Tag: Keir Starmer

  • Keir Starmer – 2022 Speech on Trust in Politics

    Keir Starmer – 2022 Speech on Trust in Politics

    The speech made by Keir Starmer, the Leader of the Opposition, on 3 February 2022.

    Thank you for hosting me here today and for that fascinating presentation. How shocking these figures are!

    I want to give a few brief reflections on them and what I think they mean for politics, for government and for business in the UK.

    Of course, I am concerned to see trust in so many institutions fall – in some cases to an unprecedented low.

    But I also want to set out a way forward.

    Because trust counts – and I’m not prepared to give up on it.

    The start point is to be honest with ourselves and face up to the scale of the challenge.

    Trust in government is falling.

    Trust in politics and politicians is falling.

    Trust in the media is falling.

    Two thirds of the public think that the way politicians act undermines democracy.

    Six out of ten people think politicians are likely to lie to them.

    Six out of ten!

    Sadly, that doesn’t surprise me given recent events.

    But it does disappoint me – it frustrates me.

    But honestly – I’m not surprised.

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

    This is a government in paralysis.

    Instead of representing the people who elected them and addressing the challenges the country faces, they are intent on saving themselves not serving the country.

    The cost of living is rising.

    Prices and taxes are up and wages are stagnant.

    While the whole country worries about how they will pay those bills when they come, this government is too pre- occupied to act.

    This government has let them down.

    No wonder the public don’t trust them.

    But we all suffer from this decline in trust.

    The appeal of democracy has always been based on two promises.

    The first is that the world will get better; democracy will deliver.

    The second is that people will be listened to; democracy will empower.

    Both of those promises rely on trust.

    And, right now that trust is in short supply.

    Small wonder the public is more pessimistic than they have been in years.

    They are pessimistic about their own security and standards of life.

    They expect things will just get worse over the next five years.

    They doubt the truth of what they hear from political leaders and from the media.

    And they feel shut out of the whole political system.

    Just 3 in 10 people feel they have the power to influence politics with their vote.

    And almost 6 out of 10 say they feel powerless as a citizen to affect change.

    For too long too many people have felt that politics has been removed from them.

    While they play by the rules, politics is not delivering its side of the bargain, even at the most basic level.

    Trust is not easily rebuilt but we really must do better than this.

    We are better than this

    And I am well aware that just because the Tories lose the public’s trust

    It doesn’t mean Labour simply inherits it.

    Trust has to be earned.

    I am confident but not complacent about the task ahead.

    I want to make a concrete commitment about decency and standards in public life.

    Of course, these standards already exist.

    They are known as the Nolan principles.

    Selflessness, integrity, objectivity, accountability, openness, honesty, leadership.

    I shouldn’t have to pledge to honour these principles but, sadly, I feel I do.

    So my solemn promise to you will always be to run a government that honours these principles.

    I believe in making credible promises that we will deliver – the very opposite of government by meaningless slogans.

    I would like to say a bit more about how a Labour government would be different.

    I want to start with the partnership that we would like to strike with British business.

    Business was one of the encouraging stories from today’s survey launch.

    It is heartening to see the high trust that workers place in their employers.

    I know the great value that employers and business can offer.

    It’s something I saw growing up in my parents’ work.

    My father was a toolmaker.

    My mother worked as a nurse.

    And the thing that I really remember from my dad was how hard he worked.

    His industry was a real source of pride and value.

    I was encouraged to see how business is seen as leaders in society, with solutions to some of the big challenges of the day.

    British business is a real source of pride, both here in the UK and internationally.

    Many businesses are driven by a sense of purpose.

    Determined to meet the challenge of the climate crisis.

    Supporting the changes we need to make to protect our future.

    Today’s report shows the public’s expectation that business will continue to show leadership on the big future issues.

    Half of the public think business should do more, not less, on climate change.

    44% think business can go further on workforce reskilling.

    But business alone cannot be expected to carry the trust of this country.

    Business can only lead when it has the support of a serious government.

    That’s why I believe that British business needs a more active, effective partnership with government.

    And that government needs an industrial strategy designed to get our country fit to face the future.

    The Director of the CBI, Tony Danker, has been clear about what’s needed: supporting business to invest, he says, will require ‘catalytic public investment’.

    That’s what Labour’s climate investment pledge does – £28bn every year for each and every year of the next decade – to ensure the industries and jobs of the future are found all across Britain.

    The business community and the political world need to work together.

    We both have a job to do.

    So what would Labour do?

    Earlier this year, I took the opportunity to set out a vision for government worthy of the British public.

