Tag: Ed Miliband

  • Ed Miliband – 2020 Comments on Government’s Offshore Wind Announcement

    Ed Miliband – 2020 Comments on Government’s Offshore Wind Announcement

    The comments made by Ed Miliband, the Shadow Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy Secretary, on 6 October 2020.

    Nothing in the Prime Minister’s re-announcement today on wind energy targets will tackle the immediate jobs crisis our country faces. We need ambition on renewable energy, but Boris Johnson rarely delivers on his rhetoric.

    The funding announced today spread over ten years is a drop in the ocean, and pales in comparison to the investment by France and Germany in green jobs.

    The Government must urgently bring forward a genuinely ambitious green recovery that will create jobs now on the scale needed to meet the challenge of the climate emergency and unemployment crisis.

  • Ed Miliband – 2020 Comments on the Job Support Scheme

    Ed Miliband – 2020 Comments on the Job Support Scheme

    The comments made by Ed Miliband, the Shadow Business Secretary, on 2 October 2020.

    The Government presents the Job Support Scheme as a measure that will save jobs. But the facts tell a different story.

    Struggling employers where work has reduced have zero incentive to keep staff on, with it still being significantly cheaper to sack 1 out of every 2 members of staff. Businesses won’t want to do this but the government is stacking the odds so it makes financial sense for them to do so. They’re essentially having to flip a coin to decide which person to lay off.

    The hospitality sector is already at huge risk of redundancies, operating at reduced capacity and on a shrunken income, hit by a 10pm curfew, and approaching a bleak Christmas season.

    Ultimately, the government has decided to accept mass unemployment in certain sectors – they have decided it is a price worth paying. It is the wrong choice for business, workers and our whole economy and society.

  • Ed Miliband – 2020 Comments on 1 in 3 Employers Making Redundancies

    Ed Miliband – 2020 Comments on 1 in 3 Employers Making Redundancies

    The comments made by Ed Miliband, the Shadow Business Secretary, on 1 October 2020.

    Businesses are facing massive challenges in this crisis, livelihoods are on the line, and the Government is writing off whole sectors as not ‘viable’.

    But the reason that businesses are struggling is because they are doing the right thing and following public health restrictions.

    The Government must abandon their sink or swim mentality, help businesses and workers through this crisis and urgently act to stem the flow of job losses and the risk of mass redundancies.

  • Ed Miliband – 2020 Comments about the Prime Minister’s Words on Climate Change

    Ed Miliband – 2020 Comments about the Prime Minister’s Words on Climate Change

    The comments made by Ed Miliband, the Shadow Secretary of State for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy, on 24 September 2020.

    Boris Johnson’s words are not matched by his deeds.

    The UK is not on track to meet the fourth and fifth carbon budgets and we have not published our strengthened plans to cut carbon emissions, as we need to do as the hosts of COP26. Breakthroughs this week from China and the EU show other countries are getting on with the fight against climate change.

    Meanwhile, we are still funnelling billions into overseas oil and gas projects, and our investment in a green recovery has been dwarfed by our European neighbours.

    We should be blazing the trail with a Green New Deal, coordinating international diplomatic efforts in the run-up to COP, and leading by example by setting out plans for the world’s most ambitious green recovery – not kicking the can further down the road.

  • Ed Miliband – 2020 Comments on New Economics Foundation Report on Regional Inequality

    Ed Miliband – 2020 Comments on New Economics Foundation Report on Regional Inequality

    The comments made by Ed Miliband, the Shadow Business Secretary, on 24 September 2020.

    Labour warned this summer that certain places around the UK would be disproportionately hit by the growing jobs crisis, and that the Government’s blanket approach to the furlough scheme failed to understand the nature of this recession.

    Communities with particularly large proportions of their workforce in manufacturing, retail and hospitality have felt the economic impact of Coronavirus more deeply.

    As we approach a cliff-edge in financial support with more restrictions being introduced, the Government must urgently outline a replacement to furlough – or risk deepening regional inequalities.

  • Ed Miliband – 2020 Comments on British Chambers of Commerce’s 26 Unanswered Questions

    Ed Miliband – 2020 Comments on British Chambers of Commerce’s 26 Unanswered Questions

    The comments made by Ed Miliband, the Shadow Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy Secretary, on 24 September 2020.

    The fact that so many fundamental questions for businesses remain unanswered when we’re getting down to the wire just underlines that this Government is not on the side of business.

