Tag: Rishi Sunak

  • Rishi Sunak – 2022 Speech on Illegal Immigration

    Rishi Sunak – 2022 Speech on Illegal Immigration

    The speech made by Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister, in the House of Commons on 13 December 2022.

    Before I start, I know that the whole House will want to join me in expressing our sympathies to the families of those who lost their children in Solihull.

    With permission, Mr Speaker, I would like to make a statement on illegal migration. I hope that the whole House will agree that there is a complex moral dimension to illegal migration. The balancing of our duty to support people in dire need with the responsibility to have genuine control over our borders understandably provokes strong feelings. So it is my view that the basis for any solution should be not just what works but what is right.

    The simplest moral framing for this issue, and one that I believe Members on both sides of the House believe in, is fairness. It is unfair that people come here illegally. It is unfair on those with a genuine case for asylum when our capacity to help is taken up by people coming through—and from—countries that are perfectly safe. It is unfair on those who migrate here legally when others come here by cheating the system. Above all, it is unfair on the British people who play by the rules when others come here illegally and benefit from breaking those rules. So people are right to be angry, because they see what I see, which is that this simply is not fair.

    It is not cruel or unkind to want to break the stranglehold of criminal gangs who trade in human misery and who exploit our system and laws. Enough is enough. As currently constructed, the global asylum framework has become obsolete. Today, there are 100 million people displaced globally. Hostile states are using migration as a weapon on the very borders of Europe. As the world becomes more unstable, and the effects of climate change make more places uninhabitable, the numbers displaced will only grow.

    We have a proud history of providing sanctuary to those most in need. Britain helped craft the 1951 refugee convention to protect those fleeing persecution. My right hon. Friend the Member for Maidenhead (Mrs May) passed the world’s first Modern Slavery Act in 2015. In the last year, we have opened our hearts and our homes to people from Hong Kong, Afghanistan and Ukraine. Thousands of families will be setting extra places around the Christmas table this year. No one—no one—can doubt our generosity of spirit.

    But today, far too many of the beneficiaries of that generosity are not those directly fleeing war zones or at risk of persecution, but people crossing the channel in small boats. Many originate from fundamentally safe countries. All travel through safe countries. Their journeys are not ad hoc, but co-ordinated by ruthless, organised criminals. And every single journey risks the lives of women, children and—we should be honest—mostly men at sea.

    This is not what previous generations intended when they drafted our humanitarian laws, nor is it the purpose of the numerous international treaties to which the UK is a signatory. Unless we act now and decisively, this will only get worse. Already in just seven weeks since I became Prime Minister, we have delivered the largest ever small boats deal with France, with significantly more boots on the ground patrolling their beaches. For the first time, UK and French officers are embedded in respective operations in Dover and northern France. We have re-established the Calais group of northern European nations to disrupt traffickers all along the migration route. Last week, the group set a long-term ambition for a UK-EU-wide agreement on migration. Of course, that is not a panacea and we need to go much further. Over the last month, the Home Secretary and I have studied every aspect of this issue in detail, and we can now set out five new steps today.

    First, our policing of the channel has been too fragmented, with different people doing different things being pulled in different directions. So we will establish a new, permanent, unified small boats operational command. This will bring together our military, our civilian capabilities and the National Crime Agency. It will co-ordinate our intelligence, interception, processing and enforcement, and use all available technology, including drones for reconnaissance and surveillance, to pick people up and identify and then prosecute more gang-led boat pilots. We are adding more than 700 new staff and also doubling the funding given to the NCA for tackling organised immigration crime in Europe.

    Secondly, those extra resources will free up immigration officers to go back to enforcement, which will, in turn, allow us to increase raids on illegal working by 50%. And it is frankly absurd that today illegal migrants can get bank accounts which help them live and work here. So we will re-start data sharing to stop that.

    Thirdly, it is unfair and appalling that we are spending £5.5 million every day on using hotels to house asylum seekers. We must end this. We will shortly bring forward a range of alternative sites, such as disused holiday parks, former student halls and surplus military sites. We have already identified locations that could accommodate 10,000 people, and are in active discussions to secure these and more. [Interruption.]

    Mr Speaker

    Order. Someone has flashed a camera. It is quite serious to take photographs in the Chamber. If the Member knew they had taken a photograph, I would expect them to leave the Chamber. It is totally unacceptable to disrupt the Prime Minister when he is speaking.

