Tag: Speeches

  • Liz Truss – 2022 BBC Radio Leeds Interview with Rima Ahmed

    Liz Truss – 2022 BBC Radio Leeds Interview with Rima Ahmed

    The BBC Radio Leeds interview between Rima Ahmed and Liz Truss, the Prime Minister, on 29 September 2022.

    RIMA AHMED

    Good morning Prime Minister.

    LIZ TRUSS

    Good morning.

    RIMA AHMED

    [asked the Prime Minister if she was well and if she slept well]

    LIZ TRUSS

    I have thank you very much. It’s great to be here on radio, Radio Leeds.

    RIMA AHMED

    [asked where the Prime Minister had been following the mini-budget, the fall of the pound to a record low and the Bank of England spending 65 billion dollars to prop up the markets.]

    LIZ TRUSS

    Well, I think we’ve got to remember the situation we were facing this winter. We were facing a situation where people could have had to pay energy bills of up to 6,000 pounds, where inflation was increasing and where we were looking at an economic slowdown, which would have had a huge impact right across the country, including in places like Leeds, so we had to take decisive action. That’s why we took action to make sure people aren’t paying a typical fuel bill of more than 2,500 pounds and that’s going to come in this Saturday.

    RIMA AHMED

    [said that this happened before the mini-budget and asked again where the Prime Minister had been.]

    LIZ TRUSS

    Well, I’m here today on Radio Leeds talking to you. The point I’m making is that we had to take decisive action to help people through this winter and next winter. I understand that families are struggling with their fuel bills and we had to take urgent action to get our economy growing, get Britain moving and also deal with inflation. Of course, that means taking controversial and difficult decisions but I’m prepared to do that as Prime Minister, because what’s important to me is that we get our economy moving, we make sure that people are able to get through this winter and we are prepared to do what it takes to make that happen.

    RIMA AHMED

    [asked how the Prime Minister felt her controversial risks had gone]

    LIZ TRUSS

    Well, what it has done is it has made sure that people and businesses will be paying lower taxes, it’s opened up new road projects, new infrastructure projects, which will mean that we can get on with doing the things that will help people, whether it’s getting to work, setting up their own business and growing the economy. And what it’s done is made sure that businesses and people are protected from these very high fuel bills this winter. And let’s remember why we’re here. We’re here because of Putin’s appalling war in Ukraine, that’s pushed up global energy prices. Countries are under pressure around the world, currencies are under pressure around the world and that’s why it’s so important that this government took urgent action and within a week of becoming Prime Minister, I took urgent action on the energy bills. We’ve taken urgent action through our fiscal statement and we will continue to make sure that we are on the side of people who work hard who do the right thing, and making sure that people aren’t facing those very, very high energy costs.

    RIMA AHMED

    [Asked the Prime Minister if she had seen the risks of the Bank of England and IMF needing to become involved.]

    LIZ TRUSS

    We’re working very, very closely with the Bank of England and it’s important that we have an independent Bank of England. They’re responsible for setting interest rates of course, the Chancellor and the Bank of England work closely together. We’re facing very, very difficult economic times, we’re facing that on a global level. I talked to a lot of my overseas counterparts about issues like energy, about making sure that we’re dealing with those global economy [sic], but the important thing is that the British government acted to make sure that people are protected from these high energy costs, to make sure we’re getting the economy going. Of course, a lot of the measures that we’ve announced won’t happen overnight, we won’t see the growth come through overnight. But what’s important is that we’re putting this country on a better trajectory for the long term.

    RIMA AHMED

    [Asked how long that would take.]

    LIZ TRUSS

    The action we’ve taken on fuel bills will start this weekend.

    RIMA AHMED

    [Asked whether given high levels of inflation if that help was just a drop in the ocean]

    LIZ TRUSS

    The National Insurance reductions will happen this autumn, that’s where we had to take urgent action to make sure people aren’t facing those higher national insurance bills. And the projects that we want to get on with like the road projects, the broadband projects and mobile projects, those will be happening over the next year. So we’re getting things done as quickly as we can to get our economy moving, but also most importantly, making sure we’re supporting families and businesses through what is a very tough winter.

    RIMA AHMED

    [Said that people had been getting in touch to tell of their financial difficulties, including Lee who she had met in a food bank. He said that without the food bank then he wouldn’t have been able to feed his children and that many people were struggling.]

    LIZ TRUSS

    The issues that Lee raises and, you know, is clearly, clearly very, very difficult for people, it’s very difficult for Lee, the issue he raises like inflation, the package that we put forward on energy is going to reduce, or likely to reduce, inflation by up to 5%. The action we’ve taken on energy bills will mean that Lee and other people living in West Yorkshire aren’t going to be facing energy bills of 6,000 pounds which is what was forecast, they’re going to be, through the energy price guarantee, a maximum of 2,500 pounds.  The action we’re taking on the economy to get the economy growing is all about making sure that people have higher wages in the future, that we are getting the investment into places like West Yorkshire, that we are building those new roads, that we are helping businesses get on so that we can have that higher wage economy. So this is exactly the reason we’re doing what we’re doing, is to help people like Lee through this winter and also make sure that he has a secure future in the long term.

    RIMA AHMED

    Thank you for being here. I don’t know whether that answer will help Lee in the short term. I don’t know whether that will give any any hope for the long term. But thank you for being here.

  • Brandon Lewis – 2022 Speech at the Lord Chancellor Swearing-in Speech

    Brandon Lewis – 2022 Speech at the Lord Chancellor Swearing-in Speech

    The speech made by Brandon Lewis, the Lord Chancellor, at the Royal Courts of Justice on 29 September 2022.

    I would like to thank the Lord Chief Justice for that warm welcome. I look forward to working with yourself and other members of the Bench during my time in office. As I look forward to working in Cabinet with you, Mr Attorney – and I would like to congratulate you on your re-appointment.

    You bring with you not only your background as a respected barrister, but also your experience serving in the role during your predecessor’s time on maternity leave. I have no doubt that you will carry out your duties as a Law Officer with both the diligence and dedication that you are renowned for.

    And I’m also delighted to welcome my esteemed colleague, Michael Tomlinson, to his new role as Solicitor General.

    As the Lord Chief Justice has described, your role is historic and vital to our democracy – providing essential support to the Attorney and overseeing the work of our prosecuting authorities.

    I know you will bring the same commitment and enthusiasm to the role as you have throughout your parliamentary career.

    It is a huge honour to become Lord Chancellor and join such a long – if slightly daunting – list of names that includes Cardinal Wolsey, Sir Francis Bacon and Ken Clarke. The patron saint of statesmen and politicians himself goes before me – Sir Thomas More is also one of my predecessors.

    Like me, Sir Thomas was fortunate enough to be the Member of Parliament for the fantastic, stunning constituency of Great Yarmouth. He was famously beheaded for treason – so I’m hoping I cannot match that similarity!

    Today is, of course, the culmination of a years-long journey for me. From being called to the bar in 1997. To getting elected as a councillor in 1998 and leading Brentwood Borough Council. All the way through to the point where I entered Parliament in 2010, my first ministerial posting in 2012 and the four departments in which I’ve served since.