    Business organisations have been asking these questions for months, and the absence of information and leadership from the Government means they are understandably finding it difficult to plan for the future. Paired with a looming furlough cliff-edge, they are operating under extreme uncertainty.

    The Government promised an oven-ready deal, but their incompetence is plain to see. They must stop prevaricating, focus on getting the deal they promised and giving businesses the answers they need, and ensure all preparations are in place for the end of the transition period.

  • Ed Miliband – 2020 Speech on the United Kingdom Internal Market Bill

    Ed Miliband – 2020 Speech on the United Kingdom Internal Market Bill

    The speech made by Ed Miliband, the Labour MP for Doncaster North, in the House of Commons on 14 September 2020.

    I beg to move an amendment, to leave out from “That” to the end of the Question and add:

    “this House notes that the UK has left the EU; calls on the Government to get on with negotiating a trade deal with the EU; recognises that legislation is required to ensure the smooth, effective working of the internal market across the UK; but declines to give a Second Reading to the Internal Market Bill because this Bill undermines the Withdrawal Agreement already agreed by Parliament, re-opens discussion about the Northern Ireland Protocol that has already been settled, breaches international law, undermines the devolution settlements and would tarnish the UK’s global reputation as a law-abiding nation and the UK’s ability to enforce other international trade deals and protect jobs and the economy.”

    There are two questions at the heart of the Bill and of why we will oppose it tonight. First, how do we get an internal market after 1 January within the UK while upholding the devolution settlements, which have been a vital part of our constitution for two decades and are essential to our Union? Secondly, will our country abide by the rule of law—a rules-based international order, for which we are famous around the world and have always stood up?

    Those are not small questions. They go to the heart of who we are as a country and the character of this Government. Let me start with the first question. An internal market is vital for trade and jobs at home, but also for our ability to strike trade deals. It is the responsibility of the UK Government at Westminster to safeguard that market and legislate. On that, we agree with the Government. But that must be done while understanding that the governance of our country has changed in the last two decades. Two decades of devolution settlements reflect a decision that we would share power across our four nations, including devolving key powers over issues such as animal welfare, food safety and aspects of environmental legislation. We should legislate for an internal market, but in a way that respects the role and voice of devolved Governments in setting those standards. That is to respect the devolution settlement. From across the UK, we have heard that the Government are not doing that; that they want to legislate with a blunderbuss approach that does not do that and simply says that the lowest standard in one Parliament must become the standard for all, with no proper voice for devolved Governments. If the Westminster Government decided to lower standards, there would be no voice for the devolved nations, even in a discussion about those standards because the Government have decided not to legislate for common frameworks.

    Ian Blackford (Ross, Skye and Lochaber) (SNP)

    The right hon. Gentleman is getting to the nub of the matter. We have Joint Ministerial Committees, and huge progress had been made in the last few months on agreeing frameworks that would allow us to do exactly what the right hon. Gentleman asked for. Is not the right way to proceed through frameworks in agreement with the devolved Administrations, not the race to the bottom that we get with the Bill?

    Edward Miliband

    The right hon. Gentleman and I come from different positions. I want to respect the devolution settlements that uphold the Union and he has a different point of view, but on this matter we should be legislating for common frameworks. That would be the way to respect devolution. I do not know whether the Prime Minister even understands the legislation—I know he has many things on his plate—but I am sorry to say that on this issue, the Government’s approach has been cavalier. Since 2017, common frameworks have developed and the Government could have legislated for that. We will seek to do that during the Bill’s passage.

    The issues were prefigured in the White Paper. Since then, we have an even bigger question to confront. Let me say at the outset that we want the smoothest trade across our United Kingdom, including Northern Ireland. There is a way to resolve those issues in the Joint Committee set up for that purpose. I have to say that, from a man who said he wanted to get Brexit done and won an election on it, the Bill gets Brexit undone by overturning key aspects of the protocol that were agreed.

    I have been part of many issues of contention across the Dispatch Box, but I never thought that respecting international law would be a matter of disagreement in my lifetime. As Leader of the Opposition, I stood opposite the Prime Minister’s predecessor David Cameron for five years. I do not know why the Prime Minister is rolling his eyes. I disagreed with David Cameron profoundly on many issues, but I could never have imagined him coming along and saying, “We are going to legislate to break international law” on an agreement that we had signed as a country less than a year earlier. Yet that is what the Bill does, in the Government’s own words.