    I set out my contract with the British people.

    Something tangible that you can see and go back to, so you know how a Labour government will lead, and what to expect.

    My contract will be founded on three principles; Security, Prosperity and Respect.

    All of these are critical for rebuilding trust.

    The public need security.

    Only when you feel secure in your own life, can you trust that things will be okay.

    That is clear in this year’s Trust Barometer report.

    Those who work hard but lack economic security are less likely and less able, to place trust in the institutions around them.

    Of course they are gaps in trust between high and low earners in the UK is one of the highest compared to other countries internationally.

    And we have seen in the data today that lower income earners are much more likely to think the UK economic system doesn’t work for them.

    Labour is focused on bringing security back to people across Britain.

    We would improve security of employment through our New Deal for Working People.

    And we would improve economic security for thousands right now by keeping energy bills down as the cost of living bites.

    But to provide this security, our nation needs to be prosperous.

    Prosperity is the second principle in my contract – and, let’s be honest, right now Britain is not as dynamic, competitive and profitable as we need to be.

    Our industrial strategy will drive productivity and ensure we Buy, Make and Sell more in Britain.

    Supporting the industries of this country which have so much potential, and so much opportunity to make us proud.

    We would scrap and replace business rates with a much fairer alternative to incentivise investment.

    We will invest in green industries creating jobs all around the country

    And we will make Brexit work so British business can thrive.

    The last principle of my contract is perhaps the most important for building trust.

    That is Respect.

    The public deserves a government that respects them.

    A government that listens, hears, and responds.

    A government that empowers them to take local decisions for themselves.

    And we all deserve a Government that is respectful of tax-payers money and how it is spent.

    The Chancellor has just written off £4.3bn of fraud, stolen from the Government during Covid.

    Under Labour, this would not happen.

    The fiscal rules that my shadow chancellor, Rachel Reeves, has set out, will be the framework for responsible spending, and our Office for Value for Money will account for every pound.

    So despite the gloomy outlook for trust right now in the UK, I do have hope.

    There are opportunities to earn back trust and I am clear how Labour would go about the task.

    By delivering security, prosperity and respect for British people throughout this country.

    Because we simply cannot go on with trust being eroded in every British institution.

    It is often said that the Prime Minister doesn’t believe the rules apply to him.

    That he has a sense of entitlement which transcends the normal rules of politics.

    I think it is considerably worse than that.

    It isn’t that the Prime Minister thinks the rules don’t apply.

    He absolutely knows that they do.

    His strategy is to devalue the rules so they don’t matter to anyone anymore.

    So, that politics becomes contaminated.

    Cynicism and alienation replace confidence and trust.

    So that the taunt “politicians are just in it for themselves” becomes accepted wisdom.

    It is a strategy to sow disillusion; to convince people that things can’t get better; government can’t improve people’s lives; progress isn’t possible because politics doesn’t work.

    But I’m not going to play the Prime Minister’s game.

    I simply refuse to accept that Britain can’t be governed better than this.

    I will never give up on the power of politics to be a force for good.

    And I will always fight to defend those essential British values of honesty, decency and integrity.

    We don’t have to accept the repeated lies from the dispatch box.

    Or the casual devaluing of the office that does so much damage around the world.

    As DPP, I prosecuted MPs over their expenses.

    And today I refuse to turn a blind eye to the dodgy practices in Downing Street.

    I won’t simply shrug my shoulders at the dishonesty and disrespect on the basis that it is “priced in”.

    That’s why I said line one of my contract with the British public would be the return of the Nolan principles to public life.

    My solemn vow is that the government I lead will govern in the public interest.

    Where standards stand for something; where truth means something and where honesty is at the heart of everything that it does.

    The health of our democracy depends on it.

    We cannot give up on all the good that is here in the UK: good businesses, good ideas, good people.

    We must rebuild public trust in our institutions, raise public trust in our industries, and build a country that works together, united, for its future success.

    No matter what damage has been inflicted by this government, I believe this can change.

    It’s time for a change.

    Together we can build a Britain fit to face the future so I hope very much to be able to return here in a few years’ time with that presentation telling a different story.

    A story of rising trust, with a Labour Government.

    Of a democracy in which trust is restored and people can once more expect integrity from their government.

    Thank you.

  • Keir Starmer – 2022 Tribute to Jack Dromey

    Keir Starmer – 2022 Tribute to Jack Dromey

    The tribute made by Keir Starmer, the Leader of the Opposition, in the House of Commons on 2 February 2022.

