The letter sent by Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister, on 6 December 2023.
Text of Letter (in .pdf format)

The letter sent by Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister, on 6 December 2023.
Text of Letter (in .pdf format)

The speech made by Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister, in Enfield on 20 November 2023.
I’m here today to talk about the central purpose of our economic policy:
To give you the opportunity to build a wealthier, more secure life for you and your family.
We should not be apologetic about that.
About the nobility of aspiration, the rewards of hard work, the dreams we have for ourselves and our children:
Owning our own home.
Starting a business.
A healthy, happy retirement.
And leaving our children a more comfortable life.
But I know that right now, that dream feels out of reach for too many.
So the most urgent choice our country faces, is how we change that.
[Please note: Political content redacted here]
Our approach is different.
One that gets inflation down and keeps it down.
One that believes the private sector grows the economy…
…and where government has a role, it must be limited.
One that believes in cutting taxes – but doing so carefully and sustainably.
And one that is ambitious about the unprecedented opportunities for this country…
…from the new wave of technology. Our approach starts with controlling inflation.
High inflation eats away at your pay packet.
It makes mortgages more expensive and stops you getting on the housing ladder.
It makes pensions and savings worth less.
In other words, inflation is a tax.
And it erodes that dream of a wealthier, more secure life that we want for everyone.
And that’s why we’ve provided unprecedented support for people’s energy bills and the cost of living.
And it’s why at the start of this year, I committed to halve inflation.
Back then, inflation was around 11%.
And now, in October, the Office for National Statistics confirmed it fell to 4.6%.
Now I’m not saying the job is done.
But it does mean we have met our commitment to halve inflation.
Prices are no longer rising as quickly.
Energy bills have fallen significantly.
And for many, wages are now rising faster than prices.
And it shows something else:
That when we make a major economic commitment, we will deliver it.
It would’ve been far easier to give into the strikes with inflationary pay rises…
…or any number of calls for higher spending and borrowing.
But we held firm.
And with inflation halved, we can now look forward…
…towards the future economy that we want to build.
As we do so, the country faces a critical choice about how we grow the economy.
Do we continue with the big government, high spending, high borrowing, and high taxes, that were necessary through the pandemic?
Or, as we believe, should we change our approach, and grow the economy through the dynamism of the private sector?
Nothing shows the difference between those two visions more than the people asking you to believe in them.
I’ve spent most of my career working and investing in businesses, large and small.
The Chancellor spent his life before politics starting and running businesses.
That’s where we learnt about the economy.
My approach is rooted in what I learned growing up, working in Mum’s pharmacy.
She worked so hard – we all worked so hard – not just because that was where our living came from.
But because it was ours; we owned it; we all had a stake in its success.
If we worked hard and took pride in our work and provided a good service, then business would improve.
If we didn’t, it wouldn’t.
The economy is about people, free to pursue their own ideas, in their own interests, in their own way.
To support themselves and their families through the dignity of their own work.
I’m not saying government has no role.
My record is not that of a market fundamentalist.
When a crisis hits, governments must intervene – just as we I did with furlough.
The state must step in where the private sector won’t.
Not least to provide high quality public services like the NHS…
Or to improve public health with our plan to create a smoke-free generation…
Or to invest in our future growth, with infrastructure, skills, and the incredible opportunities of science and technology.
And in a world where Putin is willing to weaponise energy…
…and we face the strategic challenge of a more assertive China…
…we must be smarter about protecting our economic security.
But our opponents are profoundly wrong to argue…
…that the shocks we’ve seen in the last few years, or the need to transition to Net Zero…
…mean we should borrow £28 billion a year, and permanently have bigger government.
We should be as clear-eyed about government failure as we are about market failure.
So the bar to intervene in people’s lives should be high.
Because history tells us that if it’s not, the inevitable conclusion is…
…higher spending, higher borrowing, higher mortgage rates, and higher taxes.
Greater regulation and intervention, stifling people’s energy and initiative.
Less trade, meaning less choice and higher prices.
And economic power concentrated in the hands of a small government elite…
…allowing more influence for vested interests and the trade unions.
This is a recipe for stagnation, not growth.
And it would take our country backwards, not forwards.
So we choose a different path to deliver growth.
Where we back people and businesses.
Where the state is there for you during the bad times but gets out of the way during the good.
And where the path to prosperity lies not in ever more government intervention…
…but in creating the conditions for businesses to thrive.
And so to grow the economy, we will take five long-term decisions.
Reducing debt.
Cutting tax and rewarding hard work.
Building domestic, sustainable energy.
Backing British business.
And delivering world-class education.
The first long-term decision is to reduce our debt…
…to keep inflation falling and get mortgage rates down to affordable levels.
Without financial security, we can’t do anything to support families and workers when they need it most.
When Covid struck, we could only act because our public finances were in good shape…
…thanks to the difficult but responsible decisions we’ve taken over the last decade.