    I hope to bring all of that experience to this job, but I recognise that the English legal system does have about 900 years more experience than I do! Throughout that time it has evolved to offer a crucial mix of flexibility and reliability that guarantees citizens’ rights and allows businesses to thrive and grow as well.

    As we continue to pass it down through the generations, I hope to play my part in being both a good steward and a trustworthy custodian of English Law. That is why I take my responsibility to respect its enduring principle, the Rule of Law, so incredibly seriously.

    The idea that everyone is equal before the law and that public authorities must act lawfully is the foundation of our society. It guarantees freedom and fairness in a modern democracy like ours. And we must always be aware that it is not guaranteed and therefore must be protected.

    Judges are at the forefront of that work to safeguard the Rule of Law in our justice system, and I will do all I can to defend their judicial independence. I’m clear that the work of our judiciary matters…

    …As does the work of our world-leading legal professionals, who are also represented here today. Together they not only deliver justice, they each play a crucial role in the evolution of the law and making sure that it continues to meet the needs of our country.

    What this adds up to is a legal system that works. It is not just crucial to our success as a nation, it is one that is also recognised internationally, which is why the world looks to us to be its counsel and its courtroom.

    In fact, in 2019 English law was trusted to govern some £250 billion of global mergers and acquisitions, and in 2021, over half of the cases heard in our Commercial Court were international in nature.

    We lead Europe in legal services and globally we’re second only to the United States. In terms of what this means for UK plc, the figures speak for themselves.

    Our legal services sector contributes over £29 billion gross value added to our economy each year, employing some 350,000 people. I want to make sure that justice continues to drive our economic growth as we recover from the pandemic and rise to the cost-of-living challenges that we see ahead of us.

    We’ve maintained our world-leading position because of the flexibility of our system and our willingness to embrace change. I’m clear that if we want to remain an attractive legal centre then we must continue finding those new and better ways to provide legal services.

    As Lord Chancellor, I will do all I can to support legal innovation – so that our legal services can be transformed, not just for the benefit of businesses and the public, but for our legal profession too.

    I want to see a modern justice system that is built around the people who use it. One where we do more online, with the right guidance and support.

    Whether that’s through making a claim or resolving a dispute. So that we can save time, cost, and stress to people seeking justice and reduce the burden on those who work in the system.

    And we’ve got to be agile enough to ensure that English Law provides clarity for businesses through a period of constant change – in particular when it comes to digital and emerging technologies such as blockchain and smart contracts.

    These technologies offer the opportunity for us to transform how our businesses operate, with more transparent and efficient ways of working.

    I’m very much aware that we have already begun a process of modernising the courts to make sure that they are in good working order for the digital age.

    As part of my duty for the efficient and effective running of the courts and tribunals, I intend to see through this ambitious and innovative programme.

    I am also cognisant of the fact that COVID-19 was an extraordinarily difficult period and time for the justice system, the judiciary and our hardworking court staff who played a huge part in keeping things moving. I want to thank you for your hard work and determination to meet those challenges head on, including through innovation that was delivered at rapid pace.

    While the knock-on effects of COVID-19 continue to be felt today, it is thanks to your dedication that we drove down the Crown Court backlog by around 2,000 cases from its peak in June 2021. This is a huge achievement – but there is still substantial work to be done. The family court sat to its highest ever level in 2021, and in the immigration and employment tribunals we have reduced the caseload from its peak during the pandemic.

    As Lord Chancellor I am hopeful to see an end to the disruptive strike action that risks undoing the progress we have all worked so hard to achieve, and that is delaying justice for hundreds of victims – and causing the backlog to start to increase.

    I’m pleased to have reached agreement with the leadership of the Criminal Bar Association today. They will be re-balloting their members quickly following new proposals for further reforms to criminal legal aid. These are generous and I would encourage CBA members to consider them carefully and positively.

    I would like to say something about prisons and probation, for which I am also responsible as Secretary of State for Justice.

    Prison and probation officers – some of whom were involved in the State Funeral procession – play a huge role in our justice system and are so often the hidden heroes of our society.

    I want to also take the opportunity this morning to thank them for their immense efforts throughout the pandemic – and for their continuing hard work – to keep our prisons and the public safe.

    I will continue to prioritise the creation of secure and modern prison places – ones that champion rehabilitation by equipping offenders to become active in the jobs market. This in itself will keep the public safe by preventing reoffending, but it will also help us play our part to drive the government’s agenda for economic growth.

    I also want to explore options for reforming the Probation Service, which is vital in steering prison leavers towards better futures.

    And I am determined to make public protection the overriding factor in parole decisions – so that we can be assured of the confidence of both victims and the public.

    Mr Attorney, I want to finish by thanking you all for your warm welcome and reiterating my dedication to the oath I have sworn today. As I step into this ancient role, I am very, very much aware of my constitutional responsibilities, as well as my duty to the judiciary, the courts, tribunals and to justice more broadly.

    I look forward to working with all of you as we each play our part in the justice system – to cherish and protect the ideals on which it was built and to carry on building it around the people who are using it every day. Thank you.

  • Nick Boles – 2022 Article on Now Supporting the Labour Party

    Nick Boles – 2022 Article on Now Supporting the Labour Party

    A section of the article in the Guardian newspaper on 29 September 2022. Nick Boles was the Conservative MP for Grantham and Stamford from 2010 to 2019.

    Liz Truss and Kwasi Kwarteng possess a level of intellectual self-confidence usually found among undergraduates. They always have. Since 2010, when all three of us were first elected as Conservative MPs, they have known what they believe – and have viewed those who didn’t agree with them, or didn’t share their unshakeable certainty, with amiable contempt.

    ….

    In the past few days, the values of sterling and government bonds have registered the alarm felt by international investors about the UK’s prospects. But the British economy is resilient and there is a limit to how much permanent damage even these two headstrong ideologues will be able to do.

    In two years’ time, voters will be given a choice. By then I expect that there will be millions of former Conservative voters who will have tired of being lab rats in Truss’s and Kwarteng’s ideological experiments. They will look for leaders who are prudent, responsible and steady. Who don’t think they know everything. Who listen, and are in touch with people’s everyday concerns. I predict that they will conclude, as I have done, that it is the Labour leader, Keir Starmer, and his shadow chancellor, Rachel Reeves, who best fit the bill.

  • Leo Docherty – 2022 Speech on the Russian Sham Referenda in Ukraine

    Leo Docherty – 2022 Speech on the Russian Sham Referenda in Ukraine

    The speech made by Leo Docherty, the Minister of State at the Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office, in Vienna on 29 September 2022.

    Vladimir Putin’s sham referenda must be seen for what they are. A brazen and desperate attempt, to justify an unprovoked and illegal land grab, of sovereign Ukrainian territory.

    They are a clear violation of international law and the UN Charter. And wholly illegitimate.

    That is why the United Kingdom will never recognise the supposed results. Nor any Russian attempt to illegally annex Ukrainian territory.

    We have seen Vladimir Putin use this playbook before, in Crimea. As then, Russia will try to claim that these latest votes were free and fair.

    But no amount of Russian lies can hide what we all see plainly: A sham. A propaganda exercise. Without a shred of legitimacy. Conducted down the barrel of a gun, by soldiers accompanying ballots door-to-door, forcing Ukrainians to vote.