    Ben Bradley (Mansfield) (Con)

    It was an accident.

    Mr Speaker

    I hope the photograph is deleted. Go out and have a chat with the Serjeant at Arms, because it did not look that way to me.

    The Prime Minister

    These sites will accommodate 10,000 people, and we are in active discussions to secure them and many more. Our aim is to add thousands of places through this type of accommodation in the coming months, at half the cost of hotels. At the same time, as we consulted on over the summer, the cheapest and fairest way to solve this problem is for all local authorities to take their fair share of asylum seekers in the private rental sector, and we will work to achieve this as quickly as possible.

    Fourthly, we need to process claims in days or weeks, not months or years, so we will double the number of asylum caseworkers. We are radically re-engineering the end-to-end process, with shorter guidance, fewer interviews and less paperwork, and we are introducing specialist caseworkers by nationality. We will also remove the gold-plating in our modern slavery system, including by reducing the cooling-off period from 45 days to 30 days, the legal minimum set out in the Council of Europe convention on action against trafficking in human beings. As a result of all these changes, we will triple the productivity of our caseworkers and we expect to abolish the backlog of initial asylum decisions by the end of next year.

    Fifthly, and most significantly, a third of all those arriving in small boats this year, almost 13,000 people, are Albanian, yet Albania is a safe, prosperous European country. It is deemed safe for returns by Germany, France, Italy and Sweden. It is an EU accession country, a NATO ally and a member of the same convention against trafficking as the United Kingdom. The Prime Minister of Albania has himself said there is no reason why we cannot return Albanian asylum seekers immediately. Last year, Germany, France, Belgium and Sweden all rejected almost 100% of Albanian asylum claims, yet our rejection rate is just 45%. That must not continue, so today I can announce a new agreement with Albania and a new approach.

    First, we will embed Border Force officers in Tirana airport for the first time ever, helping to disrupt organised crime and stop people coming here illegally. Secondly, we will issue new guidance for our caseworkers to make it crystal clear that Albania is a safe country. Thirdly, one of the reasons why we struggle to remove people is that they unfairly exploit our modern slavery system, so we will significantly raise the threshold someone must meet to be considered a modern slave. For the first time, we will require a caseworker to have objective evidence of modern slavery, rather than just a suspicion. Fourthly, we have sought and received formal assurances from Albania confirming that it will protect genuine victims and people at risk of re-trafficking, allowing us to detain and return people to Albania with confidence and in line with ECAT. As a result of these changes, the vast majority of claims from Albania can simply be declared clearly unfounded, and those individuals can be swiftly returned. Lastly, we will change how we process Albanian illegal migrants with a new dedicated unit, staffed by 400 new specialists, expediting cases within weeks. Over the coming months, thousands of Albanians will be returned home, and we will keep going with weekly flights until all the Albanians in our backlog have been removed.

    In addition to all these new steps, let the House be in no doubt that, when legal proceedings conclude on our migration and economic development partnership, we will restart the first flights to Rwanda, so that those who are here illegally and cannot be returned to their home country can build a new life there.

    However, even with the huge progress that we will make with the changes I have announced today, there remains a fundamental question: how do we solve this problem once and for all? It is not just our asylum system that needs fundamental reform; our laws need reform too. We must be able to control our borders to ensure that the only people who come here come through safe and legal routes. However well intended, our legal frameworks are being manipulated by people who exploit our courts to frustrate their removal for months or years on end.

    I said, “Enough is enough”, and I meant it. That means that I am prepared to do what must be done, so early next year we will introduce new legislation to make it unambiguously clear that, if you enter the UK illegally, you should not be able to remain here. Instead, you will be detained and swiftly returned either to your home country or to a safe country where your asylum claim will be considered. You will no longer be able to frustrate removal attempts with late or spurious claims or appeals, and once removed, you should have no right to re-entry, settlement or citizenship.

    Furthermore, if our reforms on Albania are challenged in the courts, we will also put them on a statutory footing to ensure that the UK’s treatment of Albanian arrivals is no different from that of Germany or France. The only way to come to the UK for asylum will be through safe and legal routes and, as we get a grip on illegal migration, we will create more of those routes. We will work with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees to identify those who are most in need so that the UK remains a safe haven for the most vulnerable. We will also introduce an annual quota on numbers, set by Parliament in consultation with local authorities to determine our capacity, and amendable in the face of humanitarian emergencies.