    On a point or order, Mr Speaker. Since the sudden passing of our friend Jack, tributes from every walk of life have captured the essence of the man we knew and loved: larger than life, bursting with enthusiasm and ideas, and tireless in the pursuit of justice and fairness. Jack channelled all those attributes into representing the people of Erdington, into a lifetime of campaigning for working people, and into his greatest love, his family.

    The loss felt on the Labour Benches is great. The loss to public life is greater still. But the greatest loss is felt by another of our own, my right hon. and learned Friend the Member for Camberwell and Peckham (Ms Harman). She and Jack were married the best part of 40 years ago. The annual general meeting of the Fulham Legal Advice Centre may not sound like the place to find romance, but that is where Jack and Harriet met, with Jack addressing the meeting, and Harriet inspired to blaze a new trail—one that eventually led her to the place she holds today, as an icon of the Labour party and of this Parliament.

    When we hear Harriet talk about Jack, one word comes through time and again: “encouraged”. It was Jack who encouraged her to join Brent Law Centre. It was Jack who encouraged her to stand as an MP—the first pregnant by-election candidate. It was Jack who encouraged her to run to be the Labour party deputy leader. When Harriet became the first woman in 18 years to answer at Prime Minister’s questions, Jack sat in the visitors’ gallery with their children, beaming down with love and admiration. I am so glad to see Jack’s family here today, beaming down with the same love, affection and pride.

    The sense that Jack was always on your side is felt across this party and across the trade union movement. You can always get a measure of someone by how they treat their staff or those who rely on them. One of Jack’s former employees has said that whenever they met new people, he would always say that she was the real brains of the operation and he was merely the bag-carrier. His humility and sense of humour were legendary.

    Shortly after Harriet’s book came out, a staffer had a copy of it on their desk. Jack roared with laughter as he saw a photo of himself in his 20s, barely recognisable with the prodigious thick beard. “Good grief!” he exclaimed, “What was Harriet thinking?” “What? Putting the picture in the book?” replied the staffer. “No,” Jack said, “marrying me!”

    I was fortunate enough to work alongside Jack when I was a new MP in 2015. Our friendship endured, and as I gave a speech in Birmingham just a few weeks ago, it was Jack’s face that I saw in the audience, beaming up at me. He texted me the next day saying how much he had enjoyed it. That was two days before he died, which brings home the shock of his sudden, tragic passing.

    Jack cut his teeth as a campaigner who spoke truth to power. He picked battles on behalf of working people, then he won them. It would be impossible to list all those victories today. He led the first equal pay strike after the Equal Pay Act 1970 was brought into law; he supported Asian women to unionise against a hostile management at Grunwick; and, even this year, he campaigned for a public inquiry on behalf of covid bereaved families.

    Jack was a doughty campaigner, dubbed “Jack of all disputes”, who was feared by his opponents, but he was also deeply respected and liked across the political divide. Each and every one of us is richer for having known him. We will all miss him terribly.

    The funeral service on Monday was beautiful and moving. Today, our hearts go out to Harriet, Joe, Amy, Harry and Jack’s grandchildren. The loss and grief they will be feeling cannot be measured or properly described. It cannot be wished away or pushed down and ignored, because great grief is the price we pay for having had love. We all love Jack and, even though he may no longer be with us here, that love will always live on.

  • Keir Starmer – 2022 Speech on the Sue Gray Report

    Keir Starmer – 2022 Speech on the Sue Gray Report

    The speech made by Keir Starmer, the Leader of the Opposition, in the House of Commons on 31 January 2022.

    I would like to thank Sue Gray for the diligence and professionalism with which she has carried out her work. It is no fault of hers that she has only been able to produce an update today, not the full report.

    The Prime Minister repeatedly assured the House that the guidance was followed and the rules were followed. But we now know that 12 cases have reached the threshold of criminal investigation, which I remind the House means that there is evidence of serious and flagrant breaches of lockdown, including the party on 20 May 2020, which we know the Prime Minister attended, and the party on 13 November 2020 in the Prime Minister’s flat. There can be no doubt that the Prime Minister himself is now subject to criminal investigation.

    The Prime Minister must keep his promise to publish Sue Gray’s report in full when it is available. But it is already clear that the report discloses the most damning conclusion possible. Over the last two years, the British public have been asked to make the most heart-wrenching sacrifices—a collective trauma endured by all, enjoyed by none. Funerals have been missed, dying relatives have been unvisited. Every family has been marred by what we have been through. And revelations about the Prime Minister’s behaviour have forced us all to rethink and relive those darkest moments. Many have been overcome by rage, by grief and even by guilt. Guilt that because they stuck to the law, they did not see their parents one last time. Guilt that because they did not bend the rules, their children went months without seeing friends. Guilt that because they did as they were asked, they did not go and visit lonely relatives.

