Tag: Speeches

  • Matt Hancock – 2018 Speech on Digital Culture

    Matt Hancock

    Below is the text of the speech made by Matt Hancock, the Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport on 7 March 2018.

    Thanks Gabriele (Finaldi – Director National Gallery).

    It’s a great pleasure to be here and see so many of you at the launch of this important report. And the next step in our exciting journey, linking the great cultural institutions of Britain and our great cultural life, with the most cutting edge, most impressive technology that there is.

    I think that the wonderful view all around us shows how broad, how encompassing culture can be. Here, Venetian paintings from the 15th and 16th century are side by side with innovative digital content.

    We all know from our daily lives that digital technology is breaking down silos within the cultural sector and blurring lines between disciplines in the same ways as in many other parts of the world.

    Increasingly, theatre blends with film; computer programming merges with sculpture.

    We have virtual reality curatorship as a crucial new skill, animated artworks and video games scored by classical music composers.

    If you go to some of the video game development studios they will have fine arts students and computer engineers sitting next to each other, understanding and learning from each other about their deep talents, in order to be able to make a better representation of reality using the best of technology.

    Of course art has always used the latest technology, whether it is Michelangelo investing time and money understanding and analysing the very basis of paint, or the brilliant exhibitions we’ve got in the modern day, using cutting edge virtual reality or computer programming in order to get their art to a wider audience.

    In my previous role as the Minister for Digital and Culture I was very interested in this nexus.

    I firmly believe, and some of you might have heard before, that Britain’s bread will be buttered at the link between cultural brilliance and technological excellence in the years to come.

    And because I was the Minister for Digital and Culture and lots of people used to say to me ‘Why are you the Minister for Digital and Culture?’, I wanted to demonstrate in a very tangible way the links between the two.

    That it’s about the connectivity and the content. Creating the future using the best cutting edge technology: the creativity and the technology and bringing them together.

    I can’t tell you how absolutely thrilled I am to be back in charge of Digital and Culture as well as Sport as Secretary of State, and able to launch the report of this project.

    The other brilliant thing about this project, which I find brilliantly exciting, is that it has been truly consultative in the very best possible way.

    Helen Williams – one of the finest Civil Servants of her generation – she has led the project and not just tried to do the project herself but rather gone and found people who can add value to the project and bought them into DCMS.

    Half a dozen people came to work in DCMS and I want to say thank you to each and every one of them and all the institutions who have lent people: the BBC; the Arts Council England and others.

    A couple of other shout outs. I want to pay a special tribute to Jeremy Silver at the Digital Catapult, because the Digital Catapult is at the digital end of this project and understands the technology side and is a great incubator and a great place for bringing together digital and culture.

    A big thank you to Darren Henley and the Arts Council England. The Arts Council holds the budget, and he has skewed the Arts Council’s budget in the direction of supporting projects that use digital technology to reach new audiences.

    I think that is important because, as the National Gallery has led the country and the world in showing, you can use digital technology to reach new audiences.

    There are many other shout outs that I could give. I acknowledge Tristram Hunt, the Director of the V&A museum, who has also bought this to bear.

    What I hope that this report shows is just what the opportunities are. That it is a ‘how to guide’ for cultural organisations in using the very latest technology.

    And it is a ‘how to guide’ for people involved in technology like Amazon and Cisco, who I can see in front of me, for how to support the nation’s cultural development.

    These two worlds have so much to gain from talking to each other, engaging and supporting each other, in bringing the very best out of each other by linking the creativity with digital technology.

    So a big thank you to organisations, big and small, involved in the digital project. From the National Gallery and Royal Opera House who are setting up collaborative opportunities, all the way to the Royal Shakespeare Company partnering with the BBC and the Arts and Humanities Research Council to share assets and support smaller organisations.

    The future of Digital Culture is reliant on digital partnerships. It’s reliant on you in this room, going out making the case and crucially breaking down boundaries, so that we can forever be using the very best of technology to showcase the very best of British culture and British creativity. And we need to do that more now than ever.

    Thanks very much.

  • Hugo Swire – 2018 Speech on the Maldives

    Below is the text of the speech made by Hugo Swire, the Conservative MP for East Devon, in the House of Commons on 6 March 2018.

    I am extremely grateful to have secured this Adjournment debate on the topical and important issue of the current political situation in the Maldives. On 1 February, the full bench of the Supreme Court in the Maldives ordered the retrial of cases against nine political leaders, including former President Mohamed Nasheed, labelling their trials politically influenced. The Supreme Court also ruled that 12 Opposition MPs, barred from Parliament by the Elections Commission, must be allowed to retake their seats, thus handing the opposition a majority in Parliament, which has the power to impeach the President.

    The Maldives police service immediately announced that it would comply with the Supreme Court ruling. Over the next two days, President Yameen fired the police chief, fired his replacement, and installed a third police chief. On 5 February, President Yameen declared a 15-day state of emergency. Masked security officials broke through the doors of the Supreme Court and physically dragged the chief justice away and threw him in detention. Another Supreme Court justice was also detained and thrown in jail. Former President Gayoom, Yameen’s half-brother, was also detained.

    The remaining three Supreme Court Judges then overruled the 1 February judgment, despite it being unconstitutional for a three-bench court to overturn the decision of the full bench. On 20 February, President Yameen petitioned parliament to extend the state of emergency by 30 days. However, the ruling party was unable to gain a quorum in Parliament. Just 40 MPs attended Parliament; a quorum demands 43, but President Yameen announced the state of emergency extension regardless. The prosecutor general has publicly declared the state of emergency extension to be unconstitutional.

    Despite the state of emergency and a 10.30 pm curfew in Malé, daily anti-Government protests have spread across the Maldives and have now entered their fourth week. Riot police have severely beaten numerous protesters, hospitalising many. A total of 110 individuals have been arrested since the declaration of the state of emergency and 31 of these are being held without trial under state of emergency rules. There are growing divisions in the security services. Some 50 military and police officials are being detained either at their barracks incommunicado or in detention centres. Four Members of Parliament are currently in detention.

    Why should any of this be of interest to the United Kingdom? I would like to make four points this evening; the first concerns radicalisation. President Yameen continues to collude with a network of radical Islamists in the Maldives who are suspected of carrying out 26 murders over the past few years.

    ​Jim Shannon (Strangford) (DUP) rose

    Sir Hugo Swire I give way to the hon. Gentleman— I suspect that I know which angle he is coming from.

    Jim Shannon I think the right hon. Gentleman knows exactly which angle I am coming from. I congratulate him on securing the debate. He will be aware of the religious persecution that is clearly taking place in the Maldives. Some of my constituents went there on holiday. One was imprisoned and sent back home, because he took his Bible with him and read it. It is against the law for someone to read a Bible, be a Christian and practise their religion in the Maldives. Is that not another example of the human rights abuses carried out in the Maldives, in this case, against those of a religious and Christian belief?

    Sir Hugo Swire This is the great dilemma of the Maldives. It is, on the one hand, an Islamic country, but on the other it is host to many hundreds of thousands of people from around the world, on whom it depends and who should be free to practise their own religion, even if they are on holiday.

    Zac Goldsmith (Richmond Park) (Con) President Mohamed Nasheed was the first democratically elected president of the Maldives, and he was elected after years of having been tortured and abused in that country’s jails by his predecessor. He was a great leader, famously closing the political prisons and holding his first Cabinet meeting underwater to highlight climate change. He was a truly progressive, secular leader in a democratic country. Does my right hon. Friend not share my tremendous sadness at how far this country has fallen at the hands of utterly corrupt and malignant forces?

    Sir Hugo Swire My hon. Friend is of course absolutely right and I shall go on to say something about this. I very much see the former President Mohamed Nasheed having a role in the future of the Maldives, along with others who have sometimes been his political opponents. My hon. Friend is absolutely right.

    There have been murders of prominent liberal bloggers and journalists, too. In late September last year Her Majesty’s Government warned that terrorists were “very likely” to carry out an attack on the islands. I understand that this is also the current travel advice from the Foreign and Commonwealth Office. Allegedly, between 200 and 250 Maldivians are either fighting or have fought in Syria and Iraq. US Assistant Secretary of State, Alice Wells, claimed that the Maldives was the highest foreign fighter contributor per capita to the so-called Islamic State.

    Much of the recruiting and radicalisation is promoted by websites such as Bilad al-Sham Media, and Facebook and other social media are more accessible than ever on the remote islands that make up the country.

    My second point concerns the safety of our British tourists. The United Kingdom ranks third in a list of visitors to the Maldives in 2016, behind Germany and China, with 7.9% of market share and more than 100,000 visitors. This was an increase of 9.8% compared with 2015.

    The Maldives economy remains a tourism driven economy in that it contributes more than 25% of the country’s GDP. While the tourism sector supplies more ​than 70% of the foreign exchange earnings to the country, one third of the Government revenue is generated from this sector. Tourism is also known as the leading employment generator in the country. In 2016, tourism contributed 36.4% to the Government revenue. But as a result of the current situation, the Maldives is facing financial ruin, with the tourism industry estimated to be losing $20 million a day since the start of the state of emergency. If the trend continues, it will lead to unemployment and dissatisfaction, to my way of thinking both active recruiting sergeants for radicalisation, and with our tourists spread out over 115 square miles in 105 resorts it is almost impossible to guarantee their safety.

    My third point concerns the Commonwealth. After 30 years of President Maumoon Abdul Gayoom’s rule, it was President Nasheed who introduced democracy into the Maldives. From 1982, it was a welcome member of the Commonwealth family. It was President Yameen who took the country out of the Commonwealth in 2016.

    Ian Paisley (North Antrim) (DUP) I thank the right hon. Gentleman for giving way, and draw Members’ attention to my registered interests on the Maldives. Is the right hon. Gentleman going to draw some attention to the fact that the United Kingdom’s reach on the Maldives has declined somewhat because it has left the Commonwealth? What can we do to rebuild that relationship, working with the ambassador, who is based in Europe? What can we do to rebuild the relationship with the Government for the very reasons the right hon. Gentleman has outlined—to make the country more prosperous and, more importantly, to turn it away from what would be a terrible plight if his predictions came true?

    Sir Hugo Swire Indeed, and two of the surrounding countries, Sri Lanka and India, are members of the Commonwealth. I will say later in my speech that, although I believe much needs to be done before the Maldives comes back into the Commonwealth, its proper place is back in the Commonwealth family.

    President Yameen’s unconstitutional behaviour has seen him arrest three lawmakers and instigate a witch hunt of the families of his political opponents, including wives and children. President Maumoon and the justices at the supreme court have been charged with treason and bribery, and access to lawyers and family has been restricted, with reports of ill-treatment. Following the arrest of President Gayoom, all the leaders of the opposition political parties are under detention, or have been sentenced under similar trumped-up charges. The Government continue to defend their actions, claiming that state-of-emergency powers are applicable only to those who are believed to have planned or carried out illegal acts in conjunction with the 1 February Supreme Court ruling. That has led to increasingly politicised targeting of the opposition by security services.

    President Gayoom’s daughter, Dunya, resigned last week as the state health Minister, and has herself now appealed for support from the international community. I hope very much that she will work with former President Nasheed and other members of the opposition, and that they will come together to chart a democratic future for the country—a future, hopefully, back in the Commonwealth family.

    Nick Herbert (Arundel and South Downs) (Con) My right hon. Friend is making a powerful case. Does he agree that a situation under the guise of a state of emergency in which judges are arrested, the normal business of courts is suspended, Members of Parliament are arrested and Parliament too is suspended makes a mockery of any notion of democracy, and, furthermore, constitutes an affront to human rights? Should not Members on both sides of the House of Commons condemn that action in the strongest possible terms?

    Sir Hugo Swire My hon. Friend is absolutely right. Unfortunately, there can be no pretence that democracy is alive in the Maldives at the moment.

    The Maldives Government also continue to condemn foreign criticism of their actions—no doubt they will now be criticising my right hon. Friend for his intervention—asking members of the international community not to chastise them publicly, and to visit the Maldives to assess the situation on the ground for themselves. However, when a delegation of EU Heads of Missions did visit Malé, the Government refused to meet them. Similarly, members of a delegation from LAWASIA—the Law Association for Asia and the Pacific—were detained and deported on their arrival at the airport in Malé on Tuesday, 27 February, although they had informed relevant Government authorities in ample time of their intention to visit.

    My fourth point concerns the possibility of regional conflict. In recent years, China has been sending more tourists to the islands and investing in the economy. In neighbouring Sri Lanka, we see China building a port at Hambantota, an 11,500-foot runway capable of taking an Airbus A380, and docks where oil tankers can refuel. That has caused understandable nervousness in India, and it is difficult to believe that the Indians will allow the Chinese to gain a similar foothold in the Maldives. It is also reported that the Japanese navy recently spotted a Maldivian-registered tanker, which allegedly is linked to President Yameen’s nephew, transferring suspected crude oil to a North Korean tanker, in violation of UN sanctions on the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea. It would be interesting to hear the Minister’s response to that.

