Tag: Keir Starmer

  • Keir Starmer – 2022 Speech on Parties in Downing Street

    Keir Starmer – 2022 Speech on Parties in Downing Street

    The speech made by Keir Starmer, the Leader of the Opposition, in the House of Commons on 19 April 2022.

    What a joke!

    Even now, as the latest mealy-mouthed apology stumbles out of one side of the Prime Minister’s mouth, a new set of deflections and distortions pours from the other. But the damage is already done. The public have made up their minds. They do not believe a word that the Prime Minister says. They know what he is.

    As ever with this Prime Minister, those close to him find themselves ruined and the institutions that he vows to protect damaged: good Ministers forced to walk away from public service; the Chancellor’s career up in flames; the leader of the Scottish Conservatives rendered pathetic. Let me say to all those unfamiliar with this Prime Minister’s career that this is not some fixable glitch in the system; it is the whole point. It is what he does. It is who he is. He knows he is dishonest and incapable of changing, so he drags everybody else down with him. [Interruption.] The more people debase themselves, parroting—[Interruption.]

    Mr Speaker

    Order. I cannot hear what is being said because there is so much noise. [Interruption.] Mr Fabricant, I am all right.

    Hon. Members

    Withdraw!

    Mr Speaker

    Order. What I will say is that I think the Leader of the Opposition used the word “dishonest”, and I do not consider that appropriate. [Hon. Members: “Breaking the rules!”] We do not want to talk about breaking rules, do we? I do not think this is a good time to discuss that.

    I am sure that if the Leader of the Opposition withdraws that word and works around it, he will be able—given the knowledge he has gained over many, many years—to use appropriate words that are in keeping with the good, temperate language of this House.

    Keir Starmer

    I respect that ruling from the Chair, Mr Speaker. The Prime Minister knows what he is. As I was saying, he drags everyone else down with him. The more people debase themselves, parroting his absurd defences, the more the public will believe that all politicians are the same, all as bad as each other—and that suits this Prime Minister just fine.

    Some Conservative Members seem oblivious to the Prime Minister’s game. Some know what he is up to but are too weak to act, while others are gleefully playing the part that the Prime Minister cast for them. A Minister said on the radio this morning, “It is the same as a speeding ticket.” No, it is not. No one has ever broken down in tears because they could not drive faster than 20 miles an hour outside a school. Do not insult the public with this nonsense!

    As it happens, however, the last Minister who got a speeding ticket, and then lied about it, ended up in prison. I know, because I prosecuted him.

    Last week, we were treated to a grotesque spectacle: one of the Prime Minister’s loyal supporters accusing teachers and nurses of drinking in the staff room during lockdown. Conservative Members can associate themselves with that if they want, but those of us who take pride in our NHS workers, our teachers, and every other key worker who got us through those dark days will never forget their contempt.

    Plenty of people did not agree with every rule that the Prime Minister wrote, but they followed them none the less, because in this country we respect others. We put the greater good above narrow self-interest, and we understand that the rules apply to all of us. This morning I spoke to John Robinson, a constituent of the hon. Member for Lichfield (Michael Fabricant), and I want to tell the House his story.

    When his wife died of covid, John and his family obeyed the Prime Minister’s rules. He did not see her in hospital; he did not hold her hand as she died. Their daughters and grandchildren drove 100 miles up the motorway, clutching a letter from the funeral director in case they were questioned by the police.

    They did not have a service in church, and John’s son-in-law stayed away because he would have been the forbidden seventh mourner. Does the Prime Minister not realise that John would have given the world to hold his dying wife’s hand, even if it was just for nine minutes? But he did not, because he followed the Prime Minister’s rules—rules that we now know the Prime Minister blithely, repeatedly and deliberately ignored. After months of insulting excuses, today’s half-hearted apology will never be enough for John Robinson. If the Prime Minister had any respect for John, and the millions like him who sacrificed everything to follow the rules, he would resign. But he will not, because he does not respect John, and he does not respect the sacrifice of the British public. He is a man without shame.

    Looking past the hon. Member for Lichfield and the nodding dogs in the Cabinet, there are many decent hon. Members on the Conservative Benches who do respect John Robinson and do respect the British public. They know the damage that the Prime Minister is doing; they know that things cannot go on as they are; and they know that it is their responsibility to bring an end to this shameful chapter. Today I urge them once again not to follow in the slipstream of an out-of-touch, out-of-control Prime Minister. I urge them to put their conscience, their country and John Robinson first; to remove the Prime Minister from office; to bring decency, honesty and integrity back into our politics; and to stop the denigration of everything that this country stands for.

  • Keir Starmer – 2022 Comments on Boris Johnson and Rishi Sunak Being Fined for Breaking Rules

    Keir Starmer – 2022 Comments on Boris Johnson and Rishi Sunak Being Fined for Breaking Rules

    The comments made by Keir Starmer, the Leader of the Opposition, on 12 April 2022.

    This is the first time in our country’s history that a Prime Minister has been found guilty of breaking the law – at a time when Britain made unimaginable sacrifices.

    And then lied about it.

    Boris Johnson and Rishi Sunak have dishonored their office.

    They must resign.

  • Keir Starmer – 2022 Comments on Boris Johnson and Rishi Sunak Being Fined for Breaking Rules

    Keir Starmer – 2022 Comments on Boris Johnson and Rishi Sunak Being Fined for Breaking Rules

    The comments made by Keir Starmer, the Leader of the Opposition, on 12 April 2022.

