lead the British Museum. And we gave you his British predecessor for the Humboldt Forum.

    And right here in this room, we gave you the gift of King Edward VII’s cup – still in pride of place in front of us today.

    While it could be said that – with the arrival in Britain of the House of Hanover in 1714 – you actually gave us King Edward VII!

    The strongest part of our relationship is our shared values and beliefs.

    We all believe in the importance of trade.

    And that has been the case for centuries.

    Go back to the time of the Hanseatic League.

    And it was the merchants of Hamburg who won the right to sell their wares across England when they were granted a Charter by King Henry III in 1266.

    If you like, they created one of the world’s first trade deals.

    And it is no co-incidence that 750 years on, it is Britain and Germany leading calls for the completion of the world’s biggest trade deal – between Europe and America.

    And just as British trade with Hamburg all those years ago helped to build this very hall, so today just across the River Elbe, is the Airbus factory where German engineers are manufacturing planes with wings made in Britain.

    It is our shared commitment to enterprise that means that time and again at European Council meetings it is Britain and Germany working together, standing up for cutting bureaucracy, standing up for growth and standing up for jobs.

    And it is Britain and Germany – with our belief in sound finances who are at the table arguing that you cannot spend your way out of problems and that you have to deal with your deficits.

    And I am proud of the way that Chancellor Merkel and I worked together to secure that historic deal to cut the European budget in real terms for the first time.

    Because that means lower taxes for our citizens and lower taxes for our businesses too.

    And it is British and German leadership that is driving the co-operation across Europe to enhance our security.

    From leading the sanctions against Russia and Iran, to responding to the crisis in Syria.

    Just last week Chancellor Merkel and I co-hosted the Syria Conference in London, raising over $11 billion – the largest sum ever raised in one day in response to a humanitarian crisis.

    And through the work Chancellor Merkel led to engage Turkey and all our efforts to support the growth of business and jobs across the region, we are ensuring that millions of Syrian refugees have a viable alternative to making that perilous journey to Europe.

    And we are ready to work together again to help the Schengen zone strengthen its external border.

    So whether through trade, enterprise or security co-operation, Britain and Germany are leading the way in Europe – promoting our values and enhancing the prosperity and security of us all.

    So when it comes to the question of Britain’s place in Europe, I have always been confident that together we can secure the reforms that address Britain’s concerns and also work for Europe as a whole.

    Some may say that Britain is sometimes seen as argumentative and rather strong-minded.

    And I make no apology for that. That is who we are.

    We have the character of an island nation – independent, forthright, passionate in defence of our sovereignty – and of institutions that have served us well for many hundreds of years.

    We stood apart when the original Six signed the Treaty of Rome in 1957.

    And the need to protect our sovereignty has always been paramount for us.

    But we are also an open nation.

    That openness drove the decision to join in 1973.

    Just as it drives our approach in so many other ways, including our role in bringing down the Iron Curtain and championing the entry into Europe of countries that lost so many years to communism.

    We have always been a country that reaches out.

    And I never want us to pull up the drawbridge and retreat from the world.

    So when it comes to the question of Britain’s future in Europe, my aim is clear: I want to keep Britain inside a reformed European Union.

    So I have thought hard about the changes that are needed to address the concerns of the British people and I am fighting hard to secure them.

    And I also believe that the changes I am arguing for will help deliver the more competitive, outward-looking, dynamic Europe that Britain and Germany both want to see.

    When Britain says it is time to complete these trade deals, that’s not just good for Britain – it’s good for Germany too.

    When we ask for clear rules for both those in the Euro and those like Britain who are not going to join, again these changes are in our shared interests.

    We need a successful Eurozone – and success for those who choose not to join.

    And when Britain says we need to have a Europe that respects nation states and that says we should be able to run our own welfare systems – those are calls that I believe resonate around Europe.

    So if by working together we can achieve these changes, then I will unequivocally recommend that Britain stays in a reformed European Union on these new terms.