    I have seen the statement put out by the European External Action Service on 6 February and the Foreign Secretary’s statement of 5 February, but will Her Majesty’s Government now go further, building on the calls made on the Government of the Maldives by the International Democrat Union on 21 February? Will they call for the release of, and access to lawyers for, all political prisoners? Will they lobby for a UN-backed mission, led by someone like Kofi Annan, to go to the Maldives without delay? Will they call for free and properly convened elections later this year, to be overseen by an international body? Will they provide support and assistance in the wholesale reform of judges and the judicial system? Will they work with other like-minded countries to counter Islamic radicalisation in the Maldives? Will they raise the issue of the Maldives at the forthcoming Commonwealth Heads of Government meeting here in London in April? Will they ask the opposition parties to provide a list of resorts owned by President Yameen’s circle, so that they can be publicised and boycotted in the event of none of the above happening? At the same time, will they put plans in place to increase targeted sanctions against the Yameen regime if the Supreme Court ruling is not fully implemented?​

    As we exit the European Union, this is a good opportunity for the United Kingdom to show that we have our own foreign policy, and are working with like-minded friends.

  • Penny Mordaunt – 2018 Speech on Somali

    Below is the text of the speech made by Penny Mordaunt, the Secretary of State for International Development, on 6 March 2018.

    I’m delighted to welcome you here today and in particular to His Excellency, Mr Gamal Hassan, the Minister of Planning, Investment and Economic Development of the Federal Republic of Somalia today and our other distinguished guests. I’d also like to thank Mark Lowcock for initiating this meeting, and for all the work his team has done with my officials to bring us all together today.

    I am proud of the UK’s partnership with Somalia. This time last year, Somalia was on the brink of disaster and we realised that we had to step up. Together we have averted a famine and saved thousands of lives.

    Last year’s response was an important success story, both for Somalia and for the international humanitarian system. But the job is not finished yet. The humanitarian situation remains a major cause for concern, and the famine risk remains high.

    We need to sustain and build on our humanitarian response to ensure that we meet the most immediate and urgent needs. Alongside this, we also need to recognise the need for long-lasting solutions to break the cycle of this crisis. That is why we have called this meeting today.

    My Department, and the UK Government, remain committed to working with the Somali authorities, local and international NGOs, UN agencies, and new partners who can help us reach the 5.4 million people in need of humanitarian assistance after some of the worst droughts on record.

    In January I visited Mogadishu and saw first-hand the lifesaving work we are doing together, and I also announced £21 million in UK funding towards the 2018 humanitarian response.

    Today, I’m pleased to confirm a further commitment, bringing our total contribution to £86 million. This includes £24.6 million from the UK Crisis Reserve, which helps us respond to emergency situations. I’m pleased to confirm that £46 million of this will be released before the end of this month, to ensure that funds are available to support early action and intervention. And I would like to thank all of you for your continued support to Somalia and encourage you to step up to the challenge in 2018 as we try and avert a potential famine.

    I hope that this meeting will serve to encourage all of us to sustain our efforts to continue to tackle the drought, and ensure that the famine we helped to prevent last year does not happen again instead, to ensure that funds are available to support early action and intervention. I would like to thank everyone for your continued support.

    I know that the spring rains will be critical in determining how severe the situation becomes this year. But even if the rains are good, humanitarian needs will still remain high. That is why I have asked my officials to keep me updated. As the year unfolds we will consider if additional UK resources are required.

    As we join together to meet the challenges ahead, we must also ensure that we deliver against the Grand Bargain commitments that we all signed up to.

    We must do better at including the most marginalised Somalis and ensuring that we protect the most vulnerable – women and girls and disabled people in particular. This means ensuring that aid is able to reach conflict-affected areas. And I call on the Somali authorities, and international partners, to do all they can to ensure that access for humanitarian aid is not restricted.

    And we must also look forward and beyond the current situation. Drought need not turn into widespread food insecurity and famine. It is vitally important that we balance both the short and long term needs of vulnerable Somalis, and make sure there are stronger links between our humanitarian and development work so we can build resilience and the ability to cope with future shocks. As Somalia’s government makes progress in addressing insecurity, rebuilding its institutions, and creating economic opportunities for its citizens, we will be better placed to break this persistent cycle of crisis.

    And having recently visited, I am optimistic about the future.

    Long term solutions require stability and a real commitment from Somalia itself. We have seen that we can work together to stave off disaster. We are also seeing growing evidence that Somalia is heading towards a future where it can better take care of its own needs, including making good progress on its re-engagement with the IMF and the development banks and raising its own revenue.

    This is why the UK government will continue to play an active role in supporting Somalia to meet all these objectives, including helping develop new ideas for economic recovery and continuing the progress being made towards re-engagement with the international financial system.

    I wish you a very fruitful meeting today and I thank you again for your continued commitment to Somalia.

  • David Gauke – 2018 Speech on Prison Reform

    Below is the text of the speech made by David Gauke, the Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice, at the Royal Society of Arts in London on 6 March 2018.

    Well thank you Rachel [O’Brien] for that introduction and for the work you and the RSA do on prison reform and the important contribution you make to public policy in this area.

    It is a huge privilege to have been appointed Justice Secretary and I am grateful for the opportunity to set out my thoughts, after two months in post, on our prison system.

    Purpose of prison

    Depriving someone of their liberty for a period of time is one of the most significant powers available to the State and must be imposed with respect for the rule of law and with purpose.

    Prison is the sharp end of our justice system. By imposing this serious sanction, we must be clear about what prison is for.

    I believe its purpose is threefold:

    First, protection of the public – prison protects the public from the most dangerous and violent individuals.

    Second, punishment – prison deprives offenders of their liberty and certain freedoms enjoyed by the rest of society and acts as a deterrent. It is not the only sanction available, but it is an important one.

    And third, rehabilitation – prison provides offenders with the opportunity to reflect on, and take responsibility for, their crimes and prepare them for a law-abiding life when they are released.

    It is only by prioritising rehabilitation that we can reduce reoffending and, in turn, the numbers of future victims of crime.

    Getting the basics right – secure, safe and decent

    And yet it’s clear that prisons don’t always achieve what they are there to do.

    The reasons for this are varied and complex, but I am determined to ensure prisons can fulfil those three purposes I have set out.

    As the Minister for Prisons, Rory Stewart, has made clear, for prisons to be effective, we must get the basics right.

    Getting the basics right means creating prisons that are secure: with the physical integrity of the prison a priority to prevent prisoners from getting out – and drugs, mobile phones and other contraband from getting in.

    It means creating prisons that are safe: with orderly, purposeful and structured regimes, free from violence, intimidation and self-harm.

    And it means creating prisons that are decent: with clean wings and humane living conditions.

    It is clear that some of our prisons have, frankly, fallen below the standards that we expect.

    I want the prison service to have a relentless focus on these fundamentals in the months ahead.

    That’s why I am giving renewed focus to our programme of prison maintenance to drive the much-needed improvements to our estate.

    I will also carry on with my predecessor, David Lidington’s, important work to ensure inspection reports are acted upon.

    Prison staffing

    I am also continuing to push hard on improving not just the number of prison officers, but also how we deploy them.

    Liz Truss, as Secretary of State, committed to raising the number of prison officers by 2,500 by the end of this year.

    I’m pleased to say that we’re on track to deliver those officers, and ended last year with the highest number of officers in post since 2013.

    The reason increased staffing levels are important is that they are allowing us to introduce a new ‘key worker’ model – with prison officers spending much more time, one-to-one, with small groups of prisoners.

    As we introduce this new model, we should start to make a difference in the levels of violence we are seeing, which are currently far too high.

    28,000 incidents were recorded in our prisons last year alone.

    That figure includes 20,246 attacks by prisoners against fellow inmates….

    ….and 7,828 assaults against prison officers by prisoners.

    The violence against prison officers is particularly shocking.

    No prison officer should go to work in fear for their safety simply for doing their job.

    I want to take this opportunity to thank the thousands of prison staff across the country who do incredibly important work each and every day.

    By its nature, the work is often hidden from view but it protects the public and keeps our prisons secure and prisoners safe.

    And I want to thank the families of prison staff.

    As the son of a police officer, I know the worries they carry, and the pride they take, in knowing their loved one is performing such an important public service.

    The drug problem and how it’s been exploited

    Increasing the numbers of prison officers and deploying them in a more effective way will help create more positive relationships between offenders and prison officers.

    But if we are to bear down on the levels of violence we are seeing, we need to deal with the biggest cause of the violence, which is drugs.

    Now, the problem of drugs entering and circulating in our prison system has always been a challenge.

    But the nature of the challenge has changed over the past few years, with the emergence of cheap and highly addictive new psychoactive substances, like Spice, in our prisons….

    ….something exploited by criminal gangs who have capitalised on the control they can exert and the money they can bring in.

    After all, what better place to target than a captive market made up of some of society’s most susceptible and vulnerable groups when it comes to drug use and addiction.

    The economics mean that Spice can sell in prison for many times its street value – bringing in a healthy return for the criminals.

    At the same time, it is relatively cheap to buy in prison compared to other drugs – so is financially attractive for prisoners.

    In exploiting the emergence of new psychoactive substances, prisons have proved a perfect marketplace for the criminal gangs.

    And for our prisons, it has created a perfect storm.

    And while there have always been low-level networks dealing in cigarettes or illegal contraband, the criminal networks and supply chains have recently got larger and more complex….

    …..and new technologies have empowered gangs to be more sophisticated and brazen about the way drugs are smuggled in.

    Many of you will be aware of the kind of things I’m talking about….

    Spice, and other drugs, ordered with a ‘Deliveroo-style’ responsiveness on tiny mobile phones from prison cells and delivered by drones direct to cell windows…..

    the paint used in supposed children’s drawings sent to their parents in prison laced with liquid psychoactive drugs, or the pages of fake legal letters purporting to be from a prisoner’s solicitor soaked in drugs….

    gangs engineering situations where a prisoner, who has been released from prison, deliberately breaches their license conditions so they are sent back to smuggle in more drugs….

    gangs enforcing control by using threats and violence towards prisoners, extorting their families and attempting to corrupt prison staff….

    From the conventional to the cunning, by design or device, through fear or intimidation….

    ….these criminal gangs will stop at nothing to maintain their access to such a lucrative market.

    We need to make prison less congenial for the modern-day Harry Grouts.

    It is clear that the reason drugs are so prevalent in our prisons is in large part because gangs are fuelling demand, boosting the supply and catching prisoners in a cycle of debt and further criminality from which they struggle to break free.

    As I’ve been visiting prisons, the conversations I’ve had so far with prison governors have brought home to me the scale and nature of the criminal gang activity and the impact of drugs in our prisons.

    Governors tell me that it’s not just when the drugs come in that there is an issue, but a couple of weeks later, when they see a spike in violence….

    ….a spike caused by prisoners carrying out attacks on fellow inmates and on staff as a payment in kind to pay back debts they have accrued by taking the drugs.

    And it is not just about attacks on other inmates or staff.

    We are seeing a rise in the incidents of self-harm.

    Last year there were 42,837 incidents of self-harm in our prisons, involving 11,428 individuals. These statistics, together with the figures for assaults I highlighted earlier, are sobering.

    But they only give us half the story….

    Behind all the numbers, is a catalogue of physical and mental injury, of intimidation and of abuse.

    I have been shocked and sickened watching some of the videos filmed by prisoners using illicit mobile phones that are posted on social media.

    They show the terrifying and debilitating impact Spice can have and the drug-fuelled violence and humiliation it unleashes.

    One of these videos shows inmates laughing and joking as the Spice takes over the mind and body of a fellow prisoner. The effect is immediate and shocking. Within a few seconds they are having a fit on the floor.

    Another video shows two naked prisoners believing they are dogs, with makeshift muzzles and leads around their neck, barking at and fighting each other, goaded on by other prisoners.

    Another shows a prisoner climbing into a tumble dryer in the prison laundry room. Other prisoners then turn the machine on and he is spun around inside – a dangerous act of humiliation to ‘earn’ himself some more Spice.

    And I’m afraid, these videos are merely a short snapshot of a grim reality.

    Many of the attacks against prison officers have been linked to Spice.

    Last year for example, a prisoner viciously attacked an officer with a table leg at HMP Northumberland after the officer intervened to break up a fight. The attack left him with bruising and tissue damage.

    The prisoner had no memory of the attack and subsequently described the officer as being a nice man who was thoroughly decent towards him whilst he was in prison.

    Cases like this show starkly how drugs like Spice are leading to violence and undermining efforts to create safe environments and respectful relationships in prisons.

    And it’s clearly not just physical damage that drugs like Spice cause.

