Tag: Rebecca Long-Bailey

  • Rebecca Long Bailey – 2018 Speech at Labour Party Conference

    Below is the text of the speech made by Rebecca Long Bailey, the Shadow Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy Secretary, at the Labour Party conference held in Liverpool on 25 September 2018.

    Conference. There’s a saying that “if Liverpool did not exist, it would have to be invented.”

    I think that captures the energy, the creativity, eternal pride and solidarity of this city.

    But in today’s Britain that energy is being held back. I don’t need to tell you in Liverpool about the Tories and “managed decline”. But it sometimes feels as if managed decline is the Tory’s plan for the entire country.

    We have a government overwhelmed by the process of Brexit – with no idea about the type of country they actually want to live in.

    On all the big questions – the economy, climate change, inequality, what our working lives will look like – this government has simply nothing to offer.

    Time and time again they have ignored the concerns of businesses, such as Jaguar, Land Rover and Airbus, who know the looming catastrophe we face if we crash out without securing a good deal.

    We also know the Tories can’t be trusted, we know that they will use Brexit as a cover to roll back on our hard won workers’ rights.

    Eight years of Tory government has seen insecurity in the workplace become the norm and many workers now don’t have access to basic employment rights.

    Laura Pidcock our Shadow Minister for Labour Rights and Justin Madders, her maternity cover, have forensically held this Government to account but they don’t care.

    They don’t care about the tragic stories of gig workers, sick, stressed and under paid. They don’t even care about staff in their own departments of justice and business, campaigning simply for basic protections and a living wage.

    We care: workers under Labour will get full legal rights – such as sick pay, holiday and parental leave and protection from dismissal from day one, even those working in the gig economy.

    But, this precariousness extends beyond employment rights. Over three years there have been 100,000 job losses in retail alone, our biggest employment sector.

    Thriving high streets were once the centre of communities, somewhere local people were proud of but once flourishing businesses are now replaced by boarded-up shops with almost 25,000 vacant retail and leisure premises across Great Britain. Household names such as Toys R Us and Maplin have disappeared and big brands like New Look and M&S are closing stores across the country.

    The move to online retail and the changing nature of the way we shop doesn’t need to mean empty high streets and job losses. It can mean a vibrant community space, with local independent shops, cafes and restaurants.

    But that will require Governmental action to reinvigorate our high streets.

    Some of that action will be long-term changes, such as addressing the imbalance of tax treatment between traditional retailers and online sellers. That is why my colleague Bill Esterson is convening a cross-departmental taskforce to look into these complex issues.

    And Roberta Blackman-Woods will be leading a planning commission which will enable Labour to create policies that will revitalise our high streets, tackle climate change and environmental protection, as well as giving communities a stronger voice to shape their areas.

    Together these working groups will develop a long-term strategy for our high streets. But some actions can be done immediately.

    Today I am announcing Labour’s emergency 5-point plan to save Britain’s high streets.

    The next Labour government will ban ATM charges and stop Post Office and bank branch closures.

    We will provide free bus travel for under 25s.

    Deliver free public Wi-Fi in town centres.

    Establish a register of landlords of empty shops in each local authority.

    And finally, on one of the most pressing issues, business rates we will introduce annual revaluations of rates, exempt new plant and machinery from revaluations, ensure a fair appeals system and fundamentally review the business rates system to bring it into the 21st century.

    You see, it is only Labour that has the energy, the ideas and the courage to challenge the big issues and shape the world as we would like to see it.

    We just don’t accept that decline is inevitable, that productivity and wage stagnation is normal, that critical industries such as steel and manufacturing don’t need support or that it’s acceptable for public and private investment to be around 4 per cent below the developed country average.

    My brilliant colleagues Chi Onwurah and Gill Furniss have already championed necessary investment to support industry from research and development through to infrastructure and skills.

    We have stated that under Labour public procurement will support home grown supply chains and support strategic industries.

    And while we’d love to bring as many public contracts back in-house as possible, we cannot reverse overnight the Tories’ devastating cuts to the capacity of the civil service and local government. We must, and we will, rebuild our public services.

    And we must, and we will, set out a bold industrial strategy with ‘missions’ to deal with the big societal issues of our time.