    But people should not feel guilty. They should feel pride in themselves and their country, because by abiding by those rules they have saved the lives of people they will probably never meet. They have shown the deep public spirit and the love and respect for others that has always characterised this nation at its best.

    Our national story about covid is one of a people who stood up when they were tested, but that will be forever tainted by the behaviour of this Conservative Prime Minister. By routinely breaking the rules he set, the Prime Minister took us all for fools. He held people’s sacrifice in contempt. He showed himself unfit for office.

    The Prime Minister’s desperate denials since he was exposed have only made matters worse. Rather than come clean, every step of the way, he has insulted the public’s intelligence. Now he has finally fallen back on his usual excuse: it is everybody’s fault but his. They go; he stays. Even now, he is hiding behind a police investigation into criminality in his home and his office.

    The Prime Minister gleefully treats what should be a mark of shame as a welcome shield, but the British public are not fools. They never believed a word of it. They think that the Prime Minister should do the decent thing and resign. Of course, he will not, because he is a man without shame. Just as he has done throughout the life, he has damaged everyone and everything around him along the way. His colleagues have spent weeks defending the indefensible, touring the TV studios, parroting his absurd denials, degrading themselves and their offices, fraying the bond of trust between the Government—[Interruption.]

    Mr Speaker

    Order. The hon. Member for South Ribble (Katherine Fletcher) is my neighbour. I expect better from my neighbours.

    Keir Starmer

    They have spent weeks fraying the bond of trust between the Government and the public, eroding our democracy and the rule of law.

    Margaret Thatcher once said:

    “The first duty of Government is to uphold the law. If it tries to bob and weave and duck around that duty when its inconvenient…then so will the governed”.

    To govern this country is an honour, not a birthright. It is an act of service to the British people, not the keys to a court to parade to friends. It requires honesty, integrity and moral authority. I cannot tell hon. Members how many times people have said to me that this Prime Minister’s lack of integrity is somehow “priced in”—that his behaviour and character do not matter. I have never accepted that and I never will.

    Whatever people’s politics, whatever party they vote for, honesty and decency matter. Our great democracy depends on them. Cherishing and nurturing British democracy is what it means to be patriotic. There are Conservative Members who know that, and they know that the Prime Minister is incapable of it. The question that they must now ask themselves is what they are going to do about it.

    Conservative Members can heap their reputation, the reputation of their party, and the reputation of this country on the bonfire that is the Prime Minister’s leadership, or they can spare the country a Prime Minister totally unworthy of his responsibilities. It is their duty to do so. They know better than anyone how unsuitable he is for high office. Many of them knew in their hearts that we would inevitably come to this one day and they know that, as night follows day, continuing his leadership will mean further misconduct, cover-up and deceit. Only they can end this farce. The eyes of the country are upon them. They will be judged by the decisions they take now.

  • Keir Starmer – 2022 Comments on the Defection of Christian Wakeford to the Labour Party

    Keir Starmer – 2022 Comments on the Defection of Christian Wakeford to the Labour Party

    The comments made by Keir Starmer, the Leader of the Opposition, on 19 January 2022.

    The policies of the Conservative government are doing nothing to help the people of Bury South and indeed are only making the struggles they face on a daily basis worse.

  • Keir Starmer – 2022 Keynote Speech on the NHS and Labour’s Health Contract

    Keir Starmer – 2022 Keynote Speech on the NHS and Labour’s Health Contract

    The speech made by Keir Starmer, the Leader of the Opposition, on 18 January 2022.

    Health Contract

    Thank you everyone and good morning.

    Two weeks ago, I set out the terms of Labour’s new contract with the British people.

    To provide people with the security, prosperity and respect they deserve.

    Today, I will concentrate on an aspect of security as I set out Labour’s contract for better health.

    Two years ago, the pandemic struck.

    As I speak, over 150,000 of our fellow citizens have lost their lives.

    I am convinced that a swifter response by government could have reduced that number.

    Covid affected every aspect of our lives. Children couldn’t go to school. Parents couldn’t get to work. We couldn’t see our families.

    Covid is still affecting so many of us.

    And the bravery and skill of health workers is helping to see us through.

    The least we can do to show the respect they are owed is to ensure that we protect the National Health Service.