    Of course, if we can’t then I rule nothing out.

    But I believe we can – and if we do, I believe we can win that referendum and that will be good for Britain, good for Germany and good for the whole of Europe.

    Because just as I believe that Britain will be safer and more prosperous in a reformed European Union, so too will Europe benefit from keeping its second largest economy, its largest defence power, a major diplomatic force in the world, and, of course, its second largest financial contributor.

    And let me conclude by saying this.

    Even if we secure the changes I am arguing for, the job will not be done.

    There will be many things that would remain to be reformed, and Britain would continue to stand alongside Germany in leading the way.

    Because at the end of all this, the reason why I believe it is so vital to keep Britain in a reformed European Union is that when I look at the world today and where it is going I am convinced more than ever that we need Britain and Germany working together to shape a European Union that can deliver prosperity and security for us all.

    In a world where some countries claim you can be a great economic success but bypass democracy, restrict the free press and go without the rule of law, we need to stand together, and show that – far from holding our countries back – these things – the free press, the democracy – make us stronger.

    In a world where Russia is invading Ukraine and a rogue nation like North Korea is testing nuclear weapons, we need to stand up to this aggression together – and bring our economic might to bear on those who rip up the rulebook and threaten the safety of our people.

    And in a world where people look at the threat of Islamist extremism and blame poverty or the foreign policy of the West, we need to say: no, it’s about an ideology that is hijacking Islam for its own barbaric purposes and poisoning the minds of young people.

    And just as Europe has faced down dangerous and murderous ideologies in the past.

    So again we must stand together in this, the struggle of our generation.

    We must confront this evil – and we must defeat it.

    Standing together.

    For our values. For our security. For our prosperity.

    That is the Europe that we want to see.

    And that is the Europe that Britain and Germany can deliver, together.

  • David Cameron – 2016 Speech on Prison Reform

    davidcameron

    Below is the text of the speech made by David Cameron, the Prime Minister, at the Policy Exchange, Westminster in London on 8 February 2016.

    Let me begin with a pretty extraordinary fact: it’s well over 20 years since a Prime Minister made a speech solely about prisons.

    To be frank, it can sometimes be easy for politicians to worry so much that their words will be caricatured, that they might just as well avoid this whole area.

    And it can be easy for us all – when these buildings are closed off by high walls and barbed wire – to adopt an “out of sight, out of mind” attitude. I want this government to be different.

    When I say we will tackle our deepest social problems and extend life chances, I want there to be no no-go areas.

    And that must include the 121 prisons in our country, where our social problems are most acute and people’s life chances are most absent.

    So today, I want to explain why I believe prison reform should be a great progressive cause in British politics, and to set out my vision for a modern, more effective, truly twenty-first century prison system.

    My starting point is this: we need prisons.

    Some people – including, of course, rapists, murderers, child abusers, gang leaders – belong in prisons. For me, punishment – that deprivation of liberty – is not a dirty word.

    I never want us to forget that it is the victims of crime who should always be our principal priority.

    And I am not unrealistic or starry-eyed about what prisons can achieve. Not everyone shows remorse, and not everyone seeks redemption.

    But I also strongly believe that we must offer chances to change, that for those trying hard to turn themselves around, we should offer hope, that in a compassionate country, we should help those who’ve made mistakes to find their way back onto the right path.

    In short: we need a prison system that doesn’t see prisoners as simply liabilities to be managed, but instead as potential assets to be harnessed.

    But the failure of our system today is scandalous. 46% of all prisoners will re-offend within a year of release. 60% of short-sentenced prisoners will reoffend within the same period.

    And current levels of prison violence, drug-taking and self-harm should shame us all. In a typical week, there will be almost 600 incidents of self-harm; at least one suicide; and 350 assaults, including 90 on staff.

    This failure really matters.

    It matters to the public purse: this cycle of reoffending costs up to £13 billion a year.

