Tag: Rishi Sunak

  • Rishi Sunak – 2024 Statement on Leaving D-Day Event for Party Political Reasons

    Rishi Sunak – 2024 Statement on Leaving D-Day Event for Party Political Reasons

    The statement made by Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister, on 7 June 2024.

    The 80th anniversary of D-Day has been a profound moment to honour the brave men and women who put their lives on the line to protect our values, our freedom and our democracy.

    This anniversary should be about those who made the ultimate sacrifice for our country. The last thing I want is for the commemorations to be overshadowed by politics.

    I care deeply about veterans and have been honoured to represent the UK at a number of events in Portsmouth and France over the past two days and to meet those who fought so bravely.

    After the conclusion of the British event in Normandy, I returned back to the UK. On reflection, it was a mistake not to stay in France longer – and I apologise.”

  • Rishi Sunak – 2024 Comments in Austria

    Rishi Sunak – 2024 Comments in Austria

    The comments made by Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister, in Austria on 21 May 2024.

    Chancellor Nehammer, Karl. it’s so wonderful to be here in Austria, especially after our very warm meeting we had together last year where, as you say, we built a very strong friendship and a partnership.

    And it has been good to continue that dialogue with you this morning.

    And Austria is an important partner and an important friend for the United Kingdom.

    Last year we signed new bilateral agreements…

    …to build that partnership, to strengthen our security and to tackle illegal migration.

    We grew our bilateral trade to £10 billion last year.

    And today we’ve taken steps to deepen that relationship even further.

    Now as Karl mentioned we see eye-to-eye on many of the big challenges before us.

    And we’re committed to addressing them together.

    We’re unwavering in our support for Ukraine.

    Austria has rightly called out Russia for breaking international law…

    …expelled Russian diplomats…

    …and given vital humanitarian support to the Ukrainian people.

    And now, we’ve discussed what more we can do together on the economic front to ensure that Russia’s war machine is not supported.

    Now we’ve also discussed, as you heard, the Middle East…

    …where we’ve been working closely together already to urgently get the aid in and get the hostages out.

    We touched on our concerns in the Western Balkans, Bosnia and Herzegovina…

    …and the work that both our nations are doing to preserve stability in the region.

    And again, I very much welcome Austria’s leadership in this area and I’m grateful to all the engagement that Karl has put into that part of our continent.

    And of course, in conclusion, we discussed illegal migration.

    This has become truly one of the defining issues of our time.

    We face criminal gangs that are growing in strength across our European continent and beyond, and they’re exacting a terrible human toll.

    People are losing their lives as they are exploited by these criminal gangs.

    And it is of course a threat to our stability, to the rule of law – and rightly our citizens are demanding that their leaders, their politicians, tackle it.

    And that’s what both Karl and I are doing.

    And I really do want to congratulate Karl on his leadership here because he’s been right on this issue for a long time, and has led the charge in Europe, in making sure this is a topic that gets the attention that it deserves.

    In our joint statement today we have committed to deepening our cooperation to end this vile trade.

    And what both of us have agreed is that business as usual won’t solve this problem.

    We have to think creatively…

    We have to pursue new ideas, solutions, and deterrents – removals to safe third countries – like the UK’s pioneering Rwanda scheme.

    And as Karl said, it’s increasingly clear that many other countries now agree that that is the approach that is required: bold, novel, looking at safe country partnerships.

    Karl was right on that a while ago and I’m delighted that now 15 European countries together have joined in supporting that position.

    So we will keep increasing our shared ambition and urgency, bringing others along with us on the journey as we have…

    …including when we meet at the European Political Community, which I am proud to be hosting in Blenheim Palace in July.

    That will be a moment to take further action on all of the issues we’ve been discussing today.

    And I’ll close on this last point.

    As you know, there is an interesting echo of history here.

    Because Blenheim Palace is named after the Battle of Blenheim in 1704…

    …when Britain and Austria came together under the Grand Alliance to protect Vienna.

    Now, the circumstances are somewhat different today…

    …but it is a reminder that our relationship, our friendship, our partnership, has deep roots.

    And today’s discussions show that it also has a very bright future.

    Karl, thank you very much.

  • Rishi Sunak – 2024 Speech Announcing the 2024 General Election

    Rishi Sunak – 2024 Speech Announcing the 2024 General Election

    The speech made by Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister, on 22 May 2024.

    In the last five years our country has fought through the most challenging times since the Second World War.

    As I stand here as your Prime Minister, I can’t help but reflect that my first proper introduction to you was just over four years ago.

    I stood behind one of the podiums, upstairs in the building behind me.

    I told you that we faced a generation defining moment, and that we as a society would not be judged by some government action, but by the small acts of kindness we showed one another.

    You met that challenge and then some.

    And I have never been prouder to be British.

    And when I introduced the furlough scheme, I did so not because I saw a country simply in need of desperate help, albeit we were, but because I saw a country whose future hung in the balance.

    I could be bold and trust in the tens of millions of you at home, that you would rise to the moment, or I could accept the inevitable, millions of job losses, and pick up the pieces.

    In truth, it was no choice at all.

    I have never, and will never, leave the people of this country to face the darkest of days alone. And you know that, because you’ve seen it.

    As I did then, I will forever, do everything in my power to provide you with the strongest protection I possibly can.

    That is my promise to you.

    Because, for so many of us, it’s easy to forget the scale of what we’ve been through. We were hit by a pandemic that upended normal life.

    Who would have thought the government would ever tell us how many times a day we could leave our homes.

    Then, just as we were recovering from Covid, war returned to Europe, with Putin’s invasion of Ukraine sending your energy bills spiralling.

    I came to office, above all, to restore economic stability.

    Economic stability is the bedrock of any future success.

    Whether that is rising wages and good jobs, investment in our public services, or the defence of our country.

    And because of our collective sacrifice and your hard work, we have reached two major milestones in delivering that stability.

    Showing that when we work together, anything is possible.

    Our economy is now growing faster than anyone predicted, outpacing Germany, France and the United States.

    And this morning, it was confirmed that inflation is back to normal.

    This means that the pressure on prices will ease and mortgage rates will come down.

    This is proof that the plan and priorities I set out are working.

    I recognise that it has not always been easy, some of you may just be starting to feel the benefits, for some it might still feel hard when you look at your bank balance.

    But this hard-earned economic stability was only ever meant to be the beginning.

    The question now is how and who do you trust to turn that foundation into a secure future for you, your family and our country.

    Now is the moment for Britain to choose its future.

    To decide whether we want to build on the progress we have made or risk going back to square one with no plan and no certainty.

    Earlier today I spoke with His Majesty the King to request the dissolution of parliament.

    The King has granted this request, and we will have a general election on the 4th July.

    This election will take place at a time when the world is more dangerous than it has been since the end of the Cold War.

    Putin’s Russia is waging a brutal war in Ukraine; and will not stop there if he succeeds.

    That war has also made all too clear the risks to our energy security. In the Middle East, the forces of Islamist extremism threaten regional and, ultimately, global stability.

    These tensions are exploited by extremists who seek to undermine our values and divide our society here at home.

    China is seeking to dominate the 21st century by stealing a lead in technology.

    And migration is being weaponised by hostile states to threaten the integrity of our borders.

    These uncertain times call for a clear plan and bold action to chart a course to a secure future.

    You must choose in this election who has that plan, who is prepared to take that bold action to secure a better future for our country and our children.

    I cannot, and will not, claim that we have got everything right, no government should.