    Boris Johnson and Rishi Sunak have broken the law and repeatedly lied to the British public.

    They must both resign.

    The Conservatives are totally unfit to govern. Britain deserves better.

  • Keir Starmer – 2022 Comments on David Amess After Murder Conviction

    Keir Starmer – 2022 Comments on David Amess After Murder Conviction

    The comments made by Keir Starmer, the Leader of the Opposition, on 11 April 2022.

    Today I am thinking of Sir David Amess, of the dedicated public servant that he was.

    A champion of Southend and of his constituents. My heart goes out to David’s wife and children, and all those who knew him.

    Threats to our democracy will never prevail.

  • Keir Starmer – 2022 Speech at the Scottish Labour Party Conference

    Keir Starmer – 2022 Speech at the Scottish Labour Party Conference

    The speech made by Keir Starmer, the Leader of the Opposition, in Glasgow on 5 March 2022.

    Thank you, Bea, for that fantastic introduction, it’s great to see you again and to be back in Glasgow making my first address to you as Labour Leader – as Anas did yesterday.

    Isn’t he bringing new energy, and a focus on the future.

    I know, because we are working so closely together, that he has the ideas and the determination to change the course of Scottish politics.

    He is leading us into important local elections here in just two months’ time.

    Anas, you have my support to make the changes that we need, to take Scottish Labour forward – thank you for everything you’re doing.

    With a rejuvenated Scottish Labour Party and a UK Labour Party, laser-focused on doing what it takes to win a General Election, we have huge opportunities ahead of us and the chance to change Britain again.

    Labour can win a General Election. Scotland can choose not just to oppose the Tories but to replace them with a Labour Government.

    A Labour government that I will lead, founded on a new contract with the people – the people of Scotland and people in every part of the United Kingdom.

    A Labour government like those that have went before that will forge, for our times, a new Britain. A new Britain that Scottish people aren’t just part of, but are proud of.

    Conference, I also want to say how important it is for us all to be together in the same room together. Because, I was elected to lead our party during lockdown.

    At the height of the pandemic, I so looked forward to gathering again like this again.

    I could scarcely have believed that when we did come back together, it would be against the backdrop of war in Europe.

    The events we are witnessing right now will stay with us forever. These are dark days, peace in Europe has been threatened by an imperialist aggressor.

    Images I didn’t think I would see in my lifetime – Russian tanks rolling into a European country, soldiers kissing their children goodbye, as they stay to fight, and families fleeing for the border.

    The world has reacted with anger and dismay, nowhere more so than here in Britain, where British people continue to show steadfast support for the people of Ukraine.

    We are in a new world. This will mean making sacrifices, our sacrifices will be like nothing, compared to the suffering of the people of Ukraine.

    Their courage is inspiring the world, just as the actions of Putin repel the world.

    Let me be crystal clear, there is no justification for Putin’s actions.

    They are an affront to the values of this country, to this party, and the international institutions, which we helped to build.

    For what crime does Putin accuse the people of Ukraine?

    It is their yearning for openness and democracy. To be free to determine their own future, and decide for themselves what alliances they make.

    Labour is the party of collective security. Labour is the party of NATO. And Labour stands with the people of Ukraine.

    We are demanding the strongest sanctions against Putin – we must tackle the oligarchs here and go after their money, and while we’re at it, clean up our own politics, once and for all.

    And yes, the next Labour government will also rebuild our own defences.

    Royal Navy ships, built here on the Clyde have been crucial to keeping safe passage in the international waters of the Black Sea.

    RAF personnel and Royal Navy men and women, playing their part from bases in the North and West of Scotland, responding to the regular testing of our own territorial security, by Russia.

    Conference, let us thank our own military for all that they do to keep us safe. Let us thank all of our military families, as they follow these events anxiously.

    But let’s also be clear that what Putin is afraid of – his fear, is order, and liberty.

    Afraid of democracy, of openness, of progress, and of a world which will move on without him. He is afraid of everything that we are most proud of.

    We know Putin’s playbook. He seeks division so we must meet him with unity.

    He believes the benefits of aggression outweigh the consequences, so we must take a stand. And he believes the West is too corrupted to do the right thing, so we must prove him wrong. I believe we can.

    The rule of law and the pursuit of justice have been important to me all my life. Playing by the rules is part of who I am.

    My dad was a toolmaker in a factory and my mum, a nurse in our beloved NHS.

    I became the Chief Prosecutor for England and Wales.

    My parents taught me that in life you need to stick up for yourself, but also stick up for those who can’t always resist the bully on their own, and we will.

    Friends, like me, Anas is a father. And he spoke to you yesterday about one of his hardest times as a parent. I want to say to Adam, Anas’ son, and to all of you here. It matters that you have elected our first leader who looks like Anas, and his family. It matters.

    Together, as Labour leaders, we won’t just talk the talk, we will walk the walk, and we will keep challenging ourselves too. In your words, Anas: it is a fight for all of us.

    Conference, you know, I try to see the best in people. I am an optimist, I believe in the politics of optimism.

    Yet we are living in a time, when right and wrong doesn’t seem to matter to those in government.

    At the height of the pandemic, every British family was touched by worry or tragedy. Everyone was affected because they followed the rules.

    But, some – and one man in particular – felt that the rules just didn’t apply to him. I refuse to accept that.