    For 7 months, in an attempt to destroy Ukrainian identity, Vladimir Putin’s forces have ruthlessly used violence and torture against civilians – and forced deportations – to exert control.

    Sham referenda held under such fear and harassment can never be free, nor fair.

    As highlighted by my Foreign Secretary last week, we know Vladimir Putin planned to rig the outcomes. Russia has no choice but to fabricate the results. These regions voted overwhelmingly to join an independent Ukraine in 1991, and for President Zelenskyy in 2019.

    Earlier this week, the United Kingdom announced sanctions against those behind these bogus votes, including 33 officials and collaborators deployed by Russia to conduct them.

    This latest Russian deception, and Putin’s decision to partially mobilise Russia’s population, only serve to highlight one thing: his invasion is failing.

    His war machine is depleted. His supply of volunteers willing to fight in Ukraine has been exhausted. Partial mobilisation will only send many more thousands of innocent Russians to die in Putin’s war-of-choice. A war which he could end right now.

    Vladimir Putin’s nuclear threats are irresponsible and will not work. Ukrainians are highly motivated. The international alliance is cast-iron strong. We and our allies are clear that any use of nuclear weapons by Russia would be met with severe consequences.

    The United Kingdom’s approach will not alter. We will be steadfast in support of Ukraine – and its right to defend its sovereign territory – for as long as it takes.

    We call on all participating States to join us in unequivocally rejecting the results of these illegitimate referenda, and any Russian attempts to illegally annex Ukrainian territory.

    If we allow Russia to change sovereign borders by force, then the core principles on which the OSCE was founded – of sovereign equality; the inviolability of frontiers; and respect for territorial integrity – lie in tatters.

    And all of our borders become less secure.

    This is about freedom and security for the people of Ukraine. But also about freedom and security across Europe and the World.

     

  • James Cleverly – 2022 Speech on the Indo-Pacific Tilt

    James Cleverly – 2022 Speech on the Indo-Pacific Tilt

    The speech made by James Cleverly, the Foreign Secretary, in Singapore on 29 September 2022.

    Huge thank you for giving me the opportunity to speak with you this afternoon – and it has been a bit of a whistle-stop tour, Japan, Korea and here in Singapore.

    Our High Commissioner highlighted the fact that I laid down an early marker that I was interested in international relations in my first speech in Parliament. But actually, my interest pre-dates that quite significantly.

    Because I’ve always loved maps. And I particularly loved the maps that I grew up with as a child.

    Perhaps because the maps that I looked at when I was a child had my house right in the centre. And the reason is, because I grew up just literally metres east of the Greenwich meridian.

    So, there was me, in the middle, and on one edge of the map there was the west coast of the United States of America, and on the other edge of the map were the Pacific islands. Literally on the periphery.

    So, perhaps, now, it is no surprise to you that I much prefer globes. Because, because globes remind us that there is no middle, there is no edge, there is no centre, there is no periphery. Every country is at the centre of its own world. And that we are all connected, that we all share opportunities, but we also have a duty to share the challenges.

    And I’m going to talk, in this speech perhaps more about challenges than opportunities. But I want you to understand – I am an optimist at heart. I know that the opportunities are many, and they are great.

    But the challenges that we all face are diverse, and they are significant.

    Disease, and ill health. Terrorism, and war – epitomised most recently by Russia’s brutal, illegal, and unjustified invasion of Ukraine.

    We see food insecurity, energy insecurity, economic insecurity, and of course the ongoing march of climate change. And climate change is the spectre that looms over us all and it amplifies all the challenges that we face. And these challenges cannot be solved by any one country alone, nor can they be solved by any one region alone.

    So when we look at our maps, or indeed our globes, we have a choice. We can either see a world divided, or we can seek to explore those things that bind us together. And we can choose to recognise that geography matters less – and it is our values that make us neighbours.

    We can see the countries which choose to be committed to trade and commerce, to those which stand up to oppression and coercion, those which seek to tackle climate change, those which look to innovation and technology to make the future better than the past.

    And those countries form a grid, form a network, they form partnerships. The UK is committed to overcoming the challenges that I described by reinforcing those grids, strengthening those networks, building more and deeper partnerships.

    The High Commissioner highlighted the fact that I’ve only been in the job for three weeks. Immediately prior to that, I was the Secretary of State for Education – for nine weeks. I’m hoping to outlast that appointment.

    But I tell you something, the three weeks that I’ve had have been pretty intense. But it has given me the opportunity to meet with world leaders and my foreign affairs counterparts. I’ve had the privilege of meeting world leaders and my international counterparts from across the globe.

    Firstly, sadly, at the occasion of the funeral of Her Late Majesty Queen Elizabeth II. Then in the heady, speed-dating environment that is the UN General Assembly in New York. Where more than 190 countries come together to discuss ways to strengthen global resilience, improve food security, and boost international investments.

    Now the UK is part of many networks – NATO, the Commonwealth, G7, G20 to name but a few. But we are looking to build on those pre-existing networks, to improve our partnerships. And our relationship with the Indo-Pacific is central to tackling those issues that I’ve just described, and our relationship with this region will be a driving force for a positive vision of growth and security in all our countries.

    Last year, in our Integrated Review, we set out our ‘Indo-Pacific Tilt’, underlining the strategic importance that we place as the UK upon this region. And it’s a region critical to our economy, to our security and to our ambition to support open societies.

    Let me describe the region in a couple of statistics. At least 1.7 million British citizens live across the region. Our trading relationships are worth over 250 billion dollars and they’re growing. In the decades to come it will be the crucible of solutions to many of the pressing global challenges that we face – from climate and biodiversity to maritime security and geopolitical competition linked to our rules and norms.

    Now the Integrated Review is a document. And it’s easy to put words on a page, or put lines in a speech. But I want to make it clear that we are committed to making the Indo-Pacific Tilt more than just a slogan, make it more than just rhetoric. That’s why we applied for, and secured, ASEAN Dialogue Partner status. The UK recognises the centrality of ASEAN to the region and the essential contribution it has made to peace, prosperity and security.

    And we take our responsibility to support those efforts seriously.

    This includes working with partners to ensure that other initiatives complement, rather than conflict with, the central role of ASEAN.

    We were the first European country to secure a Comprehensive Strategic Partnership with India. And we intend to be the first European country to accede to the CPTPP. It will give the region access to the UK’s world-class financial services sector as well as, as well as the world’s sixth largest economy. That’s why engagement between the UK and Indo-Pacific needs to cover the broadest spectrum of activity.

    So let me highlight the areas where we think this relationship matters.

    We all want to provide jobs for our young people and opportunities for our businesses. The UK is pursuing a low-tax, high growth economic strategy to deliver exactly this. And we are also working closely with countries in the Indo-Pacific to drive prosperity and growth through new trade opportunities.

    We have signed Free Trade Agreements with Australia and New Zealand – and we are working intensely to agree one with India soon.

    We have also signed free trade deals with Singapore, Vietnam, the Republic of Korea and Japan, and bilateral partnership agreements with the Republic of Korea and Indonesia.