    That is the fair way to address this global challenge. Tackling this problem will not be quick; it will not be easy; but it is the right thing to do. We cannot persist with a system that was designed for a different era. We have to stop the boats, and this Government will do what must be done. We will be tough but fair, and where we lead, others will follow. I commend this statement to the House.

  • Rishi Sunak – 2022 Comments on 80th Anniversary of Holocaust Being Debated in Commons

    Rishi Sunak – 2022 Comments on 80th Anniversary of Holocaust Being Debated in Commons

    The comments made by Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister, on Twitter on 15 December 2022. The speech referenced was made on 17 December 1942 by Anthony Eden.

    80 years ago, Parliament listened in stunned silence as the truth of the Holocaust was spoken in the House of Commons for the very first time.

    Today, in the presence of survivors, we stand together to remember and to reaffirm that truth.

  • Rishi Sunak – 2022 Statement on the Intelligence and Security Committee Annual Report 2021-22

    Rishi Sunak – 2022 Statement on the Intelligence and Security Committee Annual Report 2021-22

    The statement made by Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister, in the House of Commons on 13 December 2022.

    The Intelligence and Security Committee of Parliament has today laid before Parliament a report covering the work of the Committee between August 2021 and March 2022. The 2021-22 annual report demonstrates the wide-ranging work of the Committee across a number of important issues. While there have been changes in Government between the final drafting and publication of this report, I reiterate the Government’s gratitude to the Committee for its continued independent oversight and scrutiny of the UK Intelligence Community, and I look forward to working together.

    The membership of the Committee has changed during the period covered by the report, and I would like to thank the right hon. Dame Diana Johnson MP and the right hon. Mark Pritchard MP for their work on the Committee, and welcome the new Members, Maria Eagle MP and the right hon. Sir Jeremy Wright MP into the role.

    The Government continue to support the Committee on its ongoing inquiries on international partnerships, China, cloud technologies, and Iran, and look forward to seeing the conclusions of the Committee’s subsequent reports. The Government reiterate their thanks to the Committee for its thorough inquiry and detailed report, “Extreme Right-Wing Terrorism”, published on 13 July 2022, and will respond formally in due course.

    The Government value the scrutiny the Committee provides through its inquiries, and this oversight is vital in ensuring the public can have confidence that our agencies are operating in full accordance with the law. Protecting the operational capabilities of the agencies and wider intelligence community to ensure the safety and security of our nation remains a critical priority for the Government. We will continue to engage constructively with the Committee to ensure its effective public oversight, in line with its powers as set out in statute, while balancing scrutiny and accountability with the need to protect our operating capabilities.

    The Government consider the current memorandum of understanding with the Committee to be sufficient to enable the Committee to conduct its statutory oversight duties to provide effective scrutiny and robust oversight of the agencies and wider intelligence community. The Government note the Committee’s comments regarding the provision of sensitive information to parliamentary Select Committees. There is existing guidance establishing that classification is not a reason for Government to withhold information from parliamentary Committees and there is an agreed process in place to provide sensitive information to any Committee as required.

    I would like to again thank the Committee for its work, and I look forward to working with it as it continues its vital oversight duties.

  • Rishi Sunak – 2022 Comments on Michelle Mone (Baroness Mone)

    Rishi Sunak – 2022 Comments on Michelle Mone (Baroness Mone)

    The comments made by Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister, in the House of Commons on 7 December 2022.

    Like everyone else, I was absolutely shocked to read about the allegations. It is absolutely right that the baroness [Baroness Mone] is no longer attending the House of Lords and therefore no longer has the Conservative Whip. The one thing that we know about the right hon. and learned Gentleman is that he is a lawyer and should know that there is a process in place. It is right that that process concludes; I hope that it is resolved promptly

  • Rishi Sunak – 2022 Speech on Foreign Policy to the Lord Mayor’s Banquet

    Rishi Sunak – 2022 Speech on Foreign Policy to the Lord Mayor’s Banquet

    The speech made by Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister, at the Guildhall in London on 28 November 2022.

    My Lord Mayor, Ladies and Gentlemen,

    Whether by virtue of history or accident of geography, our country has always looked out to the world.

    I was born in Southampton…

    … a port city the Victorians called the gateway to the world…

    … where the Mayflower set sail…

    … where Spitfires were built and allied troops embarked on D-Day.

    And just as we look out to the world, so the world often looks to Britain.

    Like many others, my grandparents came to the UK, via East Africa and the Indian subcontinent… and made their lives here.

