Tag: Eric Pickles

  • Eric Pickles – 2013 Speech on Uniting our Communities

    ericpickles

    Below is the text of the speech made by the Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government, Eric Pickles, at the Institute of Civil Engineers in London on 15th January 2013.

    No-one in this country will ever forget 2012.

    Jubilee jamborees, street parties, music marathons.

    The special magic Olympian and Paralympian gold rush.

    We have not I think seen the like before compressed into a single year.

    When you look back, what strikes me is how those events were illuminated by millions of small intense sparks.

    Sparks of kindness and sparks of service.

    It was a year when volunteering went vogue.

    When the biggest army of volunteers for nearly 70 years made things go with a ‘zing’.

    And when the loudest cheer at the Olympic stadium went to the games makers.

    2012 was also the year when striving people who had struggled to be heard, finally found their voice.

    This was brought home to me by the story I heard about Nasrine from Keighley in Yorkshire – the place in which I was born and brought up.

    Nasrine came to Keighley a quarter of a century ago from Pakistan. She had always struggled to pick up the language.

    Things changed when a very thoughtful neighbour invited her to a mums and toddlers group at the local church.

    A group that happened to be supported by our Near Neighbours initiative.

    It proved to Nasrine to be the turning point.

    With the encouragement of her new friends, she plucked up the courage to enrol at a local college to learn English.

    She’s now fluent, nothing can stop her.

    She has even completed a food hygiene course, so she can give something back to the new friends that helped her.

    Nasrine’s victory, her intense spark of success, triumphing against the odds should be cheered to the rafters just as much as the achievements of magnificent Mo Farah.

    But her victory shows why we are determined to back local ambition.

    Each person is a vital part of their community.

    And when you improve the life of one person.

    You begin to improve the lives of those around them.

    We saw this time and time again last year.

    Take the organisation called the Big Lunch.

    This was about more than bringing millions together to enjoy a cuppa and a cake on a picnic table.

    Once a community picnic becomes a gathering of neighbours, once you can put a face to a name, you start to get things done as Peter from Northfleet in Kent discovered.

    By the time he had finished his meal, he’d gathered more than 90 signatures on a petition for a new zebra crossing near his local primary school.

    You break down barriers and good deed leads to another.

    It was the same with the Bandstand Marathon.

    We helped 200,000 people boogie to the beat.

    Now let’s face it from the great and the good to the rest of us we all like to boogie.

    But I loved the fact that local people went further.

    Ingeniously devising the ‘instrument amnesty’.

    So instead of getting rid of old banjos or accordions, unused instruments went to others who wanted to learn to play.

    The Jubilee Hour also offered a perfect demonstration of integration in action.

    Millions gave up 60 minutes, to mark 60 years worth of service by Her Majesty.

    Just like our Majesty, they often went above and beyond.

    Hardy folk down in Broadbottom cleared glass from a small river beach.

    Birmingham volunteers tidied up the gardens of a local care home.

    For many, what started out as an hour’s volunteering looks like turning into a life-time’s commitment.

    Members of the Military Preparation College have decided to volunteer about 10,000 hours annually to benefit local communities.

    And, while we’re on the subject of helping people to do things for themselves, we’re ensuring youngsters from all backgrounds match skills to their ambition.

    I visited Safeside, an education facility in Birmingham to see Youth United in action.

    A group of St John Ambulance volunteers teaching other young folk how to give CPR. In return gaining confidence and experience that would directly help them in the jobs market.

    It was a lifesaving course in more ways than one.

    When you bring together all these intense sparks of commitment and community, what you get is a glowing sense of pride, a real tangible sense of belonging in our country.

    The 2011 census said we are more and more becoming a cosmopolitan country.

    But 2012 demonstrated why we can celebrate the common threads that unite us.

    Last year we seized back the union flag from thugs and extremists.

    Not just from the loutish EDL, but the equally vile ‘poppy burners’.

    Both fanning the flames of hatred.

    Spreading fear.

    Clanging their discordant bell of division.

    In 2012 we won the argument.

    Where they sought to divide, we sought to unite.

    Where they tried to pull down the shutters, we put out the bunting.

    Where they seek to brick Britain in, we built Britain up.

    These extremists want Britain to return to a place and a time that never existed.

    And if it had, it would be a nasty, brutish and mean place.

    But I think we’ve shown their faces don’t fit.

    They are not welcome in modern Britain.

    Which will be a relief for taxpayers.

    For the past few years they have had to stump up the cost of policing the EDL’s malevolent marches.

    Just two of those demonstrations in Luton staggeringly cost almost £2.4 million.

    And left the local authority with very little change from £200,000.

    That’s money that could have been spent on community policing and solving crime.

    What’s more these demonstrations dealt a devastating blow to business and shops on the high street.

    Luton’s local shopping centre lost an estimated half a million pounds.

    And that doesn’t even take into consideration the losses to local stores, companies and taxi firms faced.

    Demonstrations in Bradford, my old much loved city, left businesses out of pocket to the tune of over a million pounds.

    It cost £650,000 to police 1,000 protesters.

    Now I don’t know about you but £650 per protester doesn’t sound like value for money to me.

    Now of course, it’s wonderful we live in a society where people feel able to protest.

    And the usual inconvenience is a small price to pay for such rights.