    Within six months, we negotiated a Digital Economy Agreement with Singapore. It sets the standards in removing friction and increasing confidence in digital trade. And just last week, over 20 of our top tech companies were here in Singapore: and when they went home, they took with them new customers, investors and signed a number of joint ventures. And we are keen to do more. Our focus is on strengthening collaboration in science, technology, research and development – just as we have done here in Singapore.

    But we cannot talk about economic cooperation without also talking about climate. And the importance of our relationships in the region to accelerate the world’s transition to net zero. I felt that strongly in the conversations that I had at the Partners in the Blue Pacific initiative at the UN General Assembly.

    And earlier today I met the head of our new regional hub of British International Investment here in Singapore. BII, as we call it, is the UK’s development finance arm. And through it we intend to spend up to £500 million in the region over the next five years. We will work with public and private partners in the region to support quality, green infrastructure projects in Indonesia, in Vietnam, in the Philippines, in Cambodia, and in Laos. We have also committed up to £110 million to the ASEAN Catalytic Green Finance Facility, to boost renewables, to boost clean transport, and to boost other sustainable infrastructure projects.

    Secondly, our focus on defence and security. The Indo-Pacific Tilt also means recognising that security and prosperity in the Indo-Pacific are indivisible from Europe’s. We welcomed the condemnation of Russia’s violations of the UN charter and the decisions by many countries in the region – including Singapore, Japan, and the Republic of Korea – to impose sanctions on Russia for its aggression. Russia’s violation of the UN charter sets a dangerous precedent for the whole world.

    Peace and stability in this region matters in the UK. 60% of global trade passes though shipping routes here in the Indo-Pacific, so security here has a direct impact in households in the UK. And we are working with partners in the region to promote maritime security and uphold the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea. It is 40 years old this year but it still continues to play an essential role and supports ASEAN’s own security strategy.

    The UK has lots to offer as a defence partner. Our Prime Minister has committed to increase defence spending to 3% of GDP by 2030.

    Alongside the US, we are bringing world-leading submarine technology through our AUKUS partnership to support Australia’s defence and security capabilities, and this will bolster regional peace and stability.

    And the UK is working with partners across the Indo-Pacific to strengthen cyber security and secure critical national infrastructure.

    Including with ASEAN through their dedicated centre here in Singapore.

    Thirdly, partnership through our values. The UK and many Indo-Pacific countries are committed to shared values. Our commitment to sovereignty and territorial integrity, and freedom from economic coercion. Our shared beliefs in the value of democracy and open markets.

    The UK is committed to working with partners, old and new, in defence of those values. Which is why we support ASEAN’s efforts to restore peace and democracy in Myanmar. And it’s why we have worked so hard to respond robustly to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

    Because as I said in the Security Council chamber last week… if Ukraine’s sovereignty and territory are not respected, then no country can feel itself truly secure. This region’s commitment to those values has been on show at the United Nations in recent months, where it stood shoulder-to-shoulder with other countries around the world to condemn Russia’s invasion.

    The international rules-based system doesn’t only protect our freedoms and security. It protects fair trade, and it protects us online.

    And when we join the CPTPP, as I hope we soon will,

    we will approach this work and our membership in the spirit of cooperation, looking to protect people’s interests and freedoms.

    Now it would be impossible to give a speech in this region and not mention China. And I was pleased to meet Foreign Minister Wang Yi in New York last week. It’s important to talk even where we disagree. Actually, especially when we disagree.

    Because China is a major global actor and driver of growth. It has lifted literally millions of people out of poverty. But, the lessons I take from watching China across my lifetime, is that when China departs from global rules and norms, when it aligns itself with aggressive countries like Russia – its standing in the world suffers. Now China will always have a choice about the direction that it wants to take.

    But one thing that is certain is that the UK Government will always stand up for our sovereignty and economic security – and that of our partners.

    And no UK Government will ever turn a blind eye to repression, wherever it occurs.

    All of the achievements that I’ve outlined today are products of partnership. And the UK is working with friends and partners to address the challenges that we face but also to seize the opportunities ahead of us. And we are well on our way to becoming the European partner with the broadest, most integrated presence in the Indo-Pacific. I am here to make it clear that the Indo-Pacific Tilt is here to stay. It is permanent.

    We have gone from strategy to delivery. From economic theory to signing trade deals. From security discussions to deploying our Carrier Strike Group. From talking about our values to standing together in the face of Putin’s invasions. And if you take nothing from this speech other than what I’m about to say, then I would be comfortable with that. Because what I’m about to say, is that the UK will remain a committed, reliable partner to this region. Thank you.

  • Kemi Badenoch – 2022 Speech at the Atlantic Future Forum in New York

    Kemi Badenoch – 2022 Speech at the Atlantic Future Forum in New York

    The speech made by Kemi Badenoch, the Secretary of State for International Trade, in New York on 28 September 2022.

    Thank you and good afternoon everyone.

    How wonderful it to be at the Atlantic Future Forum.

    This a superb event organised by the Royal Navy and our teams from the Department for International Trade, the Ministry of Defence and of course the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office.

    It is particularly poignant being on HMS Queen Elizabeth given the events of the last few weeks.

    To say it’s been emotional would be an understatement. For everyone in the UK, young or old Her Late Majesty had been ever presence of force in British Life. Many of us here were more than her subjects we were Her Majesty’s Ambassadors, Her Majesty’s Civil Service, Her Majesty’s Armed Forces, Her Royal Navy, Her Government.

    Our late sovereign was also, of course, a stateswoman, who devoted herself to deepening the special relationship.

    So it is a particular privilege to stand on this vessel which she named at Rosyth Dockyard 8 years ago, as we begin the Carolean age in the service of His Majesty.

    And talk about an important aspect of the US and UK’s shared future and by that I mean…our economic partnership.

    I lived briefly in the US, and learned very quickly that Americans and New Yorkers especially, like to cut to the chase.

    So, I’m going to get straight to the point:

    Right now, there’s a global growth slow-down underway.

    And if you’ll forgive the pun, we need all hands on-deck to get the world economy’s wheels spinning again.

    And that’s why in the UK we’re going for growth in a big way. And in fact some of you may have heard some major reforms we announced on Friday, to achieve this:

    But before I go into what we are doing, it would be odd not to address the elephant in the room.. and the financial instability in markets over the last few days.

    You would by now have heard the Bank of England taking short-term measures to provide stability – as is their job.

    My colleagues, including the Chancellor, continue to work very closely with our institutions to support them in their aims while maintaining their independence. And we must look at all of this in the context of the fundamentals, which are that the UK economy is strong and we have a plan – a Growth Plan to cut taxes, promote enterprise and cut red tape for business.

    So what are some of the things we’re doing?

    We’re keeping corporation tax at the lowest in the G20 at 19% not cutting keeping.

    We’re creating low tax investment zones around the country, to make it quicker and easier to build and get things done because the regulatory environment has not kept pace with our economic needs.

    We’re accelerating critical infrastructure projects in sectors like transport, energy, and telecoms…to ensure we invest in our future and deliver for the next generation.

    We’re also going to be spending 3% of GDP on defence by 2030. Something I know looking at all of the uniforms in the room is especially relevant to all of you here today.