    There is an enormous toll on the mental health of prisoners, often exacerbating existing mental health conditions and long-term issues with alcohol and drug abuse.

    Prison staff have a key role to identify and support prisoners with mental health needs. That’s why we are investing more in mental health awareness training for staff.

    We have also increased our grant to the Samaritans to fund the continued delivery of a peer support scheme called ‘Listeners’ which supports prisoner mental health.

    We must ensure offenders have access to the treatment they need to come off drugs and support their recovery – whether that’s in prison or in the community.

    That’s why we have been working with the Department of Health and Social Care and others to improve access to mental health and substance abuse services for offenders, including agreeing a clear set of standards across all the various agencies involved.

    Tackling the drugs problem in our prisons and the gangs beyond prison

    Every prisoner who attends one of these drug agencies will have their own story about what happened to them and it will very often involve, in some way, criminal gangs.

    This government has undertaken many important reforms and cracking down on drugs and criminality has always been and remains a priority.

    But the sophistication and reach of these criminal gangs into our prisons is a relatively recent development.

    It is therefore right that we continue to adjust our approach to tackling it.

    So, today, I am doubling down on our commitment to target organised criminal gangs and cut off their ability to do business in our prisons.

    That’s why I can announce today that we are investing £14 million to tackle the threat of serious and organised crime against our prisons.

    This includes creating new intelligence and serious and organised crime teams.

    Working with the National Crime Agency, they will enhance our intelligence and information-gathering capability across the country to help us identify and stop the gangs’ ability to operate in our prisons.

    This improved intelligence picture is already delivering major successes, including at least 30 successful convictions for drone activity following joint intelligence-led operations.

    And in December, following an investigation by prison intelligence officers and police, 11 gang members were handed sentences totalling over 32 years for using drones to smuggle drugs, weapons and mobile phones into prison.

    To build on that success, I can also announce today that we are installing technology at 30 prisons that will allow officers to quickly download data from illicit phones seized from prisoners.

    This means officers can access information on a phone on the same day it is seized rather than having to send it away to be processed – something that can currently take months.

    If a phone has details about an expected drone drop later that day, officers will be able to know where, how and when and can act on that intelligence and intercept it.

    In doing so, we will be able to collect vital intelligence about the criminals’ contacts and associates, who they are buying from and selling to and the bank accounts they are using.

    This will help us to stop drugs getting in and give the police the intel they need to target the source of the drugs.

    But technology can’t be the only solution to tackling gangs….

    Understanding and managing security risks

    The fact is, there are around 6,500 prisoners who have links to organised crime.

    At the moment, these offenders are spread across the estate and are helping to perpetuate the cycle of crime by drawing fellow prisoners into the clutches of the gangs.

    So, I want to rethink how we categorise prisoners – that means looking again at who goes to higher security-level prisons.

    Rather than just considering their length of sentence and risk of escape in determining which prison an offender goes to – or moves to – I want to look, as well, at their behaviour in prison and their risk of directing crime and violence whilst in prison.

    This would ensure those ringleaders, who ostensibly behave but have others do their bidding, would be cut off from their network and prevent them from operating.

    Incentives of hope over despair – the route to rehabilitation

    Removing the ringleaders also means that prisons can then focus on maintaining an orderly environment and, crucially, get on with helping prisoners rehabilitate so that they don’t re-offend when they leave prison.

    We have to make it absolutely clear to prisoners that the path of further criminality only leads to more punishment and less freedom….

    ….that there is another, better way.

    We also need to recognise that there is a better way for the whole of society.

    Re-offending and the cycle of crime costs society £15 billion a year.

    It creates more victims.

    And, it leads to the perpetuation of unfulfilled potential on the part of offenders.

    If the third and final purpose of prison is for rehabilitation, then we need to look again at what works.

    I believe rehabilitation starts with conformity with the prison rules and a rejection of further criminality, a commitment to change and an embrace of opportunities that help offenders to leave prison as law-abiding, and tax-paying citizens.

    I want to make those the desirable and attainable choices that prisoners make.

    I believe harnessing the power of incentives in our prisons is an important way to do that.

    My experience and the large amount of research out there shows that ‘incentives work’.

    As Secretary of State at the Department for Work and Pensions, I saw how a mixture of positive incentives, support and sanctions can influence behaviour and help people change their lives for the better.

    For example, the incentive of making work always pay more than benefits is a fundamental principle of our welfare system and has helped bring about record levels of employment in this country.

    I believe we can not only make prisons safer and more secure, but also help to break the cycle of reoffending….

    ….supporting and incentivising people to make the right choices that will prepare them to lead crime-free lives when they leave prison.

    An offenders’ experience in prison is too often one of detention and boredom, which leads to drug abuse and despondency, which in turn, leads to debt and despair.

    I am clear that offenders go to prison as punishment, not for punishment.

    So, I want prisons to be places of humanity, hope and aspiration.

    I want prisoners to know that there is a route to a better life….

    ….that there is a life to be had free from the clutches of gangs and free from the intimidation and abuse…

    ….and that the route to that better life is through purposeful activity, through education, through skills and through employment.

    The way I see it is that prisoners have a contract with the state.

    By serving your sentence and conforming to the rules, you are repaying your debt to society.

    If you do that, you will find the State and the prison system backing you up, supporting you, and you will be able to earn greater rights and privileges.

    This is beneficial for prisoners but even more so for wider society.

    So, I want to reset and reinvigorate the system of incentives in our prisons so they work much more in the favour of those prisoners who play by the rules and who want to turn their lives around, whilst coming down harder on those who show no intention of doing so.

    However, prisoners should be under no illusions that a failure to abide by the rules will be met with strong sanctions.

    I am supportive of the steps that have been taken to improve the punishment of unacceptable and illegal behaviour in prisons.

    Just the other month, we introduced a new protocol between the Ministry of Justice and CPS to ensure that, where there is sufficient evidence, we bring to justice prisoners who commit violent attacks against prison officers and other prisoners.

    But for those offenders who see their time in prison as a genuine opportunity to reflect and take responsibility for their crime and to be rehabilitated, to build the skills and behaviour they need to re-join society, I want to create the incentives that will support and encourage them in that effort.

    That means prisoners having the opportunity to earn rights and freedoms, an opportunity to live in a more liberal environment with greater personal responsibility, and therefore have more to lose if they fall foul of the rules.

    After all, incentives are given, and they can be taken away.

    I know that prison governors feel strongly that the current approach to using incentives in our prisons is not working.

    I hear that.

    I also know that governors want more flexibility for what and how incentives are used in their own prisons.

    I agree.

    I believe governors should govern.

    They are the best judge for what will work best in their prison.

    So this is not about me imposing a top-down system or a list of incentives.

    But I do want to give a couple of examples where I think we can more effectively use incentives.

    Prisons are required to provide a minimum amount of contact between an offender and their family whilst in prison.

    I think we could reinforce good behaviour by offering a prisoner extra and additional time to see family members, for example by using technology like Skype, to allow contact they would otherwise be unable to have.

    Another example is giving an offender a better prospect of securing a job after release by providing access to certain training and experience.

    For example, I want to look at the availability and use of “release on temporary license”.

    Specifically, I want to see how we can use ROTL to allow those prisoners, who have earned it, to have a routine where they, with close monitoring, leave prison each day to go to work nearby.

    Work is the best route out of crime

    I have seen how getting and keeping a job can change people’s lives.

    The prison and probation service have an important role to help offenders build the skills and experience they need whilst they’re in prison so they can have the right attitude for work and get a job when they’re released.

    To do that, prisons and probation need to act more as brokers between prisoners and the local community, employers and education and skills providers.

    We will shortly be launching our Education and Employment Strategy that will set out our approach to helping offenders get the skills they need to find a job and avoid the activities that landed them in prison in the first place.

    Cross-government work

    Having a job after release is a crucial factor that determines likelihood of reoffending….

    ….but it is only one of several.

    For someone coming out of prison, having a place to live and access to mental and physical health treatments are also critical.

    In this sense, re-offending is not solely a justice problem for my department, but it is a wider issue about social justice and ensuring that offenders, many of whom have complex backgrounds, are not dismissed as part of society.

    We need a cross-government approach to reoffending.

    That’s why I can announce today that I will be convening a cross-government group of senior Ministers, with the full backing of the Prime Minister, to work across all relevant departments to reduce re-offending and the £15 billion cost of reoffending to society as a whole.

    This approach means that we can target prisoners and ex-offenders with the support they need to find a job, a home, to get help with debt, or to get treatment for a drug addiction or, as I mentioned earlier, a mental health issue.

    I met with my Cabinet colleagues yesterday to discuss this and I am encouraged that there is a consensus on the mission and energy to make real progress.

    Conclusion

    Now I’m clear about what purpose our prisons serve – protection, punishment, and rehabilitation.

    But for prisons to do this well we must get the basics of a safe, secure and decent environment right.

    Only an immediate and relentless focus on maintenance, infrastructure and staffing will allow us to make further progress, and we are acting on that.

    The basics matter because organised criminal gangs have cynically and systematically exploited the rise of a drugs problem in new psychoactive substances that first reared its head on our streets and has found fertile ground in our prisons.

    We are taking action to bolster our defences at the prison gate whilst also going after the organised criminal gangs.

    I want them to know that as a result of the action we are taking, they have no place to hide.

    Through our covert and intelligence-led operations, we will track them down….

    ….removing their influence from our prisons so they can become places of hope not despair, of aspiration not assaults….

    …because my approach is a practical one, based on what works and what’s right….

    ….supporting prisoners to make the right choices and take the right path towards rehabilitation and re-joining society.

    I know that incentives work, and I want to put them to work in our prisons.

    By doing that, our prisons will not only be safer, more secure and more decent, but will support prisoners to do the right thing and turn their back on crime for good.

  • Matt Hancock – 2018 Statement on Leveson Consultation

    Matt Hancock

    Below is the text of the speech made by Matt Hancock, the Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, in the House of Commons on 1 March 2018.

    Mr Speaker,

    With your permission, I wish to make a statement on the Leveson Inquiry and its implementation, and the freedom of the press.

    Over many centuries in Britain, our press has held the powerful to account and been free to report and investigate without fear or favour. These principles underpin our democracy and are integral to the freedom of our nation.

    Today in a world of the Internet and clickbait, our press face critical challenges that threaten their livelihood and sustainability – with declining circulations and a changing media landscape.

    Mr Speaker, it is in this context that we approach the Leveson Inquiry, which was set up seven years ago in 2011, and reported six years ago in 2012, in response to events over a decade ago.

    Progress made

    The Leveson Inquiry was a diligent and thorough examination of the culture, practices and ethics of our press in response to illegal and improper press intrusion.

    There were far too many cases of terrible behaviour and having met some of the victims, I understand the impact this had.

    I want, from the start, to thank Sir Brian for his work.

    The Inquiry lasted over a year and heard evidence from more than 300 people including journalists, editors and victims.

    Three major police investigations examined a wide range of offences, and more than 40 people were convicted.

    The Inquiry and investigations were comprehensive.

    And since it was set up, the terms of reference for a Part 2 of the Inquiry have largely been met.

    There have also been extensive reforms to policing practices and significant changes to press self-regulation.

    IPSO has been established and now regulates 95% of national newspapers by circulation. It has taken significant steps to demonstrate its independence as a regulator.

    And in 2016, Sir Joseph Pilling concluded that IPSO largely complied with Leveson’s recommendations. There have been further improvements since and I hope more to come.

    In November last year, IPSO introduced a new system of low-cost arbitration.

    It has processed more than 40,000 complaints in its first three years of operation; and has ordered multiple front page corrections or clarifications.

    Newspapers have also made improvements to their governance frameworks to improve internal controls, standards and compliance.

    And one regulator, IMPRESS, has been recognised under the Royal Charter.

    Extensive reforms to policing practices have been made.

    The College of Policing has published a code of ethics and developed national guidance for police officers on how to engage with the press.

    And reforms in the Policing and Crime Act have strengthened protections for police whistleblowers.

    So it is clear that we have seen significant progress, from publications, from the police and also from the newly formed regulator.

    New challenges and the future

    And Mr Speaker, the media landscape today is markedly different from that which Sir Brian looked at in 2011.

    The way we consume news has changed dramatically.

    Newspaper circulation has fallen by around 30 per cent since the conclusion of the Leveson Inquiry.

    And although digital circulation is rising, publishers are finding it much harder to generate revenue online.

    In 2015, for every 100 pounds newspapers lost in print revenue they gained only 3 pounds in digital revenue.

    Our local papers, in particular, are under severe pressure. Local papers help to bring together local voices and shine a light on important local issues – in communities, in courtrooms, in council chambers.

    And as we devolve power further to local communities, they will become even more important.

    And yet, over 200 local newspapers have closed since 2015, including two in my own constituency.