    But I am proud of what we have achieved together, the bold action we have taken and confident about what we can do in the future.

    We have tackled inflation, controlled debt, cut workers’ taxes, and increased the state pension by £900 this year.

    We have reduced taxes on investment and seized the opportunities of Brexit, to make this the best place in the world to grow a business.

    Put record amounts of funding into our NHS and ensured it is now training the doctors and nurses it needs in the decades to come.

    We have reformed education and our children are now the best readers in the Western world.

    We prioritised energy security and your family finances over environmental dogma in our approach to Net Zero.

    We have fully funded an increase in defence spending to 2.5 per cent of GDP.

    We made a decision to invest more in local transport that you actually use rather than endlessly plough more money into HS2.

    We set out a comprehensive plan to reform our welfare system to make it fair to those who pay for it as well as those who need it.

    Immigration is finally coming down and we will stop the boats with our Rwanda partnership.

    And we will ensure that the next generation grows up smoke free.

    I hope that my work since I became Prime Minister shows that we have a plan and are prepared to take the bold action necessary for our country to flourish.

    I have stuck with that plan and always been honest with you about what is needed even when that’s been difficult.

    Because I am guided by doing what is right for the country, not what is easy.

    I cannot say the same thing for the Labour party.

    Because I don’t know what they offer. And in truth, I don’t think you know either.

    And that’s because they have no plan. There is no bold action.

    And as a result, the future can only be uncertain with them.

    On the 5th of July, either Keir Starmer or I will be Prime Minister.

    He has shown time and time again that he will take the easy way out and do anything to get power.

    If he was happy to abandon all of the promises he made to become Labour leader once he got the job, how can you know he won’t do exactly the same thing if he were to become Prime Minister?

    If you don’t have the conviction to stick to anything you say…

    If you don’t have the courage to tell people what you want to do…

    And if you don’t have a plan…

    How can you possibly be trusted to lead our country, especially at this most uncertain of times?

    Over the next few weeks, I will fight for every vote, I will earn your trust, and I will prove to you:

    That only a Conservative government, led by me:

    Will not put our hard-earned economic stability at risk.

    Can restore pride and confidence in our country.

    And with a clear plan and bold action will deliver a secure future for you, your family and our United Kingdom.

  • Rishi Sunak – 2024 Policy Exchange Speech on Security

    Rishi Sunak – 2024 Policy Exchange Speech on Security

    The speech made by Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister, on 13 May 2024.

    Thank you Dean for that warm welcome. At some point during the second half of this year, we will all go to the polls and make a choice. Not just about Conservatives versus Labour, or Sunak versus Starmer. It will be a choice between the future and the past. I remain confident that my party can prevail, not just because of our record alone, but because we will be the only party really talking about the future and not with vague lofty platitudes, but with bold ideas and a clear plan that can change our society for the better and restore peoples’ confidence and pride in our country.

    I feel a profound sense of urgency. Because more will change in the next five years than in the last thirty.

    I’m convinced that the next few years will be some of the most dangerous, yet the most transformational, our country has ever known.

    So the question we face today is this: Who has the clear plan and bold ideas to deliver a secure future for you and your family?

    The dangers that threaten our country are real. They are increasing in number. An axis of authoritarian states like Russia, Iran, North Korea, and China is working together to undermine us and our values.

    War has returned to Europe, with our NATO allies warning that if Putin succeeds in Ukraine, they might be next.

    War rages, too, in the Middle East as Israel defends itself not only against the terrorists of Hamas but a barrage of missiles fired – for the first time – directly from Iran.

    Right now in Africa, conflicts are being fought in 18 different countries. And Putin’s recklessness has taken us closer to a dangerous nuclear escalation than at any point since the Cuban missile crisis.

    These are not faraway problems. Iranian proxies are firing on British ships in the Red Sea, disrupting goods destined for our high streets.

    Here at home, China has conducted cyber targeting of our democratically elected MPs. Russia has poisoned people with chemical weapons.

    And when Putin cut off the gas supplies it had a devastating impact on people’s lives and threatened our energy security.

    And in this world of greater conflict and danger, 100 million people are now displaced globally.

    Countries like Russia are weaponising immigration for their own ends, and criminal gangs keep finding new routes across European borders.

    Illegal migration is placing an intolerable strain on our security and our sense of fairness, and unless we act now and act boldly this problem is only going to grow.

    Extremists are also exploiting these global conflicts to divide us.

    People are abusing our liberal democratic values – the freedom of speech and right of protest – to intimidate, threaten and assault others, to sing antisemitic chants on our streets and our university campuses, and to weaponise the evils of anti-Semitism or anti-Muslim hatred in a divisive, ideological attempt to set Briton against Briton.

    And from gender activists hijacking children’s sex education to cancel culture, vocal and aggressive fringe groups are trying to impose their views on the rest of us.

    They’re trying to make it morally unacceptable to believe something different and undermine people’s confidence and pride in our own history and identity. Scottish nationalists are even trying to tear our United Kingdom apart.

    But for all the dangers ahead, few are felt more acutely than people’s sense of financial insecurity. We’ve been pounded by a series of once-in-a-generation shocks.

    The worst international financial crisis since the great depression in the 1930s. The first global pandemic since the Spanish flu in 1918.

    The biggest energy shock since the 1970s. Global forces, yet they are hitting our living standards here at home.

    We must be prepared strategically, economically, with robust plans and greater national resilience, to meet this time of instability with strength.

    And people’s sense of insecurity is only heightened by the fears about new technologies like AI.

    When the IMF says 40% of jobs could be affected, or hundreds of leading experts say the risks could be on a par with pandemics or nuclear war, and when children are exposed to bullying, sexualised content or even self-harm online, people want to know they’ve got someone in charge who understands these dangers, because only if you understand what is happening can you be trusted to keep us safe.

    But the paradox of our age is that for all the profound dangers we face, right now, we also hold in our hands an opportunity for human progress that could surpass the industrial revolution in speed and breadth.

    Technologies like AI will do for the 21st century what the steam engine and electricity did for the 19th.

    They’ll accelerate human progress by complementing what we do, by speeding up the discovery of new ideas, and by assisting almost every aspect of human life.

    Think of the investment they will bring, the jobs they’ll create, and the increase in all our living standards they’ll deliver.

    Credible estimates suggest AI alone could double our productivity in the next decade.

    And in doing so, help us create a world of less suffering, more freedom, choice, and opportunity.

    Just imagine. Every child in school with their own personalised tutor, and every teacher free to spend more time personally developing each student.

    New frontiers in medical diagnostics where a single picture of your eyes can not only detect blindness but predict other diseases like heart attacks or Parkinson’s.

    And counterintuitive as it may seem, throughout human history, the greatest breakthroughs of science and learning have so often come at the moments of greatest danger.

    The first electronic digital computers were developed by British codebreakers in the Second World War. Solar technology went from powering pocket calculators to a viable commercial technology following the energy crisis of the 1970s.

    The fastest development, and deployment, of a vaccine in history came during the Covid pandemic.

    And so it is incumbent upon us to make this a period not just of great danger, but great progress, too.

    That’s why we launched a bold plan to make science and technology our new national purpose.

    We’re rightly proud of Britain’s spirit of discovery and entrepreneurship made us the leading country in the industrial revolution.

    But we can be just as proud, just as confident, just as optimistic about our future, and our prospects to lead again in this new industrial age.

    And doing so will enrich our lives and create good, well-paid jobs in the growth industries of the future here at home.