    I refuse to accept the pain and sacrifice of so many British families being cheapened, even laughed at. No wonder then that under the Tories, trust in politics is now at an all-time low.

    Two-thirds of the public think that the way British politicians act undermines democracy. Six out of ten people think politicians are likely to lie to them.

    That’s sadly inevitable, when we have a government that is misleading the public and covering up their own wrongdoing to save the Prime Minister’s job. It is also deliberate.

    This Tory government is so disreputable that even the Scottish Tories are actually embarrassed by it. It is a government that wallows in cynicism.

    It wants the public to believe that politics is no longer a force for good. And, of course, they don’t care about the consequences of their actions, including the consequences for the Union.

    It might suit the Tories – as much as it suits the SNP – to keep Scotland stuck on pause in the politics of 2014 forever, but I am calling Boris Johnson out.

    I want to lead Britain because I believe in it. I believe in all its parts and all of its differences. In all of our home nations, in all of the good and decent people who share the same hopes and dreams, fears and frustrations, the same land and the same coasts. A common language and inheritance, and the same threats to our way of life.

    Boris Johnson and his Tory party pose as patriotic defenders of the Union. But, every day that he remains in power, he weakens it. He breaks everything he touches and he won’t change.

    Even the Scottish Tories know that. Weakening the bonds between people, weakening the promises of one generation to the next, weakening the legitimacy of the office that he holds.

    Left to their downward spiral, the Tories would destroy everything that they profess to hold dear.

    So when I am asked ‘how will we win’, this is where I start. I refuse to accept that we are stuck where we are now. There is another way to lead this country.

    This United Kingdom – and the nations that come together within it. Our best days are ahead of us.

    I refuse to accept that there is no place to talk about the future and no way to bring people together on the things we have in common and the change we need to make.

    I refuse to accept that all that matters is where people were in the Scottish referendum, or the Brexit referendum.

    Just as I refuse to accept that the British people no longer care about what happens in Europe. Or that we will tolerate child poverty rising again, here at home.

    I refuse to accept that the biggest cost of living crisis of our lifetimes should break the backs of ordinary families.

    It is because I believe in the British people that I am angry that they have a government more concerned with handing contracts to their mates than addressing our challenges.

    It is because I believe in our United Kingdom, that unique partnership of Scotland, England, Wales and Northern Ireland. Because I believe in us, that I am angry that we have Tories who have allowed the UK to be a place that is laughed about abroad.

    And conference, I am angry that we have allowed these Tories to beat us.

    This is on all of us to fix and we can fix it. It is our duty to win. I believe that we can. But still our greatest hurdle might not be the Tories, but ourselves.

    There is no rule in politics that disillusionment with the Tories delivers a Labour government.

    Labour wins, as it always has done, when we have the ideas, the optimism, and the trust of the British people. So we need to be honest with ourselves – trust in us declined too.

    We are the party of working people; our founding and defining mission. But too many working people came to see us as far removed from their lives.

    We put our priorities above theirs; our ideas as more important, than their experiences. So yes, our duty to win does mean keeping our discipline.

    Never losing sight of who it is that we need to convince – working people and especially those who voted for our electoral opponents.

    We can win and we can make change, or we can pursue apparent political purity inside our party. But please make no mistake, we cannot do both. Running away from the mainstream is running away from voters – and we will never do that.

    As Gordon Brown, our last Prime Minister, said: “It is the fighters and believers that change the world.”

    He is right. We have changed our world. We did it before and we can do it again.

    In Gordon’s day, the lights in Downing Street burned late into the night. Not for parties. But they burned because here was a Scottish MP who never rested from the task at hand. Restless always to improve the lives, not just of Scots, but of families struggling to pay their bills in every part of Britain.

    The Minimum Wage, the Winter Fuel Allowance, the Child Trust Fund, the Child Tax Credit, and paid paternity leave – thank you Gordon, for your leadership in office, and since. Global leadership on vaccines, for the poorest countries, and closer to home – leadership of our commission on the UK’s future.

    That commission will create a new blueprint for a new Britain, that the next Labour Government – my government- will build. It will be a new Britain which puts security, prosperity and respect, at the heart of our politics again.

    A new Britain with a government that knows to serve the public is a privilege, not a birth right.

    Ours will be a government that works for every part of the country, every region, and every nation of Britain.

    For us “levelling up” isn’t a slogan. It is in our DNA. It’s what Labour Governments are for.

    As we come out of the pandemic, I have spent my time in the places where we need to win. Talking to people about the rising cost of living, their ideas for their town, their experiences at work, their hopes for their kids, the things that matter to them. And their hopes for a better society, after the trauma of Covid.

    I can tell you this – they have ideas, they want change, they have ambition. All they want is a government that shares their ambition.

    Labour’s new contract with the British people is rooted in those thousands of conversations. Something tangible. So you know how a Labour government will lead.

    This contract is founded on three principles – security, prosperity, and respect.

    The first term in the contract is security.

    Everyone has the basic right to feel safe in their own community. We all need to know that the NHS is there for us when we need it. And if we work hard we should also have a right to job security.

    The second term in the contract is prosperity.

    Everyone should have the opportunity to thrive. To realise our ambitions and make a good life for ourselves and our families. To have the skills they need to prosper.

    And then there is a third term in my contract.

    Respect is a less obvious political virtue than security and prosperity, but it is every bit as important. Everyone has the right to live in places we care for and to have our lives and ambitions taken seriously, and to be valued for who we are and what we do.