    There are also new challenges, that were only in their infancy back in 2011.

    We have seen the dramatic and continued rise of social media, which is largely unregulated.

    And issues like clickbait, fake news, malicious disinformation and online abuse, which threaten high quality journalism.

    A foundation of any successful democracy is a sound basis for democratic discourse. This is under threat from these new forces that require urgent attention.

    These are today’s challenges and this is where we need to focus.

    Especially as over 48 million pounds was spent on the police investigations and the Inquiry.

    During the consultation, 12% of direct respondents were in favour of reopening the Leveson Inquiry, with 66% against. We agree and that is the position that we set out in our Manifesto.

    Sir Brian, who I thank for his service, agrees that the Inquiry should not proceed on the current terms of reference but believes that it should continue in an amended form.

    We do not believe that reopening this costly and time-consuming public inquiry is the right way forward.

    Considering all of the factors that I have outlined to the House today, I have informed Sir Brian that we will be formally closing the Inquiry.

    But we will take action to safeguard the lifeblood of our democratic discourse, and tackle the challenges our media face today, not a decade ago.

    During the consultation, we also found serious concerns that Section 40 of the Crime and Courts Act 2013 would exacerbate the problems the press face rather than solve them.

    Respondents were worried that it would impose further financial burdens, especially on the local press.

    One high profile figure put it very clearly. He said:

    ‘Newspapers…are already operating in a tough environment. These proposals will make it tougher and add to the risk of self-censorship’.

    ‘The threat of having to pay both sides’ costs – no matter what the challenge – would have the effect of leaving journalists questioning every report that named an individual or included the most innocuous data about them.’

    He went on to say that Section 40 risks ‘damaging the future of a paper that you love’ and that the impact will be to ‘make it much more difficult for papers…to survive’.

    These are not my words Mr Speaker, but the words of Alastair Campbell talking about the chilling threat of Section 40. [political content removed]

    Only 7 per cent of direct respondents favoured full commencement of Section 40. By contrast, 79 per cent favoured full repeal.

    Mr Speaker, we have decided not to commence Section 40 of the Crime and Courts Act 2013 and to seek repeal at the earliest opportunity.

    Action is needed. Not based on what might have been needed years ago – but action now to address today’s problems.

    Our new Digital Charter sets out the overarching programme of work to agree norms and rules for the online world and put them into practice.

    Under the Digital Charter, our Internet Safety Strategy is looking at online behaviour and we will firmly tackle the problems of online abuse.

    And our review into the sustainability of high quality journalism will address concerns about the impact of the Internet on our news and media.

    It will do this in a forward looking way, so we can respond to the challenges of today, not the challenges of yesterday.

    Conclusion

    Mr Speaker, the future of a vibrant press matters to us all.

    There has been a huge public response to our consultation. I would like to thank every one of the 174,000 respondents as well as all those who signed petitions.

    We have carefully considered all of the evidence we received. We have consulted widely, with regulators, publications and victims of press intrusion.

    The world has changed since the Leveson Inquiry was established in 2011.

    Since then we have seen seismic changes to the media landscape.

    The work of the Leveson Inquiry, and the reforms since, have had a huge impact on public life. We thank Sir Brian Leveson for lending his dedication and expertise to the undertaking of this Inquiry.

    At national and local levels, a press that can hold the powerful to account remains an essential component of our democracy.

    Britain needs high-quality journalism to thrive in the new digital world.

    We seek a press – a media – that is robust, and independently regulated. That reports without fear or favour.

    The steps I have set out today will help give Britain a vibrant, independent and free press that holds the powerful to account and rises to the challenges of our times.

    I commend this statement to the House.

  • Sajid Javid – 2018 Speech on Housing

    Below is the text of the speech made by Sajid Javid, the Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government, on 5 March 2018.

    Everyone remembers their childhood home.

    Mine was the flat above the family shop.

    With my parents – who had come to Britain from Pakistan with almost nothing – and my 4 brothers.

    Nothing fancy, but an important rung on the ladder for our family.

    I won’t lie.

    It was a struggle at times, with the 7 of us sharing 2 bedrooms.

    And my mum and dad – like so many immigrants before and since – working all hours to make our money go further.

    But it was nonetheless a stable, loving home that gave us all a great start…

    …a start that’s undoubtedly the reason that I’m standing here today.

    And I never forget that.

    We didn’t have many luxuries, but I could count on having a safe, warm place to play – and fight! – with my brothers.

    Do my homework. Enjoy family meals and fun times together.

    I know how lucky I am.

    And how, today, there are many families and other people who are not so fortunate.

    Who are growing up without that strong foundation because, over the years, we’ve simply failed to build enough homes.

    The result – soaring house prices and rents – has effectively locked a generation out of the housing market.

    Which is why – as the Prime Minister has just said – this government is taking urgent action on all fronts to turn this situation around.

    Work that is starting to pay off.

    Since 2010, we have delivered more than a million homes.

    And thanks to your efforts, we’ve seen 217,350 homes added to our housing stock last year.

    The highest level of net additions in all but one of the last 30 years.

    We’ve also helped hundreds of thousands of people on to the housing ladder through Help to Buy.

    We’re cracking down on rogue landlords, abuse of leaseholds, taking steps to make renting fairer and tackle homelessness through earlier intervention.

    We’re working to encourage landlords to offer longer, family friendly tenancies.

    We’ve launched a new, more assertive national housing agency, Homes England.

    And we are putting billions into affordable housing and delivering essential infrastructure through the Housing Infrastructure Fund.

    But there’s still a long way to go to deliver 300,000 homes a year in England by the middle of the next decade.

    Your role as planners and developers is absolutely vital in helping us get there.

    I often say that local government is the frontline of our democracy.

    If that’s true, then you, as planners, are in many ways the frontline of our housing challenge.

    Informing crucial decisions that give the go ahead for new homes.

    Ensuring that these are supported by the right infrastructure.

    Doing the best for your local areas and creating, quite simply, great places to live.

    Places that will still be here in a hundred years’ time as well-established and much-loved parts of the community.

    So the part that you play in helping us turn the consultations we’re launching today…

    … on the revised National Planning Policy Framework (NPPF) and the reform of developer contributions…

    …into more homes and stronger communities could not be more important.

    These measures implement the planning policy reforms in:

    – last February’s Housing white paper

    – in the Planning for the right homes in the right places consultation in September

    – those announced at Budget

    – and some further reforms

    And set out a bold, comprehensive approach for building more homes, more quickly, in the places people want to live.

    Homes that embody quality and good design.

    That people are happy to live in – and happy to live next door to.

    Knowing that there’s the infrastructure to support them.

    As we all know, this point about getting communities on board is vital if we’re to deliver homes at the scale and pace that’s needed.

    So how are the proposed changes going to help us achieve this?

    And what are they going to mean for you in practical terms?

    I know that many of you have been keenly anticipating the answers to these questions.

    And have wanted greater clarity and certainty, so that you can make a real difference in your communities.

    And that’s exactly what our reforms deliver.

    A simpler, more robust system that sets much clearer expectations – for local authorities and developers alike…

    …about meeting your commitments – unlocking land, fulfilling planning permissions and providing essential infrastructure.

    And a system that, frankly, tolerates fewer excuses for failures to deliver.

    Starting first with the revision of the National Planning Policy Framework…

    This implements around 80 reforms announced last year.

    There’s still quite a lot in there that you’ll recognize, with a continued emphasis on development that’s sustainable and led locally.

    But the changes it does propose are significant.

    Offering councils flexibility to build more.

    But also greater responsibility for really delivering for their communities.

    Which means, firstly, working with your communities to get plans in place as quickly as possible…

    …so that development is dictated by what local people want and not by speculative applications.

    In many ways, these proposals will make this process of putting together a plan much easier.

    For the first time, all local authorities will be expected to assess housing need using the same methodology…

    …a big improvement on the current situation where different councils calculate housing need in different ways…

    …with expensive, or time wasting consulting and opaque methodology.

    I know that this issue – of how we establish what numbers of homes we need and where – has become muddied at times.

    Ultimately, we must be guided by where people want to live.

    And a standardized approach will help us do this – by establishing a level playing field and giving us a much clearer…

    …more transparent understanding of where the need for housing is most acute.

    Areas will also be able to agree a 5-year land supply position for a year…

    …reducing the need for costly planning appeals involving speculative applications.

    But perhaps one of the biggest shifts is a change in culture.

    Towards outcomes achieved – the number of homes delivered– rather than on processes like planning permissions

    And as it becomes easier to make plans more streamlined and strategic…

    …this culture change will also encourage authorities to work together to meet their communities’ needs.

    I know that many of you will already be doing this – and you are to be commended for it.

    It’s now time for others to follow your example.

    The standardised formula is a guide to planning the minimum number of homes that are needed.

    But ambitious councils, who have clear and robust plans for growth, may want to plan for more.

    Indeed, this kind of ambition is key to unlocking housing deals that support growth at a strategic level so that they’re not just delivering new homes but creating communities.

    And it’s because we want to champion this ambition that we’re going further.

    Councils will have much more scope to make the most of existing land, thanks to extra reform beyond those previously consulted on.

    These include an even stronger drive for increasing density -particularly in areas where housing need is high…

    …and supporting authorities to build upwards.

    But not, I must stress, at the expense of quality – with high design standards that communities are happy to embrace remaining a priority.

    You only have to look at mews street developments such as The Echoes in Thurrock and Goldsmith Street in Norwich…

    …or urban mansion blocks and traditional terraces to see that well-designed homes with high densities come in all shapes and sizes.

    These reforms also include more flexibility to develop brownfield land in the Green Belt…

    …to meet affordable housing need where there is no substantial harm to the openness of the Green Belt.

    Now I know that even the mention of the words “Green Belt” may cause some concern in some quarters.

    This is about building homes on sites that have been previously developed – not about, in any way, undermining the Green Belt.

    Our green spaces are precious and deserve our protection.

    Which is why for example the government is delivering on its manifesto commitment to give stronger protection to ancient woodland.

    Safeguarding assets that cannot be replaced for generations to come.

    And ensuring that planning policies promote net gains for biodiversity, including strengthening networks of habitats.

    So there are unprecedented opportunities here – to not only improve the environment, but to deliver the homes we need.

    With ambitious planners and local authorities leading the way.

    And with developers also stepping up – to help close the gap between planning permissions granted and homes built.

    Knowing what contributions they’re expected to make towards affordable housing and essential infrastructure…

    …and, vitally, knowing that local authorities can hold them to account.

    Unfortunately, we all know of instances where developers make these promises and later claim they can’t afford them.

    This is totally unacceptable.

    It cheats communities of much-needed housing and infrastructure and gives new development a bad name.

    Which is why we’re addressing this issue head on in our consultations, with proposals for reforms to the system.

    These include a new approach to developer contributions – so that everyone is clear about what affordable housing and infrastructure will underpin new development.

    More standardised viability assessments and greater transparency.

    Leaving developers in no doubt of what’s expected to them

    In no doubt that councils will hold them to their commitments.

    And leaving communities in no doubt that that their needs will be met.

    We will also be looking at what more we can do to support build out informed by Sir Oliver Letwin’s independent review…

    …into the gap between planning permissions granted and homes built – which is due to report by this year’s Autumn Budget

    And there’s the potential, over the long term, for more, significant reform of developer contributions.

    And there are also other areas in which we’re ready to go further to take the delivery of housing up a gear.

    Including a new permitted development right for building upwards to provide new homes.

    Finding more effective ways of bringing agricultural land forward for housing.

    And ensuring that swift and fair decisions are made at appeal.

    That’s why I will shortly announce an end-to end review of the planning inquiries process.

    This review will have one objective: to determine what it would take to halve the time for an inquiry on housing supply to be determined…

    …ensuring swift and fair decisions are made

    So with a strong focus, throughout, we’re leaving no stone unturned to meet everyone’s housing needs.

    Be that:

    – implementing an exception site policy to help more people onto the housing ladder

    – promoting Build to Rent

    – giving older people a better choice of accommodation

    – encouraging local policies for affordable homes catering for essential workers, such as nurses and police

    So with all these tools at your disposal, there’s no time to lose in getting your plans in place and really delivering for your communities.

    You’ll have heard me express my frustration about some local planning authorities that are still lagging behind on this score.

    I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: these plans are absolutely key to helping us build the right homes in the right places.

    So it’s vital that you get them in place quickly and keep them up to date to ensure that permissions turn into homes.

    The alternative – speculative development and neighbourhoods that are poorly planned, lacking strong communities – is something that none of us want to see.

    The truth is that, for too long, we’ve failed to plan for the future.

    To really get to grips with the number of homes we need.

    Whether we’re building them in the places where people want to live.

    Whether they’re of the right type – and serving the families, young people, older generations…

    And whether they’re of the right quality and in keeping with the local area.