I’ll always be proud of being the Chancellor who protected nine million jobs…
…in a moment of danger, fear, and uncertainty, people turned to this government…
…and did not find us wanting.
I’m proud of the support we provided to the NHS, with record levels of funding.
I’m proud too, of helping households pay their energy bills when Putin cut off the gas.
But the only way to give people the peace of mind that government will be there in future crises…
…is to pay down our debts now.
And if we don’t, we’re just leaving our children to pay the bill.
Last September was a stark reminder why this matters so much.
The country was rocked by a financial crisis caused, in part, because investors didn’t believe the UK had a plan to control our debt.
That’s why the Chancellor and I have taken difficult decisions to control our debt.
That wasn’t the easy thing to do – but it was the right thing to do for our country.
And that’s what leadership means.
It takes political courage to take the difficult but right decisions for the long-term.
I will do what is necessary to get our debt down and provide financial security. The second decision we’re taking is to cut tax and reward hard work.
Now I want to cut taxes.
I believe in cutting taxes.
What clearer expression could there be of my governing philosophy than the belief…
…that people, and not governments, make the best decisions about their own money?
But doing that responsibly is hard.
We must avoid doing anything that puts at risk our progress in controlling inflation.
And no matter how much we might want them to, history shows that tax cuts don’t automatically pay for themselves.
And I can’t click my fingers and suddenly wish away all the reasons that taxes had to increase in the first place.
Partly, because of Covid and Putin’s war in Ukraine.
And partly because we want to support people to live in dignity in retirement…
…with a decent pension and good healthcare – which will cost more as the population ages.
But my argument has never been that we shouldn’t cut taxes.
It’s been that we could only cut taxes once we’ve controlled inflation and debt.
First cut inflation, then cut taxes.
And that’s why I made the promise to halve inflation.
And the official statistics show, that promise has now been met.
So, now that inflation is halved…
And our growth is stronger, meaning revenues are higher…
…we can begin the next phase, and turn our attention to cutting tax.
We will do this in a serious, responsible way…
…based on fiscal rules to deliver sound money…
…and alongside the independent forecasts of the Office for Budget Responsibility.
And we can’t do everything all at once.
It will take discipline and we need to prioritise.
But over time, we can and we will cut taxes.
Rewarding hard work also means reforming our welfare system.
We believe in the inherent dignity of a good job.
And we believe that work – not welfare – is the best route out of poverty.
Yet right now, around two million people of working age are not working at all.
That is a national scandal and an enormous waste of human potential.
So, we must do more to support those who can work, to do so.
And we will clamp down on welfare fraudsters.
Because the system must be fair for the taxpayers who fund it.
And by doing all of this…
By getting people off welfare and into work…
…we can better support those genuinely in need of a safety net.
That is what a compassionate, welfare system looks like.
Our third long-term decision is to build domestic, sustainable energy.
Energy security is national security.
It underpins everything in our economy so there can be no plan for growth without it.
And the transition to net zero will create whole new sectors…
…and hundreds of thousands of good, well-paid jobs right across the country.
Yet there is almost no better example of how British politics has failed in recent decades…
…than our inability to develop a serious strategy for energy.
We’re now correcting those mistakes, with new nuclear power plants.
Record investment in renewables.
And upgrades to our electricity grid infrastructure.
But there is no path to energy security…
…and indeed no credible path to net zero…
…without secure supplies of oil and gas.
Never again can we allow our energy security to be compromised.
I believe British energy will deliver British energy security.
Now I deeply believe that when you ask most people about climate change, they want to do the right thing.
And I’m proud that since 1990, Britain has reduced our emissions faster than any other major economy.
But it can’t be right to impose such significant costs on working people…
…especially those already struggling to make ends meet.
And to interfere so much in people’s lives without a properly informed national debate.
Instead of following the path of ideological zeal, reaching Net Zero no matter what the cost.
Or to build new supplies of domestic, sustainable energy…
…to grow the economy and cut the cost of Net Zero for working people.
The fourth decision we’re taking is to back British businesses to invest, innovate, and trade.
Now that might sound obvious or uncontroversial.
We want to support businesses to invest, innovate and grow through lower taxes and simpler regulation…
…and where we provide support, it should be targeted and strategic.
So yes, we’re investing in roads, railways, broadband and mobile networks, right across the country.
Yes, we’re delivering one of the biggest ever transport upgrades for the north and midlands, in Network North.
And yes, we’re delivering the right homes in the right places to support the labour market.
But growth is all about getting the private sector to invest, too.
That’s why the Chancellor is cutting taxes directly on investment.
It’s why we’re cutting taxes to encourage innovation…
…because new ideas and ways of doing things are the most important ways to raise our productivity.
And it’s why we’re seizing the freedom and flexibility of Brexit.