    In recent years, we’ve welcomed thousands of people…

    …from Hong Kong, Afghanistan, and Ukraine.

    We’re a country that stands up for our values…

    … that defends democracy by actions not just words…

    A country that commits not just our resources but our ingenuity to better the lives of others, and ourselves.

    Ukrainian flags have flown over almost every town and city on these islands for the past nine months.

    No one told people to put them there.

    They felt moved to show solidarity with people they’ve never met, in a country most have never even visited…

    …to show their faith in fairness, freedom and the rule of law.

    These values are constant.

    They are set in stone.

    But as the world evolves, so does our application of those values.

    As Edmund Burke argued, circumstances and context are everything.

    And today the pace of geopolitical change is intensifying.

    Our adversaries and competitors plan for the long term.

    After years of pushing at the boundaries, Russia is challenging the fundamental principles of the UN Charter.

    China is conspicuously competing for global influence using all the levers of state power.

    In the face of these challenges, short-termism or wishful thinking will not suffice.

    We can’t depend on Cold War arguments or approaches, or mere sentimentality about our past.

    So we will make an evolutionary leap in our approach.

    This means being stronger in defending our values and the openness on which our prosperity depends.

    It means delivering a stronger economy at home, as the foundation of our strength abroad.

    And it means standing up to our competitors, not with grand rhetoric but with robust pragmatism.

    We will do all this…

    …not only through our diplomatic expertise, science and tech leadership, and investment in defence and security…

    …but by dramatically increasing the quality and depth of our partnerships with like-minded allies around the world.

    We will set out more detail in the updated Integrated Review in the new year…

    …including how we’ll work with friends in the Commonwealth, the US, the Gulf states, Israel and others.

    But tonight I’d like to describe how we’re already making this evolutionary leap in three other places.

    First, as we stand by Ukraine, we’re also reinvigorating our European relationships to tackle challenges like security and illegal migration.

    Second, we’re taking a longer-term view on China, strengthening our resilience and protecting our economic security.

    And third, we’re seizing the huge opportunities on offer in the Indo-Pacific by building deep and long-lasting partnerships.

    First, Ukraine.

    In Kyiv, I just saw how Russia’s focus is shifting from bruising encounters on the battlefield to brutalising the civilian population.

    It was written in the scarred buildings and the piles of rubble lining the streets…

    …in the stories of the first responders I met from liberated Kherson…

    …from the torture chambers to the booby traps left in children’s toys.

    As the world comes together to watch the World Cup…

    …I saw how an explosive device had been hidden inside a child’s football – seeking to make it a weapon of war.

    It defies belief.

    So be in no doubt, we will stand with Ukraine for as long as it takes.

    Next year we will maintain or even  increase our military aid.

    And we will provide new support for air defence, to protect the Ukrainian people and the critical infrastructure they rely on.

    By protecting Ukraine, we protect ourselves.

    With the fall of Kabul, the pandemic, the economic strife, some said the West was weak.

    In fact, our response in Ukraine has shown the depth of our collective resolve.

    Sweden and Finland are joining NATO.

    Germany is increasing its defence spending.

    Partners as far afield as Australia, Japan and South Korea are standing with us.

    We’ve developed an entirely new sanctions model.

    And through NATO and the Joint Expeditionary Force we’re guarding against further Russian aggression…

    …whether in the east or the High North.

    We’re also evolving our wider post-Brexit relations with Europe…

    …including bilaterally and engaging with the new European Political Community.

    But this is not about greater alignment.

    Under my leadership we’ll never align with EU law.

    Instead, we’ll foster respectful, mature relationships with our European neighbours on shared issues like energy and illegal migration…

    …to strengthen our collective resilience against strategic vulnerabilities.

    And that brings me to my second point.

    We also need to evolve our approach to China.

    Let’s be clear, the so-called “golden era” is over…

    …along with the naïve idea that trade would automatically lead to social and political reform.

    But nor should we rely on simplistic Cold War rhetoric.

    We recognise China poses a systemic challenge to our values and interests…

    …a challenge that grows more acute as it moves towards even greater authoritarianism.

    Instead of listening to their people’s protests, the Chinese Government has chosen to crack down further…

    …including by assaulting a BBC journalist.

    The media – and our parliamentarians – must be able to highlight these issues without sanction…

    …including calling out abuses in Xinjiang – and the curtailment of freedom in Hong Kong.