    We need to think big about the kind of communities we want to live in, not just now, but for years to come.

    That changes today with the reforms we’re proposing to the NPPF and developer contributions.

    Measures that raise the game in every regard to get Britain building as never before.

    Starting this summer, when we’ll begin implementing the new Framework.

    Help us build a better system.

    A system that ensures that everyone – councils, developers, local communities – knows where they stand.

    Knows what’s expected of them.

    And knows what they need to do to deliver the great homes and the stronger communities that the people of this country need and deserve.

    Thank you.

  • Theresa May – 2018 Speech on Housing

    Below is the text of the speech made by Theresa May, the Prime Minister, in London on 5 March 2018.

    On my first day as Prime Minister, I spoke on the steps of Downing Street about my desire to make this a country that works for everyone.

    A country where, regardless of where you live, your race or religion, or what your parents do for a living, you have a fair chance to get on and build a life for yourself and your family.

    It’s a philosophy that shapes everything this government does, and, over the past 18 months, we’ve done much to help turn vision into reality.

    We’re reforming schools, colleges and universities so that all children and young people get the education that’s right for them.

    We’re addressing failures in the justice system, making it more transparent so that racial disparities can be identified and ironed out.

    We’re raising the national living wage, increasing the income tax personal allowance, and capping energy bills so that people are able to keep more of the money they’ve worked so hard to earn.

    And, as I said at Mansion House on Friday, we’re negotiating a Brexit deal that works for the whole of the UK, so that nobody feels they have been left behind.

    It’s all about making this country a fairer place for all, breathing fresh life into the British dream that every generation has a better future than the last.

    But we cannot fulfil that dream, we cannot bring about the kind of society I want to see, unless we tackle one of the biggest barriers to social mobility we face today: the national housing crisis.

    The causes and manifestations vary from place to place but the impact is all too clear: in much of the country, housing is so unaffordable that millions of people who would reasonably expect to buy their own home are unable to do so. Others are struggling even to find somewhere to rent.

    The root cause of the crisis is simple. For decades this country has failed to build enough of the right homes in the right places.

    It’s a problem that has plagued successive governments of all colours since post-war housebuilding peaked under the first Wilson administration.

    But it was from the mid-1990s that the failure to match demand with supply really began to push prices upwards. In 1997, the average home cost 3.5 times the average wage. By 2010, that ratio had more than doubled.

    Higher prices brought with them higher rents, so prospective first-time buyers found themselves able to save less and less even as the size of the deposit they needed grew and grew.

    The result is a vicious circle from which most people can only escape with help from the Bank of Mum and Dad. If you’re not lucky enough to have such support, the door to home ownership is all too often locked and barred.

    Talking to voters during last year’s election campaign, it was clear that many people, particularly younger people, are angry about this.

    Angry that, regardless of how hard they work, they won’t be able to buy a place of their own. Angry when they’re forced to hand more and more of their wages to a landlord to whom their home is simply a business asset. Angry that, no matter how many sacrifices they make to save for a deposit, they’ll never be able to compete with someone whose parents have released equity from their own home to help their children buy.

    They’re right to be angry. Income inequality is down since 2010, thanks in part to increases in the personal allowance and the National Living Wage. But wealth inequality continues to rise. And, as figures such as Matthew Rognlie argue, it is housing wealth – unearned, and offering huge returns – that lies at the heart of this growing disparity.

    But the impact of rising prices goes beyond the simple division between housing haves and have-nots. This crisis of un-affordability is also creating a crisis of almost literal social immobility.

    Think of the skilled, experienced worker who is offered a promotion but can’t afford to take it up because it would mean moving to a town or city where he can’t afford to live.

    Think of the talented young woman from a working-class background who can’t afford to take an entry-level professional job because she wouldn’t be able to live nearby.

    It’s not so hard to accept that door-opening internship in London if your parents own a large house in central London. It’s a much greater challenge if you share a room with your siblings in a North Wales terrace.

    So the shortage of housing in this country reinforces inequality. It prevents social mobility and stops people fulfilling their potential. It creates and exacerbates divisions between generations and between those who own property and those who do not.

    And it undermines something more, something less tangible but just as important. The sense of community, of belonging, of responsibility that comes with owning your own home or having an affordable, secure, long-term tenancy.

    I still vividly remember the first home that I shared with my husband, Philip. Not only our pictures on the walls and our books on the shelves, but also the security that came from knowing we couldn’t be asked to move on at short notice.

    And because we had that security, because we had a place to go back to, it was that much easier to play an active role in our community. To share in the common purpose of a free society.

    That is what this country should be about – not just having a roof over your head but having a stake in your community and its future. All that is put at risk by the mismatch between housing supply and housing demand and the soaring prices that have resulted.

    Now, this Government is already taking action to help hard-pressed buyers. We’re putting an extra £10 billion into Help to Buy, giving another 135,000 families a step up the property ladder. We’re scrapping stamp duty for 80 per cent of first-time buyers, and looking at ways to make the whole process of buying and selling homes quicker, easier and cheaper.

    But to stop the seemingly endless rise in house prices, we simply have to build more homes – especially in the places where un-affordability is greatest.

    Getting more homes built: new planning rules

    Doing so requires action on many fronts, and at the very heart of the matter is the planning process. Planning professionals may not be as visible as the bricklayers and carpenters and roofers. But we cannot build the homes we need without them.

    Because if there’s one thing I learned from my time working on housing at Merton Council, it’s that good planning is all about detail. It’s very easy for a politician to stand up and say he or she will build however many homes in however many years. But it’s an empty promise if they don’t also address the hundreds of smaller issues that underpin it.

    Where in the country will they be built? In which communities? On what sites? What kind of homes will they be? What infrastructure will be needed to support them? Will these plans be imposed from above, or will local people have a say on what happens in their area?

    These are the kind of questions that need to be answered by anyone who is serious about getting homes built. They’re the kind of questions that are asked every day by planning professionals. And they’re the kind of questions this government is answering with the new, fairer, more effective planning rules that we’re launching today.

    When used incorrectly, as was the case for so many years, planning policy creates barriers to building, tying up councils in red tape and allowing developers to game the system. But in the right hands it can be a powerful tool with which to shape, regulate and drive the construction of homes in this country.

    So this government is rewriting the rules on planning. With the major overhaul being published today, we’re giving councils and developers the backing they need to get more homes built more quickly. More homes at prices that are affordable for first-time buyers. More homes for the NHS staff, teachers, firefighters and other key workers on whom all communities depend. More homes for rent on family-friendly, three-year tenancies.

    We’re streamlining the planning process, so that much-needed homes aren’t held up by endless appeals and bureaucracy.

    We’re making it easier for neglected and abandoned commercial sites to be turned into housing.

    And we’re making sure councils do all they can to find sites, grant planning permissions and build homes. That includes creating a nationwide standard that shows how many homes authorities need to plan for in their area – making the system fairer and more transparent.

    Our new rules will also see to it that the right infrastructure is in place to support such developments. When people oppose large-scale development in their area, it’s often because they’re worried their village or town simply won’t be able to bear the weight of hundreds of new arrivals.

    Their schools are already full, their roads are already congested, the waiting list at their GP is already too long. They want to know that any new homes will be accompanied by appropriate new facilities and infrastructure.

    Under our new planning rules, that’s exactly what will happen. And local communities will be put at the heart of the planning process by seeing to it that all areas have an up-to-date plan.

    Turning planning permissions into homes

    Yet we must not lose sight of the fact that planning for the homes we need is not the same as building the homes we need. After all, families can’t live in a planning permission. A well-designed local plan won’t keep your children safe and warm at night.

    The reforms driven forward under our last Prime Minister led to a great and welcome increase in the number of planning permissions granted. But we did not see a corresponding rise in the number of homes being built.

    All that is changing.

    The Secretary of State for Housing, Sajid Javid, along with his ministerial team and their officials, are doing incredible work in tackling failings at every level of the housing sector.

    And I’ve taken personal charge of meeting the housing challenge, leading a task-force that brings together ministers and officials from every corner of Whitehall to attack the crisis on every front.

    Because, while planning reform is part of the answer, all the evidence shows that just reforming planning and expecting the existing developers to build all the homes we need is pie in the sky.

    Of course they have a clear and vital role to play, but the government must also step in homes are going to get built.

    So we’re committing at least £44 billion of capital funding, loans and guarantees to support our housing market. We’ve changed the rules so authorities facing the greatest affordability pressures can access the finance they need to build more council homes for local people.

    We’ve given Homes England a more muscular, proactive role in the process of site assembly, bringing together patches of land to create a coherent site suitable for development.

    We’re investing in innovative modern construction methods that get more homes built more quickly.

    The £5 billion Housing Infrastructure Fund has already made its first awards, investing almost £900 million in the roads, cycle paths, flood defences and other essential works that will allow for the construction of up to 200,000 homes that would otherwise not get built.

    And we’ve put an additional £1.5 billion into the Home Building Fund, helping smaller developers deliver homes that don’t attract finance from the private sector. As one builder put it after finishing a development in Derbyshire: “The banks were very sceptical and very unhelpful. The Home Building Fund finance made all the difference.”

    The results are clear. In 2016/17 net additions to England’s housing supply reached some of the highest levels seen for a generation. More than 217,000 homes of all types and tenures providing a place to live for couples, families and individuals right across the country.

    The number of people buying their first home has reached its highest level in more than a decade: 365,000 last year, with an average age of 30.

    A challenge for developers

    Yet there remains much to do. The gap between permissions granted and homes built is still too large. The new, fairer planning rules we’re publishing today will help to close it. But it’s also time for builders and developers to step up and do their bit.

    The bonuses paid to the heads of some of our biggest developers are based not on the number of homes they build but on their profits or share price. In a market where lower supply equals higher prices that creates a perverse incentive, one that does not encourage them to build the homes we need.

    Oliver Letwin is currently reviewing the causes of the planning permission gap. If he finds evidence of unjustifiable delay, I will not rule out any options for ending such practices.

    That may include allowing councils to take a developer’s previous rate of build-out into account when deciding whether to grant planning permission. I want to see planning permissions going to people who are actually going to build houses, not just sit on land and watch its value rise.

    Where councils are allocating sufficient land for the homes people need, our new planning rulebook will stop developers building on large sites that aren’t allocated in the plan – something that’s not fair on residents who agree to a plan only to see it ignored.

    And, by ending abuse of the “viability assessment” process, we’re going to make it much harder for unscrupulous developers to dodge their obligation to build homes local people can afford.

    The Government will make sure land is available for homes and make sure our young people have the skills needed to build them. In return, I expect developers to do their duty for Britain and build the homes our country needs.

    Public investments in infrastructure and schemes such as Help to Buy have provided a real boost to house builders. If they want that to continue, they will have to raise their game.

    Protecting the green belt

    But that doesn’t have to mean destroying the country we love.

    This is not an overcrowded nation. Only around 10 per cent of England has been built on. We are not faced with a zero-sum choice between building the homes people need and protecting the open spaces we treasure.

    That’s why the answer to our housing crisis does not lie in tearing up the Green Belt. Barely 13 per cent of this country is covered by such a designation, but it serves a valuable and very specific purpose.

    Not protecting beautiful scenery, unique wildlife or accessible landscapes. For that we have National Parks, Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty, heritage coastline and more. Indeed, our new planning rules also include stronger protections for ancient woodland and historic coastlines everywhere.

    No, the defining characteristic of Green Belt land is not its beauty or its greenness, but its openness. Green Belts exist not to preserve landscapes but to prevent urban sprawl. That is what they were created for in the 1950s and that is the valuable purpose they still serve today.

    Where cities surrounded by Green Belts still need more homes, we can increase housing density, make better use of brownfield sites, build upwards rather than outwards.

    Our new planning rules make it easier to do this, allowing for minimum densities around transport hubs and city centres so that more homes can be built in areas with the highest demand.

    They also support conversions of empty spaces over shops and upward extensions, allowing planners to make the most efficient use of available space and helping families to extend their homes.

    Planning rules already say that Green Belt boundaries should be changed only in “exceptional circumstances”. But too many local authorities and developers have been taking a lax view of what “exceptional” means. They’ve been allocating Green Belt sites for development as an easy option rather than a last resort.

    To prevent this, we’re strengthening existing protections so that authorities can only amend Green Belt boundaries if they can prove they have fully explored every other reasonable option for building the homes their community needs.

    In the handful of cases where land does have to be removed, councils and developers will have to find ways to offset the impact.

    And our 25-year environment plan commits us to leaving the natural environment in a better state than we found it. So we’ll expect any development, whether in the Green Belt or outside it, to look first at sites that have previously been built on rather than opting immediately for virgin countryside.

    I’d rather see an ugly, disused power station demolished and replaced with attractive housing than a wood or open field concreted over – even if the former is in the Green Belt and the latter is not.