    But in times of austerity we simply cannot afford to subsidise this insignificant malignant minority.

    Holding thriving businesses hostage.

    Hostage to hate.

    When protests happens, week in week out, it numbs communities.

    Blights places people call home.

    Turns neighbourhoods into sinister arenas for conflict and hostility.

    You should be able to pop to the chemist, or be able to let your kids go shopping on the high street on a Saturday afternoon, without having checking the calendar to see if the EDL are on the march.

    Every community has a basic right to sleep soundly in their beds and to walk without fear on their streets.

    I’m glad to see those EDL numbers on the slide.

    Now, for some, our approach to integration is a little too simple.

    They want a Stalinist 5 year plan.

    They want to tell people what to do and what to think.

    They believe in focus groups, the graph, the bean bag, and the diversity questionnaire.

    Precisely the sort of box-ticking exercise that leads to more bureaucracy not more unity.

    Policy makers of the past preferred to fund ethnic groups to help ethnic groups, instead of supporting neighbours to meet neighbours.

    Yet the detractors have been bowled over by the success that we’ve had on the ground.

    It’s success based in the real world.

    Success founded on an understanding that integration occurs locally and can’t be imposed by Whitehall.

    Those who came to this country from the Jews of the East End to Leicester’s Ugandans, they did not abandon their heritage or culture.

    But they were able to make a success of their lives.

    They understood that what makes you British.

    Has nothing to do with the colour of your skin.

    The nature of your religion.

    It’s not where you come from.

    It’s where you’re going that matters.

    And that’s why they adopted the great things this country has to offer.

    Our great British liberties.

    Like respect for people’s right to free speech, even if you don’t agree with what’s being said.

    And respect for the law.

    It also comes out as things people consider most important about being British in today’s British Future’s poll.

    And our great communities also embraced those other intangible parts of our constitution.

    Of course, all those liberties that existed long before the Euro-judges were let loose on the issue.

    Our joint sense of tolerance, fair play, and respect for others.

    But it’s our willingness.

    Their ambition.

    Their determination.

    To come to the party.

    To grab success.

    To pick up a dictionary rather than relying on a translator.

    That made them a vital part of the British family.

    So, when it comes to integration, our priority is to make way.

    Remove the bureaucracy.

    Snap the shackles of the PC brigade.

    Let localism loose.

    Use people power so communities can do things for themselves.

    Our support for troubled families, community budgets, and neighbourhood planning are clear examples of this approach.

    The old Whitehall walls have come down.

    Local government fault lines have been erased.

    Instead we’re getting organisations together to tackle deep rooted social problems.

    We’re removing the dependence from the system and giving local people confidence to strengthen their communities.

    In 2012 we discovered, to quote the Chief Rabbi, “the music beneath the noise”.

    And in 2013 we won’t skip a beat of that music.

    We will keep breaking down the barriers that get in the way of people getting together.

    Language is our starting point.

    I began by talking about Nasrine, but she is not alone.

    Far too many have paid the price for another one of the old statist policies.

    The decision to pay for translation instead of trusting people to learn the language.

    It has been estimated that the public sector spends as much as £140 million a year translating documents into foreign languages.

    Now, it wasn’t that our predecessors were ill intentioned, don’t get me wrong there.

    Their hearts were in the right place.

    It was just their decisions were simply wrong.

    And that made matters worse.

    It entrenched division.

    Slamming shut the doors of opportunity.

    It led us to the incomprehensible situation where no one can speak English as their main language in 5% of our households.

    That’s terrible for community relations and bad news for the tax-payer.

    It was good to hear recently an apology for these poor policy choices.

    It’s just a pity it came 15 years too late.

    If we want people to get along it makes sense they speak English.

    People should be able to talk, and understand one and another in a nuanced way.

    I’m not expecting everyone to adopt the lyrical dexterity of Samuel Johnson or for that matter Boris Johnson.

    But this is about getting the best from all our citizens.

    Britain is a country built on aspiration.

    You work hard to get your first job, your first car, your first home.

    But the reality is you need English to succeed.

    You can’t really function as a good doctor, a good teacher, a good mechanic, or since we’re in the Institution for Civil Engineering, you can’t be a good engineer, if you can’t talk the language.

    Just as you can’t talk to your neighbour, read a bus timetable, or enjoy enormous joy of The Only Way is Essex.

    Worse still, our kids don’t have fluent English, are condemned to a very limited life.

    We don’t want people’s identity to disappear or cease being proud of their roots or background.

    We want them to stay in touch with their culture.

    We want them to be proud and ambitious.

    So learning English is an integral part of that process.

    That’s why, instead of millions lost in translation services, next year we’re ploughing millions into an English language service.

    Today I’m launching a competition that will allow local communities to tailor language services to suit the needs of their area.

    It will give people the power to improve their circumstances and climb the social ladder.

    But more than that it will benefit Britain.

    We all miss out, our country is the poorer, if people can’t speak our language.

    If they are unable to participate or make an economic contribution.

    English is the passport to prosperity all over the world.

    From Mumbai through to Beijing every ambitious parent is trying to get their children to learn English.

    We should want no less for our children here.

    And we need to ensure that intense spark of ambition is felt strongly right across the country.

    When need our great communities to succeed, for Britain to succeed.