    I want to address three questions at the heart of the matter. Is it right to threaten to break the law in the way the Government propose? Is it necessary to do so? Will it help our country? The answer to each question is no. Let us remember the context and the principle. If there is one thing that we are known for around the world, it is the rule of law. This is the country of Magna Carta; the country that is known for being the mother of all Parliaments; and the country that, out of the darkness of the second world war, helped found the United Nations. Our global reputation for rule making, not rule breaking, is one of the reasons that we are so respected around the world. When people think of Britain, they think of the rule of law. Despite what the Prime Minister said in his speech, let us be clear that this is not an argument about remain versus leave. It is an argument about right versus wrong.

    The Brexiteer and former Chancellor of the Exchequer, Lord Lamont, says that the Bill is impossible to defend. The Brexiteer and former Attorney General who helped to negotiate and sign off this deal as Attorney General ​says that the Bill is “unconscionable”. And the Brexiteer Lord Howard—the Prime Minister’s former boss—said this:

    “I never thought it was a thing I’d hear a British minister, far less a Conservative minister, say, which is that the government was going to invite parliament to act in breach of international law…We have a reputation for probity, for upholding the rule of law, and it’s a reputation that is very precious and ought to be safeguarded, and I am afraid it was severely damaged…by the bill”.

    Sir Bernard Jenkin (Harwich and North Essex) (Con)

    Does the right hon. Gentleman think that the EU has been negotiating in good faith?

    Edward Miliband

    It is very interesting that the hon. Gentleman should say that because a report came out today from the Northern Ireland Affairs Committee, which is chaired by a Conservative Member. This is what the report says and this is my answer to him:

    “These talks began in March and continued throughout the summer in a spirit of good faith and mutual respect for the delicate arrangements in Northern Ireland.”

    That is what the Conservative-controlled Select Committee says about this issue.

    The Prime Minister has said many times that he wants to bring unity to the country during his premiership. I therefore congratulate him on having, in just one short year, united his five predecessors. Unfortunately, their point of agreement is that he is trashing the reputation of this country and trashing the reputation of his office. Why are these five former Prime Ministers so united on this point? It is because they know that our moral authority in the world comes from our commitment to the rule of law and keeping our word. We rightly condemn China when it rides roughshod over the treaties dictating the future of Hong Kong. We say it signed them in good faith, that it is going back on its word and that it cannot be trusted. And his defence? “Don’t worry; I can’t be trusted either.” What will China say to us from now on? What will it throw back at us—that we, too, do not keep to international law?

    Andrea Jenkyns

    Does the Labour party keep its word to the British voters?

    Edward Miliband

    Actually, yes we do, and I will tell the hon. Lady why. We respect the fact that the Conservative party, under this Prime Minister, won the election. He got his mandate to deliver his Brexit deal: the thing that he said was—I am sure she recalls this because it was probably on her leaflets—“oven ready”. It is not me who is coming along and saying it is half-baked; it is him. He is saying, “The deal that I signed and agreed is actually—what’s the word? Ambiguous. Problematic.” I will get to this later in my speech, but I wonder whether he actually read the deal in the first place.

    Ms Angela Eagle (Wallasey) (Lab)

    My right hon. Friend is making an extremely good speech. Would he perhaps tell the House who on earth might have signed this terrible deal with so many ambiguities less than nine months ago?

    Edward Miliband

    My hon. Friend makes an important point; I do believe it was the Prime Minister who signed the deal.​
    In fairness to the Prime Minister, I want to deal with each of the arguments that the Government have made in the last few days for this action. It is quite hard to keep count of the different arguments—you know you are losing the argument when you keep making lots of different arguments—but I want to give the House the top five. First, let us deal with the argument about blockades, which made its first outing in The Telegraph on Saturday through the Prime Minister, and obviously it made a big appearance today.

    I have to say, I did not like the ramping up of the rhetoric from the European Union on Thursday, following the Prime Minister’s publication of this Bill, but even by the standards of the Prime Minister, this is as ridiculous an argument as I have ever heard. Let me let me explain to him why—the point was very well made by the former Attorney General this morning. This is what article 16 of the protocol says:

    “If the application of this Protocol leads to serious economic, societal or environmental difficulties that are liable to persist, or to diversion of trade, the Union or the United Kingdom may unilaterally take appropriate safeguard measures.”