    A fairer deal for tenants

    This concerted action, in planning and beyond, will get more homes built and bring home ownership back within the grasp of ordinary people.

    But while ownership is a wonderful thing, there is nothing inherently wrong with renting your home. More than a third of English households rent at present, and almost all of us will do so at some point in our lives – I know I have.

    Yet the tragedy of Grenfell Tower shone a spotlight on experiences shared by too many tenants. The fire took place in a local authority tower block, but the stories we’ve heard from the people who lived there – concerns not being acted on, voices not being listened to, needs being ignored – were all too familiar to tenants in all kinds of homes across the country.

    Whether you’re renting by choice or necessity, you’re not any less of a person for doing so and you should not be treated as such. But the rise in houses prices has helped create a rental market in which bad practice can flourish, where people can be exploited, and where tenants are all too often seen as an inconvenient commercial necessity rather than as individuals with rights and needs.

    Private landlords play an important role in the housing market. Talk to tenants, however, and you’ll repeatedly hear complaints that people are paying more and more for less and less. So this government is taking action to clean up the rental market and bring down the cost of renting.

    Too many tenants have got used to being hit with rip-off fees by letting agents, facing huge upfront bills to check references or sign contracts. That’s simply not fair, so we’re banning letting agents from charging most tenants any fees at all.

    Families face being uprooted every six months when their leases expire, so we’re working to make longer tenancies the norm.

    Rogue landlords have been flouting rules that protect tenants’ rights and safety. So we’ve given local authorities new powers to crack down on such behaviour, and we’re backing legislation that will ensure all rental properties are fit for human habitation.

    With no regulation in property management, the door has been open to cowboy agents – with tenants, leaseholders, freeholders and honest agents all paying the price. That’s why we’re working with reputable property managers and their clients to clean up and regulate the sector.

    Our new planning rules encourage providers to build more homes specifically for rent, so supply goes up and rents come down.

    And, later this year, our social housing green paper will look at what more can be done to ensure everyone living in social housing is treated fairly.

    Whether in the private or social sector, renting your home should be affordable, safe and fair – and I’m working hard to make sure that’s the case.

    Tackling homelessness

    Just as Grenfell highlighted failings in parts of the housing sector, so the tragic deaths of rough sleepers have reminded us of the plight of those forced to live on the streets.

    And let me take this opportunity to thank the thousands of council staff, charity workers, volunteers and members of the emergency services who have done so much to help rough sleepers during the recent cold weather.

    In 2018, in one of the world’s largest, strongest economies, nobody should be without a roof over their head. This isn’t just a British problem – in recent years homelessness has risen across Europe – but it is source of national shame nonetheless.

    That’s why we pledged in our manifesto to halve rough sleeping by 2022 and eliminate it altogether by 2027. We’ve already committed £1 billion to help bring this about, and are piloting the Housing First approach in three of our great cities to see how it can work in this country.

    We’re also implementing the Homelessness Reduction Act, to help more people sooner. We’ve changed the rules around funding so local government can use £400 million to help prevent homelessness, instead of just responding to it. And we’ve changed the law so councils can place families into private rented accommodation – meaning they get a safe, secure suitable place sooner.

    But it’s not just about housing. Homeless people often have complex needs, so we’re taking unprecedented action across the board to help address them.

    Here in London, 47 per cent of rough sleepers have mental health needs. That’s why we’re spending record levels on mental health support.

    Forty four per cent need help to overcome alcoholism, so we’re spending around £200 million on treatment for alcoholism every year.

    And 35 per cent need help for drug misuse, which is why our new Drug Strategy will protect the most vulnerable and help them turn their lives around.

    There’s undoubtedly more to do. But we’re taking action that will make a real difference.

    Because this is a government that isn’t afraid to uncover and face up to challenges. And that’s exactly what we’re doing with homelessness, and with the wider housing crisis.

    A property owning democracy

    More than 70 years ago, Anthony Eden told the world that “the ownership of property is not a crime or a sin, but a reward, a right and a responsibility that must be shared as equitably as possible among all our citizens.”

    This country agrees with him. For decades after, home ownership steadily grew as more and more people acquired and passed on not just a patch of land but a stake in their communities, a piece of our shared society.

    Yet ownership peaked in 2003. With prices rising and affordability falling, we became a nation where buying your own home went from a shared aspiration to a distant dream. Where rising rents led to an increasingly rootless population. Where housing wealth coalesced in the hands of those lucky enough to be on the property ladder, creating division, increasing inequality and undermining communities.

    The British dream is about each generation being better off than the last, but today’s young people are forced to spend three times more of their income on housing than was the case for their grandparents.

    The picture we see today is the result of many failures by many people over many years. Fixing it won’t happen overnight. But the size of the challenge is matched only by the strength of my ambition to tackle it.

    More home ownership. A rental market that works for tenants. Greater fairness for all.

    That is what the people of this country need.

    That is what will make this a society that truly works for everyone.

    And, as Prime Minister, that is what I am determined to deliver.

  • Theresa May – 2018 Keynote Speech on Brexit

    Below is the text of the speech made by Theresa May, the Prime Minister, at the Mansion House in London on 2 March 2018.

    I am grateful to the Lord Mayor and all his team at the Mansion House for hosting us this afternoon.

    And in the midst of the bad weather, I would just like to take a moment before I begin my speech today to thank everyone in our country who is going the extra mile to help people at this time.

    I think of our emergency services and armed forces working to keep people safe; our NHS staff, care workers, and all those keeping our public services going; and the many volunteers who are giving their time to help those in need.

    Your contribution is a special part of who we are as a country – and it is all the more appreciated at a moment like this.

    Five tests

    Now I am here today to set out my vision for the future economic partnership between the United Kingdom and the European Union.

    There have been many different voices and views in the debate on what our new relationship with the EU should look like. I have listened carefully to them all.

    But as we chart our way forward with the EU, I want to take a moment to look back.

    Eighteen months ago I stood in Downing Street and addressed the nation for my first time as Prime Minister.

    I made this pledge then, to the people that I serve:

    I know you’re working around the clock, I know you’re doing your best, and I know that sometimes life can be a struggle.

    The government I lead will be driven not by the interests of the privileged few, but by yours.

    We will do everything we can to give you more control over your lives.

    When we take the big calls, we’ll think not of the powerful, but you.

    When we pass new laws, we’ll listen not to the mighty but to you.

    When it comes to taxes, we’ll prioritise not the wealthy, but you.

    When it comes to opportunity, we won’t entrench the advantages of the fortunate few.

    We will do everything we can to help anybody, whatever your background, to go as far as your talents will take you.

    We are living through an important moment in our country’s history. As we leave the European Union, we will forge a bold new positive role for ourselves in the world, and we will make Britain a country that works not for a privileged few, but for every one of us.

    That pledge, to the people of our United Kingdom is what guides me in our negotiations with the EU.

    And for me that means five things: First, the agreement we reach with the EU must respect the referendum. It was a vote to take control of our borders, laws and money. And a vote for wider change, so that no community in Britain would ever be left behind again. But it was not a vote for a distant relationship with our neighbours.

    Second, the new agreement we reach with the EU must endure. After Brexit both the UK and the EU want to forge ahead with building a better future for our people, not find ourselves back at the negotiating table because things have broken down.

    Third, it must protect people’s jobs and security. People in the UK voted for our country to have a new and different relationship with Europe, but while the means may change our shared goals surely have not – to work together to grow our economies and keep our people safe.

    Fourth, it must be consistent with the kind of country we want to be as we leave: a modern, open, outward-looking, tolerant, European democracy. A nation of pioneers, innovators, explorers and creators. A country that celebrates our history and diversity, confident of our place in the world; that meets its obligations to our near neighbours and far off friends, and is proud to stand up for its values.

    And fifth, in doing all of these things, it must strengthen our union of nations and our union of people.

    We must bring our country back together, taking into account the views of everyone who cares about this issue, from both sides of the debate. As Prime Minister it is my duty to represent all of our United Kingdom, England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland; north and south, from coastal towns and rural villages to our great cities.

    So these are the five tests for the deal that we will negotiate.

    Implementing the decision of the British people; reaching an enduring solution; protecting our security and prosperity; delivering an outcome that is consistent with the kind of country we want to be; and bringing our country together, strengthening the precious union of all our people.

    A crucial moment

    We are now approaching a crucial moment.

    There is no escaping the complexity of the task ahead of us. We must not only negotiate our exit from an organisation that touches so many important parts of our national life. We must also build a new and lasting relationship while, given the uncertainty inherent in this negotiation, preparing for every scenario.

    But we are making real progress.

    At the end of last year, we agreed the key elements of our withdrawal.

    We are in the process of turning that agreement into draft legal text. We have made clear our concerns about the first draft the Commission published on Wednesday – but no-one should be in any doubt about our commitment to the Joint Report we agreed in December.

    We are close to agreement on the terms of an implementation period which was a key element of December’s deal.

    Of course some points of difference remain – but I am confident these can be resolved in the days ahead.

    Both the UK and the EU are clear this implementation period must be time-limited and cannot become a permanent solution. But it is vital to give governments, businesses and citizens on both sides the time they need to prepare for our new relationship.

    With this agreed, I want both sides to turn all our attention and efforts to that new relationship.

    But before we can do that, we need to set out in more detail what relationship we want, building on my Lancaster House and Florence speeches.

    So last month, I spoke in Munich about the security partnership we seek.

    And today, I want to talk about the other pillar of that relationship: how we build our economic partnership.

    Existing models will not work

    In my speech in Florence, I set out why the existing models for economic partnership either do not deliver the ambition we need or impose unsustainable constraints on our democracy.

    For example, the Norway model, where we would stay in the single market, would mean having to implement new EU legislation automatically and in its entirety – and would also mean continued free movement.

    Others have suggested we negotiate a free trade agreement similar to that which Canada has recently negotiated with the EU – or trade on World Trade Organisation terms.

    But these options would mean a significant reduction in our access to each other’s markets compared to that which we currently enjoy.

    And this would mean customs and regulatory checks at the border that would damage the integrated supply chains that our industries depend on and be inconsistent with the commitments that both we and the EU have made in respect of Northern Ireland.

    This is a wider issue in our negotiations and I want to dwell on this for a minute.

    Successive British governments have worked tirelessly – together with all the parties in Northern Ireland and with the Irish Government – to bring about the historic achievement of peace.

    This is an achievement that we should all be proud of, and protect. That is why I have consistently put upholding the Belfast Agreement at the heart of the UK’s approach.

    Our departure from the EU causes very particular challenges for Northern Ireland, and for Ireland. We joined the EU together 45 years ago. It is not surprising that our decision to leave has caused anxiety and a desire for concrete solutions.

    We have been clear all along that we don’t want to go back to a hard border in Ireland. We have ruled out any physical infrastructure at the border, or any related checks and controls.

    But it is not good enough to say, ‘We won’t introduce a hard border; if the EU forces Ireland to do it, that’s down to them’. We chose to leave; we have a responsibility to help find a solution.

    But we can’t do it on our own. It is for all of us to work together.

    And the Taoiseach and I agreed when we met recently that our teams and the Commission should now do just that.

    I want to make one final point. Just as it would be unacceptable to go back to a hard border between Northern Ireland and Ireland, it would also be unacceptable to break up the United Kingdom’s own common market by creating a customs and regulatory border down the Irish Sea.

    My personal commitment to this is clear.

    As Prime Minister of the whole United Kingdom, I am not going to let our departure from the European Union do anything to set back the historic progress that we have made in Northern Ireland – nor will I allow anything that would damage the integrity of our precious Union.

    Facing up to some hard facts

    So existing models do not provide the best way forward for either the UK or the EU. But before I turn to what a new and better model might look like, I want to be straight with people – because the reality is that we all need to face up to some hard facts.

    We are leaving the single market. Life is going to be different. In certain ways, our access to each other’s markets will be less than it is now. How could the EU’s structure of rights and obligations be sustained, if the UK – or any country – were allowed to enjoy all the benefits without all of the obligations?

    So we need to strike a new balance. But we will not accept the rights of Canada and the obligations of Norway.

    The second hard fact is that even after we have left the jurisdiction of the ECJ, EU law and the decisions of the ECJ will continue to affect us.

    For a start, the ECJ determines whether agreements the EU has struck are legal under the EU’s own law – as the US found when the ECJ declared the Safe Harbor Framework for data sharing invalid.

    When we leave the EU, the Withdrawal Bill will bring EU law into UK law. That means cases will be determined in our courts. But, where appropriate, our courts will continue to look at the ECJ’s judgments, as they do for the appropriate jurisprudence of other countries’ courts.

    And if, as part of our future partnership, Parliament passes an identical law to an EU law, it may make sense for our courts to look at the appropriate ECJ judgments so that we both interpret those laws consistently.