    At the same time, new and fast-growing economic superpowers like India, Indonesia, and Nigeria are significantly reshaping the global economy.

    And just as this ever more interconnected world creates new dangers, it also creates new possibilities.

    The United Kingdom is uniquely placed to benefit. We’ve always been an open, trading, maritime nation; and Brexit has given us the opportunity to trade even more.

    And we invent, discover, and produce new products and services that the world wants to buy.

    From aircraft wings in Filton, to financial services in Glasgow, to incredible cultural exports like film, music, and TV, or sports like the Premier League.

    Everywhere from rural Kenya to the cityscapes of South Korea, people stay up all times of day and night to watch their favourite British team.

    It’s no wonder that Brexit Britain has leapt above France, Japan, and the Netherlands to become the world’s fourth biggest exporter.

    And the more we export, the better our businesses will do, the more jobs we will create, the more wealth we will generate – right across our country.

    This is the opportunity before us. A world transformed by technological progress. Huge global markets hungry for new talent, goods, and services. You can see it all around us.

    Two brothers from Merseyside sat around their kitchen table and built Castore a £1bn sportswear business taking on global giants like Nike and Adidas, their kit now worn by Red Bull Formula 1 and Bayer Leverkusen.

    British companies and workers right across the country are pioneering offshore wind and exporting it around the world. Already, we’ve built the first floating offshore wind farm.

    And our innovations have helped reduce the cost of wind energy by around two-thirds, and increased the size of turbines to the equivalent of the Eiffel Tower with blades bigger than Big Ben.

    And you can see the opportunity too in healthcare, giving people longer, healthier lives. In Denmark, NovoNordisk created the Ozempic drug which is not only helping to tackle chronic disease globally, but singlehandedly grew Denmark’s entire economy last year.

    All this progress should show us that while this is one of the most dangerous periods we’ve ever known, it will also be one of the most transformational.

    And if we make the right choices, if we have a bold enough vision, then we should feel confidence, pride, and optimism that Britain’s future is secure.

    My point is this: our country stands at a crossroads. Over the next few years, from our democracy to our society to our economy – to the hardest questions of war and peace – almost every aspect of our lives is going to change.

    How we act in the face of these changes – not only to keep people safe and secure but to realise the opportunities too, will determine whether or not Britain will succeed in the years to come.

    There is an important choice facing the country because despite having 14 years with nothing to do but think about the future, Labour have almost nothing to say about it. No plans for our border, no plans for our energy security, no plans for our economy either and no principles either. Keir Starmer has gone from embracing Jeremy Corbyn to Natalie Elphicke, all in the cynical pursuit of power at any price. So Labour have no ideas, what they did have they’ve u-turned on. They have just one thing, a calculation that they can make you feel so bad about your country that you won’t have the energy to ask about what they might do with the incredible power that they will yield. I’m not saying the past doesn’t matter, I know people are feeling anxious and uncertain, that their sense of confidence and pride in this country has been knocked. I understand that, I accept it and I want to change it. What I cannot accept is Labour’s view that all the worries you have are because of 14 years of Conservative Government. In the last 14 years, we’ve made progress in the most difficult conditions any governments has faced since the Second World War.

    A world leading economy, we’ve seen the 3rd highest growth rate in the G7, and created 4 million jobs, 800 a day.

    We took difficult decisions to restore our country’s financial security and control national debt, and that allowed us to support the country through Covid, deliver the fastest vaccine roll-out in the world, provide record funding to the NHS, and protect state pensions with the triple lock.

    We’ve reformed welfare by capping benefits and introducing Universal Credit to help people into work.

    We’ve reduced absolute poverty, pensioner poverty, child poverty. We’ve cut carbon emissions by a third.

    Maintained our position as NATO’s second biggest defence power. Halved violent and neighbourhood crime. And improved standards in our schools with English schoolchildren not just the best readers in the UK, but in the western world.

    We’ve legislated for equal marriage. And it is now not even surprising for people from ethnically diverse backgrounds to lead Scotland, Wales, and the United Kingdom.

    And the economy now decisively has momentum. Inflation down from over 11% to 3%. Wages rising faster than prices.

    And in the first quarter of this year, we grew faster than France, Germany, Japan, Italy, and even America.

    The plan is working – so we must stick to it, and not go back to square one.

    And when Labour ignores the achievements of the last 14 years, or try to reduce the last 14 years to 49 days, remember what they’ve actually doing is trying to distract you from the thing that matters most, the future. Maybe they can depress their way to victory with all their talk and scaremongering, but I don’t think it’ll work because at heart, we’re a nation of optimists. We’re not blind to the challenges or threats that we face.

    We just have an innate belief that whatever they are, we can overcome them, as we have done so many times in our history. And create a secure future for you and your family.

    Let me tell you more about my vision for how I would lead this country through this time of danger and transformation.

    The highest priority of a Conservative Government is to keep our country safe. We’ve proudly taken the generational decision to increase defence spending to a new baseline of 2.5% of GDP, by 2030. Yet Labour have refused to match our pledge. Keir Starmer supported a former Labour leader who wanted to abolish the army and withdraw from NATO and Labour’s current deputy leader, Shadow Foreign Secretary and many others, voted against our nuclear deterrent, the ultimate guarantee of our security.

    The global displacement of a hundred million people is a new and defining challenge of our age. But we can and will protect ourselves against illegal migration. That’s why we’re pioneering the Rwanda scheme. And so, when people see that if they come here illegally, they will be swiftly detained and removed, they will be deterred from making that perilous journey, stopping the boats and saving thousands of lives.

    I know that our international frameworks are outdated. So there may be flashpoints ahead with the ECHR.

    And if the Strasbourg Court make me choose between the ECHR and this country’s security, I will choose our country’s security every single time.

    And nor will I ever compromise on defending our values, our history, and our way of life, against those who seek to undermine them.

    I am unapologetically proud of who we are.

    And under my leadership, ours will be a country where people can disagree in good faith, but where they must do so with respect and decency for others.

    A country where the benefits of belonging to our Union are self-evident to the overwhelming majority of our people.

    A country where we protect and strengthen the greatest institution of all – the family, better protect children from the harms of the online and offline worlds, and do more to protect single sex spaces.

    A country where we celebrate the small acts of kindness that bind our society together, and where we actively work to rebuild the civic involvement and pride that have always formed part of our distinctive national culture.

    A country where we honour those prepared to pay the highest price for our freedoms, as we make this the best place in the world to be a veteran here at home.

    And a country where we properly respect the older generation.

    They’ve contributed all their lives, so whatever the triple lock costs, it is morally right to give older people dignity and comfort in retirement.

    But as well as strengthening our national security and restoring pride in our national culture, we’ll also protect you from the dangers of a more unstable world by giving you greater peace of mind over your financial security.

    People have been struggling to make ends meet – I know that. In the last few years, you’ve seen rising energy bills, mortgage rates, the cost of the weekly shop.

    And I hope I’ve shown through my time in office that, from furlough to support with your energy bills, the government I lead will always be there for you.

    But that’s only possible if we take the tough decisions to strengthen the country’s finances and control debt.

    You can trust me to do that.

    When I stood for the leadership of my party, and my opponent’s policies imperilled our financial strength, I was sooner prepared to lose than abandon what I believe so deeply is right for our country.

    I feel the same conviction about Net Zero.

    In a more unstable world, where dictators like Putin have held us to ransom over energy prices, I reject the ideological zeal of those who want us to adopt policies that go further, faster than any other country, no matter the cost or disruption to people’s lives.