    In other words, let us just say that this threat somehow materialised—and by the way, I believe that Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs officials would have to implement it, making it even more absurd that it would happen. If the threat materialised, it is not overturning the protocol that is the right thing to do; it is upholding the protocol, as article 16 says. But do not take my word for it, Madam Deputy Speaker; take the word of the former Attorney General—who definitely read the protocol—who wrote this morning:

    “There are clear and lawful responses available to Her Majesty’s government”.

    As if that was not enough, there is also an irony here—the Prime Minister tried to slip this in; I do not know whether the House noticed—which is that this Bill does precisely nothing to address the issue of the transport of food from Great Britain to Northern Ireland. It is about two issues where the Government are going to override international law: exit declarations, Northern Ireland to GB, and the definition of state aid relating to Northern Ireland. If the Prime Minister wants to tell us that there is another part of the Bill that I have not noticed that will deal with this supposed threat of blockade, I will very happily give way to him. I am sure he has read it; I am sure he knows it in detail, because he is a details man. Come on, tell us: what clause protects against the threat, which he says he is worried about, to GB-to-Northern Ireland exports? I give way to him. [Interruption.]

    Madam Deputy Speaker (Dame Eleanor Laing)

    Order. The right hon. Gentleman cannot give way unless he is asked to.

    Edward Miliband

    There you have it: he didn’t read the protocol, he hasn’t read the Bill, he doesn’t know his stuff.

    Let us deal with the second bogus argument. The Prime Minister claimed on Wednesday that it was necessary to protect the Good Friday agreement. The first outing for that argument was on Wednesday, at Prime Minister’s questions. I have to say to him, I would rather trust the authors of the Good Friday agreement than the Prime Minister, who has prominent members of the Government ​who opposed the agreement at the time. However, this is what John Major and Tony Blair wrote—[Interruption.] They don’t like John Major. They said that the Bill

    “puts the Good Friday agreement at risk”—

    [Interruption]—this is very serious—

    “because it negates the predictability, political stability and legal clarity that are integral to the delicate balance between the north and south of Ireland that is at the core of the peace process.”

    These are very important words from two former Prime Ministers, both of whom helped to win us peace in Northern Ireland. The Prime Minister may not want to believe them, but he will, I hope, believe himself—[Laughter]—maybe not—because this is what he said about the Northern Ireland protocol:

    “there are particular circumstances in Northern Ireland at the border that deserve particular respect and sensitivity, and that is what they have received in the deal.”

    It is

    “a great deal for Northern Ireland.”—[Official Report, 19 October 2019; Vol. 666, c. 578-579.]

    I do not understand this. He signed the deal. It is his deal. It is the deal that he said would protect the people of Northern Ireland. I have to say to him, this is not just legislative hooliganism on any issue; it is on one of the most sensitive issues of all. I think we should take the word of two former Prime Ministers of this country who helped to secure peace in Northern Ireland.

    Sammy Wilson (East Antrim) (DUP)

    Before the shadow spokesman lectures the Prime Minister about reading documentation or starts lecturing us about the Good Friday agreement, does he not recognise, first of all, that the Good Friday agreement talks about the principle of consent to change the constitutional position of Northern Ireland, which is what this protocol does? The Good Friday agreement has within it a mechanism to safeguard the minorities in Northern Ireland through a cross-community vote, which again the protocol removed. So before he starts talking about the threats to the Good Friday agreement, does he not recognise that the protocol was a threat to it in the first place?

    Edward Miliband

    The right hon. Gentleman did not like the protocol at all. He would rather have not had the protocol. He and I just have a disagreement on this issue. I believe it was necessary to make special arrangements for Northern Ireland, or for the UK to be in the EU customs union to avoid a hard border in Ireland. That is why the Prime Minister came along and said the protocol was the right thing to do.

    Let me deal with the third excuse we heard. This is the “It was all a bit of a rush” excuse. As the Prime Minister said in his article, times were “torrid” and there were “serious misunderstandings”. He tries to pretend that this is some new issue, but they have been warned for months about the way the protocol would work. The Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, who is sitting in his place, was warned at the Select Committee in March and was asked about these issues. The Business Secretary was written to by the House of Lords Committee in April.

    Let us just get this straight for a minute, because I think it is important to take a step back. The Prime Minister is coming to the House to tell us today that his flagship achievement—the deal he told us was a triumph, ​the deal he said was oven-ready, the deal on which he fought and won the general election—is now contradictory and ambiguous. What incompetence. What failure of governance. How dare he try to blame everyone else? I say to the Prime Minister that this time he cannot blame the right hon. Member for Maidenhead (Mrs May), he cannot blame John Major, he cannot blame the judges, he cannot blame the civil servants, he cannot sack the Cabinet Secretary again. There is only one person responsible for it and that is him. This is his deal. It is his mess. It is his failure. For the first time in his life, it is time to take responsibility. It is time to ’fess up: either he was not straight with the country about the deal in the first place, or he did not understand it.