    When they do well, our country is enriched culturally and economically.

    Ultimately, Britain can only compete in the global race if we realise the full potential of each and every person in our country.

    Another unintended consequence of the previous administration was the attitude to uncontrolled immigration.

    Besides they put a strain on our schools, our healthcare and welfare.

    Besides the social tension it created.

    Was that it stifled a real opportunity for us to develop home grown talent.

    British Asian cuisine is a classic example of this.

    We all know curry is the favourite item on the menu of people up and down the land.

    It warms the cockles of 2.5 million people every week.

    Bringing billions into our economy.

    It is also reminds us of the way we have taken a traditional dish and added our own unique British twist.

    Yet I can’t understand why many chefs were being imported from Bangladesh for this purpose.

    When what we should have done was train local people up to that level of cuisine.

    That’s why I’m as keen as korma on curry schools.

    That are helping us put some domestic glitz and glam back into the industry and enable us to develop a new generation of Master Chefs.

    New Atul Kochhars.

    To export to India and the rest of the world.

    A desire to improve social mobility for all our citizens, is a factor I identified as being integral to integration last year.

    But this is about more than curry schools.

    We’re also encouraging at least 50 more schools to take part in enterprise challenges.

    And winning hundreds more secondary school pupils to work placements in industry.

    We’re also moving forward on another element of our strategy – participation.

    Our faith communities are past masters of bringing people together.

    Alastair Campbell might carp, but we definitely do ‘God’.

    Faith provides a clear moral compass and a call to action that benefits society as a whole.

    At a time when Christians are under attack for their beliefs in different parts of the world, I am proud we have freedom of belief in Britain.

    But in recent year long-standing British liberties of freedom of religion have been undermined by the intolerance and aggressive secularism.

    Taking people to task for wearing a cross or a rosary .

    Beginning costly legal actions against council prayers – as if they had nothing better to do.

    We’re committed to the right of Christians and people of all beliefs to follow their faith openly, wear religious symbols and pray in public.

    That’s why I signed a Parliamentary Order last year to protect the freedom for communities to pray.

    I am delighted that the principle of wearing a religious symbol at work has today been upheld by the European Court. It’s a very long judgement our lawyers are ploughing through.

    Our Year of Service reminded us why faith still counts.

    Christians at Harvest festival, Muslims at Eid and Jews on Mitzvah Day, Sikhs on the martyrdom of Guru Arjan Dev all reaching across the divide – giving succour to the sick, support for the needy, to the poor of all faiths and to people of no faith.

    Faith galvanised our communities.

    That’s why we will soon be announcing our plans to build on the success of A Year of Service.

    Plans that make the most of the energy and the enthusiasm of all those who took part in faith-based volunteering last year.

    Alongside this I’ll be supporting a further 190 Near Neighbours projects to keep communities connecting.

    Participation stems from what last year I referred to as sharing common ground.

    Last year it was about celebration. Next year will be about commemoration.

    On the ceiling of this building’s Great Hall is a painted memorial to the war to end all wars.

    It is a reminder of the self-sacrifice of those who fought and died for this country in a conflict that began 99 years ago.

    They were made up of all creeds, colours and class, and came from all corners of the globe world.

    As I stood at the Cenotaph on Remembrance Sunday last year, it occurred to me that this was the first time we stood in silence without a World War One veteran by our side.

    But we will continue to remember them.

    And this year our preparations to honour the fallen will pick up pace.

    Few people have a greater sense of responsibility than our brave armed forces and it’s been another of my priorities to build that sense of responsibility – particularly amongst our young people.

    That is why we’ve encouraged tens of thousands of youngsters to join the National Citizen Service, and that will continue.

    And we’re also helping hundreds of young people get involved in great activities like the Scouts and Industrial Cadets – helping break down barriers while having a bit of fun at the same time.

    Finally, if we’re to encourage people to get on board, we have got to be very clear we need to tell some people where to get off.

    As we did last year, we will continue to work to isolate extremism.

    Twenty years on from the death of Stephen Lawrence, we will continue to show racism the red card – working with 10,000 students in schools across the country to reject the extremist message.

    And a special interest group – led by Blackburn and Luton councils – are undertaking important work locally to tackle the fanatics.

    We’ll be watching out for their findings with great interest.

    Meanwhile, the money we’ve put into the Monitoring Anti-Muslim Attacks (MAMA) will lay the foundations for reporting and gathering data on anti-Muslim incidents.

    There can be no hiding place for the racists in our society.

    So in 2013 our mantra is simple; integration, integration, integration.

    We will continue reaching hard across the divide

    We will continue forging the friendships that strengthen our society and help everyone get on in life.

    But if I had one new year’s resolution for this year, it would be to make this year

    …like the title of the book I’ve just downloaded onto my Kindle:

    “A year of doing good”.

    Because it’s those intense sparks of ambition that will light the way for our country.

    Those intense sparks that will weld us together as a stronger nation in the years and the decades to come.

  • Eric Pickles – 2012 Speech to Conservative Party Conference

    ericpickles

    The below speech was made by the Secretary of State for Communities, Eric Pickles, in October 2012.

    After two and a half years in Coalition, it still seems strange to be working with our yellow chums in government.

    I sit next to Vince Cable in Cabinet.