    But even as we strengthen our security and our sense of pride and confidence in ourselves, I also feel a sense of urgency about readying our country to succeed in a world transformed.

    That starts by giving all our young people – wherever they live and whatever their background – the skills and knowledge to succeed.

    Building on the success of the last 14 years, we will create a truly world-class education system.

    The Advanced British Standard is the most far-reaching reform to education for 16-18 year olds in a generation.

    We’re tearing down the artificial barriers between technical and academic education.

    Increasing children’s time in the classroom.

    Studying a greater breadth of subjects to match our competitors.

    And unapologetically saying that every single child must leave school not just literate but numerate as well.

    Now, I know this will not win universal acclaim but maths will be fundamental to our children’s life chances in this new technological age.

    And it is our duty to give them those skills. And more. We’ll end rip-off degrees and massively expand the number of apprenticeships, because a degree is not the only path to success in the modern economy.

    And we’ll make sure that everyone has the funding they need to retrain or learn new skills, at any point in their lives, because in the future education won’t stop when you walk out of the school gates.

    But for Britain to finish first in today’s world, we don’t just need the skills to succeed, we need to create a dynamic, innovative economy fuelled by technological progress, so we lead in the industries of the future and help you and your family become wealthier and more economically secure.

    The government I lead is creating the conditions for a new British dynamism. By investing in the new infrastructure of the future – not just roads, railways, and buses, but gigabit broadband, research and development, computing power.

    By helping to create hundreds of thousands of good, secure, well-paid, highly-skilled jobs, that will level up opportunity right across our country.

    And yes, by taking the necessary decisions to build the right homes in the right places to support those jobs.

    But true British dynamism won’t come from the State alone. It will come from you. It will come from the ingenuity and creativity of the British people, given the support, the opportunities and the rewards to have, pursue and realise big ambitions.

    If you have a brilliant new idea – I want you to build it. If you’re passionate about solving a problem – I want you to pursue it.

    If you simply want to set up on your own – I want you to get out there and do it.

    Because you won’t find the future written in a slide deck in a Whitehall quango.

    You’ll find it out there in our country.

    And so the government I lead will create the conditions for people themselves to try, to build, to invent – yes, sometimes to fail, but more often to succeed.

    That’s why we’re cutting taxes directly on investment. It’s why we’re cutting taxes to encourage innovation.

    And it’s why we’re seizing the freedom and flexibility of Brexit. Because so often, the EU’s default approach was top down, precautionary regulation.

    Whereas we in the UK now have the chance to be more agile, so that rather than stifling innovation and growth, we encourage it, in everything from financial services to agriculture, from healthcare to house building.

    Above all, we will reward hard work.

    Because you don’t get anything in life without hard work.

    So we’re making the tax system simpler, fairer, and more rewarding, cutting National Insurance by £900 for the average worker, alongside increasing the state pension by £900 this year.

    We’re raising the National Living Wage to end low pay.

    And we’re reforming welfare to make sure that work always pays, and our safety net is fair to those who pay for it.

    Not least because giving people support to get off welfare and into work gives them purpose, dignity and hope and it is also the only sustainable way to cut legal migration.

    A world-class education system.

    A dynamic, innovative economy.

    Hard work valued and rewarded.

    That’s how Britain will succeed in future.

    That’s how we’ll grow the economy.

    And that’s how we’ll transform public services, too.

    Imagine a welfare system where new technologies allow us to crack down on the fraudsters, exploiting the hardworking taxpayers who fund it.

    Imagine the huge opportunities to cut crime through technologies like live facial recognition, helping police catch wanted criminals, find missing people, and spend more time on the beat.

    And imagine our NHS, still free at the point of use, but transformed for the future.

    A service staffed by tens of thousands more doctors and nurses, thanks to our Long Term Workforce Plan.

    Backed by record funding made possible by years of fiscal discipline. With far greater choice over where you can receive your care, made as simple as choosing what to watch on iPlayer.

    And I believe there will be no more powerful example of what all the forces of British dynamism, innovation, scientific discovery and technological progress can achieve, than this:

    To address, finally, the fear of one word that still lurks in the back of everyone’s minds, that touches almost every family in our country, and that envelopes our whole world, if we or a loved one hears it: cancer.

    Yet even here, if we are bold enough, there can be cause for new hope. We already know we can prevent most lung cancer cases – the UK’s leading cause of cancer deaths – by stopping smoking.

    That’s why I took the important decision to create a smokefree generation.

    And with huge breakthroughs in early diagnosis and new treatments, like the MRNA vaccine for skin cancer, I believe we can be just as bold and ambitious in improving rates of cancer survival.

    Because if we can bring together my vision of a country transformed, with our world class education system that trains the PhD oncologists and apprentice lab technicians, and our dynamic economy that attracts investors and incubates the billion-pound biotech businesses of the future, our post-Brexit regulatory freedoms to approve trials in a safe but faster way.

    And the scale of our NHS to help us research and trial those new drugs in a way no other country can, then just one example of the incredible achievements this country can make would be to make a generational breakthrough against this cruel disease and fundamentally change what it will mean for our children and grandchildren to hear the word cancer.

    Today I’ve set out my vision for how Britain can succeed in one of the most dangerous yet transformational eras we’ve ever known.

    The values that lie behind that vision are a new patriotism: a confidence in ourselves and in all that we can achieve.

    I reject those who insidiously question our history and our identity.

    I believe in that innate confidence in ourselves that has always run through our island story.

    And just as we’re proud of all that we created, invented, and discovered in our past, so we can be confident and optimistic about what we will achieve in our future.

    My pledge to you is that I will create the conditions to make that possible, to help you fulfil your ambitions.

    To build the world-class education system that gives our children the skills they need to succeed, no matter where they started off in life.

    To create the dynamic, innovative economy that will give you the opportunity of a wealthier, more financially secure life for you and your family.

    To restore our sense of civic pride and national cohesion so we can be secure in the knowledge that we are all on the same side.

    And above all, you can trust me to keep you and your family safe and secure from the threats we face at home and abroad.

    There are storms ahead.

    The dangers are all too real.

    But Britain can feel proud again.

    Britain can feel confident again.

    Because with bold action and a clear plan, we can and we will create a secure future.

  • Rishi Sunak – 2024 Defence Speech Made in Warsaw

    Rishi Sunak – 2024 Defence Speech Made in Warsaw

    The speech made by Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister, in Warsaw on 23 April 2024.

    My first duty as Prime Minister is the security of the British people.

    And fulfilling that profound responsibility is only possible because of you.

    Just ten days ago, I gave the order for the RAF to join an international effort…

    …intercepting a barrage of Iranian missiles headed towards Israel.

    Those pilots, like you, and like every generation of British service men and women before you…

    …were willing to put their own safety over the line…

    …for the security of others and the defence of our liberties and our values.

    From your Regiment’s service in Iraq and Afghanistan…

    …to your current role here in Poland, protecting NATO’s eastern flank…

    …you have made those sacrifices in the service of our country.

    I am truly humbled by your courage and professionalism.

    And on behalf of a proud and grateful nation, let me simply say: thank you.

    But I haven’t just brought you together today to express my gratitude.

    I want to talk to you about how we equip you to do your duty…

    …in an increasingly dangerous world.

    We have entered a period of history in which competition between countries has sharpened profoundly.

    An axis of authoritarian states with different values to ours…

    …like Russia, Iran, North Korea, and China…

    …are increasingly assertive.

    The danger they pose is not new.