    As I said in Munich, if we agree that the UK should continue to participate in an EU agency the UK would have to respect the remit of the ECJ in that regard.

    But, in the future, the EU treaties and hence EU law will no longer apply in the UK. The agreement we reach must therefore respect the sovereignty of both the UK and the EU’s legal orders. That means the jurisdiction of the ECJ in the UK must end. It also means that the ultimate arbiter of disputes about our future partnership cannot be the court of either party.

    The next hard fact is this. If we want good access to each other’s markets, it has to be on fair terms. As with any trade agreement, we must accept the need for binding commitments – for example, we may choose to commit some areas of our regulations like state aid and competition to remaining in step with the EU’s.

    The UK drove much of the policy in this area and we have much to gain from maintaining proper disciplines on the use of subsidies and on anti-competitive practices.

    Furthermore, as I said in Florence, we share the same set of fundamental beliefs; a belief in free trade, rigorous and fair competition, strong consumer rights, and that trying to beat other countries’ industries by unfairly subsidising one’s own is a serious mistake.

    And in other areas like workers’ rights or the environment, the EU should be confident that we will not engage in a race to the bottom in the standards and protections we set. There is no serious political constituency in the UK which would support this – quite the opposite.

    Finally, we need to resolve the tensions between some of our key objectives.

    We want the freedom to negotiate trade agreements with other countries around the world. We want to take back control of our laws. We also want as frictionless a border as possible between us and the EU – so that we don’t damage the integrated supply chains our industries depend on and don’t have a hard border between Northern Ireland and Ireland.

    But there are some tensions in the EU’s position too – and some hard facts for them to face as well.

    The Commission has suggested that the only option available to the UK is an ‘off the shelf’ model.

    But, at the same time, they have also said that in certain areas none of the EU’s third country agreements would be appropriate.

    And the European Council’s Guidelines aspire to a balanced, ambitious, and wide-ranging deal, with common rules in a number of areas to ensure fair and open competition.

    This would not be delivered by a Canada-style deal – which would not give them the breadth or depth of market access that they want.

    And it is hard to see how it would be in the EU’s interests for the UK’s regulatory standards to be as different as Canada’s.

    Finally, we both need to face the fact that this is a negotiation and neither of us can have exactly what we want.

    Future economic partnership

    But I am confident we can reach agreement.

    We both want good access to each other’s markets; we want competition between us to be fair and open; and we want reliable, transparent means of verifying we are meeting our commitments and resolving disputes.

    But what is clear is that for us both to meet our objectives we need to look beyond the precedents, and find a new balance.

    As on security, what I am seeking is a relationship that goes beyond the transactional to one where we support each other’s interests.

    So I want the broadest and deepest possible partnership – covering more sectors and co-operating more fully than any Free Trade Agreement anywhere in the world today. And as I will go on to describe we will also need agreements in a range of areas covering the breadth of our relationship.

    I believe this is achievable because it is in the EU’s interests as well as ours.

    The EU is the UK’s biggest market – and of course the UK is also a big market for the EU. And furthermore, we have a unique starting point, where on day one we both have the same laws and rules.

    So rather than having to bring two different systems closer together, the task will be to manage the relationship once we are two separate legal systems.

    To do so, and to realise this level of ambition, there are five foundations that must underpin our trading relationship.

    First, our agreement will need reciprocal binding commitments to ensure fair and open competition.

    Such agreements are part and parcel of any trade agreement. After all, why would any country enter into a privileged economic partnership without any means of redress if the other party engaged in anti-competitive practices?

    But the level of integration between the UK and EU markets and our geographical proximity mean these reciprocal commitments will be particularly important in ensuring that UK business can compete fairly in EU markets and vice versa.

    A deep and comprehensive agreement with the EU will therefore need to include commitments reflecting the extent to which the UK and EU economies are entwined.

    Second, we will need an arbitration mechanism that is completely independent – something which, again, is common to Free Trade Agreements.

    This will ensure that any disagreements about the purpose or scope of the agreement can be resolved fairly and promptly.

    Third, given the close relationship we envisage, we will need to have an ongoing dialogue with the EU, and to ensure we have the means to consult each other regularly.

    In particular we will want to make sure our regulators continue to work together; as they do with regulators internationally. This will be essential for everything from getting new drugs to patients quickly to maintaining financial stability. We start from the place where our regulators already have deep and long-standing relationships. So the task is maintaining that trust; not building it in the first place.

    Fourth, we will need an arrangement for data protection.

    I made this point in Munich in relation to our security relationship. But the free flow of data is also critical for both sides in any modern trading relationship too. The UK has exceptionally high standards of data protection. And we want to secure an agreement with the EU that provides the stability and confidence for EU and UK business and individuals to achieve our aims in maintaining and developing the UK’s strong trading and economic links with the EU.

    That is why we will be seeking more than just an adequacy arrangement and want to see an appropriate ongoing role for the UK’s Information Commissioner’s Office. This will ensure UK businesses are effectively represented under the EU’s new ‘one stop shop’ mechanism for resolving data protection disputes.

    And fifth, we must maintain the links between our people.

    EU citizens are an integral part of the economic, cultural and social fabric of our country. I know that UK nationals are viewed in entirely the same way by communities across the EU. And this is why at every stage of these negotiations, I have put the interests of EU citizens and UK nationals at the heart of our approach.

    We are clear that as we leave the EU, free movement of people will come to an end and we will control the number of people who come to live in our country.

    But UK citizens will still want to work and study in EU countries – just as EU citizens will want to do the same here, helping to shape and drive growth, innovation and enterprise. Indeed, businesses across the EU and the UK must be able to attract and employ the people they need. And we are open to discussing how to facilitate these valuable links.

    Reciprocal commitments to ensure fair and open competition, an independent arbitration mechanism, an ongoing dialogue, data protection arrangements and maintaining the links between our people. These are the foundations that underpin the ambition of this unique and unprecedented partnership.

    It will then need to be tailored to the needs of our economies.

    This follows the approach the EU has taken with its trade agreements in the past – and indeed with its own single market as it has developed.

    The EU’s agreement with Ukraine sees it align with the EU in some areas but not others. The EU’s agreement with South Korea contains provisions to recognise each others’ approvals for new car models, whereas their agreement with Canada does not. Equally, the EU’s agreement with Canada contains provisions to recognise each others’ testing on machinery; its agreement with South Korea does not.

    The EU itself is rightly taking a tailored approach in what it is seeking with the UK. For example, on fisheries, the Commission has been clear that no precedents exist for the sort of access it wants from the UK.

    The fact is that every Free Trade Agreement has varying market access depending on the respective interests of the countries involved. If this is cherry-picking, then every trade arrangement is cherry-picking.

    Moreover, with all its neighbours the EU has varying levels of access to the Single Market, depending on the obligations those neighbours are willing to undertake.

    What would be cherry-picking would be if we were to seek a deal where our rights and obligations were not held in balance.

    And I have been categorically clear that is not what we are going to do.

    I think it is pragmatic common sense that we should work together to deliver the best outcome for both sides.

    Goods

    Let me start with how we do this for goods.

    This is the area where the single market is most established and both the UK and the EU have a strong commercial interest in preserving integrated supply chains that have built up over forty years of our membership.

    When it comes to goods, a fundamental principle in our negotiating strategy should be that trade at the UK-EU border should be as frictionless as possible.

    That means we don’t want to see the introduction of any tariffs or quotas. And – as the Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union set out in his speech in Vienna last week – we must ensure that, as now, products only need to undergo one series of approvals, in one country, to show that they meet the required regulatory standards.

    To achieve this we will need a comprehensive system of mutual recognition.

    The UK will need to make a strong commitment that its regulatory standards will remain as high as the EU’s. That commitment, in practice, will mean that UK and EU regulatory standards will remain substantially similar in the future.

    Many of these regulatory standards are themselves underpinned by international standards set by non-EU bodies of which we will remain a member – such as the UN Economic Commission for Europe, which sets vehicle safety standards. Countries around the world, including Turkey, South Africa, South Korea, Japan and Russia, are party to the agreement.

    As I said in my speech in Florence this could be achieved in different ways.

    Our default is that UK law may not necessarily be identical to EU law, but it should achieve the same outcomes. In some cases Parliament might choose to pass an identical law – businesses who export to the EU tell us that it is strongly in their interest to have a single set of regulatory standards that mean they can sell into the UK and EU markets.

    If the Parliament of the day decided not to achieve the same outcomes as EU law, it would be in the knowledge that there may be consequences for our market access.

    And there will need to be an independent mechanism to oversee these arrangements.

    We will also want to explore with the EU, the terms on which the UK could remain part of EU agencies such as those that are critical for the chemicals, medicines and aerospace industries: the European Medicines Agency, the European Chemicals Agency, and the European Aviation Safety Agency.

    We would, of course, accept that this would mean abiding by the rules of those agencies and making an appropriate financial contribution.

    I want to explain what I believe the benefits of this approach could be, both for us and the EU.

    First, associate membership of these agencies is the only way to meet our objective of ensuring that these products only need to undergo one series of approvals, in one country.

    Second, these agencies have a critical role in setting and enforcing relevant rules. And if we were able to negotiate associate membership we would be able to ensure that we could continue to provide our technical expertise.

    Third, associate membership could permit UK firms to resolve certain challenges related to the agencies through UK courts rather than the ECJ.

    For example, in the case of Switzerland, associate membership of the European Aviation Safety Agency means that airworthiness certifications are granted by its own aviation authority, and disputes are resolved through its courts. Without its membership, Swiss airlines would need to gain their certifications through another member state or through the Agency, and any dispute would need to be resolved through the ECJ.

    Fourth it would bring other benefits too. For example, membership of the European Medicines Agency would mean investment in new innovative medicines continuing in the UK, and it would mean these medicines getting to patients faster as firms prioritise larger markets when they start the lengthy process of seeking authorisations. But it would also be good for the EU because the UK regulator assesses more new medicines than any other member state. And the EU would continue to access the expertise of the UK’s world-leading universities.

    And, of course, Parliament would remain ultimately sovereign. It could decide not to accept these rules, but with consequences for our membership of the relevant agency and linked market access rights.

    Lastly to achieve as frictionless a border as possible and to avoid a hard border between Northern Ireland and Ireland, we also need an agreement on customs.

    The UK has been clear it is leaving the Customs Union.

    The EU has also formed a customs union with some other countries.

    But those arrangements, if applied to the UK, would mean the EU setting the UK’s external tariffs, being able to let other countries sell more into the UK without making it any easier for us to sell more to them, or the UK signing up to the Common Commercial Policy. That would not be compatible with a meaningful independent trade policy. It would mean we had less control than we do now over our trade in the world. Neither Leave nor Remain voters would want that.

    So we have thought seriously about how our commitment to a frictionless border can best be delivered. And last year, we set out two potential options for our customs arrangement. Option one is a customs partnership between the UK and the EU. At the border, the UK would mirror the EU’s requirements for imports from the rest of the world, applying the same tariffs and the same rules of origin as the EU for those goods arriving in the UK and intended for the EU. By following this approach, we would know that all goods entering the EU via the UK pay the right EU duties, removing the need for customs processes at the UK-EU border.

    But, importantly, we would put in place a mechanism so that the UK would also be able to apply its own tariffs and trade policy for goods intended for the UK market. As we have set out previously, this would require the means to ensure that both sides can trust the system and a robust enforcement mechanism.

    Option two would be a highly streamlined customs arrangement, where we would jointly agree to implement a range of measures to minimise frictions to trade, together with specific provisions for Northern Ireland.

    First, measures to ensure the requirements for moving goods across borders are as simple as possible.

    This means we should continue to waive the requirement for entry and exit declarations for goods moving between the UK and the EU.

    And we should allow goods moving between the UK and the rest of the world to travel through the EU without paying EU duties and vice versa.

    Second, measures to reduce the risk of delays at ports and airports. For example, recognising each other’s “trusted traders” schemes and drawing on the most advanced IT solutions so that vehicles do not need to stop at the border.

    Third, we should continue our cooperation to mitigate customs duty and security risks.

    And fourth, measures to reduce the cost and burden of complying with customs administrative requirements, including by maximising the use of automation.

    And recognising the unique circumstances in Northern Ireland, and our shared commitments to avoiding a hard border, we should consider further specific measures.

    80% of North-South trade is carried out by micro, small and medium sized businesses.

    So for smaller traders – who as members of the community are most affected but whose economic role is not systemically significant for the EU market – we would allow them to continue to operate as they do currently, with no new restrictions.

    And for larger traders we would introduce streamlined processes, including a trusted trader scheme that would be consistent with our commitments.

    Both of these options for our future customs arrangement would leave the UK free to determine its own tariffs with third countries – which would simply not be possible in a customs union.

    I recognise that some of these ideas depend on technology, robust systems to ensure trust and confidence, as well as goodwill – but they are serious and merit consideration by all sides.