    The NHS cannot look after us, if we do not look after it.

    This is a political crusade for us in the Labour party.

    The NHS is Labour’s proudest achievement in office.

    As Bevan said when he introduced the National Health Service Act: The NHS would “lift the shadow from millions of homes”.

    But this is also a personal crusade for me.

    My wife works in our local hospital.

    My sister is a care worker.

    And my mum was a nurse in the NHS.

    She took great pride in what she did all her working life.

    But she was also, sadly, a long-term patient of the NHS.

    I spent a lot of time as a child visiting my mum in hospital.

    I have never forgotten – I never will forget – the care my mum received. The respect with which she was treated.

    I want that level of care for everyone.

    We all need the security of knowing that the NHS is there for us when we need it.

    That will be what my contract will offer. And I cannot stress how badly it is needed.

    Rather than concentrating on getting through the pandemic and bringing down waiting lists this self-indulgent Tory party is having a fight about a leader who they should have known from the start is not fit for office.

    Boris Johnson is too preoccupied defending his rule breaking and as day follows night when it comes to the National Health Service you can never trust the Tories.

    We are witnessing the broken spectacle of a Prime Minister mired in deceit and deception, unable to lead.

    But while the Tories bicker and fight each other on whats app, I want to look to the future.

    Because the NHS faces new challenges.

    We are an ageing population a fact brutally exposed by a virus that hit the oldest the hardest.

    We must devise new methods of care to help with long-term conditions.

    We need to think about mental as well as physical health.

    And we need to think not just about how we treat patients but about how we prevent them from falling ill in the first place.

    The Present Crisis

    But before we can think about the future we must attend to the present.

    When Labour left office 12 years ago, the Conservatives inherited a strong NHS…

    Waiting times were the shortest on record.

    The overall mortality rate from cancer had fallen by 22%.

    That proud record really puts the failure of the Tory years into sharp relief.

    Today, NHS waiting lists are the highest since records began.

    6 million people in England – more than one in nine – are waiting for consultations and operations.

    I would imagine that most people in this room know someone who is either waiting for an operation on an eye, a hip or a knee. Or someone who is worried about the symptoms they are experiencing but cannot get an appointment to see anyone.

    The Health Secretary has admitted this backlog is going to get worse.

    And it is not good enough to blame all this on Covid.

    This mess has been much longer in the making and this government has to bear the responsibility.

    Waiting lists were the highest on record before the virus arrived.

    Average life expectancy had stalled after decades of improvement.

    And the health gap between the poorest and wealthiest parts of the country had increased.

    And why are we in this mess?

    Why have we got to this point, where the NHS itself is in a critical condition?

    It’s not hard to work out what has gone wrong.

    The NHS went into the pandemic short of 100,000 staff.

    In social care, there were 112,000 vacancies.

    Even before the pandemic, patients could not be discharged from hospital bed because there were too few places in social care and too few staff.

    The consequences of 12 years of Tory failure are coming in.

    This is what always happens with Tory governments.

    It always ends this way.

    And I am afraid it may well get worse yet.

    The Conservatives said they would train more GPs.

    The Health Secretary now admits he is not on track to meet that commitment.

    These broken promises cost lives.

    If there is no GP to go to people will end up going to hospital.

    A&E departments become the front door of health and social care.

    The first task of a Labour government would be to clear up the mess the Tories have made of the NHS.

    The last Labour Government brought waiting times down from 18 months to 18 weeks.

    We will need to do the same again.

    People who can afford it, are paying to go private.

    Those who can’t afford it are stuck in the queue, waiting for months, if not years, in pain and agony.

    That cannot be right.

    This is an issue about fairness, as much as it is an issue about health.

    People should get treated faster via the NHS.

    But it’s outrageous that people are being forced to spend more in the private sector simply because the Tories have run down the public sector.

    That’s why the Labour government I lead will invest properly to bring down waiting lists.

    We would start by recruiting, training and, crucially, retaining the staff we need.

    We have a five-point plan for the transformation of social care.

    We would make sure that every older and disabled person who needs care and support can get it when and where they need it.

    We would act on the principles of prevention and early intervention; an approach we call “Home First”.

    We would give disabled adults choice and control over their support.

    We would establish a New Deal for Care Workers to ensure they get the job security they deserve, and the rewards they have earned.

    And we would establish a new partnership with families to ensure they don’t put themselves at risk for looking after people they love.

    And, as we repair and strengthen, we need to learn to live with Covid.

    So that people can live their lives as normal supported by a strong health care system.