    But what is new is that these countries – or their proxies…

    …are causing more instability, more quickly, in more places at once.

    And they’re increasingly acting together…

    …making common cause in an attempt to reshape the world order.

    Now I know there are some people who will think these are faraway problems.

    But they are not.

    They pose real risks to the United Kingdom’s security and prosperity.

    Russia has already poisoned people on British soil with chemical weapons.

    Caused energy bills to soar.

    Weaponised migration.

    And sent technology to Iran in exchange for weapons, like the Shaheed drones…

    …that I saw myself are wreaking such devastation on Ukraine.

    Iran themselves have threatened to kill and kidnap people within our borders for exercising their right to free speech.

    And used proxies like the Houthis, to attack British ships in the Red Sea…

    …disrupting supplies of crucial goods to our high streets.

    North Korea, too, is supplying munitions and artillery to Russia…

    …and their hackers have targeted British businesses and the NHS.

    And Chinese state-affiliated actors have conducted malicious cyber campaigns…

    …against British MPs.

    China itself is engaged in a huge military modernisation programme.

    Potential flashpoints in the Indo-Pacific…

    …could have an impact on the global economy far larger even than Covid.

    And China is increasingly working with others to try and reshape the world…

    …including their so-called ‘unlimited partnership’ with Russia.

    So the new assertiveness of these authoritarian states far from our shores must concern us.

    Because they are increasingly acting together…

    …against the fundamental values that we all hold dear…

    …of democracy, freedom, and the rule of law.

    Now, we must not overstate the danger.

    We’re not on the brink of war.

    And nor do we seek it.

    And people should feel reassured…

    …that the UK’s armed forces are some of the most professional…

    …well-trained, well-equipped, and battle-ready in the world.

    And I’m incredibly proud of all they’ve achieved.

    From patrolling the Arctic Circle as part of the Joint Expeditionary Force…

    …to the campaign against Daesh in the deserts of Iraq and Syria.

    From protecting the freedom of navigation in the Red Sea…

    …to policing the skies above Eastern Europe.

    And just look at the investments we’ve made in the last decade.

    £40 billion in the British Army…

    …who proudly provide one of NATO’s strategic reserves…

    …with 16,000 troops deployed to Europe this year.

    The Royal Air Force, equipped with new Typhoons, Chinooks, F35s…

    …with the GCAP programme delivering new fighter jets with Japan and Italy.

    The Royal Navy is a carrier navy once again…

    …with 22 new ships and submarines on the way…

    …and the historic AUKUS partnership building the most advanced nuclear-powered subs the world has ever known.

    And we’ve launched a new national endeavour to invigorate and invest more in our nuclear deterrent.

    And all of this is combined with our outstanding diplomatic network…

    …development expertise, law enforcement and intelligence agencies…

    …and our support for allies – above all the £12bn we’ve provided to Ukraine.

    So I’m proud of our record on defence.

    And confident in our ability to deter our adversaries.

    …and ensure the security of the United Kingdom.

    But in a world that’s the most dangerous…

    …it’s been since the end of the Cold War…

    …we cannot – and must not – be complacent.

    As Churchill said, in 1934:

    “To urge the preparation of defence is not to assert the imminence of war.

    On the contrary, if war were imminent…

    …preparations for defence would be too late.”

    I believe we must do more…

    …to defend our country, our interests, and our values.

    So today, I’m announcing…

    …the biggest strengthening of our national defence for a generation.

    We will increase defence spending to a new baseline of 2.5% of GDP, by 2030.

    That starts today.

    And rises steadily in each and every year.

    Over the next six years, we’ll invest an additional £75bn in our defence.

    And it will be fully funded with no increase in borrowing or debt.

    So this is not some vague aspiration for the future.

    We have a clear plan for what we’ll spend, when we’ll spend it, and how we pay for it.

    A plan that makes the United Kingdom by far the largest defence power in Europe – and second largest in NATO.

    Today is a landmark moment in the defence of the United Kingdom.

    This is a generational investment in British security and British prosperity.

    It makes us safer at home and stronger abroad.

    Now we have three immediate priorities for this new investment.

    First, we will put the UK’s own defence industry on a war footing.

    One of the central lessons of the war in Ukraine…

    …is that we need deeper stockpiles of munitions…

    …and for industry to be able to replenish them more quickly.

    So today, we’re giving £10bn in munitions to give industry long-term funding certainty…

    …backed by long-term contracts…

    …so they can produce more, be readier to surge capacity…

    …and move to ‘always on’ production, when required.

    From surface-to-air-missiles made in Bolton…

    …to anti-tank weapons in Belfast…

    …we will replenish our stockpiles…

    …all while supporting British jobs right across the Union.

    But it’s not just about investing more – we must invest better.

    For too long, too much of our defence procurement…

    …has been over-complex, over-budget, and over-time.

    So we are making radical reforms to our procurement model…

    …to make sure this new investment delivers value for money.

    And to encourage private sector investment into defence production…

    …I can also announce today that we’re going to put beyond doubt that defence investment…

    …does count towards environmental, social and governance assessments.

    There is nothing more ethical than defending our way of life from those who threaten it.

    Now all of this will put us at the forefront of the global defence industry…

    …allow us to hugely ramp up defence production…

    …and give our armed forces the capability they need to keep us safe.

    But as in so many areas of our lives, technology is changing the face of war.

    So our second immediate priority is innovation and new technology.

    We need to innovate and adapt faster than our adversaries…

    …in space and cyberspace just as much as land, sea, and air.

    Look at Ukraine.

    Many aspects of the war would be familiar to a soldier from WWI or II

    Yet others would be unimaginably different.

    Like the fact that cheap, high-tech, autonomous drones could disable large parts of Russia’s Black Sea fleet.

    The good news is that innovation is already one of our greatest strengths.

    The UK’s own Dragonfire laser directed energy weapon…

    …costs only £10 a shot…

    …yet is accurate enough to hit a £1 coin from a kilometre away.

    And today we’re going further.

    We will increase defence R&D to at minimum to 5% of the defence budget.

    Invest far more in autonomous drones.

    And we will set up a new Defence Innovation Agency.

    So that for the first time, decisions about defence innovation…

    …will be brought together in a single, strategic agency…

    …that will be freed from red tape …

    …and work with the private sector on emerging new technologies.

    Now third, we must support Ukraine for the long term.

    Since the Cold War ended, the freedom of our continent has been based on a simple idea:

    That it is for people to decide the fate of their countries, not foreign armies.

    But allow Putin to win in Ukraine…

    …and that principle of sovereignty would be undermined.

    We would be dragged back to a world…

    …where brute force, rather than the democratic will of free peoples…

    …would shape borders and decide futures.

    And Putin will not stop in Ukraine.

    Win there, and he – and indeed others – will be emboldened.

    He has the desire, if not yet the capacity, to attack other countries in Europe…

    …potentially including NATO allies, who we would be bound to defend…

    …just as they are bound to defend us.

    The costs of failing to support Ukraine now will be far greater than the costs of repelling Putin.

    Because only if he fails will he and other adversaries be deterred.

    That is why the United Kingdom…

    …whose history of standing up to dictators is so much part of our national consciousness…

    …has come together with our allies to stand with Ukraine from the very start.

    Today we will go further.

    We will send Ukraine an additional half a billion pounds , hitting £3 billion of support this year.

    And we’ll provide them with largest-ever package of UK military equipment.