    Of course, we cannot simply ignore China’s significance in world affairs…

    …to global economic stability or issues like climate change.

    The US, Canada, Australia, Japan and many others understand this too.

    So together we’ll manage this sharpening competition, including with diplomacy and engagement.

    Much of this is about dramatically improving our resilience, particularly our economic security.

    That’s why we created new powers under the National Security and Investment Act…

    …it’s why we used them this month to block the sale of Newport Wafer Fab.

    It’s why we took action on 5G.

    And it’s why we’re ending global dependence on authoritarian regimes – starting with Russian gas.

    Now we’re also acting to deepen our ties in the Indo-Pacific – the third example of where we’re evolving our approach.

    Before I came into politics, like many of you, I invested in businesses around the world… and the opportunity in the Indo-Pacific is compelling.

    Take Indonesia, which I visited just this month.

    It’s a young, vibrant country…

    …the world’s third largest democracy…

    …poised to become a top 5 global economy.

    By 2050, the Indo-Pacific will deliver over half of global growth …

    …compared with just a quarter from Europe and North America combined.

    That’s why we’re joining the Trans-Pacific trade deal, the CPTPP…

    …delivering a new FTA with India…

    …and pursuing one with Indonesia.

    But in the Indo-Pacific economics and security are indivisible.

    60% of global trade passes through regional shipping routes…

    …including choke points like the straits of Malacca.

    It’s in our interests to keep these trade lines open.

    That’s why we joined the Five Power Defence Arrangements with Australia, Malaysia, New Zealand and Singapore half a century ago.

    And it’s why we’re evolving new long-term defence, industrial and technological partnerships…

    …like AUKUS with Australia and the US…

    …and the Future Combat Air System with Italy and Japan.

    By deepening these ties we’ll help protect the arteries and ventricles of the global economy…

    …supporting security and prosperity – both at home in our European neighbourhood and in the Indo-Pacific.

    My Lord Mayor,

    As we meet here tonight, the people of Ukraine are hunkered down in freezing temperatures, on the front line of the fight for freedom.

    In Iran, women are displaying the most humbling and breath-taking courage…

    …refusing to bow to thuggish, theocratic control.

    And tomorrow Iran’s football team will again stand with them in solidarity – facing unknown consequences as a result.

    Freedom and openness have always been the most powerful forces for progress.

    But they have never been achieved by standing still.

    As Henry Kissinger wrote:

    …during periods of crisis… whether war, technological change or economic dislocation… management of the status quo may be the riskiest choice of all.

    Under my leadership we won’t choose the status quo.

    We will do things differently.

    We will evolve…

    … anchored always by our enduring belief in freedom, openness and the rule of law…

    … and confident that in this moment of challenge and competition…

    … our interests will be protected… and our values will prevail.

    Thank you.

  • Rishi Sunak – 2022 Statement on the G20 Summit in Indonesia

    Rishi Sunak – 2022 Statement on the G20 Summit in Indonesia

    The statement made by Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister, in the House of Commons on 17 November 2022.

    With permission Mr Speaker, I would like to make a brief statement on the G20 summit in Indonesia, but first I want to address Russia’s missile attacks on Ukraine this week.

    On the very day that I and others confronted the Russian Foreign Minister across the G20 summit table with the brutality of his country’s actions, and on the very day that President Zelensky addressed the G20 with a plan to stop the war, Russia launched over 80 separate missile strikes on Ukraine. The targets were innocent people and civilian infrastructure; the aim, to cast the population into darkness and cold. Once again, Russia has shown its barbarity and given the lie to any claim that it is interested in peace.

    During the bombardment of Ukraine on Tuesday, an explosion took place in eastern Poland. The investigation into this incident is ongoing and it has our full support. As we have heard the Polish and American Presidents say, it is possible that the explosion was caused by a Ukrainian munition which was deployed in self-defence. Whether or not this proves to be the case, no blame can be placed on a country trying to defend itself against such a barrage. [Hon. Members: “Hear, hear.”] The blame belongs solely to Russia.

    I spoke to President Duda yesterday to express my sympathy and pledge our solidarity. I also spoke to President Zelensky on a joint call with Prime Minister Trudeau to express our continued support, and I met my G7 and NATO counterparts at the sidelines of the G20. We will help our Polish allies to conclude their investigation and we will continue to stand with Ukraine in the face of Russia’s criminal aggression.