    It matters to you: because in the end, who are the victims of this re-offending? It’s the mother who gets burgled or the young boy who gets mugged.

    It matters to the prison staff – some of the most deeply committed public servants in our country – who have to work in dangerous and often intimidating conditions.

    And yes, it matters to the prisoners themselves, who mustn’t feel that society has totally given up on them.

    I’m clear: we need wholesale reform.

    And I am convinced that with the right agenda, we can be world leaders in change just like we have been in welfare, just like in education – we can demonstrate that with the right reforms, we can make a lasting difference to people in our society.

    Resetting the debate

    Now that begins with resetting the terms of the debate, especially when there are unhelpful, but well-worn mantras that I think hold progress back.

    For years, education was set back by the soft bigotry of low expectations – the idea that the most disadvantaged children shouldn’t be expected to achieve the best results.

    Likewise, police reform was partly set back by the false notion that the number of officers you had mattered, more than how smartly they were actually deployed.

    And welfare reform was set back by the lazy idea that fairness could be judged by the size of a cheque, rather than the chances you offered.

    One by one, in this government we’ve taken those arguments on – and we created the platform for reform.

    Today, we need to do the same with prisons.

    I think there are 3 views that have held back our progress.

    And together, they’ve helped produce the sterile ‘lock ‘em up’ or ‘let ‘em out’ debate that I think has often got in the way of real change.

    The first is the idea that prisons are packed to the rafters with people who don’t deserve to be there.

    This is not wholly untrue – there’s a strong case for the severely mentally ill, or women with small children, to be dealt with in a different way.

    But this position of some – that we could somehow release tens of thousands of prisoners with no adverse consequences – is nonsense.

    It’s simply not borne out by the evidence.

    Prisons are not full of offenders sentenced for drug possession, licence fee evasion or petty, victimless crime.

    It’s actually pretty hard to get into prison in the first place.

    Here are the facts: only 7% of prisoners are sentenced to custody for a first offence – and these will inevitably have been very serious crimes.

    70% of prisoners have at least 7 previous offences, and the average prisoner has 16 previous convictions.

    So you won’t hear me arguing to neuter judges’ sentencing powers or reduce their ability to use prison when it is required.

    Of course, there is one group I do want out of prison much more quickly, instead of British taxpayers forking out for their bed and breakfast: and that is foreign national offenders.

    One of the big barriers here is that we don’t systematically record the nationality of offenders early enough – and this can hamper our ability to deport them.

    I know the frustrations of prison governors when they have to try to find out someone’s nationality after they’ve already arrived in prison.

    So I can announce today that we will now legislate to give the police new powers to require foreign nationals to hand over their passports, and make them declare their nationality in court.

    The second view that has held reform back is the idea that the only reliable way of cutting crime is to toughen sentencing and substantially increase the prison population.

    Now again, there is some truth in this, and I know that incapacitation – prisoners being unable to threaten public safety while they’re behind bars – is absolutely vital.

    I’ve made this point myself about prolific burglars many times.

    That’s why we’ve toughened sentencing, including for the most serious violent and sexual offenders, and rightly so.

    But I think politicians from all sides of the political spectrum are starting to realise the diminishing returns from ever higher levels of incarceration.

    For a start, under this government we’ve already cut crime by around 23% in the last 5 years while keeping the prison population largely flat.

    And the truth is that simply warehousing ever more prisoners is not financially sustainable, nor is it necessarily the most cost-effective way of cutting crime.

    Worse than that, it lets the other parts of the criminal justice system that are failing off the hook. It distracts us from the job of making prisons work better.

    And it fuels prison overcrowding, which hampers efforts to rehabilitate offenders – and that just makes us all less safe.

    So the question must be: wouldn’t we be better to focus our scarce resources on preventing crime in the first place and by breaking the cycle of reoffending?

    The third view that has held back reform is the one that says that prisons are too soft – that they’re a holiday camp, and we should make them harsher to provide more of a deterrent.