    This will include more than 400 vehicles…

    …4 million rounds of ammunition…

    …60 boats and offshore raiding craft…

    …vital air defences…

    …and long-range precision-guided Storm Shadow missiles.

    And as we make our historic commitment to increase defence spending to 2.5% of GDP…

    …we’ll move past this stop-start, piecemeal way of backing Ukraine…

    …so that alongside our long-term security guarantee…

    …we are today providing a long-term funding guarantee…

    …of at least the current level of military support to Ukraine, for every year it is needed.

    That is the longest commitment any nation has provided.

    And it shows that Ukraine is not alone, and Ukraine will never be alone.

    A decade ago, as Russian tanks rolled into Crimea…

    …and the fight against ISIL raged across the Middle East…

    …NATO allies came together in Wales, and reached an historic agreement…

    …to increase their defence budgets to 2% of GDP.

    Back then, the UK was one of only 4 countries who did so.

    Today, there are 11.

    And I believe we will look back on this moment…

    …as a similar turning point in European security.

    Because for all that we welcome the news over the weekend…

    …that the US Congress agreed a new package of aid for Ukraine…

    …support that will be indispensable on the frontline…

    …this is not the moment for complacency.

    We cannot keep expecting America to pay any price or bear any burden…

    …if we ourselves are unwilling to make greater sacrifices for our own security.

    So I’m proud that the United Kingdom is increasing our defence spending to £87bn a year…

    …the biggest strengthening of our national defence in a generation…

    …guaranteeing our position as the second largest defence power in NATO, after the US.

    All across Europe…

    …countries like Poland, Germany, Norway and the Baltic nations…

    …are stepping up to take greater responsibility for our own security.

    And I’m confident that whether in months or years…

    …others will follow, too.

    And at this turning point in European security, if 2.5% becomes a new benchmark for all NATO partners to reach…

    …allied defence spending would increase by over £140 billion.

    That would provide a level of safety and security for the British people…

    …and the peoples of all allied nations…

    …that far outstrips anything we could achieve alone.

    To conclude, we did not choose this moment. But it falls to us to meet it.

    In a world of increasing threats, we must show our enemies that we are resolute and determined.

    That their attempts to destabilise our world or redraw its borders by force will fail.

    That with our friends and allies, we will be at the forefront of the defence of the free, democratic world.

    And under my leadership, the United Kingdom will always stand up for our interests…

    …deter our enemies, and defend our values.

  • Rishi Sunak – 2024 Statement on Safety of Rwanda Bill

    Rishi Sunak – 2024 Statement on Safety of Rwanda Bill

    The statement made by Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister, on 23 April 2024.

    The passing of this landmark legislation is not just a step forward but a fundamental change in the global equation on migration.

    We introduced the Rwanda Bill to deter vulnerable migrants from making perilous crossings and break the business model of the criminal gangs who exploit them. The passing of this legislation will allow us to do that and make it very clear that if you come here illegally, you will not be able to stay.

    Our focus is to now get flights off the ground, and I am clear that nothing will stand in our way of doing that and saving lives.

  • Rishi Sunak – 2024 Statement on Stopping the Boats

    Rishi Sunak – 2024 Statement on Stopping the Boats

    The statement made by Rishi Sunak on 22 April 2024. Please note that this is the Downing Street press release, with redactions for political impartiality reasons. Rishi Sunak’s office were unable to supply a complete text.

    Last week – yet again – Peers in the House of Lords contrived to stop the Safety of Rwanda Bill.

    For almost two years our opponents have used every trick in the book to block flights and keep the boats coming.

    But enough is enough.

    No more prevarication. No more delay.

    Parliament will sit there tonight and vote no matter how late it goes.

    No ifs, no buts. These flights are going to Rwanda.

    We are going to deliver this indispensable deterrent…

    …so that we finally break the business model of the criminal gangs and save lives.

    Starting from the moment that the Bill passes…

    ..we will begin the process of removing those identified for the first flight.

    We have prepared for this moment.

    To detain people while we prepare to remove them, we’ve increased detention spaces to 2,200.

    To quickly process claims, we’ve got 200 trained dedicated caseworkers ready and waiting.

    To deal with any legal cases quickly and decisively, the judiciary have made available 25 courtrooms…

    …and identified 150 judges who could provide over 5,000 sitting days.

    The Strasbourg Court have amended their Rule 39 procedures in line with the tests set out in our Illegal Migration Act…

    …and we’ve put beyond all doubt that Ministers can disregard these injunctions…

    …with clear guidance that if they decide to do so, civil servants must deliver that instruction.

    And most importantly, once the processing is complete, we will physically remove people.

    To do that, I can confirm that we’ve put an airfield on standby…

    …booked commercial charter planes for specific slots…

    …and we have 500 highly trained individuals ready to escort illegal migrants all the way to Rwanda, with 300 more trained in the coming weeks.

    This is one of the most complex operational endeavours the Home Office has carried out.

    But we are ready. Plans are in place.

    And these flights will go come what may.

    No foreign court will stop us from getting flights off.

    Rwanda is ready too.

    And I would like to thank the government of Rwanda for their work…

    …in strengthening their asylum system, passing legislation, and setting up a new appeals tribunal.

    The next few weeks will be about action.

    But whilst I’m conscious people want deeds not words…

    …I’m not going to outline now exactly what will happen when.

    There are good operational reasons for this.

    There is a loud minority who will do anything to disrupt our plan…

    …so we will not be giving away sensitive operational detail…

    …which could hinder all the progress made to date.

    Teams across government need to be able to get on and deliver without interference.

    They are working flat out to deliver this genuine game changer.

    The first flight will leave in 10 to 12 weeks.

    Now of course, that is later than we wanted.

    But we have always been clear that processing will take time…

    [Please note political content redacted here.]

    …and if Peers had not spent weeks holding up the Bill in the House of Lords to try to block flights altogether, we would have begun this process weeks ago.

    And the success of this deterrent doesn’t rest on one flight alone.

    It rests on the relentless, continual process of successfully and permanently removing people to Rwanda…

    …with a regular rhythm of multiple flights every month over the summer and beyond until the boats are stopped.

    Now I know there are some who will hear all of this and accuse me of lacking compassion.

    But the truth is the opposite.

    We are in a battle with callous, sophisticated, and global criminal gangs…

    …who care nothing for the lives they risk in unseaworthy dinghies.

    Nine people have died already attempting to cross the Channel just this year – including a seven-year-old girl.

    That’s why we secured the largest ever deal with France to strengthen interceptions on the French coastline.

    And because a third of all arrivals were coming from Albania…

    …we struck a deal that reduced illegal Albanian migrants by 90 per cent.

    Taken together we’re doubling illegal working raids and returning 150 hotels backto our communities…

    …we got the number of small boat arrivals last year down by more than a third…

    …the first time they had fallen since this phenomenon began, and at a time when European countries were seeing numbers rise exponentially.

    But these sophisticated gangs are changing tactics once again.

    As well as piling twice as many people into small dinghies…

    ….and increasing violence against French police…

    …they have shifted their attentions towards vulnerable Vietnamese migrants.

    Vietnamese arrivals have increased ten-fold…

    …and account for almost all of the increase in small boat numbers we have seen this year.

    And just as we succeeded in reducing Albanian arrivals dramatically, so I’m confident we will do the same when it comes to the Vietnamese.

    President Macron and I have agreed to work with European partners on closing loopholes to enter Europe in the first place.