    He’s not as cheerful as he seems on telly.

    But I wasn’t always a Conservative.

    I was born into a Labour family.

    My great-grandfather was one of the founding members of the local Independent Labour Party.

    As a 14 year old, my birthday present was a book by Leon Trotsky.

    Aptly, ‘the Revolution Betrayed’.

    Not exactly Harry Potter.

    Trotsky rightly warned of the oppressive bureaucracy of the Soviets.

    But it was the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia that made me join the Conservative Party as a protest.

    Gradually I became a Conservative.

    A Tory that has a burning dislike of oppressive state bureaucracy.

    A Tory that knows that prosperity and fairness is best delivered through freedom.

    Now, I came from a humble background.

    And I am proud to be both a Member of Parliament and a member of David Cameron’s Cabinet.

    It was the Conservative Party that helped me get where I am today.

    And now, I want others to have a chance in life.

    There is nothing more fundamental than supporting home ownership.

    We have reinvigorated the Right to Buy, reversing Labour’s savage cuts.

    We are offering families up to seventy-five thousand pounds discount to buy their home…

    …Using the money from additional sales to build more affordable homes.

    The Right to Buy gives something back to families who worked hard, pay their rent and play by the rules.

    Across the country, Margaret Thatcher’s Right to Buy has given people a sense of pride and ownership in where they live.

    Sadly, many Labour councils are keeping their tenants in the dark about these new extended rights.

    Their council leaders have pledged to fight tooth and nail against the Right to Buy.

    A right can only be exercised if you know about it.

    So I can pledge my department will be talking direct to tenants to inform them of their Right to Buy.

    It’s a great policy to campaign on for May’s local elections.

    We should tell every tenant in every council estate – that we’re on their side.

    We are also tackling a great injustice – discrimination against our Armed Forces.

    Precisely because they have served overseas – servicemen and women don’t have a ‘local connection’ under housing rules.

    Amazingly foreign migrants have been given greater priority on housing waiting lists than those who fought for Queen and Country.

    So we have changed the rules to give Armed Forces first priority for our first-time buyer and shared ownership schemes.

    And we have given councils new freedoms to allocate social housing to those who have worked hard and given something back to society…

    …from the Armed Forces to community volunteers.

    And can you believe it?

    Some Labour councils are turning their back on our Armed Forces.

    Why?

    Because there could be some “equality issues” – well,

    I don’t mind discriminating in favour of our military heroes.

    Conference,

    I believe in lower taxes.

    Whereas Labour doubled council tax.

    We have worked with councils to freeze it for the last two years.

    And this year, we are again offering additional funding to help councils freeze their bills.

    And we’ve scrapped Labour’s plans for an expensive and intrusive council tax revaluation, and Labour’s plans for new taxes on your home improvements.

    We want to make it easier for families to improve their home and build a new conservatory.

    Labour want to tax it!

    We have also cut business rates for small firms, doubling their rate relief.

    Bit by bit, we are pulling back the burden of regulation imposed by Labour.

    Clamping down on loony health and safety,

    Stopping the gold-plating of Euro Directives and equality rules,

    Opening up more government contracts to small and medium firms.

    And we have scrapped Whitehall rules which forced up parking charges and made it impossible to park in town centres.

    Now, councils need to do their bit to help.

    And to encourage that, we are giving councils a financial stake in their high street.

    From April, councils will keep more of the money they raise in business rates.

    No longer will it all be snatched back by Whitehall.

    So councils will have a direct interest and motivation to see their local economy grow and develop.

    Conservative councils, I know, will seize this opportunity.

    They will reward enterprise and hard work.

    By cutting waste and bureaucracy, we’ve been able to cut council tax and business rates, and still pay off Labour’s deficit.

    I’m doing my bit in Whitehall.

    My department is reducing its running costs by five hundred and seventy million pounds.

    Yet despite the fact that Labour were planning big cuts in local government budgets, Labour have opposed every single saving we’ve made.

    All they offer is more borrowing and more taxes.

    They are simply not credible.

    I believe that more joint working, cutting fraud, clamping down on senior pay, greater transparency, and better procurement will help deliver sensible savings in council budgets, and protect frontline services.

    We practice what we preach.

    We’ve published every single item spent on the Government’s corporate credit cards, reducing our card spending by three quarters.

    It has exposed astonishing waste by Labour – wining, dining and jollies at your expense.

    Conference,

    Whereas arrogant Labour Ministers had a party at your expense, I’m proud of what this Government has done to support people’s street parties.

    The Royal Wedding, the Diamond Jubilee and the Olympics were great occasions of the nation coming together.

    This Government has backed British values,

    having pride in our nation and our flags,

    supporting our united identity and our common English language.

    We have stood up for the role of Christianity and faith in public life.

    And protected councils’ right to hold prayers at meetings, if they wish.

    Upholding values of tolerance and freedom of religion.

    They’re not human rights.

    They’re British rights.

    Rights that existed long before European Judges came into existence.

    And, at the same time, we will confront and challenge the minority of extremists who spread hate and division.

    We are stronger as a nation when we stand together.

    And – what a great thing it is – that kids in Birmingham, across colours and creeds, have been waving the Union flag this summer for British champions like Mo Farah.

    Born overseas, but now proud to be British.