    I don’t want a government ever again to have to place tough restrictions on our lives, our livelihoods and our liberties.

    And I’m delighted to say that Wes Streeting, the shadow health secretary will be setting out the details of our plan for living with Covid in the days to come.

    New Problems

    But the job will not be done once we have dealt with the immediate crisis.

    It’s much bigger than that because health challenges are changing all the time.

    In the first half of the 20th century polio, rubella, mumps, tuberculosis, and diphtheria were among the leading causes of death.

    The NHS’s treat and cure model proved a remarkable success.

    In the second half of the 20th century, these conditions were effectively wiped out.

    In 1950, the average life expectancy was 69, today it is 81.

    People live for much longer now with conditions that would once have killed them or which they would not have lived long enough to contract.

    Many of the pressures on the NHS today are the result of our successes.

    I am delighted we are an ageing society.

    It’s wonderful that so many people live so long.

    But an older society needs a different health system.

    One that is as much about prevention as it is about cure.

    That is a bit less about the community hospital and a bit more about the community.

    A health system that is a bit less about the system and a lot more about the patient.

    Many people feel insecure about whether the NHS will be there for them in the future.

    I understand that anxiety: I share it.

    In fact, it makes me more than anxious.

    It makes me angry.

    Angry that an important national institution is being allowed to decline.

    Angry that this government has the opportunity to do something good but is instead doing nothing.

    And angry that so many people who could be helped are suffering.

    The shadow that Bevan said was lifting from so many homes is falling again.

    So let me tell you what we would do to lift it.

    How we would protect an NHS free at the point of use.

    How we would secure health care for all.

    It is obvious that the NHS needs more money.

    But that is not all it needs.

    Do not think that the NHS is automatically protected when more investment goes in.

    The NHS also needs reform, so that it works in a different way.

    We set the NHS up in 1948, to treat the diseases of 1948.

    When we were last in government, we started to reform the NHS so that it was pointed more towards the patient so that it answered the needs of the time.

    That renewal process has stalled because this government simply doesn’t care enough, if the NHS falls behind.

    It will fall to us again to establish the changes that the NHS needs if it is to remain the great institution it has been for more than seven decades.

    From Cure to Prevention

    Let me give you a flavour of the change I have in mind.

    It has been said many times that the NHS is a national sickness service rather than a truly National Health Service.

    I see health as about more than hospitals and surgeries, as important as they are.

    It is about the towns and cities where we grow up, the food we eat, our access to green spaces.

    Health is about the air we breathe.

    It is estimated that, every year in the UK, air pollution kills tens of thousands of people.

    We would introduce a new Clean Air Act to tackle this silent killer.

    Poor health affects our earnings, our relationships, and our sense of purpose.

    And its effects are measured in lower productivity and higher crime, in family breakdown, and increased loneliness and depression.

    Labour would make wellbeing matter as much as national economic output.

    My preferred definition of well-being has been given by Angus Deaton, the winner of the Nobel prize: “all the things that are good for a person, that make for a good life”.

    This is about treating people with basic respect.

    So we would expect the Treasury under a Labour Government, to weigh every pound it spends not just for its effect on national income but also for its effect on national well-being.

    A good example of a policy for well-being is supporting our mental health.

    A Labour government would treat mental health as seriously as physical health.

    We would guarantee mental health treatment in less than a month.

    We’ll recruit over 8,500 more mental health professionals to support a million more people every year.

    Every school will have specialist support.

    Every community will have an open access mental health hub for young people.

    Under Labour, spending on mental health will never be allowed to fall.

    Stress, depression and anxiety account for 18 million workdays lost every year.

    We know that the more secure people feel about their jobs the less likely they are to suffer from stress and be absent from work.

    So we would expect employers to take wellbeing at work seriously.

    Under Labour’s New Deal for Working People, people will have the security of knowing they have the right to paid leave for family emergencies.

    Security and respect at work is good for workers.

    It is good for families.

    And a healthier workforce is good for the economy.

    That is why I envisage a health service in the future which is under less strain because a healthier population needs it less.

    Let me give you an example of prevention in action.

    In the early 2000s, every pub you walked into was filled with smoke.

    More than a quarter of all British adults smoked cigarettes.

    Labour banned smoking indoors, as well as cigarette advertising.

    Now just 14 per cent of adults smoke.

    Reducing the number of smokers preventing countless people from needing treatment and it freed up beds in the NHS.

    Just think of what more we could do.

    We know that high blood pressure and cholesterol hit the poor hardest.

    The consequences are cancers, heart failures, strokes.

    Much of this can be prevented.