    The Home Office have signed a Joint Statement with the Vietnamese Government committing…

    …to deepen our already very strong migration relationship…

    And just last week officials from the Government of Vietnam were at Western Jetfoil and Manston…

    …to observe Border Force operations on the front line as they continue to manage small boat arrivals.

    But we can’t keep reacting to the changing tactics of these gangs.

    The truth is we need innovative solutions to address what is a global migration crisis…

    …to disrupt the business model of people smuggling gangs and save lives.

    And that means a systematic deterrent.

    The only way to stop the boats is to eliminate the incentive to come…

    …by making it clear that if you are here illegally, you will not be able to stay.

    This policy does exactly that.

    [Please note political content redacted here.]

    I believe it should be this country and your government who decides who comes here, not criminal gangs.

    And I have the plan to deliver it.

    So we will start the flights – and stop the boats.

    Thank you.

  • Rishi Sunak – 2024 Statement on Attack in Hainault

    Rishi Sunak – 2024 Statement on Attack in Hainault

    The statement made by Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister, on 30 April 2024.

    This is a shocking incident. My thoughts are with those affected and their families.

    I’d like to thank the emergency services for their ongoing response, and pay tribute to the extraordinary bravery shown by police on the scene. Such violence has no place on our streets.

  • Rishi Sunak – 2024 Speech on Welfare

    Rishi Sunak – 2024 Speech on Welfare

    The speech made by Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister, at the Centre of Social Justice on 19 April 2024.

    Today I’d like to talk about the growing number of people who have become economically inactive since the pandemic…

    …and the moral mission of reforming welfare to give everyone who can, the best possible chance of returning to work.

    The values of our welfare state are timeless.

    They’re part of our national character – of  who we are as a country.

    We’re proud to ensure a safety net that is generous for those who genuinely need it – and fair to the taxpayers who fund it.

    We know there are some with the most severe conditions who will never be able to work.

    And some who can no longer work because of injury or illness.

    And they and their loved ones must always have the peace of mind that comes from knowing they will always be supported.

    But we also have a long-standing and proudly British view that work is a source of dignity, purpose, of hope.

    The role of the welfare state should never be merely to provide financial support…

    …as important as that will always be…

    …but to help people overcome whatever barriers they might face to living an independent, fulfilling life.

    Everyone with the potential should be supported…

    And not just to earn, but to contribute and belong.

    And we must never tolerate barriers that hold people back from making their contribution…

    …and from sharing in that sense of self-worth that comes from feeling part of being something bigger than ourselves.

    That is why this is a moral mission.

    And why the value of work is so central to my vision for welfare reform.

    And it’s fitting to be setting out that vision here, at the Centre for Social Justice.

    Over your 20-year history, you’ve inspired far-reaching changes to welfare.

    I want pay tribute to you and of course your founder, Iain Duncan-Smith…

    …who began the journey of reform in 2010…

    …a journey carried through so ably today, by Mel Stride.

    Because when we arrived in office in 2010, people coming off benefits and into work could lose £9 for every £10 they earned…

    …by far the highest marginal tax rate.

    That was morally wrong.

    So we created Universal Credit to make sure that work always pays.

    We introduced the National Living Wage – and increased it every year, ending low pay in this country.

    We’re rolling out 30 hours of free childcare for every family over 9 months of age.

    We’ve halved inflation, to make the money you earn worth more.

    And we’ve cut workers’ National Insurance by a third.

    A tax cut worth £900 for someone earning the average wage…

    …because it is profoundly wrong that income from work is taxed twice…

    …when other forms of income are not.

    For me, it is a fundamental duty of government to make sure that hard work is always rewarded.

    I know – and you know – that you don’t get anything in life without hard work.

    It’s the only way to build a better life for ourselves and our family; and the only way to build a more prosperous country.

    But in the period since the pandemic something has gone wrong.

    The proportion of people who are economically inactive in Britain is still lower than our international peers.

    And lower today than in any year under the last Labour government.

    But since the pandemic, 850,000 more people have joined this group due to long-term sickness.

    This has wiped out a decade’s worth of progress in which the rate had fallen every single year.

    Of those who are economically inactive, fully half say they have depression or anxiety.

    And most worrying of all…

    …the biggest proportional increase in economic inactivity due to long-term sickness came …

    …from young people.

    Those in the prime of their life, just starting out on work and family – instead parked on welfare.

    Now, we should see it as a sign of progress that people can talk openly about mental health conditions…

    …in a way that only a few years ago would’ve been unthinkable.

    And I will never dismiss or downplay the illnesses people have.

    Anyone who has suffered mental ill health or had family or friends who have, knows that these conditions are real and they matter.

    But just as it would be wrong to dismiss this growing trend…

    …so it would be wrong merely to sit back and accept it…

    …because it’s too hard; or too controversial; or for fear of causing offence.

    Doing so, would let down many of the people our welfare system was designed to help.

    Because if you believe as I do, that work gives you the chance not just to earn…

    …but to contribute, to belong, to overcome feelings of loneliness and social isolation…

    …and if you believe, as I do, the growing body of evidence that good work can actually improve mental and physical health…

    …then it becomes clear: we need to be more ambitious about helping people back to work.

    And more honest about the risk of over-medicalising the everyday challenges and worries of life.

    Fail to address this, and we risk not only letting those people down.

    But creating a deep sense of unfairness amongst those whose taxes fund our social safety net…

    …in a way that risks undermining trust and consent in that very system.

    We can’t stand for that.

    And of course, the situation as it is, is economically unsustainable.

    We can’t lose so many people from our workforce whose contributions could help to drive growth.

    And there’s no sustainable way to achieve our goal of bringing down migration levels, which are just too high…

    …without giving more of our own people the skills, incentives, and support, to get off welfare and back into work.

    And we can’t afford such a spiralling increase in the welfare bill…

    …and the irresponsible burden that would place on this and future generations of taxpayers.

    We now spend £69bn on benefits for people of working age with a disability or health condition.

    That’s more than our entire schools budget; more than our transport budget; more than our policing.

    And spending on Personal Independence Payments alone is forecast to increase by more than 50 per cent over the next four years.

    Let me just repeat that: if we do not change, it will increase by more than 50% in just four years.

    That’s not right; it’s not sustainable and it’s not fair on the taxpayers who fund it.

    So in the next Parliament, a Conservative government will significantly reform and control welfare.

    This is not about making our safety net less generous.

    Or imposing a blanket freeze on all benefits, as some have suggested.

    I’m not prepared to balance the books on the backs of the most vulnerable.

    Instead, the critical questions are about eligibility…

    …about who should be entitled to support…

    …and what kind of support best matches their needs.

    And to answer these questions, I want to set out today five Conservative reforms for a new welfare settlement for Britain.

    First, we must be more ambitious in assessing people’s potential for work.

    Right now, the gateway to ill health benefits is writing too many off…

    …leaving them on the wrong type of support…

    …and with no expectation of trying to find a job, with all the advantages that brings.

    In 2011, twenty percent of those doing a Work Capability Assessment…

    …were deemed unfit to work.

    But the latest figure now stands at 65 per cent.

    That’s wrong.

    People are not three times sicker than they were a decade ago.

    And the world of work has changed dramatically.

    Of course, those with serious debilitating conditions should never be expected to work.

    But if you have a low-level mobility issue, your employer could make reasonable adjustments…

    …perhaps including adaptations to enable you to work from home.

    And if you are feeling anxious or depressed, then of course you should get the support and treatment you need to manage your condition.

    But that doesn’t mean we should assume you can’t engage in work.

    That’s not going to help you. And it’s not fair on everyone else either.