    So to conclude on goods, a fundamental principle in our negotiating strategy is that trade at the UK-EU border should be as frictionless as possible with no hard border between Northern Ireland and Ireland.

    We believe this can be achieved via a commitment to ensure that the relevant UK regulatory standards remain at least as high as the EU’s and a customs arrangement.

    We recognise this would constrain our ability to lower regulatory standards for industrial goods. But in practice we are unlikely to want to reduce our standards: not least because the British public would rightly punish any government that did so at the ballot box.

    Agrifood and fisheries

    This approach to trade in goods is important for agriculture, food and drinks – but here other considerations also apply.

    We are leaving the Common Agricultural Policy and will want to take the opportunity that brings to reform our agriculture and fisheries management.

    The UK has among the highest environmental and animal welfare standards of any nation on earth. As we leave the EU we will uphold environmental standards and go further to protect our shared natural heritage. And I fully expect that our standards will remain at least as high as the EU’s.

    But it will be particularly important to secure flexibility here to ensure we can make the most of the opportunities presented by our withdrawal from the EU for our farmers and exporters.

    We are also leaving the Common Fisheries Policy.

    The UK will regain control over our domestic fisheries management rules and access to our waters.

    But as part of our economic partnership we will want to continue to work together to manage shared stocks in a sustainable way and to agree reciprocal access to waters and a fairer allocation of fishing opportunities for the UK fishing industry.

    And we will also want to ensure open markets for each other’s products.

    Services

    Just as our partnership in goods needs to be deeper than any other Free Trade Agreement, so in services we have the opportunity to break new ground with a broader agreement than ever before.

    We recognise that certain aspects of trade in services are intrinsically linked to the single market and therefore our market access in these areas will need to be different.

    But we should only allow new barriers to be introduced where absolutely necessary. We don’t want to discriminate against EU service providers in the UK. And we wouldn’t want the EU to discriminate against UK service providers.

    So we want to limit the number of barriers that could prevent UK firms from setting up in the EU and vice versa, and agree an appropriate labour mobility framework that enables UK businesses and self-employed professionals to travel to the EU to provide services to clients in person and that allows UK businesses to provide services to the EU over the phone or the internet. And we want to do the same for EU firms providing services to the UK.

    And given that UK qualifications are already recognised across the EU and vice versa – it would make sense to continue to recognise each other’s qualifications in the future.

    There are two areas which have never been covered in a Free Trade Agreement in any meaningful way before – broadcasting and, despite the EU’s own best efforts in the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership, financial services.

    But we have some ideas for how we can do this – and it is in all our interests to explore these.

    On broadcasting, we recognise that we cannot have exactly the same arrangements with the EU as we do now. Currently, because of the “country of origin” principle, a company based in the UK can be licenced by Ofcom and broadcast into any EU member state and vice versa. The relevant directive will not apply to the UK, as we leave the EU, and relying solely on precedents will hurt consumers and businesses on both sides.

    The UK’s creative hub leads to the development of products that European consumers want – the UK currently provides around 30% of the channels available in the EU. But equally, many UK companies have pan-European ownership, and there are 35 channels and on-demand services, which are offered in the UK but licensed in the EU.

    So we should explore creative options with an open mind, including mutual recognition which would allow for continued transfrontier broadcasting – recognising the enriching role that British broadcasters and programme makers play, not only in British – but more broadly in our common European – culture.

    Similarly, on financial services, the Chancellor will be setting out next week how financial services can and should be part of a deep and comprehensive partnership. We are not looking for passporting because we understand this is intrinsic to the single market of which we would no longer be a member. It would also require us to be subject to a single rule book, over which we would have no say.

    The UK has responsibility for the financial stability of the world’s most significant financial centre, and our taxpayers bear the risk, so it would be unrealistic for us to implement new EU legislation automatically and in its entirety.

    But with UK located banks underwriting around half of the debt and equity issued by EU companies and providing more than £1.1 trillion of cross-border lending to the rest of the EU in 2015 alone, this is a clear example of where only looking at precedent would hurt both the UK and EU economies.

    As in other areas of the future economic partnership, our goal should be to establish the ability to access each others’ markets, based on the UK and EU maintaining the same regulatory outcomes over time, with a mechanism for determining proportionate consequences where they are not maintained. But given the highly regulated nature of financial services, and our shared desire to manage financial stability risks, we would need a collaborative, objective framework that is reciprocal, mutually agreed, and permanent and therefore reliable for businesses.

    There are many other areas where the UK and EU economies are closely linked – including energy, transport, digital, law, science and innovation, and education and culture.

    On energy, we will want to secure broad energy co-operation with the EU. This includes protecting the single electricity market across Ireland and Northern Ireland – and exploring options for the UK’s continued participation in the EU’s internal energy market. We also believe it is of benefit to both sides for the UK to have a close association with Euratom.

    On transport, we will want to ensure the continuity of air, maritime and rail services; and we will want to protect the rights of road hauliers to access the EU market and vice versa.

    On digital, the UK will not be part of the EU’s Digital Single Market, which will continue to develop after our withdrawal from the EU. This is a fast evolving, innovative sector, in which the UK is a world leader. So it will be particularly important to have domestic flexibility, to ensure the regulatory environment can always respond nimbly and ambitiously to new developments.

    We will want our agreement to cover civil judicial cooperation, where the EU has already shown that it can reach agreement with non-member states, such as through the Lugano Convention, although we would want a broader agreement that reflects our unique starting point. And our agreement will also need to cover company law and intellectual property, to provide further legal certainty and coherence.

    The UK is also committed to establishing a far-reaching science and innovation pact with the EU, facilitating the exchange of ideas and researchers. This would enable the UK to participate in key programmes alongside our EU partners. And we want to take a similar approach to educational and cultural programmes, to promote our shared values and enhance our intellectual strength in the world – again making an ongoing contribution to cover our fair share of the costs involved.

    In all these areas, bold and creative thinking can deliver new agreements that are in the very best interests of all our people – both in the UK and across the EU.

    And in the face of a worrying rise in protectionism, I believe such agreements can enable us to set an example to the world.

    Post-Brexit Britain

    For the world is watching.

    We should not think of our leaving the EU as marking an ending, as much as a new beginning for the United Kingdom and our relationship with our European allies.

    Change is not to be feared, so long as we face it with a clear-sighted determination to act for the common good.

    Nor is Brexit an end in itself.

    Rather, it must be the means by which we reaffirm Britain’s place in the world and renew the ties that bind us here at home. And I know that the United Kingdom I treasure can emerge from this process a stronger, more cohesive nation.

    A United Kingdom which is a cradle for innovation; a leader in the industries of the future; a champion of free trade, based on high standards; a modern, outward-looking, tolerant country, proud of our values and confident of our place in the world.

    This is an optimistic and confident future which can unite us all.

    A Global Britain which thrives in the world by forging a bold and comprehensive economic partnership with our neighbours in the EU; and reaches out beyond our continent, to trade with nations across the globe.

    The approach I have set out today would: implement the referendum result, provide an enduring solution, protect our security and prosperity, helps us build the kind of country we want to be, and bring our country together by commanding the confidence of those who voted Leave and those who voted Remain. It is an approach to deliver for the whole of our United Kingdom and our wider family of overseas territories.

    I am in no doubt that whatever agreement we reach with the EU, our future is bright. The stability and continuity of centuries of self-government, our commitment to freedom under the rule of law, our belief in enterprise and innovation, but above all, the talent and genius of all our people – and especially our young people – are the seeds of our success in the future, as they have been the guarantors of our success in the past.

    I look forward to discussing our future partnership with our European friends. Because although we are leaving the EU – and in that regard we will become separate – we are all still European and will stay linked by the many ties and values we have in common. And because it is only by working together that we will find solutions that work for all our peoples.

    Yes, there will be ups and downs in the months ahead. As in any negotiation, no-one will get everything they want. We will not be buffeted by the demands to talk tough or threaten a walk out. Just as we will not accept the counsels of despair that this simply cannot be done. We will move forward by calm, patient discussion of each other’s positions. It is my responsibility as Prime Minister to provide that leadership for our country at this crucial time. By following the course I have set out today, I am confident we will get there and deliver the right outcome for Britain and the EU.

    A generation from now what will be remembered is not the rough and tumble of negotiation but whether we reached an enduring solution cast in the interests of the people we are all here to serve. So my message to our friends in Europe is clear.

    We know what we want.

    We understand your principles.

    We have a shared interest in getting this right.

    So let’s get on with it.

  • Theresa May – 2018 Speech on St. David’s Day

    Below is the text of the speech made by Theresa May, the Prime Minister, at Downing Street in London on 1 March 2018.

    Good afternoon everyone and croeso i Stryd Downing.

    It’s a pleasure to have you all here to celebrate Wales’ national day alongside Welsh people from every walk of life and every part of the country.

    We have great figures from the worlds of business, culture and sport.

    And I’d like to echo the comments made by Alun about the great effort so many of you made to get here today, despite the weather.

    And I hope you’ve all had a chance to try out some of the wonderful Welsh produce on display.

    Today is a great showcase for a great part of the United Kingdom, a part of the world that is no longer Europe’s best-kept secret.

    Every year millions of people are seeing for themselves just how much Wales has to offer.

    That includes myself and my husband, who are regular visitors to Snowdonia, we love to go walking there.

    And while the world is coming to Wales, Wales is also reaching out to the world.

    Many of the companies represented here tonight are exporting across Europe and around the globe.

    But also in sport, the whole world saw the amazing medal-winning performance by Wrexham’s Laura Dais in the Winter Olympics.

    And next month well over a hundred Welsh men and women will be heading to Australia for the Commonwealth Games.

    They will include Anna Hursey, who is lighting up the world of table tennis despite being just 11 years old.

    Anna and her teammates will be proud to be competing under the red dragon – just as I’m proud to see it flying over Downing Street today.

    I’m proud because it is a reminder that Wales makes the UK the country it is.

    And we wouldn’t be the same without it.

    The nations of the UK each have their own unique characters, cultures and needs.

    But when we come together as one, we are all the better for it.

    As my colleague David Lidington said in Broughton earlier this week, when we are united at home we are stronger abroad.

    That’s why I’m working with Alun to help Wales be all it can be, to help Welsh businesses and people reach their full potential.

    And that does include abolishing the Severn Crossing Tolls, investing over £600 million in City Deals for Cardiff and Swansea and committing to a growth deal for the north.

    This is a government that is working hard for everyone in every part of Wales, from Haverfordwest to Holyhead.

    It’s an exciting time for Wales, there’s much to look forward to, many opportunities on the horizon.

    So, tomorrow let’s get out there and make sure the world knows all about Wales and what it has to offer.

    But tonight, let’s celebrate the very best of Welsh life – and of course the very best of Welsh food and drink!

    Enjoy the rest of the reception, and Dydd Gwyl Dewi hapus.

  • Alun Cairns – 2018 Speech on St. David’s Day

    Below is the text of the speech made by Alun Cairns, the Secretary of State for Wales, at Downing Street on 1 March 2018.

    Prime Minister, Ladies and Gentlemen,

    Today is an extremely important day. It is our opportunity to celebrate, underline and show our respect to the world’s greatest nation! We have our own language, history and culture.

    After all we have more castles per square mile than any other country.

    If you flattened our mountains, we’d be the bigger than England.

    And Welsh is one of the oldest living languages in Europe – and through your hospitality, Prime Minister, so many people, have travelled to celebrate St David’s Day here in No 10 – I don’t think these walls have heard so much Welsh spoken since Lloyd George lived here!

    There is little wonder that our exports are growing so sharply when you consider the quality of the produce we have on offer here today.

    And the Cor y Boro (Cor y Borough) choir from London and harpist Rhys Wardough from the Vale of Glamorgan are excellent examples of our fantastic cultural offering.

    I have the privilege of seeing the importance you place on every part of the UK, Prime Minister, but this reception again shows to the public the special emphasis and respect you show to all 4 nations of our precious Union.

    Over the last year, we’ve had had the joy of witnessing some of our best sporting and cultural offerings – from Opera to Football or rugby. – And I am sure you will agree that was a try in Twickenham two weeks ago!

    We’ve been moved by the heroic tales of Welshmen who fought for our freedom during the First World War commemorations.

    And only a few weeks ago, I had the privilege of being the first MP in history to make a speech in the Welsh Language in a House of Commons debate.

    And before we look to the future, we need remember our roots and heritage, it’s worth recalling St David saying, –Be Joyful. Keep your faith and your creed. Do the little things that you have seen me do’.

    And looking to the future – amongst a host of exciting policy commitments to Wales – to help grow our economy and improve the way we live our lives – The whole country was particularly delighted when you agreed that the Severn Toll barrier to enter Wales will be abolished by the time we meet next year.

    Ladies and Gentlemen, I give you the Prime Minister.