We’ve already cut Brussels red tape to save small businesses a billion pounds a year.
We’re creating more agile regulation to support innovation and competition…
…particularly in growth sectors like financial services, life sciences, and agri-tech.
And we’re building new trade deals with the fastest growing regions in the world, like CPTPP.
So this is our message to business:
The Chancellor and I spent most of our careers in business.
We understand, we care, we get it, and we’re acting to make this the best country in the world to do business.
Now, our final long-term decision is about delivering world-class education…
…so young people have the skills they need to get good jobs.
Education is about opportunity.
About giving people the knowledge and skills to get on in life and fulfil their aspirations.
And about preparing the country for the profound transformation technologies like AI will bring.
I’m incredibly proud of our record since 2010.
Higher standards; more choice for parents; more powers for teachers.
And the result?
State schools in some of the most deprived parts of our country are now producing some of the best results.
And we are doing more.
Our new qualification, the Advanced British Standard will:
For the first time, put technical education on an equal footing with academic courses.
Dramatically increase time spent in the classroom.
Teach Maths and English to every child through to 18, with extra help for those struggling most.
And give students the chance to study a much broader range of subjects.
We know that brilliant teachers make for a brilliant education, so we’re going to back them.
We’ve doubled the grants for new teachers in key subjects to £30,000 over five years…
…and for the first time extended those grants to colleges as well as schools.
To conclude, the first time many of you saw me was during Covid, when I stood up at a Press Conference to announce the furlough scheme.
From that moment until today, whether you like me or not…
…I hope you know that when it comes to the economy…
…when it comes to your job, your family, your incomes…
…I’ll always take the right decisions for our country.
I promised you we would halve inflation.
We took the difficult decisions and have delivered on that promise.
Now you can trust me when I say we can start to responsibly cut taxes.
And we will now move to the next phase of our plan, to grow our economy by…
Reducing debt;
Cutting tax and rewarding hard work;
Building domestic, sustainable energy;
Backing British business;
And delivering world-class education.
You can trust me to take the right long-term decisions and that’s how we’ll build a brighter future for our children.
Thank you.

The speech made by Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister, in Dubai on 1 December 2023.
I’m here at COP28 with two clear messages…
First, the world needs to do more to tackle climate change.
We’ve made real progress – including at the Glasgow summit…
…but the climate science and mounting evidence of climate-related disasters…
…show we’re not moving quickly or effectively enough.
So I’m calling on major emitters to dramatically accelerate delivery on what they’ve already promised.
Everyone can do more.
And let’s be very clear – the UK is leading the charge.
We’re absolutely committed to our Net Zero targets.
We’ve already decarbonised faster than any other major economy.
Our emissions are down 48 percent since 1990.
Compared to limited cuts from others.
And a 300 percent increase from China.
We’re also one of the largest climate donors, because we want to help those suffering the impacts of climate change.
My pledge from September of £1.6 billion for the Green Climate Fund was the UK’s biggest single climate change commitment.
And we’re going further… announcing £1.6 billion today for renewable energy, green innovation and forests…
…delivering on the historic Glasgow deal to end deforestation – because we can’t tackle climate change without nature.
We’re also leveraging the genius of the City of London to deliver billions more in private finance.
Again the UK is leading by example… and we need others to step up.
Because my second message is this…
As I said in September, we won’t tackle climate change unless we take people with us.
Climate politics is close to breaking point.
The British people care about the environment.
They know that the costs of inaction are intolerable.
But they also know that we have choices about how we act.
So yes we’ll meet our targets…
…but we’ll do it in a more pragmatic way, which doesn’t burden working people.
We’ve scrapped plans on heat pumps and energy efficiency, which would have cost families thousands of pounds.
We’ll help people to improve energy efficiency and cut bills – but we won’t force them too.
We’ll support nature across the UK.
Just this week I announced a huge new effort with 34 landscape recovery projects, a new national park – and more.
And we’ll harness the opportunities of technology and green industry to deliver net zero in a way that benefits the British people.
And today I can share more proof on the progress we’re making.
I’m pleased to announce a new deal between Masdar and RWE…
…which includes a commitment to jointly invest up to £11 billion into the UK’s new windfarm at Dogger Bank – which will be the biggest in the world.
This is a huge boost for UK renewables…
…creating more jobs…
…helping to power 3 million homes…
…and increasing our energy security.
And, by the way, this comes just days after we announced £30 billion of investment at our Global Investment Summit… and £21 billion of investment from South Korea.
We’ve quite frankly never seen a week like it.
In Dubai today, I’ve also had conversations with a range of leaders – including Israel, Qatar, Egypt and Jordan – about the situation in Israel and Gaza.
Our position is clear and consistent.
We’ve been categorical in our support for Israel’s right to self-defence and to go after the architects of the atrocities of 7th October…
…while stressing Israel’s obligation to act in line with international humanitarian law.