    The Bali summit took place amidst the worst economic crisis since 2008. The G20 was created to grip challenges like this, but today’s crisis is different, because it is being driven by a G20 member. By turning off the gas taps and choking off the Ukrainian grain supply, Russia has severely disrupted global food and energy markets. The economic shockwaves will ripple around the world for years to come. So, together with the other responsible members of the G20, we are delivering a decisive response.

    Almost all G20 members joined me in calling out Russia’s actions, declaring that

    “today’s era must not be one of war.”

    We will work together to uphold international law and the United Nations charter, and we will act to protect our collective economic security. The G20 agreed to use all available tools to support the global economy and ensure financial stability. That means international financial institutions mobilising more resources to support developing countries, it means continuing to call out those who exploit their lending power to create debt traps for emerging economies, and it means tackling the causes of rising inflation head on, including by delivering fiscal sustainability.

    We pledged our support for the UN-brokered deal to keep grain shipments moving in the Black sea. I am pleased to say that that deal has now been renewed. Two thirds of Ukraine’s wheat goes to developing countries. With famine looming, it is desperately needed and Russia must uphold its part of the deal.

    We agreed action to improve energy security by accelerating the transition to clean energy. We launched a new just energy transition partnership with Indonesia, which will unlock billions in private finance for new green energy infrastructure. Finally, we committed to maintain free markets and free trade and to reform the World Trade Organisation.

    Yesterday, I held my first meeting with President Biden. We pledged to redouble our support for Ukraine and to continue deepening our co-operation, including on energy security and managing the challenges posed by China. I met Prime Minister Modi, when we reviewed progress on our forthcoming free trade agreement. I discussed our accession to the comprehensive and progressive agreement for trans-Pacific partnership with the Prime Ministers of Japan, Canada and Australia, and I met almost every other leader at the summit, with the exception of Russia.

    In each of those discussions, there was a shared determination to restore stability, deliver long-term growth and drive a better future—one where no single country has the power to hold us back. In just a few moments, my right hon. Friend the Chancellor will build on those international foundations when he sets out the autumn statement, putting our economy back on to a positive trajectory and restoring our fiscal sustainability.

    By being strong abroad, we strengthen our resilience at home. We will continue to support Ukraine, we will continue to stand up for the rule of law and the fundamental principles of sovereignty and self-determination, and we will build a global economy that is more secure, more stable and more resilient, because that is what the gravity of the moment demands and that is how we will ensure that our country emerges from this crisis stronger than it was before. I commend this statement to the House.

  • Rishi Sunak – 2022 Speech to the CBI Conference

    Rishi Sunak – 2022 Speech to the CBI Conference

    The speech made by Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister, to the CBI Conference held on 21 November 2022.

    Tony, let me start by saying thank you to you and your team.

    The CBI is a valued institution in this country…

    …and a powerful voice for business.

    And let me thank all of you…

    Because I know things are tough right now.

    You rightly want to know what you can expect from me.

    You saw what mattered to me when I was Chancellor, with policies like furlough.

    Acting with empathy. In the national interest.

    Above all, being bold, decisive, and radical.

    Now let me tell you what I want to do as Prime Minister.

    I said on the steps of Downing Street that I would put stability and confidence at the heart of this government’s agenda.

    And last week we did that…

    …with a plan to grip inflation and balance the books.

    I said I would bring fairness and compassion to help the most vulnerable.

    And we’ve done that too…

    …not just with record increases in pensions and welfare…

    ….and help for people’s energy bills…

    …but by controlling inflation.

    Because the best way to help people…

    …is by stopping mortgages, rents, and food prices from spiralling out of control.

    Re-establishing stability is the critical first step.

    But there’s so much more we need to do.

    I’m not just here to solve problems.

    I want to build a better country.

    Where we get inflation down and grow the economy.

    Where we cut NHS waiting times and improve the quality of care.

    Where we invest more in schools and give every child a world-class education.

    And critical to achieving all this…

    ….is innovation.

    That’s my theme today.

    And a defining focus of my government.

    Why innovation matters

    I sometimes worry that when people hear the word ‘innovation’, all they think of are the latest gadgets – a smarter watch, better tv, or faster car.

    But to me, innovation is much more about new ideas, new ways of doing things that drive economic and social progress.

    The product of creativity and ingenuity…

    …and what Roosevelt called ‘bold, persistent experimentation.’

    I want to lead a country where that mindset and that culture of innovation…

    …permeates every aspect of what we do.