    And usually the earlier you act, the better.

    A community in which all are respected is itself a source of better health.

    Because the connections we have in our communities are a form of security.

    These bonds have been eroded over 12 years of Tory rule.

    The social clubs, community centres, sports clubs, the green spaces, secure homes and safe streets.

    These are all health policies.

    There is a great example in Wigan.

    Like most local authorities the Labour council in Wigan saw its budget slashed.

    Its leadership responded with great imagination.

    They decided to let the people decide the future of their own borough.

    The people wrote the contract.

    The Wigan Deal.

    Which set out what both the people and the council would do.

    Already, life expectancy in Wigan has increased.

    On average, more than two years of good health have been added to people’s lives.

    And early deaths from heart disease have fallen faster than elsewhere in the country.

    This is what Labour in power can do.

    This is, in fact, what Labour is doing in many councils all over the country.

    And what the Labour government in Wales is doing too.

    From Hospital To Home

    I want the opportunity to add to this through central government.

    Because the range of what we can do now is quite mind-boggling.

    I was really struck by the power of progress recently.

    Many years ago, my mum had her knees and her hips replaced, when she was in her 20s and 30s.

    As was typical at the time, it took her six months to recover from the operation.

    She couldn’t get out of bed for weeks.

    By contrast, recently, a friend of mine had a hip operation, and he was on his feet the same day.

    The improvement in care in our lifetimes has been amazing.

    That’s what makes me optimistic about the NHS.

    That’s why, for all the neglect of the Tories, and all the big challenges it faces I am still upbeat about its future.

    We are still only beginning to explore what we might achieve.

    There are technologies that can provide us with early warnings about the diseases we might be vulnerable to.

    “Hospital at home” technologies allow patients to track and report their conditions with remote supervision.

    We now have access to the most incredible array of information about ourselves.

    Every day, algorithms are predicting our shopping choices.

    Imagine how information like that could be gathered and the insights used for our health.

    We can connect people with information and choices about their own health.

    Which give people greater security and control of their health.

    And that in turn makes us healthier, happier and more prosperous.

    Conclusion: Only Labour

    Sadly, the NHS is not getting better at the moment.

    There is no plan.

    No strategic thinking.

    If the NHS is going to continue to look after us, then it has to change.

    And only the Labour party has the permission to make that change.

    We founded the NHS.

    We understand it.

    We have reason to be thankful for it.

    I know I do.

    We are not out of the woods yet.

    The pandemic is by no means over.

    But we should not make the mistake of thinking that once we get through Covid all will be well with the NHS.

    It won’t.

    We have a government that we cannot trust with a precious national resource.

    Nearly three quarters of a century ago this party put into practice one of its cherished principles.

    Health care, collectively provided, free at the point of use to embody the idea of equality.

    It was a powerful idea then and it is a powerful idea now.

    And every generation has to find its own way to carry the tradition on.

    Because to prosper, we need the security of good health.

    This is the health contract that we will sign with the British nation.

    Item one, to tackle the immediate crisis to bring down waiting times by recruiting, training and retaining the staff we need.

    Item two, to make mental health as important as physical health.

    And item three, to shift the focus of health care to prevention as well as cure.

    To build the communities that care for us.

    To ensure that the NHS thrives.

    To look after the NHS so it can look after us.

  • Keir Starmer – 2022 Comments on Downing Street Apology to the Monarch

    Keir Starmer – 2022 Comments on Downing Street Apology to the Monarch

    The comments made by Keir Starmer, the Leader of the Opposition, on 14 January 2022.

    This shows just how seriously Boris Johnson has degraded the office of Prime Minister.

    The Conservatives have let Britain down. An apology isn’t the only thing the Prime Minister should be offering the Palace today.

    Boris Johnson should do the decent thing and resign.

  • Keir Starmer – 2022 Article on Fixing the NHS

    Keir Starmer – 2022 Article on Fixing the NHS

    The article written by Keir Starmer, the Leader of the Opposition, on 14 January 2022 in the Guardian newspaper.

    The next Labour government will build a new Britain based on security, prosperity and respect. To do that, we must renew the very foundations of our country. That will begin with renewal of the health service.

    The NHS must be resilient, able to meet the challenges of the future, and focused on prevention as well as cure. It must be there to protect us in the future, rather than requiring us to protect it in the present.

    It is to the country’s great misfortune that at this crucial time we have a Conservative government yet again mired in scandal, led by a prime minister who is out of control, out of touch and out of ideas. Senior cabinet ministers are spending their days plotting how and when to dispose of him. Precious time is being wasted on the latest internal psychodrama of the Tory party instead of sorting out the mess they have made.