    Let me be clear, that means respect for Scotland within our Union. That’s why Gordon’s commission is so important because it is examining how to reform the UK. Not just to acknowledge or accommodate devolution, but to give it proper respect and unleash the true power of the idea.

    Not the devolution of grievance, or one-upmanship. But the vision of devolution that Anas is talking about and that our mayors in England are also talking about – pushing power away from parliaments and towards people – and towards great cities like Glasgow, which is being let down so badly by the SNP.

    That’s why the next Labour Government will govern for all of Britain. We will change Westminster, and Whitehall, and we’ll clean it up at the same time.

    Under the Tories, our country has become increasingly unequal. The Tories talk of levelling up is not serious.

    In contrast, Labour in power will always be alongside people. Not weary of finding solutions to problems new and old.

    As North Lanarkshire Labour have with their school meals and activities programme all through the holidays to make sure no child there was left behind. Thank you.

    Or as North Ayrshire Labour are doing with their solar farms and wind turbines – turning their communities into net exporters of energy. Thank you again, this is the difference.

    This is the difference that being in power makes.

    This Tory government is so distracted, it has no plan for household finances and no economic planning at all. And I ask you, what do these Tories and the SNP have in common?

    Well, beyond being joined at the hip in wanting to turn every election into the same referendum again, and again, they have no industrial strategy to meet the challenge of our age. They don’t have the credible policies we need to create and sustain decent jobs.

    Decades of power between them – neither the Tories nor the SNP – has done enough to secure the jobs and industries of the future.

    The so-called party of British business is barely able to talk to business. Whilst the party of North Sea nationalism is now selling Scotland’s offshore wind to every foreign energy interest imaginable.

    So we have a new opportunity now to have a Labour government that will be in partnership with business, to create work. Because Labour is the party of work, we always have been.

    There is no challenge ahead of us, whether its automation or climate change, that we can’t rise to.

    President Biden said: “When I hear climate change, I think jobs.” He is right, and this must be our mind-set too.

    That’s why the Shadow Chancellor, Rachel Reeves, is out talking to business every week about our plan to buy, make and sell more in Britain. That’s why we have proposed Labour’s Climate Investment Pledge.

    We will meet the challenge of the next generation and the urgency of the climate emergency with £28bn of green capital investment every year until 2030. That’s equivalent to more than half of the current defence budget. That’s what we’re about – decent jobs with a future.

    Jobs that support communities and allow individuals and families to prosper and live well. Jobs for those workers in Fife who can see the offshore industry of the future being constructed while political failure in Edinburgh and London, leaves them idle.

    No one should support the Labour Party simply to oppose the Tories or for that matter the SNP.

    It is the honour of my life to be the Leader of our Party but I tell you this – I have no ambition to be Leader of the Opposition. We gather here not just to oppose the Tories but to replace them.

    Throughout our history, our leaders have been driven by our love of our country but also full of passion for what more it can be. Each time, Labour has built a new Britain – Attlee, Wilson, Blair and Brown – each has sought office to change this country. That is my ambition too, not just to oppose the Tories, but to replace them.

    Scotsmen and women, including from this city, have been integral to the great Labour governments of which we are so proud.

    The next Labour government, the Labour government that I will lead, needs those Scottish voices again – to help us build our new Britain.

    Conference, I want to welcome Scottish Labour MPs to join Ian Murray in our task. Thank you, Ian.

    I wants to win more seats in Scotland, not just to achieve Labour’s majority, but to have more MPs like Ian – forthright and determined that Scotland is not just stuck between two governments, fighting the same constitutional battle day after day, year after year.

    I do understand why there are people in Scotland on both sides of the constitutional divide who despair of this Tory government. Who could blame them?

    But just as we must defeat the cynicism of the Tories, we should be confident that ours are the bigger ideas, tat working together, we can achieve more than we achieve alone.

    That is the difference between simply opposing this Tory government and replacing it. That’s the difference between Labour MPs using their votes to make a change and not just posture. That’s the difference between the SNP failing to support our windfall tax on big energy to cut the bills of millions of families. That’s the difference between backing Labour’s plans, and an SNP that fails to turn up.

    Scottish votes have never carried more weight in a General Election. Those who pretend that Scotland can’t choose the government it wants are wrong.

    I understand the scale of the task that Anas and I have but, I’ve never taken on any job because I thought it was going to be easy.

    It was John Smith, the night before he died, who told us that the chance to serve our country was all that Labour sought. I have spent my own working life serving this country. My values, our Labour values, have changed Britain before. We can build a new future together.

    We must be clear-headed in our determination to win the people’s trust.

    Our party will continue to change, and I won’t apologise for that. Tony Blair said the only Labour tradition he’d wanted to change was losing – too right.

    We are changing Labour again for the challenges of our time. Don’t let us sit here in this conference and just oppose the Tories let us build the alternative.

    I am going to take my contract to the people of Scotland, and every part of Britain. It is my solemn promise that their priorities, are again the priorities of the Labour Party.

    A new Britain, that Scotland isn’t just part of, but proud of.

    A United Kingdom, reengaged in the world. Fierce in our defence of liberty, forever alert, and apologists for no one.

    Conference, Downing Street should be a place where the lights are always on. Where no matter the time, work is being done by serious people in the service of our country.

    A Labour government, a chance to serve. This is who I am, and that is my ambition.

    Thank you.