I strongly welcomed the pause in fighting to get hostages out…
…and we’ve been using the opportunity to get more aid into Gaza.
The UK has trebled its aid, but still not enough is getting in via Rafah and other crossings.
So we are actively exploring other routes, including by sea.
The breakdown of the truce today is deeply disappointing, not least because a growing number of hostages were coming home.
I pay tribute to the role of Qatar in helping facilitate these efforts – and I hope the process can be resumed.
We want all the hostages released – and in this initial phase all women and children should be freed.
I’ve said before that the number of civilian casualties and the scale of the suffering has been far too high.
So the return of hostilities is concerning to us all.
We’re making it clear that Israel must take maximum care to protect civilian life.
We’re opposed to anything that would involve the mass displacement of people.
We need to ensure that there are viable designated areas where safety can be guaranteed.
And we need to ensure that critical infrastructure like water supplies and hospitals are protected.
Again, we’ve been consistent on all of this.
So I support the civilian protection plans outlined yesterday by the US Secretary of State.
Indeed this has been a central theme in our discussions with regional leaders here, including Israeli President Herzog.
Ultimately we will redouble our efforts create a political horizon in which hostages are freed and security, safety and dignity is assured.
We will continue to work with our partners to create a lasting peace…
…beginning with practical steps that address the crisis now.
Thank you.

The comments made by Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister, on 30 November 2023.
I had the great pleasure of spending time with Dr Kissinger at No10 earlier this year. I learned so much from him, from studying his work as a student to reading his most recent books as Prime Minister.
Henry had a great affinity for and understanding of the UK, with many friends and admirers here. He was a titan of international diplomacy who led a remarkable life.
Right until his 100th year, he was a source of great wisdom on subjects from geopolitics to AI. Our thoughts are with his family.

The speech made by Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister, at 10 Downing Street on 27 November 2023.
“Good morning.
Welcome to Hampton Court Palace and the UK’s second Global Investment Summit.
Now, my argument today is that the UK is a modern, dynamic, thriving economy.
And where better to prove those futuristic credentials, than a 500-year-old Palace.
But this Summit is not just a sales pitch for Britain…
…although you’d better believe I’m going to give you that.
It’s also a chance for us to say: thank you.
I’ve spent my career before politics in business and finance.
And so have many of my top team, including the Chancellor.
And we know that it’s not governments that grow the economy.
It’s businesses and investors like all of you.
You create jobs; drive growth; generate wealth…
… and you even take on some of the biggest social challenges we face.
And it may be unfashionable to say…
…but I believe that your success is our country’s success.
So I really am grateful to all of you for making time to be here today.
And your presence…
…your decision to choose to invest in Britain…
…is a huge vote of confidence in this country’s future.
And I think you’re absolutely right to feel that confidence.
Because we’re setting about to make this best place in the world to invest and do business.
Now I am unashamedly proud of Britain.
Ands there’s a growing momentum in the UK right now.
Don’t just take my word for it.
PWC’s survey of thousands of global CEOs rated the UK the most attractive investment destination in Europe.
And you can see that confidence in the decisions people are making.
Like Tata, BMW, and just last week, Nissan – investing billions into automotive and electric vehicles manufacturing.
Or Microsoft, announcing today £2.5bn for critical AI infrastructure…
…in addition to all the leading AI labs who already have their European offices here.
Or the Ellison Institute of Technology, confirming today a £1bn investment into their new Oxford site..
…researching and developing new technologies, including life sciences.
And you can see that momentum too in our commitment to free trade.
In the past year alone, we’ve secured new investment partnerships with the US, Japan, and South Korea…
…worth more than £50bn.
We’ve become the first European country to join the fast-growing Trans-Pacific partnership…
And hugely benefited from the sovereign investment partnership with the United Arab Emirates…
…deploying over £14bn into the UK in a little over two years.
And all of that is why this country is one of the fastest [for] investment growth… anywhere in the G7
Now when I say this country can be the best place in the world to invest and do business…
…you should believe me and believe me because of three big competitive advantages.
Our low tax approach; our culture of innovation; and our people.
Firstly, tax.
The purest expression of this government’s economic philosophy…
…is that people and businesses make far better decisions about their own money…
…than any government could.
And I believe that by allowing you to keep more of the return on your capital…
…our country becomes more competitive as a place to invest, grow, and create jobs.
And make no mistake, we are cutting taxes.
Not only do we have the lowest rate of Corporation Tax rate in the G7.
Last week, we announced that we would make full expensing, permanent.
This means you can write off the cost of many capital investments – in full.
It makes our capital allowances regime one of the most generous in the world.
And it was the biggest business tax cut in modern British history.
And that’s not all.
We’ve got lower capital gains tax rates than France, Germany, Italy, and Japan.
Some of the most generous tax reliefs on stock options anywhere in the world.