    We Brits are increasingly proud to fly flags as an expression of our local and national identities.

    Now, flying a flag should be a pleasure, not a chore.

    Brussels has been trying to make it compulsory for public buildings to fly the EU flag all year round.

    Bless them – they thought it was a good idea.

    We have successfully fought off this ludicrous policy.

    We’ll fly flags – but of our own choosing.

    So I’ve cut the rules which has held back flag-flying of Britain’s local and military flags.

    Such as the great flag of Yorkshire and its White Rose.

    Now, I’m proud to have been born and bred in Yorkshire, but Essex is my home now.

    I have been transformed from a Yorkshire TYKE to an Essex TOWIE.

    My constituency is the location of the television programme The Only Way Is Essex.

    It’s fun TV and we all enjoy it.

    But there is another Essex Value that runs deep in the DNA of our Party:

    – if you work hard, you can go far.

    It’s a message well understood by Margaret Thatcher, John Major and by David Cameron.

    And it’s this:

    It doesn’t matter where you’re from, it’s where you’re going that counts.

    As Conservatives, we are at our best when we back that aspiration.

    We should reject the voices of the left who want to sneer at success, kick enterprise and punish the rewards that go with hard work.

    There are, of course, some families in our society who are caught in a culture of welfare dependency, criminality and low self-esteem.

    They have been let down.

    A cosy centre-left consensus saw this as ‘too difficult’ to tackle.

    They just kept paying the benefit and abandoned people in sink estates.

    We saw it during last year’s riots – opportunistic thugs – a Gucci generation looting flat-screen tellies and trendy trainers.

    And we see it with a generation who want nothing other than the next benefit cheque, and don’t care about their kids’ future.

    That is why we have launched a Troubled Families initiative – to tackle this head on.

    We are bringing all the different public agencies together.

    Dedicated workers to intervene and turn these families’ lives around.

    It’s not about social workers feeling their pain or respecting their “lifestyle choices”, it’s about tough love – very tough love.

    It’s not acceptable for parents to blow their benefits on booze or drugs.

    Or allow their kids to skip school and drift into crime.

    So we will work with families to provide the guidance and supervision that kids need.

    Every council has signed up to a scheme.

    By the end of the year, we have committed to be actively working with over forty-thousand families across England.

    By the end of this Parliament, we aim to have turned around one-hundred-and-twenty thousand troubled families.

    It won’t be easy.

    But we will help improve the lives of the most vulnerable, neglected and exploited in society.

    Conference,

    Just as we want to change things, we also want to protect the good things – especially the environment.

    So we’ve introduced a new protection for valuable green spaces and have given councils new powers to stop unwanted garden grabbing.

    Now, there’s been a lot of press speculation in recent weeks on the Green Belt.

    Protecting the character of the countryside is stamped deep into the heart of Conservativism.

    And I want to be absolutely clear – the Green Belt plays a vital role in stopping urban sprawl – and we will protect it.

    To maintain those environmental safeguards, we have to be tough on those who break them.

    We are helping councils tackle the rogue landlords who build “beds in sheds” – which house and exploit illegal immigrants.

    We have outlawed squatting in people’s homes. Invade someone’s house and you now go to jail.

    We’ve handed councils the powers to close down the protestors’ shanty towns that blighted the likes of Parliament Square and St Paul’s.

    Now, long-drawn out cases like Dale Farm have brought the legal system into disrepute.

    You know the story: in breach of planning law, travellers move in over a bank holiday weekend, and it takes years for councils to remove them.

    A small minority exploit Labour’s human rights and equality rules and have cost taxpayers millions of pounds.

    Such episodes give the whole travelling community a bad name and fuels community tensions.

    So I can announce today new powers for councils to literally stop those caravans in their tracks.

    New instant Stop Notices will allow councils to issue unlimited fines for those who ignore planning rules and defy the law.

    We will stand by those who play by the rules, and use the full force of the law against those who break them.

    Conference chums,

    In my Ministerial office, I’ve placed reminders of what it means to be a Conservative.

    A bust of Disraeli.

    A poster of the great Winston.

    A momento of the magnificent Margaret.

    But over my left shoulder is a photograph that often catches the eye of visitors.

    Ché Guevara.

    The Cuban Revolutionary.

    Smoking a very large Havana cigar.

    It’s there to remind me: that without constant vigilance – the cigar-chomping Commies will take over.

    Well, that isn’t going to happen on my watch.

    After more than two years in government, I’ve learnt that cigar-chomping Commies come in many guises.

    We may be in Coalition, but we are doing sound Conservative things, and we should be proud of what we’re doing.

    Proud of taking on the vested interests of oppressive bureaucracy,

    Proud of cutting back waste to pay off Labour’s overdraft,

    Proud of rewarding those who work hard,

    And proud to be at the front of a revolution.

    A very Conservative revolution that will allow Britain to deliver.

    Thank you.

  • Eric Pickles – 2011 Speech to Conservative Party Conference

    ericpickles

    Below is the text of the speech made by the Communities and Local Government Secretary, Eric Pickles, to the 2011 Conservative Party conference.

    It’s now almost 18 months since David Cameron entered the doors of Number 10 together with our coalition chums to clean up Labour’s mess.

    Getting our nation’s finances back on the right track has been challenging.