  • Keir Starmer – 2022 Televised Address on Ukraine

    Keir Starmer – 2022 Televised Address on Ukraine

    The televised address made by Keir Starmer, the Leader of the Opposition, on 24 February 2022.

    In this dark hour, our thoughts, our solidarity, and our resolve are with the Ukrainian people.

    They have been cast into a war, not through fault of their own. But because Putin knows that no people will choose to live under his bandit rule unless forced to at the barrel of a gun.

    The consequences of Putin’s war will be horrendous and tragic for the Ukrainian people but also for the Russian people, who have been plunged into chaos by a violent elite who have stolen their wealth, stolen their chance of democracy, and stolen their future.

    And we must prepare ourselves for difficulties here. We will see economic pain, as we free Europe from dependence on Russian gas, and clean our institutions from money stolen from the Russian people.

    But the British public have always been willing to make sacrifice to defend democracy on our continent. And we will again.

    Russia’s democratic neighbours and every other democracy that lives in the shadow of autocratic power are watching their worst nightmare unfold.

    All those who believe in democracy over dictatorship, the rule of law over the reign of terror, in freedom over the jackboot of tyranny, must unite and take a stand and ensure Putin fails.

    We must make a clean break with the failed approach to handling Putin, which after Georgia, Crimea and Donbas fed his belief that the benefits of aggression outweigh the cost. We must finally show him he is wrong.

    That means doing all we can to help Ukraine defend herself -urgently reinforcing and reassuring our NATO allies in Eastern Europe, and the hardest possible sanctions must be taken against the Putin regime. It must be isolated. Its finances frozen. It’s ability to function crippled.

    And there are changes we must make here in the UK. For too long our country has been a safe-haven for the money that Putin and his fellow bandits stole from the Russian people. It must end now.

    And this must be a turning point in our history, we must look back and say what this terrible day was actually when Putin doomed himself to defeat.

    He seeks division, so we must stay united. He hopes for inaction, so we must take a stand. He believes that we are too corrupted to do the right thing, so we must prove him wrong.

    I believe we can. But only if we stand together.

  • Keir Starmer – 2022 Statement on Russian Invasion of Ukraine

    Keir Starmer – 2022 Statement on Russian Invasion of Ukraine

    The statement made by Keir Starmer, the Leader of the Opposition, on 24 February 2022.

    Vladimir Putin’s attack on Ukraine is unprovoked and unjustifiable. His actions will have horrendous and tragic consequences that will echo throughout the world and throughout history.

    All those who believe in the triumph of democracy over dictatorship, good over evil, freedom over the jackboot of tyranny must now support the Ukrainian people. They have been cast onto the frontline of a war, simply for existing.

    There can be no space for equivocation when faced with the evil that Putin has unleashed. His actions pose a grave threat to the international order on which we all depend.

    There will be dark days ahead. But Putin will learn the same lesson as Europe’s tyrants of the last century: that the resolve of the world is harder than he imagines and the desire for liberty burns stronger than ever. The light will prevail.

    I know people in this country will be feeling worried and uncertain. And I know that Ukrainians and Russians here in the UK will be worrying for friends and family back home. Our hearts are with them today.

    We must now match our rhetoric with action. We must urgently reinforce our NATO allies. The hardest possible sanctions must be taken against all those linked to Putin. The influence of Russian money must be extricated from the UK. And those who have for too long turned a blind eye to Russia’s actions must reckon with their own consciences.

  • Keir Starmer – 2022 Speech on Ukraine

    Keir Starmer – 2022 Speech on Ukraine

    The speech made by Keir Starmer, the Leader of the Opposition, in the House of Commons on 22 February 2022.

    Yesterday was a dark day for Europe. The Russian President denied the right of a sovereign nation to exist, unilaterally recognising separatist movements that he sponsors and that seek to dismember Ukraine. Then, under the cover of darkness, he sent in troops to enforce his will. Putin appears determined to plunge Ukraine into a wider war. We must all stand firm in our support for Ukraine. We support the freedom of her people and their right to determine their own future without the gun of an imperialist held to their head.

    There can be no excuses for Russia’s actions. There is no justification for this aggression. A war in Ukraine will be bloody, it will cost lives, and history will rightly scorn Putin as the aggressor. Putin claims to fear NATO expansion, but Russia faces no conceivable threat from allied troops or from Ukraine. What he fears is openness and democracy. He knows that, given a choice, people will not choose to live under the rule of an erratic and violent authoritarian, so we must remain united and true to our values across this House and with our NATO allies. We must show Putin that we will not be divided.

    I welcome the sanctions introduced today and the international community’s efforts to unite with a collective response. However, we must be prepared to go further. I understand the tactic of holding back sanctions on Putin and his cronies to try to deter an invasion of the rest of Ukraine, but a threshold has already been breached. A sovereign nation has been invaded in a war of aggression based on lies and fabrication. If we do not respond with a full set of sanctions now, Putin will once again take away the message that the benefits of aggression outweigh the costs. We will work with the Prime Minister and our international allies to ensure that more sanctions are introduced.

    Russia should be excluded from financial mechanisms, such as SWIFT, and we should ban trading in Russian sovereign debt. Putin’s campaign of misinformation should be tackled. Russia Today should be prevented from broadcasting its propaganda around the world. We should work with our European allies to ensure that the Nord Stream 2 pipeline is cancelled. Whatever the sequencing of these sanctions, this will not be easy. Britain must work with our European allies to handle the disruption to the supply of energy and raw materials. We must defend ourselves and our allies against cyber-attacks. We must bring together the widest possible coalition of nations to condemn this action against a sovereign UN member state.