    We’re rolling out significant financial services reforms that will make the UK an even better place to do business and much more.

    There is radical change happening on our side of the Atlantic. It’s the kind of radical change that we’ve not seen for 40 years.

    We know it is bold.

    We know it comes with risk.

    But in these volatile times, every option, even the status quo is risky.

    And the Prime Minister, my predecessor but one in my role as Trade Secretary gets trade and knows that our global economic relationships have got to be at the heart of this work.

    Right now, US-UK trade is booming. Sadly, not enough people know this or hear the message enough. So I want to make sure they do and I’ll continue to bang the drum.

    But it’s the investment story that’s even more interesting.

    Increasing numbers of American firms are realising that backing the UK is a great move.

    I could make your eyes glaze over by trotting out an endless list of statistics! Don’t worry I’m not going to do that today

    ….. but the numbers speak for themselves:

    US businesses already invested £479 billion pounds into in our economy –To put that figure into context it’s more than Sweden’s annual GDP.

    Every day just under 1.5 million Britons go to work for an American firm.

    And in the year to March alone, American investment created 27,000 British jobs.

    I know to some extent I’m preaching to the choir here.

    Because I don’t have to look far around this room to spot businesses that are boosting their UK operations.

    In fact, Lockheed Martin and Raytheon, are just some of the American firms here today that have said they will do precisely that. And we look forward to working with them.

    Undoubtedly, factors like good infrastructure, our legal system and a lack of red-tape, are part of the UK’s attraction.

    But there’s another reason too. We are fast becoming the world’s innovation destination.

    Just like Manhattan, we’re an island full of dynamism and ingenuity.

    We’re the nation with big ideas.

    We’re Europe’s unicorn factory.

    And the first quarter of this year our tech start-ups attracted more global investment than anywhere bar the US…..and partnerships between UK and American firms are pushing forward progress…..

    For instance, there’ s a really interesting story taking place right now involving a firm in Cambridge called PhoreMost and a business named Polaris Quantum Biotech from North Carolina.

    Together, they want to cut the time it takes to create cancer therapies. That’s not only a great business partnership, it’s literally a life-saving collaboration.

    But I want to do even more to make sure American ambitions collide with British ideas or vice versa.

    So here’s my elevator pitch. The UK is pro-ambition, pro entrepreneur, pro-growth and home to top-flight talent fizzing with extraordinary ideas.

    And we are more determined than ever before to turn the country into the place to come if you want your business to succeed.

    Of course, we mustn’t pretend everything is perfect or easy. We know that, sometimes trading our way to growth can be more difficult than it needs to be.

    But it’s because the US and UK are close that we can fix problems wherever we find them.

    Look at the way we recently solved the Section 232 tariff dispute on UK steel and aluminium exports and reached an understanding on the Airbus-Boeing dispute.

    Very soon, Americans will be able to pick up a leg of Welsh lamb at their local store for the first time in decades, after a long-standing rule was removed.

    That’s obviously big news for British farmers. And it’s arguably even better news for Americans who get to tuck in on some of the finest grass-fed lamb in the world…

    And, of course, we’re delighted that bourbon is fully back on the drinks menu, in Britain, following the Section 232 resolution.

    I know that behind the scenes we’re working hard to resolve issues and make it quicker, easier and cheaper for our firms to do business.

    The UK also sees the huge potential to develop our relationships with individual states as another huge opportunity.

    In May, under the stewardship of my predecessor, Anne-Marie Trevelyan, who is also here today, we signed a Memorandum of Understanding on trade and economic cooperation with Indiana – a state that already buys $1.4 billion worth of UK goods every year.

    North Carolina followed in July.

    And I know the DIT team is working hard on continuing Anne Marie’s legacy with me and securing more this year…so watch this space.

    Given we’re anchored not far from the Statue of Liberty, I want to end by saying a few words about trade as a force for progress and a force for good.

    Free markets and fair trade are very personal to me.

    Too many people trot them out as cliches and platitudes, but a world without these freedoms is not just poorer it’s also more dangerous.

    I grew up in Nigeria. And I saw first-hand what happens when a nation can’t trade or worse embraces protectionism.

    Not long ago, the government there banned rice and tomato not tomayto tomato imports to support local industry. The result was not a boom in production, but supply shortages, price rises and people smuggling in tomatoes like they were diamonds.

    I will never forget the sight of my mother a university professor stuffing her suitcase with Tesco Value Rice when she visited me in London because it was cheaper there than back home for her.

    One of the many reasons I’m so frustrated by the trope that Brexit was the UK retreating from the world, is because it is completely untrue. I voted to leave the European Union and I saw Brexit as a once in a generation opportunity for the UK to embrace the world and trade was and still is at the heart of that.

    So I want to make sure that we use our freedoms to build better and fairer trading relationships with emerging economies.

    When trade is open and free and everyone plays by the rules, we will win and developing countries gain an alternative to authoritarian regimes.

    But at a time when weaker economies are being exploited by those who don’t share our values, it’s not enough to talk about why free and fairtrade matters, we need to show why too.

    Last month, my department launched the Developing Countries Trading Scheme. It’s one of the most generous initiatives of its type in the world and it’s going to give a boost to businesses in 65 countries by cutting red tape and lowering tariffs.

    It’s early days but I’m already hearing how the scheme is giving entrepreneurs in countries like Bangladesh the opportunities they need to grow their businesses. And closer to home, I’m very much focused on exploring how trade can support the reconstruction of Ukraine.

    Of course, the UK-US trading relationship couldn’t be a better illustration of capitalism’s power to influence, unite and act as a counter to protectionism and authoritarian regimes.

    And We’re already using trade to tackle some of the biggest issues facing the world.

    At last year’s G7 we renewed our Atlantic Charter; originally signed by Churchill and Roosevelt pledging UK and US economic and security collaboration.

    Through our Future of Atlantic Trade dialogues, we’re working on critical issues, such as developing and diversifying our supply chains in response to the war in Ukraine and the pandemic.

    We’re deepening our ties in the Indo-Pacific through our AUKUS pact.

    Our response to the Indo Pacific region’s rapid growth and China’s growing assertiveness, is another shared challenge.

    And I know we’re both committed to opposing economic coercion, and the unfair trade practices that choke competition and penalise countries that follow the rules.

    President Ronald Reagan once said: ‘Free trade serves the cause of economic progress and it serves the cause of world peace.’

    And the UK-US economic partnership is the clearest possible example of why free trade and free markets are not just integral to our growth but to the freedoms we share.

    Next month, we’ll mark the 75th anniversary of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade – the forerunner of today’s multilateral system.

    Our nations helped to forge that deal after WW2, following long negotiations.

    At GATT’s heart was an acknowledgement that free and fair trade would be key to our future.

    Again today, we face unprecedented challenges.

    Again, at times, we may have differences…

    But just like the American and British teams who gathered round the negotiating table three quarters of a century ago.

    I know we are committed to deepening our transatlantic economic partnership.

    Building our businesses’ bonds of commerce.

    And demonstrating, unequivocally, how through free trade we can together create a better world. Thank you.