    Now, I get hugely frustrated when I see the poor security that, for example, means prisoners able to access Facebook, or prisons that appear to be awash with alcohol and drugs.

    We are taking more action on drugs, corruption and mobile phones. We’ve legislated to criminalise possession of so-called legal highs in prison.

    We’re developing a new Corruption Prevention Strategy to deal with the small number of corrupt staff who allow contraband in our prisons.

    And I can announce today that we are going to work with the mobile network operators to challenge them to do more, including developing new technological solutions, so we can block mobile phones’ signals in prisons.

    But you know what?

    Prisons aren’t a holiday camp – not really. They are often miserable, painful environments. Isolation. Mental anguish. Idleness. Bullying. Self-harm. Violence. Suicide. These aren’t happy places.

    It’s lazy to subscribe to the idea that prisoners are somehow having the time of their lives. These establishments are full of damaged individuals.

    But here’s the point: 99% of them will be released one day, back into our communities.

    So we should ask ourselves: is it a sensible strategy to allow these environments to become twisted into places that just compound that damage and make people worse?

    Or should we be making sure that prisons are demanding places of positivity and reform – so that we can maximise the chances of people going straight when they come out?

    Think about it this way: being tough on criminals is not always the same thing as being tough on crime.

    Principles of reform

    So we need a new approach – one that doesn’t waste too much energy discussing big existential questions about the prison population or trap us into often false choices between so-called tough or soft approaches.

    We’ve got to move on – and develop a sensible plan for prison reform that will deliver better outcomes, improved public safety and lower costs for taxpayers.

    Michael Gove is just the man for the job.

    And I want to thank Ken Clarke and Chris Grayling for the good start we made in this area in government – and Nick Herbert for changing our approach on prisons in opposition.

    In reforming prisons, we need to look no further than the approach we’ve taken in reforming other public services.

    Our reforms have followed some general rules.

    One: give much greater autonomy to the professionals who work in our public services, and allow new providers and new ideas to flourish.

    This is how you institute a culture of excellence – empowering staff, as well as charities and businesses, to innovate and try new things.

    It’s exactly what we did in education – with academies, free schools and new freedoms for heads and teachers.

    Two: hold these providers and professionals to account with real transparency over outcomes.

    Just as we have done in education and policing, we need better data – to allow meaningful comparisons to be made between different prisons – so the best performing institutions and best performing leaders can be recognised and rewarded.

    Three: intervene decisively and dramatically to deal with persistent failure, or to fix the underlying problems people may have.

    This is the lesson from our troubled families programme. We know piecemeal, fragmented solutions don’t work. Instead, you need to see how an individual’s problems link together, and intervene in the right way.

    So while we’ve got the opportunity that prison presents, we need to be far better at deal with and at addressing prisoners’ illiteracy, addiction and mental health problems.

    Four: use the latest behavioural insights evidence and harness new technology to deliver better outcomes.

    We’ve done this in welfare, for instance through the introduction of greater conditionality – meaning that those who are out of work must show they are taking meaningful steps to find employment, in return for getting their benefits.

    And the number of workless households has fallen by an incredible 480,000 since 2010.

    By applying these principles, I believe we really can deliver a modern, more effective prisons system that has a far better chance of turning prisoners into productive members of society.

    So let me explain more what we will do in each area.

    Greater autonomy

    The first part of our strategy is to put professionals in the lead and to remove the bureaucratic micromanagement that disempowers them. The prisons system today is incredibly and uniquely centralised.

    Think about this, and think about it from the perspective of the boss of a prison – the prison governor.

    924 prison service instructions and prison service orders are currently in operation. These are documents issued from ‘headquarters’ to prescribe the running of our prisons.

    Together, they amount to an incredible 46,000 pages of rules, regulations and guidance. Now some of this will be necessary, I accept. Prisons need rules.