    Ukrainians are defending their own country and democracy in Europe. We must stand ready with more military support for Ukraine to defend itself, and we must stand ready to do more to reassure and reinforce NATO allies in eastern Europe, but we must also get our own house in order. The Prime Minister said that the lesson from Russia’s 2014 invasion of Donbas is that we cannot just let Vladimir Putin get away it, but until now we have. We have failed to stop the flow of illicit Russian finance into Britain. A cottage industry does the bidding of those linked to Putin, and Russian money has been allowed to influence our politics. We have to admit that mistakes have been made, and we have to rectify them.

    This must be a turning point. We need an end to oligarch impunity. We need to draw a line under Companies House providing easy cover for shell companies. We need to ensure that our anti-money-laundering laws are enforced. We need to crack down on spies, and we have to ensure that money is not pouring into UK politics from abroad.

    Russian aggression has now torn up the Minsk protocol and the Budapest memorandum, but even at this late hour we must pursue diplomatic routes to prevent further conflict, so can the Prime Minister tell us what international diplomatic efforts are going on and what role the UK will have in that process? We know Putin’s playbook. He seeks division; we must stay united. He believes the benefits of aggression outweigh the consequences, so we must take a stand, and he believes the west is too corrupted to do the right thing, so we must prove him wrong. I believe we can, and I offer the support of the Opposition in that vital endeavour.

  • Keir Starmer – 2022 Speech on Covid-19

    Keir Starmer – 2022 Speech on Covid-19

    The speech made by Keir Starmer, the Leader of the Opposition, in the House of Commons on 21 February 2022.

    May I start by sending my condolences to the family of Christopher Stalford? Christopher was a dedicated servant of the people of South Belfast and his loss will be deeply felt.

    I also send our best wishes to Her Majesty the Queen; as the Prime Minister said, the whole House wishes her a speedy recovery.

    I thank the Prime Minister for the advance copy of his statement and for the briefing earlier this afternoon.

    Huge efforts have been made over the past two years and we would not be where we are today without the heroism of our NHS and key workers, without those who pioneered and rolled out the vaccines and without the sacrifices that people made every day to follow the rules and protect our public health. We must honour the collective sacrifices of the British people and do everything possible to prevent a return to the loss and lockdowns that we have seen over the past two years.

    The Prime Minister promised to present a plan for living with covid, but all we have today is yet more chaos and disarray: not enough to prepare us for the new variants that may yet develop and an approach that seems to think that living with covid means simply ignoring it. This morning, he could not even persuade his own Health Secretary to agree to the plan, so what confidence can the public have that this is the right approach?

    Let me be clear: the Labour party does not want to see restrictions in place for a moment longer than necessary—[Interruption.] Mr Speaker, we have to take the public with us, and that requires clarity—[Interruption.]

    Mr Speaker

    Order. I call on Members to show some respect. Just as I expect the Prime Minister to be heard in silence, so, too, should the Leader of the Opposition. If you do not wish to be in here, there is plenty of room outside this Chamber. I suggest that you start using it, and I will be helping you on your way. Let us have silence.

    Keir Starmer

    We have to take the public with us, and that requires clarity about why decisions are being made. Will the Prime Minister publish the scientific evidence behind his decision to remove the legal requirement to self-isolate, including the impact on the clinically extremely vulnerable for whom lockdown has never ended?

    Having come this far, I know that the British people will continue to act responsibly and that they will do the right thing: testing and then isolating if positive. What I cannot understand is why the Prime Minister is taking away the tools that will help them to do that. Free tests cannot continue forever, but if you are 2-1 up with 10 minutes to go, you do not sub off one of your best defenders.

    The Prime Minister is also removing self-isolation support payments, which allow many people to isolate, and weakening sick pay. These are decisions that will hit the lowest paid and the most insecure workers the hardest, including care workers, who got us through the toughest parts of the pandemic. It is all very well advising workers to self-isolate, but that will not work unless all workers have the security of knowing that they can afford to do so.

    The Prime Minister mentioned surveillance and the ONS infection survey. This is crucial to ensuring that we can ramp up testing and vaccination if the virus returns, so can the Prime Minister confirm that he has put the funding in place to ensure that the ONS infection survey will not see reduced capacity and that it will be able to track the virus with the same degree of detail as it can today? We cannot turn off Britain’s radar before the war is won. “Ignorance is bliss” is not a responsible approach to a deadly virus. It actually risks undoing all the hard-won progress that the British people have achieved over the last two years.

    The Labour party has published a comprehensive plan for living well with covid. Our plan would see us learn the lessons of the past two years and be prepared for new variants. The Prime Minister’s approach will leave us vulnerable. Where is the plan to secure the UK’s supply of testing? Why are schools still not properly ventilated? There is no doubt that, as a nation, we need to move on from covid. People need to know that their liberties are returning and returning for good, but this is a half-baked announcement from a Government paralysed by chaos and incompetence. It is not a plan to live well with covid.

  • Keir Starmer – 2022 Comments on the Creative Industries

    Keir Starmer – 2022 Comments on the Creative Industries

    The comments made by Keir Starmer, the Leader of the Opposition, on 2 February 2022.

    Thank you Caroline, and hello everyone.

    I’m so pleased to be here talking to you for the first time.

    This should not be a one off.