    I’ve seen first hand the inefficiency and incompetence of Labour.

    Take FireControl – John Prescott’s plan to regionalise England’s fire service.

    His vanity project spiralled out of control, wasting half a billion pounds of taxpayers’ money.

    You won’t hear about that on money supermarket dot com

    And there’s nothing to show for it – apart from a series of empty bunkers, each kitted out with deluxe chrome coffee machines costing six grand a piece.

    Now that’s Labour’s idea of national resilience.

    Come hell or high water, Labour Ministers could still demand a Venti Skinny cappuccino.

    What a waste! You can get a big pack of Yorkshire Tea for a fiver…

    Now if my Coalition Mucker Chris Huhne tunes in today – that’s what I call a proper Tea Party, Chris.

    Or take the example of Labour blowing £5,000 on my department’s officials having a staff away day at a club.

    Not a working men’s club.

    Not a Pall Mall Gentlemen’s Club.

    No, a different kind of gentlemen’s club –

    A club which features Showgirl Sensation Amber Topaz and her exotic chum, Lady Beau Peep.

    I’ve never thought of the civil service as lost sheep,

    And I’m not sure why they flocked to that establishment.

    No more – I’ve cancelled these plush away days.

    Labour Ministers were at it too.

    With their corporate credit card – the so-called “Government Procurement Card” –

    Labour and their staff wined and dined at the finest restaurants at your expense.

    Boisdales.

    The Cinammon Club.

    The Wolseley.

    And in the very heart of Prezza-land, close to the mouth of the Humber… Mr Chu’s China Palace.

    Unlike Labour, I pay for my own Chicken Chow Mein.

    We are clamping down on the abuse of government credit cards and opening their spending up to public scrutiny.

    Transparency will help councils save billions through better procurement, joint working, and driving out waste.

    In comparison to Whitehall, local government has been the most efficient part of the public sector – especially Conservative councils.

    By dismantling Labour’s interfering, intrusive laws and regulations, we can do even more for less.

    In a radical extension of localism, we are giving councils a new general power of competence to champion their local communities.

    We’ve shredded Labour red tape.

    And I’m tackling the gold-plating of equality rules.

    Did you know… if you want to take out a copy of Mills and Boon from your local library…….In some places you’re asked to fill out a sex survey on your private life.

    No more. Councils won’t need to undertake these expensive and intrusive questionnaires.

    Use some common sense and respect people’s privacy.

    But in the game of Town Hall Top Trumps, there’s a non-job which beats even the Civic Sex Snooper.

    Taxpayer-funded full-time trade union officials.

    They cost the public sector – that’s taxpayers to you and me – a quarter of a billion pounds a year.

    That’s money taken away from frontline services.

    Guess what… You won’t find Labour criticising them.

    Silence from Ed Miliband. His Labour councillors voted to close libraries, but keep bankrolling union officials on the rates.

    And surprise, surprise.

    Not a dicky bird from Labour’s local government spokesperson, Jack Dromey.

    No wonder.

    Because that former union baron knows Labour is in hock to the unions.

    In my book, that’s not All Right Jack.

    If unions want to raise money for Labour do it in your own time, not on the rates.

    We’re going to call time on this last closed shop.

    As night follows day, Labour waste your money and put up taxes.

    Take council tax.

    They doubled it.

    We are freezing it.

    Not just for one year, but two years – as we promised in Opposition.

    And Labour councils charge higher council tax.

    Conservative councils charge less – and deliver even better.

    Had they remained in power, Labour would have hiked council taxes even more on middle England.

    Labour were actively planning a council tax revaluation –

    – to spy on your gardens,

    – your patios,

    – counting your bedrooms,

    – your conservatories,

    – your parking spaces,

    – even a room with a view.

    We’ve cancelled Labour’s expensive council tax revaluation.

    We’ve stopped soaring council tax bills for millions of homes.

    It’s not just about protecting middle England from higher taxes.

    I want to stop clipboard-wielding inspectors peering into your children’s bedroom or nosing about your bathroom.

    We will protect families’ civil liberties and privacy.

    It wasn’t just council tax hikes that Labour threatened.

    Labour would impose new bin taxes on your home too.

    Yet another tax for the privilege of your town hall collecting your bin.

    Labour love fining for minor breaches of petty bin rules.

    Handing out bigger fines than those given to convicted shoplifters.

    State officials secretly going through and filming your bins.

    Did you put a yoghurt pot in the wrong recycling bin?

    Did you put your bin out at the wrong hour?

    Watch out!

    Because nobody expects the Town Hall Binquisition.

    Well, it’s time to place Labour’s bin taxes and bin fines in the dustbin of history.

    But there’s more to do.

    In Opposition, we also made clear promises on the frequency of rubbish collections.

    Promises first announced to you at our Party Conference.

    Well, as you know – Conservatives keep our promises.

    The public deserve proper, decent frontline services for their council tax.

    So I can announce my department will be introducing a new fund to support weekly rubbish collections.

    Reversing Labour’s Whitehall policy of bin cuts.

    This will support those who want to improve their existing weekly collections.

    And it will support switching from fortnightly to better weekly collections.

    Helping councils work with families to go green and provide a comprehensive service every week.

    Labour oppose this scheme. No wonder, in Government they were drawing up plans to impose monthly bin collections.