    Where it’s at the heart of our economic policy…

    …and at the heart of our vision for public services.

    The question is – how do we do that?

    First, we need to harness innovation to drive economic growth.

    Second, we need to embed innovation in our public services – especially our NHS.

    Third, we need to teach people the skills to become great innovators.

    Harnessing Innovation to drive economic growth

    First, growth.

    Tony, you’ve rightly challenged us to be more ambitious for growth.

    Well, there’s one factor above all that drives growth.

    Over the last 50 years, innovation was responsible for around half of the UK’s productivity increases.

    But the rate of increase has slowed significantly since the financial crisis.

    This difference explains almost all our productivity gap with the United States.

    How do we fire up the innovation engine?

    We believe that the very act of creativity and exploration is itself a reward…

    …so it starts with government investment in basic science and research.

    In a challenging time, when we are making difficult decisions on public spending…

    …in last week’s autumn statement, we protected the budget for research and development.

    £20bn – almost a fifth of our entire capital budget, the highest level of R&D this country has ever seen.

    And we’re investing in high-risk, high-reward research with the new Advanced Research and Invention Agency.

    But more important than what government does is what you do.

    It’s private sector innovations that really drive growth.

    You’d expect me to say that, I’m a Conservative – but it’s true.

    That’s why the Autumn Statement cut taxes to encourage larger companies to do more research and development.

    Its why we’re going to allow businesses to claim R&D tax relief on pure maths and cloud computing.

    And its why we’re absolutely committed to using our new Brexit freedoms…

    …to create the most pro-innovation regulatory environment in the world…

    …in sectors like life sciences, financial services, AI and data.

    But any credible strategy also needs to support fast growing businesses…

    …those firms disproportionately responsible for our future growth.

    Turning million-pound businesses into billion-pound businesses and turning billion-pound businesses into ten-billion-pound companies

    …will create good well paying  jobs for the British people.

    But too often, those firms can’t access the finance they need.

    That’s why we’re radically reforming the regulation of our insurance and pensions sectors, as well as our listings rules…

    …to release a flood of new funding for exciting, innovative businesses.

    And we’ll need to go further.

    But this isn’t just about what large businesses and financial markets can do.

    We want to support small businesses to innovate, too.

    On every high street, in every market town, every day we rely on brilliant local businesses from the greengrocer to the dry cleaner to the local plumber.

    We should be ambitious for their future too.

    The real prize is supporting them to innovate.

    And that’s exactly what we’re doing with new initiatives like Help to Grow and Made Smarter.

    So make no mistake – our most pressing task when it comes to growth is stability and controlling inflation.

    But that will never be the limit of our ambition.

    The more we innovate, the more we’ll grow – and we have a plan for both.

    An innovation culture in our public services

    Second, we also need to create a culture of innovation in our public services.

    Now I grew up in an NHS family.

    It’s in my blood.

    And as your Prime Minister, I will always protect an NHS free at the point of use.

    And that’s why, in a budget where we had to make savings overall….

    …we didn’t cut the funding for health and social care….

    …we increased it.

    By £8 billion.

    So let no-one ever doubt our commitment to the brilliant men and women who work in our NHS.

    But our ambition for our country’s most important public service cannot be measured solely by the money we spend…

    …but by the quality of care every patient receives.

    We all want it to be easier for people to see their family GP.

    We don’t want our loved ones waiting so long for ambulances…

    …or for the operations they need.

    But better care requires innovation.

    Now In part that means new drugs and new technologies.

    And this country should be proud of how we are leading the way.

    Not just with that extraordinary Covid vaccine.

    But with robots assisting surgery…

    ….doctors being trained with Virtual Reality headsets…

    …and drones transporting prescription medicines to patients in remote locations.

    Medical technologies like these are only the most visible form of innovation.

    But we also need to radically innovate in how we do things.

    That’s how we will really improve the quality and speed of care and make the money we invest in the NHS go further.

    To do that, we’re opening Community Diagnostic Centres to deliver millions more tests, checks and scans…

    ….close to home and without having to arrange multiple appointments.

    And our new elective surgical hubs will offer hundreds of thousands of patients…

    …quicker access to the most common procedures.

    But we need to go further still.

    We want to give patients genuine choice about where and when to access care.

    And those choices need to be informed by radical transparency about the performance of our healthcare system.