    But we’ve reached the point where someone in Whitehall is sitting around deciding how many jigsaws a prisoner should be able to keep in his cell, how many sheets of music they can have in their possession – 12, in case you’re wondering – and even how many pairs of underpants they’re allowed.

    Think about the kind of morale-sapping, initiative-destroying culture this can create in an organisation.

    Want to try something new? Ask head office.

    Think you’ve found a better way of organising things? Get back in your box.

    Looking for motivation and inspiration on a Monday morning? Go and look elsewhere.

    There’s a governor I spent some time with this morning who made exactly this point. He said it’s almost as if, in doing the things he needs to, to get businesses in to prisons and to get workshops going ultimately he said he’d have to break the rules. This is obviously the wrong approach.

    Prisons are often accused of infantilising the prisoners, but we’re actually infantilising the staff.

    This is one of the toughest environments we ask people to work in.

    And I want the leadership team of a prison to be highly-motivated, to be entrepreneurial and to be fired up about their work, to be a team who don’t ask permission from the centre every time, but are just empowered to get on and try something new.

    So this is what we are going to do.

    We are going to bring the academies model that has revolutionised our schools to the prisons system.

    We are going to give prison governors unprecedented operational and financial autonomy, and be trusted to get on and run their jail in the way they see fit. They’ll be given a budget and total discretion over how to spend it.

    So, for example, they’ll also be able to opt-out of national contracts and choose their own suppliers.

    Instead of being prevented from transferring money between different pots, they can decide what they want to focus resources on.

    And they’ll also be able to tailor their own regimes – including the amount of time spent ‘out of cell’ doing purposeful activity.

    I can announce today that we will create 6 such reform prisons this year, run by some of the most innovative governors from across the prison estate.

    We’ll follow this with a Prisons Bill in the next session that will spread these principles across the rest of the prisons system.

    And because we know that state monopolies are often very slow to change themselves, and because the involvement of the private and voluntary sectors in prisons has been one of the most important drivers of change in this system since the 1990s, we’ll ensure there is a strong role for businesses and charities in the operation of these reform prisons and the new prisons we will build in this Parliament.

    Together, this will amount to the biggest shake-up in the way our prisons are run since the Victorian times.

    And we’ll adopt the same principle in youth justice, too.

    As Charlie Taylor’s interim review will recommend tomorrow, we’ll explore using the free school process to set up secure alternative provision academies.

    In short: this will mean turning existing Young Offender Institutions into what will effectively be high quality schools that will demand the highest standards.

    And we want to attract the best talent into our prisons.

    I want us to make it even more aspirational for people to work in a prison and to want to run a prison.

    So just as we have done with the police, we’ll put rocket boosters under direct entry and fast-track schemes to attract the very best into managing the prison system so that it can benefit from greater diversity, fresh ideas and new leadership.

    Transparency and accountability
    With freedom and autonomy must come accountability – and that’s why the second part of our plan must be to improve transparency.

    Here are some questions for you:

    What is the best performing prison in the country?

    Which is the prison that is achieving the best reoffending results?

    Which is the prison where offenders get the best qualifications to help them get a job when they’re released?

    The answer is: we don’t know. Seriously, we have no idea. This just isn’t good enough.

    Any modern public service has to be able to demonstrate its value. It’s how you can make meaningful comparisons between different services.

    But most of all, it’s how the people working inside the system can find out what’s working and what isn’t working – and adapt accordingly.

    It can incentivise more of the kind of projects I saw this morning, like the Halfords Academy that is getting people the skills they need to find work.

    So I can announce today we will now develop meaningful metrics about prison performance.

    We will measure the things that really count: reoffending levels compared to a predicted rate; employment outcomes for prisoners; whether or not the offender went into permanent accommodation; and what progress was made on basic literacy and key skills.

    And I can also announce that we will not only publish this data, we will develop new Prison League Tables that allow us to easily compare different institutions.