  • Caoimhe Archibald – 2022 Comments on State of the Economy

    Caoimhe Archibald – 2022 Comments on State of the Economy

    The comments made by Caoimhe Archibald, Sinn Fein’s economic spokesperson, on 28 September 2022.

    The Tory government’s outrageous and scandalous Budget has prioritised the super-rich at the expense of ordinary workers, families and businesses.

    Now the Bank of England has issued a stark warning of more interest hikes that will make mortgages unaffordable and leave people struggling to keep a roof over their head.

    Ordinary people and businesses are struggling to pay their bills and keep the shutters up, while the British government is driving more misery.

    The International Monetary Fund (IMF), who previously called for austerity, are now exposing the scale of the mess the Tories are creating with this Budget and calling on them to reverse this bad decision making.

    I am reiterating the call on the Tories to abandon their ideologically driven financial catastrophe stop lining the pockets of the rich and support working people who are struggling.

    What we need now is a tax break for small businesses, more funding for public services, support for workers and a Windfall Tax to cut energy companies’ eye-watering profits. Workers and families need money in their pockets now.

  • Angela Rayner – 2022 Closing Speech at Labour Party Conference

    Angela Rayner – 2022 Closing Speech at Labour Party Conference

    The closing speech made by Angela Rayner, the Deputy Leader of the Labour Party, on 28 September 2022.

    Thank you, Conference, and thank you Svetlana.

    The sacrifice you have made for your country sets an example to us all.

    A woman, a mother who has led a movement, not for personal ambition but to free her country and her people.

    The Labour Party stands with you, and a Labour government will too.

    Conference, it’s a great honour to make the closing speech before our traditional anthems.

    To close the week just as John Prescott did back in the day.

    Although I look better in a dress.

    I hope to do him proud.

    I love the traditions of our movement.

    From Durham Miners’ Gala to the Tolpuddle Martyrs’ Festival.

    But there is one part of our history that I will never celebrate – losing elections.

    Think how it will feel meeting here in this hall in a few years’ time after a term of a Labour government.

    Back in power.

    Now, this is the Labour Party.

    I’ve no doubt we’ll also be discussing how much further we’d like to go.

    Once we’ve debated the CAC report for twenty minutes, of course.

    But when the Tories deliver 1% of what they promised, they talk endlessly about that 1% and we never hear about the list of broken promises.

    When we deliver 99% of what we promised, we talk endlessly about the 1% we didn’t instead.

    Just think about the historic Labour Governments and their legacy.

    They didn’t please all of our movement all of the time, including me.

    But those Labour Governments made history.

    The NHS.

    Social security.

    The welfare state.

    Council housing.

    Modern higher education.

    The Open University.

    Decriminalising homosexuality.

    Outlawing racial discrimination.

    Introducing equal pay.

    The National Minimum Wage.

    Sure Start.

    The Good Friday Agreement.

    Civil Partnerships.

    The Equality Act.

    The Human Rights Act.

    The world’s first Climate Change Act.

    Conference, if we’re not proud of ourselves, don’t expect anyone else to do it for us.

    And just think what that future Party Conference could have to celebrate.

    We’ve shown this week how different we’ll be.

    Not just in our vision but with our plan for Britain.

    Starting with the biggest challenge facing not just our country but the world.

    We will tackle the climate crisis head on.

    We will protect our people and our planet.

    And we will pull out all the stops to build a fairer and greener Britain.

    As Keir set out yesterday through our Green Prosperity Plan.

    We will unleash a green industrial revolution.

    By reaching 100 per cent clean power by 2030, we will save £93 billion off energy bills.

    And through Great British Energy we will give British power right back to British people.

    I said on Sunday that a moment of choice is upon us.

    A moment to show the country that we are ready to govern.

    Well, Conference, I know I’m a bit biased, but, boy, do I think that we’ve shown that.

    It isn’t just that we have better policies, although we do.

    It isn’t just that we will be a more competent government, although we will.

    No, it is that our values differ fundamentally.

    And our policies are not better despite our values but because of them.

    Labour values.

    The country’s values too.

    Yet too often when it comes to elections, people feel they have a choice of heart versus head.

    Values or competence.

    I say to those watching at home – this week we have shown it’s a choice you will never have to make again.

    And this past week, the Tories have shown it too.

    The Conservative Party are no longer pretending to be competent and stable.

    Today’s Tories will plunge us into chaos in pursuit of their dogma.

    Divide the country to rule it and regards rules as for you, and not for them.

    Tough on crime?

    They brought crime to Number 10

    Defenders of the free market?

    The market’s in free fall.

    England’s green and pleasant land?

    Frack it.

    From the party of stability to causing earthquakes.

    From the party of business, to a slap down from the IMF.

    From the party of serious government to the party of parties.

    Liz Truss has even crashed the pork market.

    Now…that. Is. A. Disgrace.

    You’d think that snouts in the trough was the one thing they could manage.

    When interest rates were low and borrowing was cheap, they sacrificed public services for austerity.

    Now they’re borrowing just as interest rates are soaring.

    To think this was the party that claimed they were for sound money.

    That’s WHAT one high-flying new Tory MP certainly thought in 2012.

    He wrote a pamphlet demanding a balanced budget every year.

    He said “Fiscal prudence is the very least we should expect from a Chancellor.”

    And if they failed, they should face a 20% pay cut.

    That Tory MP must be absolutely furious with the new Tory Chancellor, except he is the new Tory Chancellor.

    I’ve got a funny feeling he won’t be taking that pay cut either.

    Pay cuts are for other people.

    He won’t even let the budget watchdog tell him just how much of our money he’s handing over to the super rich.

    They used to say the Tories knew the value of nothing but the cost of everything.

    Now they don’t even know that.

    The next election won’t be a choice between a strong economy or a fair society.

    We don’t have to choose one or the other.

    Because you can’t have one without the other.

    An unequal economy is an inefficient one.

    It’s perhaps the starkest difference between us and the Tories.

    Never again can we let them pretend they are the patriotic party.

    I love my country.

    That’s why I want so much better for it.

    But the Tories now think our biggest economic problem, is you.

    The working people of Britain.

    And while they think you are our country’s greatest weakness, we know that you are our greatest strength.

    It’s why Rachel and I will make the minimum wage, a real living wage.

    Because we are not just the party of higher growth but of higher wages.

    We know what the Tories think.

    The new Prime Minister and her Chancellor have said it out loud.

    The problem is that British workers are idlers not grafters.

    The irony.

    From this lot!!

    Liz Truss said she doesn’t like hand-outs.

    Then handed £150 billion to the energy giants.

    They believe in hand-outs alright.

    It’s the same with her other top priority – unlimited bankers’ bonuses.

    It’s the same old ideology.

    You incentivise the richest by giving them more money.

    You incentivise the rest of us by taking it away.

    Conference, it hasn’t worked before and it won’t wash now.

    I know they’d rather forget it, but we’re now twelve years into Tory government.

    Even if we are on our fourth Prime Minister.

    Where are they now?

    David Cameron.

    The privatised Prime Minister, sold to Green-sill.

    What was his greatest achievement?

    Fooling the Lib Dems?

    Not exactly a high bar.

    If you just care about power for powers’ sake and have no principles, no policies and no plan, you end up with a pointless premiership.