    The choice is clear:

    – Conservatives standing up for families and frontline services.

    – Or Labour and their rubbish policies.

    Just as we are standing up for local families, so we will support local firms.

    I grew up living above a greengrocers, helping out every week.

    I know that business rates are the third biggest outgoing for local shops after rent and staff.

    So we have doubled small business rate relief for two years. And we’re making it easier to claim.

    We have scuppered Labour’s ports tax.

    And we are giving councils new powers to cut business rates, to support community pubs, post offices and local shops.

    We understand that local high streets are the lifeblood of the local economy, and the centre of what we call home.

    So are changing Tony Blair’s reckless all-you-can-drink licensing laws.

    We are giving councils more powers to tackle the anti-social behaviour that blights so many of our town centres late at night.

    And to help those affected by the disgraceful riots get back to business, we have created a twenty million pound High Street Support Scheme.

    Over their 13 years, Labour failed business.

    Their Regional Development Agencies were too distant from local firms, and squandered their budgets.

    In their place, our new Local Enterprise Partnerships now have councils working hand in hand with local business.

    We will allow councils to keep the money from business rates, giving them a direct stake in local enterprise.

    Helping them to help business grow.

    But this is also a radical devolution of local government finance, meaning councils raise the money they spend

    rather than being so dependent on Whitehall handouts.

    And in targeted growth areas, we have over twenty new Enterprise Zones.

    They will boost regeneration through simplified planning, tax breaks and super-fast broadband.

    We can help the economy by building more homes too.

    But under Labour, house building hit the lowest rate since the 1920s.

    For those who aren’t lucky enough to have the Bank of Mum and Dad, the first time buyer is now aged 37.

    So we are selling off the Government’s disused land and empty offices, and use it to build one hundred thousand more homes.

    And we’re bringing back Margaret Thatcher’s Right to Buy,

    And we’ll use the receipts to build more affordable homes.

    The planning system also has its role to play in building more homes and boosting local growth

    But it doesn’t have to be at the expense of the countryside or local democracy.

    Last week, Labour pledged to keep regional planning and regional quangos.

    They’re still wedded to regional government and Whitehall knows best.

    Labour’s Regional Spatial Strategies planned to bulldoze the Green Belt.

    Well, we will protect it.

    In the Localism Bill, we are abolishing Labour’s top-down targets and putting local people in charge.

    We have also given councils stronger powers to tackle ‘garden grabbing’.

    And we’re creating a brand new local protection for green spaces.

    This can safeguard the likes of playing fields, bowling greens and village greens.

    Now… You won’t be surprised to learn that me and Mrs Pickles are partial to the odd scone and a warm beverage in a National Trust Tea Room.

    But, the planning system needs to be improved.

    Labour churned out over 1,000 pages of central planning guidance.

    They made the planning regime the preserve of inspectors, pressure groups and planning lawyers.

    So we’re simplifying this guidance to 52 pages.

    We need a system which is quicker, and provides greater certainty for local firms and local residents.

    But it’s not a choice between countryside or concrete.

    Our countryside is one of the best things that makes Britain great, and we will protect it

    Our planning system must also have integrity.

    It must be seen to be fair to all.

    Labour undermined this.

    They created a system where special treatment was given to travellers.

    Whatever their intentions, this fuelled resentment and undermined community cohesion.

    We should support those who play by the rules.

    So we’re providing sixty million pounds to support councils build and improve official traveller pitches.

    We have given travellers on official sites stronger tenancy rights – the same as council tenants.

    Treating law-abiding people equally and fairly.

    But it’s not right to have planning rules which gave a green light to traveller camps being dumped in the Green Belt and open countryside.

    The Green Belt should be applied evenly and fairly.

    So we’re changing planning rules to give it more protection.

    We are also giving councils stronger enforcement powers to prevent unauthorised sites like Dale Farm from ever being established in the first place.

    You hear a lot about human rights these days.

    But rights and responsibilities cut both ways.

    It’s time to respect the family life of those who have to live next door to these illegal sites.

    It’s time to respect the property rights of law-abiding homeowners.

    We should take no lectures from far-left activists

    or penpushers parachuted in from some obscure United Nations agency.

    The Dale Farm saga has now spent 10 years before the courts.

    Justice delayed is justice denied.

    It’s time that planning law was enforced.

    It’s time to uphold the British rule of law.

    Conference, after 18 months, we’ve started to put our country back on track.

    In government, we are following the example of so many good Conservative councils:

    Doing more for less and delivering frontline services at value for money prices.

    But there is still more to be do.

    Our country does best when led by Conservatives.

    We do best for our country

    when we are true to our Conservative convictions.

    Respect the law, the right to private property and personal liberty.

    Scale back the waste of the state which forces up taxes and crowds out enterprise and innovation.

    And above all, a basic trust in the people.

    My friends, you can feel that power is shifting – back to you, back to your communities, back in the right direction.

    From the forces of officialdom to families.

    From Whitehall to councils.

    From quangos to neighbourhoods.

    The opportunity is yours.

    Together, we will shake off the shackles of Labour.

    And Britain will be great again.

  • Eric Pickles – 2009 Conference Speech

    ericpickles

    Below is the text of the speech made by Eric Pickles at the 2009 Conservative Party Conference in Manchester on 5th October 2009.