    This transparency isn’t just a very powerful way to drive culture change, it also allows the government to hold those working in the system more easily to account.

    Using this information, we can use other tools – like payment for performance – to drive further improvements.

    It’s working in academies, it’s working in troubled families, it’s working in the Civil Service – so I can announce today that we will work with prison staff to examine a new financial incentive scheme to reward staff in the best-performing prisons.

    Intervention and treatment

    By introducing autonomy and transparency, we can get the structures right to improve outcomes. But we often need more direct, and joined up, intervention to help turn people’s lives around.

    Consider these facts: 24% of those in prison have been in care as a child.

    49% have an identifiable mental health problem. Nearly half.

    47% almost half, have no qualifications whatsoever.

    And behind these numbers, we have human beings.

    Children who felt the raw pain of abandonment at a young age – pain that never goes away.

    Young people who were abused physically by those they trusted most – with violence and fear often devastating the sanctuary of home.

    Kids who never had proper discipline and so never learnt the virtues of delayed gratification or impulse control.

    Arriving at school already far behind, and the frustrations of illiteracy or maybe dyslexia leading to bravado, misbehaviour and exclusion.

    Exposed to alcohol and drugs too young in life. Kicked out of the house as a teenager and learning to survive on the streets.

    I spoke last month about extending life chances.

    But we have to recognise that the prison population draws mostly from the ranks of those whose life chances were shot to pieces from the start.

    This doesn’t excuse where they ended up, nor does it say anything about the anguish they caused for victims.

    But it does, I believe, help to explain what’s happening.

    This is important: cutting reoffending is just a pipe dream unless we truly understand the turmoil and the trauma that define the lives of so many who have ended up in prison.

    This is a golden opportunity to correct some earlier – often catastrophic – state failure.

    I want prisons to be places of care, not just punishment; where the environment is one conducive to rehabilitation and mending lives.

    That’s why I’m so passionate about building new prisons.

    I think it’s frankly a disgrace, that for so long we’ve been cramming people into ageing, ineffective prisons that are creaking, leaking and coming apart at the seams.

    These are places that were barely fit for human habitation when they were built, and are much, much worse today. They design in bullying, intimidation and violence.

    As one staff member told the Chief Inspector of Prisons last year, “I wouldn’t keep a dog in there.”

    So I am proud that this this government has made a £1.3 billion commitment to knock many of these prisons down and to build 9 new ones, including 5 during this Parliament.

    As Policy Exchange’s work has shown, these new prisons can be far more effective at rehabilitating offenders, with modern facilities and smart use of technology such as biometric key systems.

    But it isn’t just about new buildings; it’s about what goes on in them. And here we must think afresh about prison education.

    Over 50% of prisoners have the English and maths skills of a primary school child. Many have learning difficulties.

    But at the moment, governors have almost no control over who their education provider is, or what is taught.

    We have only 4 organisations nationally who provide education in prisons, and the way these services are organised is not producing anything like the results we need.

    We’re focusing too much on the number of qualifications – regardless of their usefulness – and neglecting basic literacy and good-quality qualifications that are actually going to help these people to find work.

    This needs to change.

    Soon Dame Sally Coates will publish her review of prison education.

    It will recommend giving control of education budgets to prison governors, letting them bring in new providers – whether further education colleges, academy chains, free schools or other specialists.

    I can announce we back that recommendation 100%. And we’ll go further: I can also announce we’ll protect those budgets in cash terms, with £130 million a year.

    I also want the best and brightest graduates to want to teach prisoners, even if it’s just for a short period in their career.

    So just as we have backed programmes which get graduates teaching in our worst schools or working in social services, I can announce that I have asked Brett Wigdortz, chief executive of Teach First, to advise on setting up a new social enterprise that will work to develop a similar scheme for prisons.

    And I’m pleased to say David Laws has agreed to chair this new organisation.

    Next, we’ve got to sort out mental health treatment and drug treatment.