    A competent Government would never have entered into a binding agreement with provisions they could not live with. If such a Government somehow missed the point but woke up later, they would do what any competent business would do after it realised it could not live with the terms of a contract: they would negotiate a way out in good faith. That is why this is all so unnecessary. There is a mechanism designed for exactly this purpose in the agreement: the Joint Committee on the Northern Ireland protocol. What did the Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster say on 11 March at the Committee on the Future Relationship with the European Union? He will recall that he was asked about state aid. He said:

    “the effective working of the protocol is a matter for the Joint Committee to resolve.”

    The remaining issues to which the Bill speaks are not insignificant, but nor are they insurmountable, and that is the right way to pursue them, not an attempt at illegality.

    Let me come back to the excuses. Fourthly, on Sunday, there was the Justice Secretary’s “the fire alarm” defence: “We don’t want to have to do this, but we might have to.” I want to be clear with the House about something very, very important about a decision to pass the Bill. I have great respect for the hon. Member for Bromley and Chislehurst (Sir Robert Neill), but I want to make this point. The very act of passing the Bill is itself a breach of international law. It would be wrong for hon. and right hon. Members on either side of the House to be under any illusions about that as they decide which Lobby to go into tonight. If we pass the Bill, even if there is a nod and a wink from the Prime Minister to the hon. Member for Bromley and Chislehurst, we equip the Government with the power to break the law. That in itself is a breach of the Northern Ireland protocol and therefore a breach of international law.

    Sir Robert Neill

    I have listened carefully to the right hon. Member’s formulation and I understand much of what he says. However, an Act passed by this House only becomes law when it comes into force. He will be right, I submit, to say that as soon as any of these provisions came into force we would potentially breach international law. That is not quite the same thing, as I think he would fairly concede.

    Edward Miliband

    That is not a risk we are going to take.

    So the fire alarm defence simply does not work. The last defence was floated as a trial balloon, one might say, by the Northern Ireland Secretary last Tuesday, I believe. He said it was a breach of the law in a “specific and limited way.” That really is a new way of thinking ​about legal questions. It now turns out that breaking the law specifically and in a limited way is a reasonable defence for this Government. We have all heard of self-defence, the alibi defence, the innocence defence; now we have the Johnson defence: you can break the law, but in a specific and limited way.

    Think about the grave context we face. The Home Secretary is in today’s newspapers warning everyone, “You must abide by the law.” On this, she is absolutely right. She says,

    “I know that, as part of our national effort, the law-abiding majority will stick to these new rules. But there will be a small minority who do not”.

    You couldn’t make it up. What she does not say in the article, but what we now know about this Government, is that the Johnson defence means something very specific: there is one rule for the British public and another rule for this Government. Pioneered by Cummings, implemented by Johnson—that is the Johnson rule.

    This is the wrong thing to do. It is not necessary and it is deeply damaging to this country. Let us think about the impact on our country in the negotiations. The Government’s hope is that it will make a deal more likely, but that relies on the notion that reneging on a deal we made less than a year ago with the party we are negotiating with now will make that party more likely to trust us, not less. Think about our everyday lives: suppose we made an agreement with someone a year ago and we were seeking to have another negotiation with them; if we had unilaterally reneged on the first deal we made, would it make them more likely to trust us, or less likely? Obviously, it would make them less likely to trust us.

    We know the risks. I very much hope the Prime Minister gets a deal. As a country, we absolutely need a deal. We know the risks of no deal if this strategy goes wrong. The Prime Minister said last week that no deal is somehow “a good outcome”. He is wrong. I hear all the time from businesses—I am sure the Business Secretary, who is in his place, does too—that are deeply worried about the danger of no deal. I know what the Prime Minister thinks about the views of business, thanks to his four-letter rant, but this is what businesses have to say. Nissan says there could be no guarantee about its Sunderland plant if there were tariffs on UK to EU trade. Ford says that no deal would be disastrous. The NFU says it would be catastrophic for British farming—indeed, the Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, when he was Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, said the same thing. We are in the biggest economic crisis for 300 years, the biggest public health crisis for 100 years. No deal is not some game; it is about the livelihoods of millions of people across our country.