    Remembered only as a pub quiz answer.

    Then we had Theresa May.

    I remember her telling us that if you were a citizen of the world, you were a citizen of nowhere.

    If only we’d known about their green cards and tax loopholes.

    Their politicians are becoming like their donors – residents of everywhere, taxpayers of nowhere.

    Then there’s Boris Johnson.

    I do owe him one apology.

    I said he couldn’t organise a booze up in a brewery.

    Turns out he could organise a booze up pretty much anywhere.

    Just a shame he couldn’t organise anything else.

    We’re a party with a serious plan.

    He had a plan for a serious party.

    I’ll miss one thing though.

    As inflation ran out of control, at least his jokes were one thing that got cheaper every week.

    But the real problem wasn’t that his jokes were so cheap.

    It was that his mistakes were so expensive.

    He ended his time claiming he was forced from office by the ‘deep state’.

    The only deep state that forced him from office was the one he left our country in.

    Sorry Conference, I had to use all my Boris lines now, while we still remember who he is.

    Before he becomes a footnote of failure in the history books.

    Or at least that’s what the new Prime Minister must be hoping for.

    Because I think he’ll be sat on the backbenches plotting his come back, with a glint in his eye, thinking I wasn’t so bad after all…was I!

    And what a sorry state of affairs that is.

    What does Liz Truss have to say after a decade in government?

    Apparently they were wrong all along.

    She’s now asking for seven years to fix it.

    Yet offering us even more of the ideology that caused the problems in the first place.

    She doesn’t just think that we’re lazy.

    She must think we’re stupid as well.

    And that brings me to this new government.

    Openly chosen for loyalty not ability.

    A ministry of all the talent-LESS.

    Frankly when I looked at the benches opposite last week, I thought the clowns had escaped the circus.

    Not so much a flying circus as a lying circus.

    My new opposite number.

    Her first act was to get to grips with the real crisis in our NHS.

    The spread of a new and dangerous contagion.

    Not the Omicron variant.

    The Oxford comma.

    That’s a comma before the word ‘and’, in case you were wondering.

    Something like this sentence.

    GPs are overwhelmed, ambulances not turning up, beds are full, waiting times are rocketing, the NHS is starved of investment and, it’s all the fault of Tory decisions.

    It will take a Labour government to put that right.

    So, here’s another sentence that Therese Coffey won’t like.

    A Labour government will double the number of district nurses, train 5,000 new health visitors, create 10,000 nursing placements, double the number of medical students, and we will pay for it by reversing your handout to the wealthiest few.

    I like every dot and comma of that policy, Conference.

    And what a contrast to the government you’ve seen this week, Conference.

    Yesterday the country saw the Keir that I know and see every day.

    Announcing 100 per cent clean power by 2030, driven by a British energy company owned by the British people for the British people.

    He showed the real leadership this country needs.

    And on Monday Rachel showed how Labour would govern with competence, class and care.

    With her as the UK’s first-ever female Chancellor, setting out our National Wealth Fund to give the British public a share of the wealth they create.

    And a genuine living wage that matches the cost of living.

    And I thank my own front bench team – Fleur, Rachel, Justin, Imran and Flo – for all that they do.

    We have set out our five-point National Procurement Plan to tackle waste, sleaze, and lies.

    And unleash the power of public spending.

    Our Fair Work Standard to raise working conditions across the economy.

    Alongside our New Deal for Working People.

    And we haven’t stopped there.

    Our whole Shadow Cabinet has shown we are a team with a plan.

    70% home ownership, our renters’ charter and a clamp down on buy-to-let.

    Council housing, council housing, council housing.

    The Hillsborough Law, a domestic abuse register and a new football regulator.

    Sewage sanctions, Job Centre reform and a transformational industrial strategy.

    Insulation, innovation, inspiration,

    All in one.

    13,000 more police officers to keep our communities safe.

    New Navy ships built by unionised workers in British shipyards.

    Closing the tax break for private schools, to fund education for all.

    Free school breakfasts for children.

    New bus services in public hands.

    And as contracts expire, restoring public ownership of the railways.

    Conference, our Shadow Cabinet has shown what a Labour Government will be radical, responsible, realistic.

    But delivering this message would be impossible without all of you.

    Our brilliant activists who campaign through rain and wind.

    And that’s just outside this building.

    If you ever needed proof that on shore wind can deliver!

    I have too many people to thank but I want to mention our brilliant chair, Alice Perry standing down from the NEC.

    And Diana Holland who is stepping down as Party Treasurer after 12 years.

    We all have a debt of gratitude to you.

    Finally, thank you Liverpool for hosting our Conference.

    While the Tories dare not show their face here – you’ve shown us the warmth and pride that defines this city.

    Conference, this week we have shown how together we will transform this country.

    And the depth of talent across our party.

    And we have come together to honour our history as only Labour can.

    Be in no doubt, the times ahead are going to be tough,

    Now, let’s rise to the moment and deliver for the working people of Britain.

    Let’s build a Fairer, Greener Future,

    With a Labour Government in power once again.

  • Bridget Phillipson – 2022 Speech to Labour Party Conference

    Bridget Phillipson – 2022 Speech to Labour Party Conference

    The speech made by Bridget Phillipson, the Shadow Education Secretary, on 28 September 2022.

    Conference, it is the greatest privilege of all, to be here today as Labour’s Shadow Education Secretary.

    Heading a fantastic team of Shadow Education Ministers.

    Because nothing is more important to our futures than education.

    As Keir said yesterday, Labour will run towards the challenges of tomorrow.

    And if we are to solve the biggest challenges we face, spreading prosperity, tackling climate change, revitalizing our communities and building a fairer, greener future, in a world where children born today will live into the next century, where workplaces are changing as never before, where reskilling throughout life is essential, then education must be at the heart of every part of that.

    And we must build a future where children come first.

    Conference, this is personal for me.

    My mam brought me up on her own.

    I remember my time at school under the Tories.

    Classes too big, books too few.

    Money short and opportunities rare.

    Families like mine judged, not helped.

    But I was lucky.

    I had a loving family, who valued education.

    I went to great state schools.

    With teachers who saw the value and worth, in each and every one of us.

    But life should not come down to luck.

    That is why I am determined that every child, in every school, in every corner of our country should have the best possible start.

    So, we need a fresh vision of that education.

    One that looks to the future, not the past.

    A curriculum that prizes skills, as well as knowledge.

    That values and nurtures creativity, alongside academic success.

    We need an education system that enables every child to achieve and thrive.

    Our priorities will define that vision.

    Conference, that is why we will end the tax breaks private schools enjoy.

    We will use that money to deliver the most ambitious school improvement programme for a generation.

    Recruiting thousands more teachers to help children excel in science and maths and thrive with access to sport, art, music, and drama.

    Working with brilliant teachers, leaders, support staff and unions.

    We will drive up standards everywhere.

    We will build a modern careers advice and work experience system.

    So young people across our schools and colleges leave education, ready for work and ready for life.

    Conference, it is the simple language of priorities.

    The Tories put the richest first.

    We put children first.

    And we know these Tories will go on making the wrong choices.

    Because education, under this government is like a school maths problem.