    This is one area where I believe that we, as a country, really need to ask some searching questions.

    There’s been a failure of approach, and a failure of public policy.

    In terms of approach, frankly, we are locking up some severely mentally ill people in prison who should not be there.

    And that’s why, as a matter or urgency, I have asked Michael Gove and Jeremy Hunt to look at what alternative provision can be made for more humane treatment and care.

    In terms of policy, I worry that at the moment the design of mental health treatment cuts out governors and staff.

    So I can announce that for mental health, we will now move towards full co-commissioning for governors and NHS England – meaning prison leaders can have much more say in defining the kind of services their prisoners need and how the available budget is used.

    This will begin in reform prisons and, if successful, will apply nationwide from 2017, underpinned by new legislation in our Prisons Bill.

    We will also publish healthcare data on a prison-by-prison basis, so there is proper transparency about outcomes and performance.

    And we will also move towards co-commissioning for drug treatment funding, so governors have more freedom to set up the therapeutic communities, drug-free wings and abstinence-based treatment programmes that their offenders need.

    When it comes to turning prisoners’ lives around though, there is a new front we need to open: tackling extremism.

    We have around 1,000 prisoners who have been identified as extremist or vulnerable to extremism.

    And we know, through intimidation, violence and grooming, some of these individuals are preying on the weak, forcing conversions to Islam and spreading their warped view of the world.

    I understand not only what a problem this is causing for prison management who are trying to deliver a safe environment, but also what a danger the risk of radicalisation poses for public safety when prisoners are released.

    We will not stand by and watch people being radicalised like this while they are in the care of the state.

    That’s why Michael Gove has commissioned a review of this issue.

    And I want to be clear: I am prepared to consider major changes: from the imams we allow to preach in prison to changing the locations and methods for dealing with prisoners convicted of terrorism offences, if that is what is required.

    I look forward to the review’s recommendations.

    But I can announce today two things we will definitely do:

    We will develop a new prison-based programme for countering the non-violent extremism that can lead to terrorism and violence and this will focus on those at risk of radicalisation, regardless of the crime they originally committed – as well as those convicted of terrorism offences.

    And to deal with the most serious cases, just as we introduce mandatory de-radicalisation programmes in the wider community, we will also introduce these in our prisons.

    Behaviour change

    Everything I have spoken about today is about what goes on in prison. But rehabilitation doesn’t end at the prison gates; it’s about what happens outside them too.

    That’s why Chris Grayling began the Transforming Rehabilitation programme – and it means every prisoner now receives support and supervision on release.

    This was a huge landmark reform of the last Parliament that [INAUDIBLE] has the potential to make a real impact on reoffending and public safety.

    Outside prison, I believe we should be really creative and much more open to the new thinking, the new technology, and the understanding from behavioural insights.

    For example, Judge Steve Alm in Hawaii has been pioneering the idea of ‘swift and certain’ sentencing to deal with drug offenders.

    Instead of just locking them up, they are randomly tested for drugs in the community on certain days of the week. If they test positive, they’re instantly jailed for between 24 and 48 hours.

    And then they come back out, and the process starts over again. And the results are fascinating.

    It’s perhaps the most successful community sentence anywhere on the planet.

    Massive reductions in drug use and re-arrest rates.

    Perhaps more effective than even intensive drug treatment in terms of changing behaviour.

    Almost 20 US states have now adopted this model, as well as others like it – including drug courts and problem-solving courts that adopt a similar tough love approach.

    And why do these programmes work?

    Because instead of an uncertain and often random sentence, delivered months or sometimes even years after a crime is committed, this is far more instantaneous and much more demanding for the offender.

    And because punishment is less severe but much swifter and more certain, it allows you to apply punishments far more frequently.

    More punishments, delivered rapidly. A real, meaningful deterrent.

    That is how to bring about lasting behaviour change.

    That’s why a promise to introduce legislation for a new swift and certain sentence was in our manifesto.