    Perhaps one of the biggest issues we face, which the market has proven uniquely incapable of addressing – is climate change. The debate is over. The super-storms of the last fortnight are further evidence that the climate is changing, and the consequences are severe.

    Ten years ago a Labour government passed the Climate Change Act. World leading legislation binding the Government to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 80% by 2050.

    But ten years later, the science is clear. We need to go further and faster to avoid dangerous climate change. My colleagues Alan Whitehead and Barry Gardiner magnificently show up the Tories’ rhetoric. The truth is the Tories are off track to meet our current targets.

    We acknowledge that the UK needs to do much more to meet the Paris Agreement goal of limiting warming to 1.5°C. So today I state firmly that A Labour government will back a target for net zero emissions by 2050.

    And that’s just the start because targets aren’t enough. We need a plan of action.

    And we’ve got one. We’ve been working with an expert team of energy professionals and engineers supported by leading academics. They have looked at Labour’s mission to provide 60 per cent of the UK’s energy demand from renewable or low-carbon sources within 12 years. They have asked – can it be done? How can it be done? And with what consequences for our climate and economy?

    And yes, it can be done! Offering a profound economic opportunity to revive our productivity and reshape our economy.

    Now this is just a taster in the time I have.

    The report recommends a diverse energy mix, one part, harnessing the best offshore wind prospects in the world to deliver a seven-fold increase in offshore wind power. That’s over 7000 turbines, a massive 52 gigawatts – enough to power 12 million homes.

    They propose doubling onshore wind power, and almost tripling solar power. Together, that’s enough to power over 7 million homes.

    And the report proposes making every single house in the UK a warm, dry, energy efficient home – eliminating fuel poverty.

    Conference, George Harrison once said “it’s being here now that’s important. We can hope for the future, but we don’t know if there is one.”

    So this is not the time for piecemeal measures. We do not have to settle for whatever the market can deliver, and sleep walk into catastrophe.

    Because we can unleash the energy of the wind and the waves, and of our people, who have been criminally neglected through this country’s long deindustrialisation.

    Because for Labour, this is about boosting the fundamental quality of life for millions of people. This is about reinvigorating our towns and communities so that they truly symbolise local pride and prosperity. This is about kick-starting an industrial revolution with workers and unions at its heart, one that is built in Britain, and that can rebuild Britain.

    And by doing so, we can reclaim the future.

  • Rebecca Long-Bailey – 2017 Speech to Labour Party Conference

    Below is the text of the speech made by Rebecca Long-Bailey, the Shadow Secretary of State for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy, at the Labour Party Conference in Brighton on 25 September 2017.

    Conference, when I was little, my dad would tell me stories of his job in Salford, unloading oil tankers. How we were known as “the workshop of the world”. Life was good for us back then. My dad’s work was unskilled, but it paid well. My parents even managed to get a mortgage for their own little house.

    And from poverty-plagued childhoods, which made the film Angela’s Ashes look like an advert for a luxury minibreak, they felt proud of their achievement! And that was true of so many working class people right across Britain, for the first time in history they were truly being offered the chance to aspire!

    But under Thatcher industries such as my father’s were put into what is so callously called ‘managed decline’. It meant factories shutting their doors, firms moving abroad or simply closing down, lower wages for those who could still find work, and cuts to benefits for those who couldn’t.

    We now have the most regionally imbalanced economy in Europe. 40% of our economic output comes from London and the South East alone. And despite the pretence that we have ‘full employment’, we know the figures hide a worrying truth:

    an insecure, low paid and ‘casualised’ workforce.

    When the Prime Minister called the general election in spring, we were 20 points behind in the polls. The seven weeks that followed saw the biggest narrowing of the polls in British electoral history.

    There were many things that contributed to that turnaround. The passion, integrity and strength of our leader, Jeremy Corbyn. The hard work of the Shadow Cabinet, not least my brilliant team Chi Onwurah, Alan Whitehead, Barry Gardiner, Bill Esterson, Jack Dromey, Gill Furniss and Dan Carden. The hard-work and dedication of every single person in this hall and in our movement.