    So we are going to tighten up the Work Capability Assessment…

    …such that hundreds of thousands of benefit recipients with less severe conditions…

    …will now be expected to engage in the world of work – and be supported to do so.

    Second, just as we help people move from welfare into work…

    …we’ve got to do more to stop people going from work to welfare.

    The whole point of replacing the Sick Note with the Fit Note was to stop so many people just being signed off as sick.

    Instead of being told you’re not fit for work…

    …the Fit Note provided the option to say that you may be fit for work…

    …with advice about what you could do; and what adaptions or support would enable you to stay in, or return to work, quickly.

    11 million of these Fit Notes were issued last year alone.

    But what proportion were signed “maybe fit for work”?

    6 per cent.

    That’s right – a staggering 94 per cent of those signed off sick…

    …were simply written off as “not fit for work.”

    Well, this is not right. And it was never the intention.

    We don’t just need to change the sick note – we need to change the sick note culture…

    …so the default becomes what work you can do – not what you can’t.

    Building on the pilots we’ve already started..

    …we’re going to design a new system…

    …where people have easy and rapid access to specialised work and health support…

    …to help them back to work from the very first Fit Note conversation.

    And part of the problem is that it’s not reasonable to ask GPs to assess whether their own patients are fit for work.

    It too often puts them in an impossible situation where they know that refusal to sign someone off…

    …will harm their relationship with that patient.

    So we’re also going to test shifting the responsibility for assessment from GPs…

    …and giving it to specialist work and health professionals…

    …who have the dedicated time to provide an objective assessment of someone’s ability to work…

    …and the tailored support they need to do so.

    Third, for those who could work with the right support…

    …we should have higher expectations of them in return for receiving benefits.

    Because when the taxpayer is supporting you to get back on your feet…

    …you have an obligation to put in the hours.

    And if you do not make that effort, you cannot expect the same level of benefits.

    It used to be that if you worked just nine hours a week, you’d get full benefits without needing to look for additional work.

    That’s not right. Because if you can work more, you should.

    So we’re changing the rules.

    Anyone working less than half a full-time week will now have to try and find extra work in return for claiming benefits.

    And we’ll accelerate moving people from legacy benefits onto Universal Credit, to give them more access to the world of work.

    One of my other big concerns about the system…

    …is that the longer you stay on welfare, the harder it can be to go back to work.

    More than 500,000 people have been unemployed for 6 months…

    …and well over a quarter of a million have been unemployed for 12 months.

    These are people with no medical conditions that prevent them from working…

    …and who will have benefitted from intensive employment support and training programmes.

    There is no reason those people should not be in work, especially when we have almost 1 million job vacancies.

    So we will now look at options to strengthen our regime.

    Anyone who doesn’t comply with the conditions set by their Work Coach…

    …such as accepting an available job…

    …will, after 12 months, have their claim closed and their benefits removed entirely.

    Because unemployment support should be a safety net – never a lifestyle choice.

    Fourth, we need to match the support people need to the actual conditions they have.

    And help people live independently and remove the barriers they face.

    But we need to look again at how we do this through Personal Independence Payments. I worry about it being misused.

    Now its purpose is to contribute to the extra costs people face as they go about their daily lives.

    Take for example, those who need money for aids or assistance…

    …with things like handrails or stairlifts.

    Often they’re already available at low cost, or free from the NHS or Local Authorities.

    And they’re one-off costs…

    …so it probably isn’t right that we’re paying an ongoing amount every year.

    We also need to look specifically at the way Personal Independence Payments support those with mental health conditions.

    Since 2019, the number of people claiming PIP citing anxiety or depression as their main condition, has doubled…

    …with over 5,000 new awards on average every single month.

    But for all the challenges they face…

    …it is not clear they have the same degree of increased living costs as those with physical conditions.

    And the whole system is undermined by the way people are asked to make subjective and unverifiable claims about their capability.

    So in the coming days we will publish a consultation on how we move away from that…

    …to a more objective and rigorous approach that focuses support on those with the greatest needs and extra costs.

    We will do that by being more precise about the type and severity of mental health conditions that should be eligible for PIP.

    We’ll consider linking that assessment more closely to a person’s actual condition…

    …and requiring greater medical evidence to substantiate a claim.

    All of which will make the system fairer and harder to exploit.

    And we’ll also consider whether some people with mental health conditions should get PIP in the same way through cash transfers…

    …or whether they’d be better supported to lead happier, healthier and more independent lives…

    …through access to treatment like talking therapies or respite care.

    I want to be completely clear about what I’m saying here.

    This is not about making the welfare system less generous to people who face very real extra costs from mental health conditions.

    For those with the greatest needs, we want to make it easier to access with fewer requirements.

    And beyond the welfare system, we’re delivering the largest expansion in mental health services in a generation…

    …with almost £5 billion of extra funding over the past 5 years, and a near doubling of mental health training places.

    But our overall approach is about saying that people with less severe mental health conditions…

    …should be expected to engage with the world of work.

    Fifth, we cannot allow fraudsters to exploit the natural compassion and generosity of the British people.

    We’ve already cracked down on thousands of people wrongly claiming Universal Credit…

    …including those not reporting self-employed earnings or hiding capital

    And we’ll save the taxpayer £600 million by legislating to access vital data from third parties like banks.

    Just this month, DWP secured guilty verdicts against a Bulgarian gang caught making around 6,000 fraudulent claims…

    …including by hiding behind a corner shop in North London.

    And we’re going further.

    We’re using all the developments in modern technology, including Artificial Intelligence…

    …to crack down on exploitation in the welfare system that’s taking advantage of the hardworking taxpayers who fund it.

    We’re preparing a new Fraud Bill for the next Parliament which will align DWP with HMRC…

    …so we treat benefit fraud like tax fraud…

    …with new powers to make seizures and arrests.

    And we’ll also enable penalties to be applied to a wider set of fraudsters through a new civil penalty.

    Because when people see others in their community gaming the system that their taxes pay …

    …it erodes support for the very principle of the welfare state.

    Now, in conclusion some people will hear this speech and accuse me of lacking compassion.

    Of not understanding the barriers people face in their everyday lives.

    But the exact opposite is true.

    There is nothing compassionate about leaving a generation of young people to sit alone in the dark before a flickering screen…

    …watching as their dreams slip further from reach every passing day.

    And there is nothing fair about expecting taxpayers to support those who could work but choose not to.

    It doesn’t have to be like this.

    We can change. We must change.

    The opportunities to work are there…

    …thanks to an economic plan that has created almost a million job vacancies.

    The rewards for working are there…

    …thanks to our tax cuts and increases to the National Living Wage.

    And now, if we can deliver the vision for welfare I’ve set out today…

    …then we can finally fulfil our moral mission, to restore hope…

    …and give back to everyone who can, the dignity, purpose and meaning that comes from work.

    Thank you.

  • Rishi Sunak – 2024 Statement on the Iranian Attack on Israel

    Rishi Sunak – 2024 Statement on the Iranian Attack on Israel

    The statement made by Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister, on 13 April 2024.

    I condemn in the strongest terms the Iranian regime’s reckless attack against Israel. These strikes risk inflaming tensions and destabilising the region. Iran has once again demonstrated that it is intent on sowing chaos in its own backyard.

    The UK will continue to stand up for Israel’s security and that of all our regional partners, including Jordan and Iraq.  Alongside our allies, we are urgently working to stabilise the situation and prevent further escalation. No one wants to see more bloodshed.