    What about the prized trade deal with the United States? I know the Prime Minister thinks he has a friend in President Trump, but even he must recognise the necessity of being able to deal with both sides. The Speaker of the House of Representatives, Nancy Pelosi, said:

    “The UK must respect the Northern Ireland Protocol as signed with the EU… If the UK violates that international treaty and Brexit undermines the Good Friday accord, there will be absolutely no chance of a US-UK trade agreement passing the Congress.”

    This is the signal that we—the country known for the rule of law, the country that abides by the law, the ​country that founded international law—are sending to our friends and allies around the world. That is why we cannot support the Bill.

    The Government must go back, remove the provisions breaking international law and ensure that the Bill works in a way that respects the devolution settlements. That is what a responsible, competent and law-abiding Government would do. This is a pivotal moment to determine the future of our country—who we are and how we operate. In shaping that future, we have to stand up for the traditions that matter: our commitment to the rule of law. The Bill speaks of a Government and a Prime Minister who are casual, not to say cavalier and reckless, about the gravity of the issues confronting them. The Prime Minister should be focusing on securing a Brexit deal, not breaking international law and risking no deal. He is cavalier on international law and cavalier on our traditions. This is not the serious leadership we need, and it is why we will oppose the Bill tonight.

  • Ed Miliband – 2015 Keynote Speech on the NHS

    Ed Miliband – 2015 Keynote Speech on the NHS

    The comments made by Ed Miliband, the then Leader of the Opposition, on 23 April 2015.

    It is great to be here with you at Manchester Metropolitan University.

    What a fantastic turn-out. And I particularly want to thank you for having us on exam day.

    And I want to thank John Brookes the Vice Chancellor here at the University.

    John’s going to be retiring in May after 10 years, so let’s pay tribute to him today.

    And let’s also pay tribute to all of the brilliant student nurses here today who are training to work in our health service. Thank you.

    The general election is getting closer and closer.

    There is just over two weeks to go now.

    Just over two weeks to decide what the future looks like for our country.

    Not simply a competition between parties.

    But a choice between two different visions of the country.

    Carrying on with the Tory way, hoping that the success of a few at the top will somehow be enough for us all to succeed, and cutting our public services back to the very bone.

    Or a Labour vision.

    A vision of a recovery that reaches not just the City of London but the front door of every working family.

    And a vision that knows we must invest in the future of our vital public services.

    And there is nowhere this choice matters more than the NHS.

    I don’t need to tell you here that the NHS is the most precious institution in our country.

    We all have our own reasons why we love the NHS.

    It looks after us when we’re born.

    It cares for us when we’re sick.

    And it so often cares for us also in our final days and weeks of life.

    It is the proudest achievement in our country and the envy of the world.

    But we know too that the NHS is facing one of the greatest threats since its foundation.

    We know it has been going backwards under this government.

    Harder and harder to see a GP.

    More and more elderly people who can’t get the care they need at home.

    And when that happens, the problems pile up in hospitals.

    Patients stuck outside hospital in ambulances because A&E is full.

    Seriously ill people waiting for treatment lying on trolleys in corridors for hours.

    So often doctors, nurses and midwives are rushed off their feet.

    Unable to do the job that they are so well-trained to do.

    Two-thirds of nurses today say patients are missing out on care because there just aren’t enough nurses on the wards.

    Today we hear the news that one-in-three NHS Trusts were investigated last year over safe staffing.

    And none of this has happened by accident.

    It has happened as a direct result of choices this government has made.

    A government that has wasted billions on a top-down reorganisation that no-one wanted.

    A government that has cut nurse training, meaning we don’t now have enough nurses.

    It is a government that has cut back on GP services and care for the elderly, increasing the pressure on hospitals.

    And it is a government that has overseen a creeping privatisation of our NHS.

    With a Health and Social Care Act that sees precious NHS resources spent on accountants and competition lawyers.

    Friends, that’s not the NHS I believe in.

    It is not the NHS you believe in.

    It is not the NHS the British people want to see.

    Of course now there is an election on again, it is all change.

    The Conservatives are committed to doubling the spending cuts next year, even deeper spending cuts than we’ve seen in the last parliament.

    But now they want you to believe they’re going to spend more on the NHS.

    With money they can’t identify, from a place they cannot name.

    These are promises that can’t be believed.

    They are false promises with an expiry date of May 8th stamped on them.