    But the beginning of a conversation we can keep coming back to.

    As I was planning this talk, I was reflecting on how lucky we are.

    We live in a country with a cultural heritage stretching back thousands of years.

    Our literature, art, music, theatre, advertising and fashion are admired all over the world.

    We have a truly national culture, maintained by universal public broadcasting.

    And 2022 will be a big year to celebrate that culture.

    It is Her Majesty the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee.

    The Women’s Euros are here, Birmingham will host the Commonwealth Games and the BBC will celebrate the centenary of its creation.

    But as great as they are, I am not here just to celebrate the cultural achievements of the past.

    Instead, I want to look at the source of this heritage – our creativity as a nation.

    Creativity allows us all to see the world in entirely new ways.

    We saw it in the scientists at Oxford developing the coronavirus vaccine every bit as much as we see it in our great painters, actors, and musicians.

    So my focus today is not just on what are known in policy circles as “the creative industries”.

    I want to widen the conversation to talk about our creative nation.

    Because I believe that all good industry is creative.

    To be creative is the economic necessity of our times.

    Creativity brings beauty and meaning into our lives.

    But it is also the source of innovation and invention.

    It is the expression of talent and imagination.

    It is the key to the security, prosperity and respect that our country needs and nowhere is this more in evidence than in the creative industries themselves.

    At the beginning of this year, I set out my contract with the British people.

    Its objective was the creation of a new Britain in which people get the security, prosperity, and respect they deserve.

    Today, I want to fill in the details of this contract.

    To give you a sense of how those values will make us an even more creative nation.

    I’ll talk about how Labour will work in partnership with you to provide security to a creative workforce to bring prosperity to the nation and to restore respect to the industry and creative communities across the nation.

    The first term in my contract with the British people is security.

    Labour is committed to providing security for people working in every sector.

    The creative industries were left especially exposed to the pandemic.

    Output in the creative industries declined by more than a third between 2019 and 2021.

    That’s partly because – beyond Britain’s renowned creative brands –

    there are legions of small businesses, micro-businesses and freelancers who depend for a living on the success of those brands.

    A third of creative workers are freelancers – double the UK average.

    That rises to 7 in 10 workers in music and the performing and visual arts.

    The pandemic left many people in these industries insecure and short of support.

    110,000 jobs were lost.

    And if Britain is to recover strongly from the pandemic the creative industries must thrive.

    We need your entrepreneurial spirit, your ability to navigate and embrace change.

    We need you to feel safe to take risks.

    We need your ideas and innovation.

    In return for that, the government should provide you with the security to do so.

    A decade of this Conservative government, though, has let you down – badly.

    Economic growth has slowed and the cost of living has risen faster than earnings.

    This makes it harder to build new businesses.

    Labour would unleash the entrepreneurial spirit so evident in the creative industries – with our plan for 100, 000 start-ups across the country.

    Sadly, today the British economy is increasingly defined by insecure work and low pay.

    The government I lead would deliver the security at work you need and deserve.

    We would raise the minimum wage to £10 an hour.

    We would give workers full rights from day one.

    We would ban zero-hours contracts and we would increase Statutory Sick Pay and make it available to all.

    In addition, we have a ten-point plan to live well with Covid, preventing the need for future restrictions.

    This would give the creative industries security from the threat of cancellations.

    We will not prosper if we are not secure.

    Security and prosperity work together.

    The second term in the contract is prosperity.

    Under my leadership, Labour is back in business.

    We will equip the next generation for work and we will invest to create high-skilled jobs.

    In response, we expect each sector to invest in the long term, too.

    We expect businesses to contribute to the aim of net-zero.

    And we expect them to be good local citizens by supporting their workforces with fair pay and flexible working.

    Labour believes Britain’s future prosperity lies with its home-grown industries.

    And the creative industries are a Great British success story.

    In 2019, for instance, they contributed over one hundred billion pounds in gross value added to the UK economy.

    That’s greater than the aerospace, automotive, life sciences and oil and gas sectors combined.

    And that’s not all, these industries supported a further £62.1 billion across the supply chain.

    There are 2 million jobs in the creative sector and a further 1.4 million more rely on it.

    And creativity is nation-wide.

    Some of Britain’s most famous characters – James Bond and Harry Potter were brought to life in Pinewood Studios in Buckinghamshire through the acknowledged excellence of our film crews, technicians and set-builders.

    The UK theatre industry is world-beating. Our productions are in huge demand and our West End, regional theatres and community arts are envied worldwide.

    We have world-leading 3D capture technology at Dimension Studios in London.

    The UK gaming industry has evolved into the UK’s most lucrative entertainment sector and is the leading video game market in Europe.

    More than 1,500 people are employed in the industry in its birthplace in Dundee.

    In 2020, the universities of Abertay, Dundee and St Andrews announced the launch of a £9m gaming research and development centre in the city.

    The University of Reading’s Thames Valley Science Park is soon to become the UK’s biggest film studio, creating 3,000 jobs.

    There are studio developments underway in Cardiff, Northern Ireland, Yorkshire, Manchester and Scotland.

    The creative industries are growing four times the rate of the UK economy as a whole.

    Their gross value-added has grown by over a third in the North-West and almost half in Scotland over the last decade.

    The creative industries are creating jobs at three times the UK average.

    Employment in the sector grew 21% in Northern Ireland and 30% in the West Midlands between 2010 and 2017.

    And we are exporting the fruits of our creativity too.