    My dear Chums – welcome to Manchester,

    Welcome to our Conference,

    And welcome to the start of the General Election.

    Since we met in Birmingham 12 months ago a lot has happened

    To our country,

    To the world economy,

    And to the challenges faced by our Party

    After a bruising political year, we remain ahead in the opinion polls.

    After June’s elections we have over ten thousand councillors

    …in the north

    AND

    In the south.

    More than the Liberal Democrats and Labour combined.

    We are the only political party to have an MEP in every region and every country that makes up the United Kingdom.

    And to confound all the pundits, we outpolled Labour in Wales – a feat last achieved when Lloyd George was a lad.

    To cap it off, just when Gordon Brown was sloping off on his holidays, we elected the youngest member of the House of Commons – Chloe Smith in Norwich North.

    Won’t it be a wonderful moment when Chloe takes her seat in parliament next week?

    Well done Chloe, and well done all of you who worked so hard on that campaign.

    Now there are some people who will tell you that because of these results, the General Election is in the bag.

    And all we have to do is sit back and enjoy the view.

    A bit like Neil Kinnock in Sheffield in ‘92

    Well take a tip from your Uncle Eric – that is just not the case.

    Be under no illusion, the General Election is not in the bag.

    We still have a mountain to climb.

    To form the next Government, we need to gain 117 seats – something not achieved by the Conservative Party since 1931.

    We need a swing greater than Margaret Thatcher’s in 1979.

    Because of the way parliamentary boundaries are drawn Labour still has an inbuilt advantage over the Conservatives.

    Now, there is a popular saying in politics that oppositions don’t win elections, governments lose them.

    That is not enough for me,

    And I know it’s not enough for you.

    And it is not enough for David Cameron

    We are not going to sit by and just watch the Labour Party implode

    We want to earn each and every vote.

    We don’t want to get people’s votes just because we are not the Labour Party

    We want to earn people’s votes

    Because we want a mandate for change.

    We will make bold announcements.

    By the end of this week, we will have clearly demonstrated to you, and to the rest of the country, that our Party, led by David Cameron has the answers to rebuild our broken economy, mend our broken society and put the trust back in politics.

    We will also lay down a clear set of tests by which a Conservative Government will be judged.

    A test firmly rooted in social justice.

    Measured in those communities that have been abandoned by Labour.

    Those run down estates,

    Those children in sink schools,

    The unemployed – particularly the long term unemployed.

    Those communities forgotten and neglected by Labour

    I know in my heart that David Cameron’s shadow cabinet team has got what it takes to tackle these challenges.

    Just ask yourself, who would do a better job?

    The decisive George Osborne or dithering Alistair Darling?

    The determined Theresa May or Yvette Cooper?

    The wise William Hague, or banana man David Milliband?

    The experience of Ken Clarke,

    or

    His Lordship Peter Mandelson First Secretary of State for …. well just About Everything

    Actually, you know Gordon Brown is in serious trouble when he recalls Peter Mandelson to the Cabinet – and 12 months later – he is still there!

    Of course, there were rumours last week that Peter might want to join a Conservative Government.

    He has even started using my catchphrase – he’s now calling journalists “chums”.

    Well at least that is what I think he had said, but my hearing is not what it was.

    Now Gordon Brown likes to talk about dividing lines – about the differences between us and Labour.

    We are not about dividing lines – we are about drawing people together – uniting people for the common good.

    Sure, there are differences.

    Unlike Labour, we will achieve our aims through social responsibility not state control.

    By giving power back to people and communities, not handing it over to unaccountable bureaucrats.

    They want remote Ministerial control from Whitehall.

    We want decentralisation, transparency and local people in charge.

    And we want accountability.

    So when Gordon Brown talks about fair votes, and changing the voting system

    We say yes!

    We will introduce fair votes and reduce the cost of politics in the process.

    We will make all constituencies equal in voting size ending the system that devalues the votes of some at the expense of others. And in the process we will reduce the number of MPs initially by 10%

    Furthermore, the first election under a Conservative Government will be fought on these new boundaries. We will deliver fair boundaries. Now that’s fair votes.

    So friends, this is going to be a decisive week in British politics.

    A week where we must prove that our whole party is ready for change.

    A week where we show we will not be deflected.

    We will not be distracted.

    And we will show we are united in our determination to bring change to the country as a whole.

    So I say to the Labour voter who feels let down by the once great party of the working man.

    – who feels angry at the abolition of the 10p tax hitting Britain’s poorest

    – cuts in the NHS,

    – who is not prepared to send our soldiers off to war without the proper equipment.

    I say join a truly progressive party who want to be judged by how we treat the poorest in society.

    To the Liberal Democrat voter worried about ID cards, social justice and climate change.

    I say vote for a party with Liberal Democracy firmly at its heart and that can deliver in Government

    And to all those union members worried about spiralling debt, job losses and the neglect of thousands of young people consigned to a life without a job and without a sense of purpose.

    I say to them vote for a party determined to get Britain working and to give our young people the life changing experience that only a job can bring.

    I make this appeal above the heads of party leaders, union officials and newspaper editors.

    Join us. Trust us with your vote. And help us change our country for the better.

    Trust us, and we will not let you down.