And we’re cutting personal taxes for 27 million working people, too.
But while low taxes are crucial, they’re not enough on their own…
…to make this country the best investment destination in the world.
We’re also creating new ideas…
…and turning those ideas into the most exciting companies of the future.
And that’s the UK’s second competitive advantage: our incredible culture of innovation.
Now the story of the United Kingdom has always been about discovery and invention.
Ours is the country of Newton, Faraday, Hodgkin, and Lovelace…
…of Stephenson’s steam engine, Darwin’s theory of evolution…
…and the world wide web, invented by Tim Berners-Lee…
…who I’m delighted is attending here today.
And that tradition is still very much alive.
With less than 1% of the world’s population, we have three of the world’s top 10 universities.
The third highest number of research publications.
And the second most Nobel laureates of any nation.
And we’re turning those ideas into incredible businesses, up and down the country.
With more tech Unicorns than any country, bar the US and China.
And more venture capital than France and Germany combined.
Not that I’m in any way competitive.
But at a moment like this, when the tectonic plates of technology are shifting…
…not just in AI, but in quantum, synthetic biology, semiconductors, and much more…
…we cannot be complacent.
And that’s why we’re investing record amounts of public capital into R&D.
Also Cutting taxes for all of you that are investing in R&D.
And overhauling our listing rules to make it easier for those innovative growing companies to raise capital.
And outside the EU, we’re delivering agile regulation that is pro-innovation and pro-growth.
So, whether it’s financial services or life sciences…
…AgriTech or our creative industries…
…innovation is the golden thread running through the British economy.
But in the end, the greatest asset to any economy is its people.
And that’s the UK’s third competitive advantage.
Here at home, we’re delivering a world-class education system.
We’ve already got one of the most highly qualified workforces in Europe.
And just as your businesses are having to adapt to the economy of the future, so our skills policies are evolving too…
…with our new Lifetime Skills Guarantee, …which supports adults to retrain at any stage in their careers…
…with record funding in vocational training like apprenticeships.
But we don’t have a monopoly on talent in this country.
And we recognise that nearly half of our most innovative companies have an immigrant founder.
So if you’re an innovator, an entrepreneur, a researcher,
…you should know that the most competitive visa regime for highly skilled international talent…
…is right here in the United Kingdom.
And let me give you just one example:
Our High Potential Individual visa means…
That if you’re a young person…
Who’s graduated from a global top 50 university…
You can just come to the UK…
And stay here, with your family, for two years…
To just explore. Work. Study. Invent.
Nothing like that exists anywhere else in the world.
And that tells you everything about our pro-innovation, pro-growth, pro-business philosophy:
So that’s the opportunity here in the UK.
That’s why you should believe me when I say…
…this is the best country in the world to invest and do business.
Because of that unique combination of a competitive tax system…
Our culture of innovation…
And our people.
Now I know some people look at Summits like this and often they’re all talking shops.
But let me tell you what we’ve achieved.
This Summit has galvanised new investments in the UK economy…
…worth a total of [almost] £30bn, over three times as much as the first Summit that was held a couple of years ago.
That will support tens of thousands of new jobs right across the UK.
It will create new growth and new opportunities.
And it’s a huge vote of confidence in this country’s future.
So, thank you for choosing to be part of that future.
Thank you for everything you’re doing for this country.
with your support…
…we can and we will build an even brighter future…
…for our children and grandchildren.
Thank you.

The statement made by Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister, on 27 November 2023.
It gives me great pleasure to wish Sikhs across the UK, in India and across the world, a Happy Gurpurab!
Today we celebrate the 554th anniversary of the birth of Guru Nanak Dev Ji, the founder of the Sikh religion. As a somebody of Punjabi Indian heritage, this day is especially dear to me.
This joyous occasion is an opportunity to once again recognise the immense contribution of the Sikh community to our country.
You are a source of pride and inspiration to us all. Waheguru Ji Ka Khalsa, Waheguru Ji Ki Fateh.

The remarks made by Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister, at Lancaster House in London on 20 November 2023.
Welcome to the Global Food Security Summit.
I’d like to start by thanking our summit partners – Somalia, the UAE, the Children’s Investment Fund Foundation and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation…
And I also want to thank my friend Andrew Mitchell for his incredible work on the International Development White Paper – which we’re proud to be launching today.
hank you all for your participation and support today.
We live in a dangerous world – a time of growing threats, strategic competition and conflict.
Many of these challenges, like the war in Ukraine, have a direct impact on the poorest around in world.
Others threaten to draw attention away from their plight, putting at risk the vital progress made over recent years.
With this White Paper, we’re answering those challenges…
…changing our approach to deliver in a changing world.
Because we know that you don’t lead merely with strength – but with compassion.
So we’re going further to help the poorest and support those suffering in humanitarian crises.
We’re not just applying our aid budget to deliver results on the ground, but also Britain’s expertise in development and our leadership in science, technology and innovation.