    And you know, nothing is more dangerous for the future of our NHS than pretending you are going to pay for it with an IOU.

    And what do the Conservatives say when asked about where they will find the money?

    “Just look at our record.”

    Well, we have.

    And it’s failed.

    I have a direct message for the British people:

    For five years, the NHS has gone backwards.

    For the next five if the Conservatives are returned to power the NHS will be starved of funds, it will face a rising tide of privatisation.

    This is the truth.

    David Cameron is now a mortal danger to the NHS.

    We have a fortnight to fight for our NHS.

    We have a fortnight to rescue our NHS.

    That’s why the country needs Labour’s immediate rescue plan for the National Health Service.

    The central idea is this: that we must invest in the NHS with a fully funded plan, so it has time to care.

    And we must join up services at every stage, from home to hospital, so you get the care you need, where you need it.

    That is how we make our NHS sustainable and successful for years to come.

    So we’ll have a Mansion tax on properties worth over £2 million.

    We will raise extra revenue from the tobacco companies.

    And we’ll do something the Conservatives would never do: we’ll clamp down on tax avoidance, including by the hedge funds.

    And we will use that money for a plan to transform services, and have 20,000 more nurses, 8,000 more doctors, 5,000 more care-workers and 3,000 more midwives.

    So that we have what every nurse wants, every doctor wants, every patient wants:

    An NHS with time to care.

    And this investment will not be for an NHS that stands still but one that keeps up with the challenges of our time.

    Let me tell you what I have learnt most from talking to people in the NHS.

    The most important principle is that the success of what goes on inside a hospital depends on what goes on outside in the community.

    When people can’t get to see their GP, many go to A&E instead.

    When problems with mental health aren’t spotted early at school or work, people can end up in crisis, needing more intensive support.

    When elderly people can’t get the care they need at home, they are more likely to struggle, grow ill or have a fall, and end up in hospital.

    In each and every case, failing to act early is worse for the person involved and it costs more for the NHS too.

    We have to give people the right care at the right time in the right place.

    And that is what we will do:

    We will hire more doctors and by saving resources on privatisation and bureaucracy, we will guarantee everyone who wants it an appointment with a GP in 48 hours.

    Our new care workers will be a new arm of the NHS, to help elderly people with the greatest needs.

    And we will meet the central challenge of the 21st century with integrated, not fragmented services.

    We’ll put the right values at the heart of the NHS:

    Care, compassion and co-operation.

    Not competition, fragmentation and privatisation.

    So we will repeal the Health and Social Care Act.

    But to save the NHS from the trouble it’s in, we can’t wait.

    With A&E in crisis, staff shortages, and hospitals weighed down by large deficits, this plan has to start immediately.

    Straight away.

    With real money, right now.

    So today I can announce in our first 100 days, our first Budget, our first year in office, we’ll begin to bring in funds from the Mansion Tax and tobacco levy .

    And we will use that money to support the NHS with our immediate Rescue Plan.

    An emergency round of nurse recruitment.

    Funding for 1,000 extra training places this year.

    Getting extra resources into the NHS right from the very start.

    First things first: We’ll save the NHS.

    To begin easing frontline pressures as soon as we can.

    To begin bringing down the spiralling bill for agency staff.

    To begin opening the doors of places just like this to more talented young people.

    Giving them the opportunities they need.

    And to do this on their first day in office, Labour ministers will instruct officials to write to colleges and universities, and call on them to reopen admissions for highly-oversubscribed nursing courses this year.

    And we’ll take further action too, so we can get more nurses on the wards straight away, we’ll persuade nurses to stay in practice and to return to practice.

    This is part of our plan for 20,000 more nurses.

    And let me say to all of the student nurses here today, that by putting in more resources, it will mean that there are jobs for you to go to in the NHS.

    Using your dedication, your commitment and your compassion for the health of our country.

    And that is only the start of our rescue plan for the NHS.

    We are also going to begin immediate planning to avoid an A&E crisis for the coming winter.

    Improving GP access and ensuring there are GPs in all A&Es.

    Increasing the numbers of clinically-trained NHS staff on the 111 phoneline.

    And we’ll take action to tackle the increasing scandal of ‘delayed discharges’, where patients end up stuck in hospital when they could be being looked after at home.

    And we’ll immediately halt the cost and chaos of privatisation in our National Health Service.

    With a Bill to Parliament to repeal the Health and Social Care Act within the first 100 days of a Labour government.