    And I can announce today that the Justice Secretary and Lord Chief Justice have set up the first joint working group to examine how to deliver problem-solving courts in England and Wales.

    We have also got to be much smarter about using new technology.

    We have already pledged to expand the use of alcohol monitoring tags, which enforce drinking bans for those offenders convicted of alcohol-related crimes.

    And there is also a huge opportunity presented by new satellite tracking tags.

    Satellite tracking will be ground-breaking for the criminal justice system – meaning that the police and probation service can know where an offender is at all times.

    It means we can tightly manage and accurately track someone’s movements – opening up radical new sentencing options.

    Satellite tracking tags could be used so that more prisoners can go out to work in the day and return in the evening.

    They could help some offenders with a full-time job to keep it, and just spend weekends in custody instead.

    This could revolutionise the way we release prisoners on licence at the end of a sentence, and dramatically toughen up community sentences.

    We’ve made too slow progress in getting this technology on-stream, and I want us to go faster.

    So I can announce today that major new pilots will begin on satellite tracking later this year, and we will have this technology rolled-out right across the country before the end of the Parliament.

    I especially want to look at how we use these tags for female offenders.

    A sad but true fact is that last year there were 100 babies in our country living in a prison. Yes, actually inside the prison. In the prison’s mother and baby unit, to be precise.

    Prison staff do their best to make these environments pleasant.

    Some units even have special sensory rooms, so that babies can see colours, sights and sound – even nature – that they wouldn’t otherwise see inside the grey walls of a jail.

    I understand why this happens. But we should ask ourselves: is it right?

    When we know the importance of the early years for child development, how can we possibly justify having babies behind bars?

    There are actually women in these prisons who were born in the same prison 20 years earlier, and then have ended up there later as criminals themselves.

    Think of the damage done to the life chances of these children.

    I believe we’ve got to try to break this cycle.

    So I want us to find alternative ways of dealing with women offenders with babies, including through tagging, problem-solving courts and alternative resettlement units.

    There is one other area where I want us to be bold, and where we can use the latest thinking to make a difference – and that is to help prisoners find work on release.

    There’s a simple problem: today, ex-offenders are often rejected for jobs out right because of their past.

    I want us to build a country where the shame of prior convictions doesn’t necessarily hold them back from working and providing for their families.

    Of course, I want businesses and organisations to know who they are interviewing.

    If a conviction is ‘unspent’, they need to know about it and make the right decision for that business.

    But here’s my question: should offenders have to declare it up-front, before the first sift of CVs – before they’ve been able to state their case?

    Or might this be done a bit later, at interview stage or before an actual offer of work is made?

    They’ve done it in America – it’s called ‘ban the box’- and I want to work with businesses, including the many who’ve already signed up to the Business in the Community campaign, to see if we can do this here.

    And because I believe in leading by example, I can announce today that every part of the Civil Service will be ‘banning the box’ in these initial recruitment stages.

    Conclusion

    So this is our agenda for a revolution in the prisons system – all centred around those powerful public service reform principles.

    This will take time and a lot of hard work to deliver – just as in education and welfare – and I’m under no illusions, it won’t be easy.

    This system will be hard to change because it is, in some ways, still stuck in the dark ages – with old buildings, old thinking and old ways of doing things.

    So I don’t want to go slow here – I want us to get on with proper, full-on prison reform.

    And the prize is big: if we get this right, we can begin to deliver the lower reoffending rates that will protect the poorest who so often bear the brunt of crime.

    If we get it right, we can change the culture so that our brilliant staff can be empowered to lead the world with new rehabilitation techniques and smarter ways of managing prisoners.

    If we get it right, we can change lives, improve public safety and bring hope to those for whom it was in short supply.

    Turning waste and idleness into prisons with purpose. Turning remorse and regret into lives with new meaning.

    Finding diamonds in the rough and helping them shine.

    That is our mission. Let’s get to work.