And we’ll do all of this not by acting alone or seeking to dictate the way forward…
…but through building even deeper partnerships around the world, based on mutual respect.
It’s only by working together that we will get the Sustainable Development Goals back on track.
And that starts with redoubling our efforts to deliver the goal on “zero hunger”.
It can’t be right that today in 2023, almost one billion people across the world regularly do not have enough to eat…
…that millions face hunger and starvation…
…and over 45 million children under five are suffering acute malnutrition.
In a world of abundance, no one should die from lack of food.
And no parent should ever have to watch their child starve.
I’m proud of everything the UK is doing to provide immediate relief.
We’re one of the top 4 donors to UN crisis response.
We’ve doubled our aid for Palestinian civilians – with an additional £30 million.
We’re clear that Israel has the right to defend itself…
…it has been attacked in the most brutal manner possible by an enemy that hides itself in hospitals.
It must act within international humanitarian law. The situation on the ground is truly tragic and getting worse.
We’re pressing hard for unhindered humanitarian access in Gaza… and for urgent and substantive humanitarian pauses to get in food, fuel and medicine…
…because the suffering of innocent civilians must end.
We’re also leading the way in helping Ukraine get its grain out through the Black Sea and into the hands of those in need.
But because the scale of the global hunger crisis is so staggering, today we’re going further…
…providing up to £100 million now for those worst hit, particularly across East Africa, the Sahel, and Afghanistan…
…and in countries like Malawi which are reeling from climate-related cyclones and drought.
Yet, as everyone here knows, simply responding in the wake of crisis is not enough.
Climate change, conflict and population rise mean ever greater challenges to food supplies.
So we need a fundamental shift in the way we approach food security…
…with a focus on long-term solutions to stop food crises before they start.
And we need to harness the full power of science and technology to ensure supplies are resilient to threats like conflict, drought and floods.
That’s why the UK is working to deliver lasting solutions.
And we’re doing so in four important ways.
First, by preventing the worst forms of child malnutrition.
We played a leading role in the design of the Child Nutrition Fund, which supports vital supplies of life-saving food.
And today I’m pleased to announce we’re building on that with a further £16 million…
… and helping to bring in more funding, including from our fantastic philanthropic partners.
Second, we’re using technology to anticipate and prevent food security crises.
Together with our partners, we’re applying AI to model the impact of climate change on agriculture, so that we can find ways to avoid future crises.
And we know just how effective this can be.
Our work with the Government of Somalia helped them avert famine last year.
And today, I’m pleased to announce that will we help Somalia avoid future crises with up to £100 million of future support…
…enabling thousands of communities manage water supplies, adapt their farming, and increase their resilience to droughts, floods and other climate shocks.
Third, we’re supporting developing countries to build more sustainable and resilient food systems.
We helped set up the Global Agriculture and Food Security Program to crowd-in public and private sector finance.
And now we’re driving reform of development banks, stretching their balance sheets even further to unlock more resources for food security…
… and that includes UK guarantees which are releasing $6 billion of the Banks’ resources for development in countries in Africa, Asia and the Pacific.
Finally, we’re applying our leadership in science to this crisis.
As the country that over the last few years has led the development of the world’s first and second malaria vaccines…
…we’re also driving scientific advances in food security which benefit millions globally…
…as well as supporting our brilliant farmers here at home.
We’ve already helped develop crops that are drought-resistant and even richer in vitamins…
…now feeding 100 million people across Africa.
And we’re going further… launching a new UK CGIAR Science Centre to drive cutting-edge research on flood tolerant rice, disease resistant wheat and much more.
These innovations will reach millions across the poorest countries…
… as well as improving UK crop yields and driving down food prices.
In conclusion, this is the difference that Britain makes – using all our expertise and tools at our disposal – helping people now and for the long term.
But we cannot do this alone.
That’s what this summit is all about. And it’s why our approach is all about partnership.
With your help, we can get the Sustainable Development Goals back on track…
…deliver a world of zero hunger…
…and transform millions of lives for years to come.
Thank you – have a great summit.

The speech made by Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister, at the Guildhall in London on 13 November 2023.
My Lord Mayor, Ladies and Gentlemen,
These are deeply challenging times for our world.
Events far beyond our shores echo here at home with implications for our security, our economy, and our very social fabric.
It falls to us to do everything we can to shape these events.
And so, we’ve delivered one of the most significant years for British foreign policy in recent times.
That’s due in no small part to James Cleverly.
I know he’ll bring the same vigour to the equally vital job of Home Secretary.
And I’m pleased to have appointed a new Foreign Secretary who will build on everything we’ve achieved in the last year…
A year in which we’ve gone further than ever to support Ukraine as the first G7 nation to move on sending tanks first to send long-range weapons and first to step up on training pilots.