    Because the right principles and the right care go hand in hand in our NHS.

    So this is our plan.

    And as I look around this room today, I know that you are the future of our NHS.

    We have the best doctors and nurses in the world.

    The pride of our country.

    Our job – my job as Prime Minister – would be to help you do all you can to make the difference.

    To care.

    To keep our country well.

    A better plan for the NHS today.

    A better plan for the NHS in the future.

    Labour’s commitment to the NHS is part of who we are.

    We’ve got just 16 days to start to make that difference.

    Let’s not let the NHS slip further and further backwards.

    Let’s show that the idea that was right for our parents and our grandparents, is right for our children and grandchildren too.

    Let’s rescue our NHS.

    Let’s make sure it is there for our country.

    Let’s elect a Labour government.

  • Ed Miliband – 2015 Comments on Cancer Treatment in the NHS

    Ed Miliband – 2015 Comments on Cancer Treatment in the NHS

    The comments made by Ed Miliband on 23 April 2015.

    The NHS needs a real plan with real money right now – not an IOU.

    Yesterday I set out our NHS Rescue Plan for our first 100 days, our first Budget and our first year in office. Now I want to set out the next stage of our fully-funded plan, an investment of £150 million a year, every year in the key equipment patients need to get quick access to cancer tests and improve early diagnosis.

    There can be nothing more worrying for patients and their families than waiting to hear if you have this terrible disease. Speeding up cancer tests will help reduce the anxiety of waiting for a test result, improve early diagnosis, and ensure those who need it can start treatment sooner.

    And we know that early diagnosis dramatically improves the chances of successful treatment while saving the NHS on the costs of late intervention.

    So we are raising money through a Mansion Tax, closing loopholes enjoyed by the hedge funds and imposing a new levy on tobacco firms – to pay for the equipment needed to deliver our guarantee of one-week cancer tests.

    What a contrast with the Tories who promised extra money before for cancer treatment but ended up cutting cancer budgets. They have run a government that has taken the NHS backwards and now we have the shabby sight of them sneaking out evidence of their own failure on cancer treatment under cover of darkness and dissolution, hoping no-one will notice.

    I’ve got news for David Cameron: the game’s up, you broke your promises on the NHS before and no one will believe you again in the future.

  • Ed Miliband – 2015 Comments on Conservative Spending Cuts

    Ed Miliband – 2015 Comments on Conservative Spending Cuts

    The comments made by Ed Miliband, the then Leader of the Opposition, on 23 April 2015.

    This General Election is coming down to a straight choice about who will stand up for working families: a choice between another five years of a recovery just reaching big firms in the City of London with the Tories – or Labour’s better plan to ensure the recovery reaches the front doors of working people across Britain.

    And, with two weeks to go, it’s time that choice was made plain and clear. The Tories want to pretend that another five years of their failing plan is the route to the good life. But the truth is they are engaged in a grand deception.

    David Cameron is running a desperate campaign, talking about anything but their record of failure or their plans for the future. They might not want to talk it, but we will.

    The Tories are committed to the most extreme spending plans of any political party in generations.

    It is a plan so extreme that IMF figures show Britain would be facing the deepest cuts over the next three years of any advanced country in the world.

    It is a plan so extreme that far from protecting the NHS they would end up cutting the NHS.

    It is a plan so extreme that it wouldn’t mean three years of the good life, it would mean three years of hard times.

    Maybe not for some of the rich and powerful, who have done so well with the last five years of the Tories.

    But it would mean hard times for the working families of Britain, who put in the hours, pay their taxes and play their part.

    It would mean hard times for young people just starting out in life and wondering if they will ever be given a decent chance.

    And it will mean hard times for the NHS that we all rely on. David Cameron has broken all those promises he made before the last election.

    He promised there would be no more top-down re-organisations and then wasted billions on the biggest the NHS has ever seen.

    He stood outside a hospital with a sign that said there would be no cuts and no closures – only to shut that very same A&E.

    He said there would be no return to people waiting hours on end in A&E. But under his government, A&E targets are in tatters and patients are waiting longer and longer to be seen.

    He promised extra money for frontline services like cancer treatment but ended up cutting cancer budgets.

    And now in this campaign, he’s at it again. After five years of failure, he wants us to believe the NHS is safe in his hands. He wants us to believe he’s going to increase funding for the NHS. When he can’t tell us where a single penny of the money is coming from. You can’t save the NHS with an IOU and you can’t trust the Tories with the NHS.