    The creative industries account for 12% of total UK exports.

    Our creativity enhances Britain’s international reputation.

    It attracts investors and visitors.

    But leaving the EU does of course pose challenges.

    There is, for a start, a potential loss of funding.

    Between 2014 and 2020, the UK received 68 million euros in funding from Creative Europe.

    And we will lose funds such as Erasmus+, Europe for Citizens and the European Structural & Investment Funds.

    In addition, EU citizens are a significant part of the UK’s creative industries workforce.

    Creative professionals need to be able to travel abroad at speed so the impact on them has been tough – with musicians especially hard hit.

    The Conservatives believed it was enough to get Brexit done.

    It’s not.

    We urgently need to Make Brexit Work.

    We would push for a visa waiver for touring artists.

    And we would negotiate an EU-wide cultural touring agreement – including allowances for cabotage, carnets and custom rules.

    It is only when we achieve security and prosperity that we will be paying the creative industries the respect they are properly due.

    Respect is the third term in my contract with the British people.

    Every village, town and city in Britain has a sense of identity.

    And nothing creates more civic pride than a cinema, a museum, a theatre, a gallery, or a concert hall.

    Creativity has driven the regeneration of so many of our towns, cities and regions.

    Margate, for instance, the home of the Turner Contemporary, attracts 2.9 million visitors and generates £68 million for the local economy.

    In Folkestone, the Creative Quarter has regenerated the area with arts, creative industries and education.

    And of course in Scotland we have the world’s largest international arts festival – the Edinburgh festival.

    The Edinburgh festival, as many of you will know first-hand, is the launch pad for creatives across the country – and indeed the world – who bring their performances and new works to the city.

    And Scottish TV productions – like Outlander – are exported across the world helping to promote jobs in the media that make Britain such a world leader in TV production.

    The UK video effects industry thrives in Cardiff Bay with successful businesses like Bait Studio.

    And Creative UK launched the Culture and Creative Investment Programme in the North-East.

    We need to look after our national culture, too.

    The UK’s public service broadcasting is a national treasure because it is also local and global.

    Local news, the World Service, the BBC and Channel 4 are the narrators of our national story.

    They create jobs and drive productivity.

    The Conservatives threaten the future of these two great institutions.

    The plan to privatise Channel 4 and the threat to the BBC as we know it are a direct attack on some of the best of Britain’s creative work.

    There will be an economic price to pay, too.

    Yesterday, the Secretary of State announced £50 million of investment for the creative industries.

    But the privatisation of Channel 4 would put £2.1 billion of gross value-added to the supply chain at risk over the next ten years.

    It risks putting 60 UK production companies out of business showing that the Government isn’t interested in growth.

    Meanwhile, a commercial BBC would rob us – and the world – not only of superb news services with unparalleled local knowledge but of a valuable cultural export.

    I want to challenge all of you here today and the wider sector to be bold to come together and assert your collective clout by speaking out in defence of the value of public sector broadcasting against the government’s attacks.

    I promise you this.

    You can do so knowing that a government I lead will always have your back.

    Our record, in government, on creativity and culture speaks for itself.

    The last Labour government oversaw a boom in creative industries and institutions.

    Tate Modern opened in 2000.

    The Eden Project in Cornwall in 2001.

    The Baltic Centre for Contemporary Art on the Quayside in Newcastle opened in 2002.

    And the Sage Gateshead concert hall opened in 2004.

    In Salford, meanwhile, MediaCityUK began life in 2006.

    The next Labour government will help the creative industries flourish again.

    Creative roles now make up a significant part of the Government’s Shortage Occupation List.

    And they include many of the jobs predicted to grow as a share of the workforce by 2030.

    As I tour the country, I am frequently struck by how often I am told about skills shortages.

    A recent survey showed that 80% of businesses were worried about skills.

    In this context the Government’s squeeze on creative subjects in curriculums is self-harming.

    Even STEM industries say that the stripping away of vital creative subjects including drama, music and art is costing them.

    Even primary age children have seen almost a 40% decline in participation in music activities.

    Not only does this affect access to careers in the performing arts it also further degrades the creativity upon which our national prosperity rests.

    The skills gaps in the creative industries workforce aren’t being filled by the available training.

    Funding per student in further education and sixth form colleges has fallen by 11% in real terms since Labour was last in government.

    Digital skills are another area where the UK needs to improve.

    But fewer than half of employers believe young people have the digital skills they need.

    In government, we would add digital skills to the basics of reading, writing and arithmetic.

    And last year, we launched our Council of Skills Advisors.

    David Blunkett, a former education secretary will work alongside the tech entrepreneur Praful Nargund the skills expert, Rachel Sandby-Thomas and Kevin Rowan of the TUC.

    In government, we would ensure that everyone leaves education ready for work and ready for life.

    The reputation of the creative nation depends on it.

    Prosperity, security and respect.

    The three terms of my contract with the British people.

    A Labour government would extend this contract to the creative industries.

    You have achieved so much.

    But to succeed as a country, we will need more creativity than ever before.

    I want us to become an even more creative nation.

    A nation defined by its willingness to take risks and embrace change.

    Creativity can make us more prosperous as a country.

    And it can bring meaning, beauty and pride to every village, town and city.

    It can give people opportunities to flourish.

    The security they need to do so and the respect they deserve.

    Together we can build the creative nation of which we can all be proud.

    Let’s keep this conversation going.

    Thank you.