In the last few weeks, I’ve travelled to Cyprus, Jerusalem, Riyadh and Cairo, to respond to the crisis in the Middle East and I’m in constant contact with leaders across the region.
Since we last gathered here a year ago, we’ve secured the Windsor Framework with the EU launched AUKUS with the US and Australia, building one of the most advanced submarines the world has ever known…
…signed the Hiroshima Accord with Japan, and the Atlantic Declaration with the US…
…secured membership of the CPTPP, which will drive global growth…
…delivered returns agreements to tackle illegal migration – an approach now being followed by many others…
…and brokered the first international statement on the risks of Artificial Intelligence – including the US and China, something many thought impossible.
But these treaties and alliances speak to something deeper:
Our willingness to act…
to shape the world, not be shaped by it…
…wherever there’s a challenge, wherever there’s a threat, wherever we can promote peace and security.
That’s why we’ve deployed troops to Kosovo, supporting stability in the Balkans.
20,000 servicemen and women are on their way to protect NATO’s eastern flank and the high north.
Royal Navy vessels are in the Middle East to deter further escalation.
And vital humanitarian aid is reaching civilians in Gaza, and across the Horn of Africa – funded by the British people.
This is who we are.
The difference we make, every single day, across the world, should make each and every one of us here tonight enormously proud.
We’re hard-headed about our interests and our security.
But Britain’s realism has always had values, and this is a moment for moral clarity.
My Lord Mayor,
The past is trying to stop the future being born.
What motivated Hamas to launch their horrific attack on Israel?
It wasn’t just hatred – it was also their fear that a new Middle East was being born…
…one that would see Israel normalising relations with its neighbours, and which gave hope for a better, more secure, more prosperous way forward.
Why did Russia invade Ukraine?
Because Putin feared the emergence of a modern, reforming, thriving democracy on his doorstep – and wanted to pull it back into some imperialist fantasy of the past.
So, we must keep alive the promise of a better future, bolster those striving for it and stand up for the innocents who Russia see as targets and Hamas see as human shields.
I recall those lines from Yeats:
“The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere, the ceremony of innocence is drowned… the best lack all conviction, while the worst, are full of passionate intensity.”
That’s what our adversaries believe.
So, we will outmatch them with our conviction and intensity.
We must and we will prove them wrong.
Let me set out what that means – in Ukraine, in how we help the most vulnerable around the world and in the Middle East – a region whose tragedy and heartbreak hang heavy on us all.
In Israel, I met the families of British victims.
I sat with them, held their hands, and saw the profound pain in their eyes.
I heard the existential fear that Israelis are feeling.
Their country was founded to ensure that what happened in the Holocaust could never happen again.
Hamas poses a fundamental challenge to that idea.
Hamas have stated clearly: “We will repeat the October 7 attack time and time again until Israel is annihilated.”
Last week was the 85th anniversary of Kristallnacht.
And as we see hatred rising, we all have a responsibility to meet the promise of the words that in recent days have lit up the Brandenburg Gate:
“Never again is now.”
So, Israel must be able to defend itself against terror, restore its security and bring the hostages home.
But there are things that Israel must do as part of its response.
We’ve been clear they must act within international law.
They must take all possible measures to protect innocent civilians, including at hospitals, stop extremist violence in the West Bank and allow more aid into Gaza.
Mahmoud Abbas, the President of the Palestinian Authority, described to me the terrible suffering of the Palestinian people.
Too many civilians are losing their lives.
That’s why I’ve doubled our aid to Gaza and why we continue to press – both at the UN and directly with Israel – for unhindered humanitarian access and urgent and substantive humanitarian pauses.
We want aid coming in by land, air and sea – and we’re ready to use our bases in Cyprus as a staging post.
Alleviating the suffering is our foremost priority.
But we need to do more – to create a new political horizon.
We must unite around the only answer that can come close to creating peace in those troubled lands.
The only answer that can acknowledge the history and hurt of both peoples.
The only answer that can allow a new future to be born and that is a two-state solution.
The UK wrote the original UN resolutions setting this out.
We’ve argued the case for decades.
But now we must help make it a reality.
So, to the UK’s friends across the region, like Jordan, Egypt, UAE, and Saudi Arabia, who support normalisation and peaceful co-existence and to our communities at home…
…I pledge to redouble efforts to this end.
That means providing the serious, practical and enduring support needed to bolster the Palestinian Authority because they are the best route to sweep away the terrible scourge of Hamas and all it has wrought.
As hard as it may be, no matter the obstacles, we must put the region on the path to a genuine peace.
We’re also supporting a better future for Ukraine.
And let me tell you this: the last year has shown that Russia cannot win.
They tried to blockade Ukrainian shipping routes – and they failed.
Ukraine has pushed back the Black Sea Fleet and made Crimea a vulnerability for Putin rather than a strength.