    Nowhere is that mess more profound than in the health service. Twelve years ago, the Tories inherited a strong NHS from Labour. Waiting times were the shortest on record. Today they are the highest since records began. Across the country, people are struggling to see a doctor, get the care they require or have a much needed operation.

    The claim from the government benches that all the NHS’s ills are down to Covid is simply not true. Waiting times were on the rise long before the virus showed up. Life expectancy had stalled. We went into the pandemic short of 100,000 staff in England and with patients unable to be discharged from beds. Lockdowns were necessary to stop the NHS falling over – but the reason it was in such a perilous state was because the Tories had made it so.

    Without a great renewal, the NHS will continue to be vulnerable to new variants and new viruses. That, in turn, will leave the country vulnerable. This is unsustainable. Lockdowns come at enormous cost to people’s lives and health, and the country’s economy. Being forced into a hokey-cokey of restrictions will only do more harm in the long term.

    Instead we must fix the damage the Tories have done, to make the NHS more resilient again. That means investing properly. Labour would get waiting lists down by getting staff numbers up: recruiting, training and – crucially – retaining the staff we need. We would treat care workers with respect by giving them real job security and rewarding them properly. And we would transform social care to give older and disabled people the support they need to live the life they choose.

    Our focus will be on the sort of renewal that has only ever been possible under Labour governments. Just as the Blair government refocused the health service on outcomes, we would switch the focus from simply treating illnesses to preventing them. When I was director of public prosecutions, hardly a case came across my desk where early intervention couldn’t have turned lives around before they unravelled. The same is true in health.

    Achieving this sort of change means rethinking how the healthcare system works. It will require us to focus on the patient rather than just the system, the community as much as the community hospital. If we are to keep people well and at home we must strengthen those services that in turn strengthen entire communities, such as adequate mental health provision.

    The NHS needs to be properly funded but, simply throwing money at the problem isn’t the answer. Instead, we need to think radically about how the NHS can deal with the challenges of the future. We would be forensic with investment. Technology has the potential to transform how we live and manage our lives, while also reducing pressures. It will be possible to get early warnings about diseases we may be vulnerable to. “Hospital at home” systems will allow patients to track and report their conditions, with remote supervision.

    Tackling the immediate crisis, future-proofing the NHS and shifting our focus to prevention is all part of Labour’s new contract with the British people. It will provide the security that comes with knowing the health service will be there for you and your loved ones when you need it. It will increase our nation’s health and wellbeing, giving us all the chance to prosper. And it will provide people with the dignity and self-respect that come with being able to have control over your own life. The Tories don’t get any of this. They think it’s enough for the NHS to merely survive. Under Labour, the NHS – and Britain – will once again thrive.

  • Keir Starmer – 2022 Comments in House of Commons on Boris Johnson Attending Party

    Keir Starmer – 2022 Comments in House of Commons on Boris Johnson Attending Party

    The comments made by Keir Starmer, the Leader of the Opposition, in the House of Commons on 12 January 2022.

    We’ve got the prime minister attending Downing Street parties – a clear breach of the rules. We’ve got the prime minister putting forward a series of ridiculous denials which he knows are untrue – a clear breach of the ministerial code. That code says ministers who knowingly mislead parliament will be expected to offer their resignation.

    The party’s over, prime minister. The only question is will the British public kick him out, will his party kick him out or will he do the decent thing and resign?

  • Keir Starmer – 2022 Comments on Boris Johnson Breaking Law and Attending Party

    Keir Starmer – 2022 Comments on Boris Johnson Breaking Law and Attending Party

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

    The party is over Boris Johnson.

    Resign.

  • Keir Starmer – 2022 Comments on Death of Jack Dromey

    Keir Starmer – 2022 Comments on Death of Jack Dromey

    The comments made by Keir Starmer, the Leader of the Opposition, on 7 January 2022.

    The proud son of Irish parents, Jack Dromey dedicated his life to standing up for working people through the Labour movement, becoming Deputy General Secretary of the UK’s largest trade union and then a Labour MP.

    From supporting the strike at the Grunwick film processing laboratory, when he met Harriet, through to being elected to represented Birmingham Erdington in 2010, Jack lived his commitment to social justice every day.

    Jack was recognised for his determination to stand up for his constituents and he was highly respected and warmly regarded across Parliament.

    My thoughts are those of the whole Labour movement are with Harriet, their children and all those who knew and loved Jack.