    But there were other key factors at play. A country fed up with the dogmas of political and economic neglect that, for so many, had only meant so much hardship. And a Manifesto that showed them that it didn’t have to be this way. When we promised an industrial strategy to end the economy’s reliance on the City of London. To properly fund our public services by making the top 5% pay their fair share. And to invest in our energy, transport and digital infrastructure to make it fit for the 21st Century

    When we promised to take the radical action needed to tackle climate change,

    and ensure that 60% of our energy comes from low carbon or renewable sources by 2030. To support projects like Swansea tidal lagoon and Moorside nuclear plant.

    When we promised to introduce a £10 living wage. And to level the playing field between small and big business. We offered a vision of hope. And we offered transformation! Because we know what lies ahead.

    Conference, we are standing on the precipice of the fourth industrial revolution,

    a pace of technological and digital change so immense it will leave you feeling dizzy.

    It will transform industry, it will transform our economy. And it has the potential to transform the quality of life of every single person in Britain.

    But it will only do this if a Labour Government is holding the reins.

    Now I know it’s hard to believe but I was 38 the other day. Just 20 years ago, on my 18th birthday, you had to dial up the internet, you checked your lottery numbers on teletext, my first mobile only received ten text messages, and you taped things off the telly with a cassette, which if, like in our house, you were at the cutting edge of 1990’S interior design, you kept them in those plastic boxes designed to look like books.

    But people in their teens today have no idea what most of those things are.

    And the pace of change we have seen in the last 20 years will pale in comparison to the next 20. Over the last few centuries, we have gradually learnt how to transfer more and more human skills to machines. With current technological breakthroughs, we are, for the first time, designing machines that do cognitive and non-routine work.

    Machines that think!

    But, with some estimates suggesting that half of all jobs could be lost to automation,

    and that few businesses are ready to harness change, it also brings the threat of rising poverty and inequality. There is no doubt about what the digital age will look like under the Tories: monopoly profits for the few, and increased exploitation for the many.

    Only Labour will ensure that workers and businesses are equipped to enjoy the prosperity this changing economy can bring.

    We’ll restore the rights of workers – rolling out sectoral collective bargaining and guaranteeing unions access to the workplace – to ensure that new technology is not just an excuse for disgraced old employment practices. Because there is nothing cutting edge about hire-and-fire, casual contracts.

    We’ll create the conditions for business to make those really ‘transformative’ discoveries which can change all our lives for the better, with an industrial agenda that is so transformational, it will eclipse the new deal set out by Franklin D Roosevelt in the history books.

    We’ll bring investment in research and development in line with other major economies and create national missions to deal with the big issues of our time

    And our National Education Service will allow every single person in this country to obtain the skills they need to thrive in a modern economy and ensure real diversity in our workplaces.

    But it’s not enough for Britain to innovate. We’ll put Britain at the forefront of industrial manufacturing, so that the ideas conceived in Britain are manufactured and delivered here in Britain. ‘Made in Britain’ will not just be an idealistic vision of times gone by, it will be a source of national pride for future generations.

    And finally, we’ll ensure that workers themselves can have a stake in our industrial journey alongside business.

    Imagine if the technology which allows us to hail a taxi or order a takeaway via an app was shared by those who rely on it for work. They would have the power to agree their own terms and conditions and rates of pay, with the profits shared among them or re-invested for the future.

    That’s why we are today launching a Report on Alternative Models of Ownership.

    To start asking fundamental questions about how we achieve real diversity of business in the digital age, and how to ensure that it’s enormous potential benefits serve the many, not the few.

    Now conference, the fourth industrial revolution is here! A time of profound economic and technological change. The Tories have had their chance. We’ve seen how they deal with industrial and technological change. And they have failed.

    We either seize the possibilities it can bring us, technological advancement,

    living standards and leisure time, that even Harold Wilson in the white heat of technology couldn’t have dreamed of! Or we let the Tories consign our heritage as a proud industrial nation to the dustbin of history.

    As Klaus Schwab the Founder and Executive Chairman of the World Economic Forum once said:

    “There has never been a time of greater promise, or greater peril.”

    But we are ready! Together we will harness the fruits of the extraordinary changes that are coming. A society with more potential than any before, but built for the many, not the few. Conference, this is our time now!