Russia is mounting its third wave of attacks on Avdiivka – and again they continue to fail, at horrendous cost.
Since their invasion, Russia has suffered over a quarter of a million casualties…
Half of the territory they seized has been taken back…
And Putin has faced a more united response than he ever imagined.
He’s ensured defence spending is rising across Europe, led by the UK…
He’s fast-tracked Finland into NATO, with Sweden close behind…
And he’s seen an armed rebellion marching on Moscow.
It’s a self-inflicted strategic calamity.
Putin’s vain hope is that we lose patience but, friends, we never will.
Instead, we’re providing more air defence to protect Ukraine’s cities and infrastructure, more help for the long, hard winter and we’re going further.
In February at the Munich Security Conference, I argued Ukraine needs long-term security assurances.
And in July, allies delivered.
Following the NATO summit, over 30 other leaders joined us in agreeing to put assurances in place.
Together we’ll strengthen Ukraine’s defence and boost their economy so they can thrive even while they fight to regain their territory.
And, to do so, Ukraine needs the City of London.
It needs all of you, it needs expertise and capital – and war risk insurance to support trade and investment and keep the ships moving.
I know you’ll deliver.
And so will the government – building Ukraine’s navy, training their pilots, and training their soldiers.
We’ve now trained over 50,000 Ukrainian troops.
President Zelenskyy and I went to meet some of them earlier this year.
I recall sitting together on a Chinook flying to the south coast.
Over the din of the rotors, we chatted and shared family photos.
It was a moment of normality in an abnormal setting – and a reminder of what unites us.
In the face of aggression, we will always protect our values and all we hold dear.
We will stand with Ukraine until they prevail.
Finally, to deliver a better future, we must lead not just with strength, but with compassion, helping the poorest and tackling global problems.
So, while Russia seeks to starve the world by choking off food supplies – we’re helping Ukraine get their food to those who need it most.
And next week we’re hosting an international conference on alleviating global hunger.
While some load the poorest nations with unsustainable debt, the UK is driving fundamental reforms of development finance, including a capital increase for the World Bank.
While some talk down our record on climate, we’re actually a world leader, cutting emissions faster than any other G7 country…
…and with $2 billion recently announced for the Green Climate Fund, I’ve delivered the biggest single international climate pledge the UK has ever made.
We’re also a leading donor to global health initiatives, helping vaccinate over a billion children, saving millions of lives.
But we bring more to the table than funding – we also bring our expertise.
Right now, the world’s first ever malaria vaccine is being rolled out across Africa – with the second one following soon.
It has dramatically cut early child mortality.
And where were both of those vaccines developed?
Right here in the UK.
We don’t talk about it enough, but every day Britain is out there helping the poorest and most vulnerable, saving and transforming lives.
So, I say it again – this is who we are, and it should make us proud.
My Lord Mayor,
When conflicts overseas create division at home, it’s more important than ever that we preserve the values we hold dear – tolerance, free speech, the rule of law, respect for our history.
We’ll protect all communities from violence and intimidation.
And prevent people being drawn into radicalisation.
In these dangerous times, we’re not just defending a better vision of the future against those who would destroy it, we’re marshalling our expertise, our people, and our alliances to bring that future into being.
We’ll continue to stand up for what is right.
We’ll stand with our allies and with the most vulnerable, wherever they may be.
We’ll show that the best is full of conviction and that our values will prevail.
Thank you.

The statement made by Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister, on 11 November 2023.
I condemn the violent, wholly unacceptable scenes we have seen today from the EDL and associated groups and Hamas sympathisers attending the National March for Palestine. The despicable actions of a minority of people undermine those who have chosen to express their views peacefully.
Remembrance weekend is a time for us to come together as a nation and remember those who fought and died for our freedoms. What we have seen today does not defend the honour of our Armed Forces, but utterly disrespects them.
That is true for EDL thugs attacking police officers and trespassing on the Cenotaph, and it is true for those singing antisemitic chants and brandishing pro-Hamas signs and clothing on today’s protest. The fear and intimidation the Jewish Community have experienced over the weekend is deplorable.
All criminality must be met with the full and swift force of the law. That is what I told the Met Police Commissioner on Wednesday, that is what they are accountable for and that is what I expect.
I will be meeting the Met Police Commissioner in the coming days.

The message issued by Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister, on 11 November 2023.
Happy Diwali to all those celebrating around the world and across the UK, and a very happy Bandi Chhor Divas to our friends in the Sikh community.
With the lighting of the Diyas, let this be a moment we can look to the future with hope. My guiding light as Prime Minister is the determination to change things for the better, and as a symbol of the triumph of light over darkness, I believe Diwali is a poignant representation of the endeavour for a brighter tomorrow.
As your first British Asian Prime Minister, and a devout Hindu, I also hope this can be a celebration of the fantastic ethnic and cultural diversity which makes the UK the place it is today.