    We’re also making sure the NHS has the workforce it needs for the future…

    …with the right numbers of doctors and nurses in the right places…

    …as well as thinking creatively about what new roles and capabilities we need…

    …in the healthcare workforce of the future.

    When it comes to the NHS, we all share the same ambition…

    …to give everybody in the country the best possible care, free at the point of use.

    But to deliver it, we need to be bold and radical in challenging conventional wisdom.

    And that’s what we’ll do.

    Giving the people the skills to become great innovators

    Now, third, there can be no innovation unless people have the skills to innovate.

    That starts with our schools.

    So last week we announced an extra £2bn in each of the next two years.

    But funding is not enough.

    There is no responsibility as Prime Minister that I feel more deeply, than how we develop a truly world-class education system…

    …giving every child in our country the best chance in life and preparing them to enter into a rapidly changing world.

    The Times were right to challenge us about what that looks like.

    And we are asking ourselves radical searching, questions.

    About the curriculum – because young people need to enter the modern economy equipped with the right knowledge and skills.

    And about technology – because we want to help children engage and learn better and save teachers’ time.

    We also need to end once and for all the mistaken idea that learning is something you finish at 18.

    So we will also deliver our Lifetime Skills Guarantee to help people of any age retrain and acquire new skills.

    I believe, in the very core of my being, that education is the closest thing we have to a silver bullet in public policy.

    It’s the most transformative thing we can do for our people…

    …something you as employers know all too well…

    …and I am determined to get this right.

    But to make this country a true island of innovation, we also need to attract the best and brightest from around the world.

    So we will unapologetically create one of the world’s most attractive visa regimes for entrepreneurs and highly skilled people.

    And one of the areas where we need to be most ambitious – is AI – Artificial Intelligence.

    Because this isn’t just another new technology.

    It’s a general purpose technology…

    …like the invention of the steam engine and the computer chip…

    …with the potential to transform every aspect of our lives.

    So we cannot allow the world’s top AI talent to be drawn to America or China.

    That’s why – building on the AI scholarships and masters conversion courses I instigated as Chancellor…

    …we are launching a programme to identify and attract the world’s top 100 young talents on AI.

    Less “build it and they will come” and more “let them come and they will build it”.

    But we must be honest with ourselves.

    Part of the reason we ended free movement of labour was to rebuild public consent in our immigration system.

    If we’re going to have a system that allows businesses to access the best and brightest from around the world…

    ….we need to do more to give the British people trust and confidence that the system works and is fair.

    That means tackling illegal migration.

    And that’s what I’m determined to do.

    So, to conclude – innovation matters.

    It matters because it creates more jobs, higher wages, and better opportunities for people.

    It matters because it improves our schools and NHS.

    And, over the long-term, by boosting growth and creating more productive public services…

    …innovation is how we will cut taxes for people and businesses.

    That’s why I am placing innovation at the heart of my governing agenda

    And despite the challenges we face – I am optimistic about the future.

    Because the golden thread of our national story has always been innovation.

    The idea that what’s yet to be discovered is surely even greater than all that’s come before.

    I want the United Kingdom to be a place of learning, discovery, and imagination.

    Of potential realised and ambition fulfilled.

    That’s how we’ll improve the lives of all our people.

    And as your Prime Minister, that’s what I’m going to do.

    Thank you.

  • Rishi Sunak – 2022 Comments During Visit to Ukraine

    Rishi Sunak – 2022 Comments During Visit to Ukraine

    The comments made by Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister, on 19 November 2022 on a trip to Ukraine.

    I am proud of how the UK stood with Ukraine from the very beginning. And I am here today to say the UK and our allies will continue to stand with Ukraine, as it fights to end this barbarous war and deliver a just peace.

    While Ukraine’s armed forces succeed in pushing back Russian forces on the ground, civilians are being brutally bombarded from the air. We are today providing new air defence, including anti-aircraft guns, radar and anti-drone equipment, and stepping up humanitarian support for the cold, hard winter ahead.

    It is deeply humbling to be in Kyiv today and to have the opportunity to meet those who are doing so much, and paying so high a price, to defend the principles of sovereignty and democracy.

  • Rishi Sunak – 2022 Letter to Dominic Raab on his Personal Conduct

    Rishi Sunak – 2022 Letter to Dominic Raab on his Personal Conduct

    The letter written by Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister, to Dominic Raab, the Deputy Prime Minister, on 16 November following allegations about Raab’s personal conduct.

    Text (in .pdf format)