    If you have five education secretaries in one year.

    Three of them, who haven’t got a clue what they are doing.

    Two of them, who want a return to the Fifties.

    What have you got left?

    I’ll tell you.

    A government that is failing our children.

    Childcare in crisis.

    A recovery programme in chaos.

    School buildings collapsing.

    A skills system unfit for today, never mind tomorrow.

    Universities treated as a political battleground, not a public good.

    Conference, we will make different choices.

    For children and families across this country.

    For the world our children will inherit.

    Today parents spend more on childcare than on their rent or mortgages.

    Yet what do we see?

    Nurseries closing.

    Spiralling costs.

    Mams giving up the jobs they love, because they can’t drop their kids at school and get to work on time.

    The Tories denying parents choices, denying children the best start they deserve.

    And yet the evidence couldn’t be clearer:

    Gaps in learning and development,

    Gaps in opportunities open up early.

    So, our plan must start early too.

    Today, Conference, I can tell you that the next Labour government will build a modern childcare system.

    One that supports families from the end of parental leave,

    right through to the end of primary school.

    One that gives our children the start to their day,

    and the start to their life,

    they deserve.

    One that gives parents time to succeed,

    And our economy the chance to grow.

    Conference, as the first step on that road, today I can announce that we will introduce breakfast clubs for every child in every primary school in England.

    Breakfast clubs drive up standards and achievement.

    They improve behaviour, and attendance.

    Because it’s about the club, as well as the breakfast.

    They enable parents to work.

    They give mams and dads choices.

    And they will help us build the economy we all need and the society we all want.

    We will fund this landmark first step on that road by restoring the higher income tax rate for the very richest.

    Because Conference, our children are our priority.

    And while education starts in childhood, it doesn’t end there.

    The skills system should support people, to reskill and upskill.

    It should support companies to invest in their future and in ours.

    Conference, it doesn’t. It needs to change and change it we will.

    That’s why our announcement yesterday, building on the work of David Blunkett and the Council of Skills Advisors is crucial.

    By reforming the Apprenticeships Levy we will give people opportunities to retrain, to upskill and to learn throughout life.

    And we’ll drive a focus on growth across government.

    By creating Skills England to bring together businesses, unions, and training providers to work in partnership, leading a national mission to upskill our country.

    Conference, education is about opportunity.

    For each of us, for all of us, all our life long.

    But it’s about opportunity for our whole country too.

    The opportunities we all gain from a growing economy, where working parents are supported to succeed, where all our children can achieve and thrive.

    That is the society Labour wants to build.

    We will only build that fairer society of which we all dream by closing the gap among our children and young people.

    Conference, Education transformed my life.

    I know it can transform every life.

    It will be my mission as your Education Secretary to make sure it does.

  • Rosena Allin-Khan – 2022 Speech to Labour Party Conference

    Rosena Allin-Khan – 2022 Speech to Labour Party Conference

    The speech made by Rosena Allin-Khan on 28 September 2022.

    Good morning Conference, hasn’t it been a fantastic week?

    I am so proud to be part of the Labour team.

    A team with one goal – getting Labour back into office.

    There are so many reasons why we must end this long, dark night of Tory rule.

    And the nation’s mental health is top of my list.

    Under the Tories’ 12 years of mismanagement, there are 1.6 million people waiting for mental health treatment.

    That’s more than the entire populations of Birmingham and Liverpool put together.

    Waiting times are soaring.

    And far too often help depends on your postcode, not your need.

    And children are being let down.

    Referrals for children and young people with eating disorders have doubled and referrals for children who are self-harming have tripled.

    Children are waiting days in A&E in crisis.

    In the A&E where I work, I see it.

    My colleagues across the country see it.

    The Tories have cut a quarter of mental health beds and it is our communities

    who are suffering.

    An entire generation is being failed by this Conservative Government.

    This mental health crisis is wrecking the British economy.

    Last year 18 million work days were lost to mental illness – more than industrial disputes, more than injuries.

    It costs the UK economy at least one hundred and seventeen billion pounds a year.

    And who does the cost-of-living crisis hit the hardest?

    Those already living with mental illnesses.

    Do you remember Thatcher’s Britain?

    One of being cold in your own home with the perpetual fear of debt and disconnection.

    That should have been consigned to the history books.

    I remember all too well my brother, mum and me gathered around the only heater for moments of relief from that gnawing, biting cold that saps your energy and robs you of your concentration.

    I listened to my mum, awake at night, worrying how to keep us safe and warm.

    This was the 1980s – how are we here again now?

    I’m proud to be an NHS doctor and I’m also proud to be a socialist.

    Working in A&E, I approach a patient from the point of view of their health needs.

    But I know that we cannot divorce the person from their social class, gender, race and background.

    The gig economy, soaring bills, rising crime, a brittle and divided society, a broken social media, brimming with hate.

    For millions, modern life means poor mental health.

    If ever there was an argument that prevention is better than cure, it is with mental health.

    We know that the longer mental illnesses are left untreated, the harder and more costly they are to treat.

    I met the fantastic team at Paul’s Place here in Liverpool on Monday.

    They show how communities support one another after suicide.

    Their stories are raw.

    Moving.

    But their work is filled with hope and love.

    Conference, if there’s one word to sum up Labour’s mental health policy it is this:

    Prevention.

    The next Labour Government will:

    • Guarantee NHS mental health support within a month and when I say ‘support’ I mean treatment, not just an assessment of need.

    • Improve service quality for patients.

    • Recruit more mental health staff – starting with eight and a half thousand new staff by the end of our first term in office.

    • Place specialist mental health support in every school.

    • Establish mental health hubs for young people in every community – open to under-25s, with no need for referral.

    And finally, we will guarantee a fair share of funding for mental health.

    We will not abandon those in crisis.

    Whenever I meet patients and staff, all over the country, people ask me the same thing, “What practical difference will Labour’s pledges make to me?”

    It’s a good question.

    Conference, here’s the answer:

    Our resolute commitment to prevention, early intervention and timely treatment

    will make the difference.

    I’ll never forget the sight of a father with an ashen face being brought into the A&E in a wheelchair with his teenage daughter on his lap.

    She was, covered in cuts and her body emaciated.

    How is it fair that in Tory Britain parents have to give up work to be on suicide watch because they cannot access timely CAMHS support?

    Sadly, I’ve met many such parents and their faces will never leave me.

    This is why it is vital that children can see someone without bureaucracy, judgement, or red tape, our new mental health hubs will make a difference.

    Labour will make the difference and what a contrast to Tory indifference.

    Conference, in her ten years as a government Minister, do you know how many major policy speeches Liz Truss has made on mental health?

    Not one.

    Her reckless mini-budget has left people terrified.

    Terrified of what’s to come this winter.

    Terrified of how to support their families.

    Terrified for their futures.

    Liz, you can’t skip the blame for Britain’s mental health crisis.

    For those of us who work shifts on the NHS frontline, the length of waiting lists is no surprise.

    It’s what happens after over a decade of Tory decision making.

    Conference, Labour will transform our mental health services.

    New staff.

    New services.

    Faster treatment.

    Prevention as our watchword.

    Better mental health for all.

    Conference, thank you.