Tag: Speeches

  • Volodymyr Zelenskyy – 2022 Speech to the Forbes 400 Summit on Philanthropy

    Volodymyr Zelenskyy – 2022 Speech to the Forbes 400 Summit on Philanthropy

    The speech made by Volodymyr Zelenskyy, the President of Ukraine, on 23 September 2022.

    Ladies and Gentlemen! Friends!

    Thank you for the invitation to participate in this summit.

    I am sure that today many wise words will be said about charity – about the experience of philanthropy and opportunities to help.

    Therefore, I do not want to waste your time now on what others may say.

    I want to draw your attention to one detail, which I think is very important – to the experience that Ukraine has acquired and that others can acquire – together with us, together with Ukraine.

    Ukraine is currently the only place on earth that very organically combines investment and philanthropy.

    In Ukraine, you can be an investor and, as a result, a de facto philanthropist in relation to others, you can even be just a businessman, and such quite ordinary economic activity is transformed into a real good help for hundreds of millions or even billions of people.

    Just look at how much the world depends on the supply of agricultural products from Ukraine to the global market. For subjects of the agricultural sector in Ukraine, for businessmen and farmers, this is business and this is work, this is the economy. But as a result, it is the right to food for hundreds of millions of people in the countries of Africa, Asia and Europe.

    We are currently sending agricultural products to Ethiopia, Somalia, Yemen, Lebanon and other countries. This is a real lifesaver.

    But how much depends on logistics!

    When Russia blocked our seaports, exports decreased significantly. Because grain, sunflower and other agricultural raw materials are such a cargo, the supply logistics of which is very, very difficult to rebuild. Large volumes can now be delivered primarily by sea. We need more investment in the expansion of export technologies.

    For example, we are preparing the construction of a pipeline with Poland for the export of sunflower oil. This is a pilot. A specific project, which is the economy for us, and for the global food market, it is an element of stability, an element of security.

    By investing in agro-processing in Ukraine and in the construction of food storage facilities, it is possible to expand not only the logistical possibilities for the supply of agricultural products, but also the range of goods that can be supplied.

    The more added value Ukraine produces, the more added security the people of the world get.

    Look at what the production of electricity in Ukraine means. On the one hand, it is business. Quite a profitable business – in particular, in the field of green energy production. But given our ability to export electricity, this is not just business – this is a real tool to prevent energy poverty for tens of millions of people in the countries of Europe with which we border. This is the stabilization of the energy situation on the entire European continent.

    We are approached by Moldova, Romania, Poland, and other neighbors to help them with electricity in the winter. And we are ready to help. And that is why investments in the expansion of our energy capacities are a salvation from the cold for various peoples.

    Moreover! Ukraine’s ability to export tens of gigawatts of electricity is an important factor in European climate policy. Currently, Europe, unfortunately, is still heavily dependent on Russia’s dirty energy resources. They are dirty not only because their sale is Russia’s way of financing the war. Not only because their burning pollutes the atmosphere. But also because they are extracted so brutally and carelessly in relation to the environment that their extraction in Russia is synonymous with ecological disaster.

    Ukrainian electricity can help replace dirty Russian energy resources. And therefore, this is climate security.

    We also have tremendous opportunities in the development of hydrogen energy and transportation of green hydrogen to Europe. The sun, wind, nuclear energy, green hydrogen – all this is in Ukraine, and it’s not just billions of dollars that can be invested and earned, but billions of dollars that will work to help different countries and peoples – tens of millions of people.

    New green clean energy requires lithium, graphite and other rare earth metals. We have enough of them. Therefore, by investing in Ukraine, one can accelerate the development of green energy in other countries as well.

    We generate tens of millions of cubic meters of wood annually. At the same time, we ensure the restoration of forests. Investing in the production of ecological products from wood and cellulose in Ukraine is a way to reduce the world’s use of petroleum products and plastic, and it is part of the joint protection of our nature.

    Another example is that the whole world needs fertilizers for food production. Why make or buy them from Russian gas? It is possible to build facilities for the production of tens of millions of tons of pure green and cheap ammonia in Ukraine. You can make money from this and help not only food security, but also peace – peace on our planet.

    Ukraine has never waged illegal wars. We are not aggressors. We have never wished harm to other peoples. We have never made geopolitics a means of conquering someone else. Why is this important?

    When any economic player works with us, it means that the economic potential that he creates with his business helps realize only peace, only peaceful goals.

    For example, if any company now works in Russia, it indirectly helps evil – at least it pays taxes to the budget of the aggressor state, that is, it supports their economy, which serves terror. Or even supplies something to the Russian army, directly helping the killers.

    When any state gets carried away with geopolitics and becomes an aggressor, business can inevitably become an accomplice to this evil.

    Therefore, we are grateful to all companies and businessmen who left the Russian market.

    And that is why we offer all the companies and businesses of the world to come to us in Ukraine – to start a business here, to localize their production here, to work with Ukraine in order to have access to the huge markets of the European Union, Britain, Canada and other nations with which we are friends.

    We give priority to the development of our processing industry – its various directions. We have a special program for its development. And we offer all investors of the world to join in its implementation.

    This is the same process – when investments, when business, when the economy – simply by working – become philanthropy, because they can increase the potential of peace in the world and reduce the potential of aggressors.

    Look at the capabilities of our IT sector and industries such as drone production.

    Russia tried to destroy our digital resilience. But we did not allow that.

    Ukrainian digital potential has endured, it is very solid. Our digitization has a powerful social aspect – it is technology that really works for the welfare and protection of people. Our people have digital documents, access to digitized government services, and a high level of digitization of business.

    IT companies in Ukraine are profitable, and their business is both a boon for millions and an element of peace protection, if we take the context of cyber security and Russian cyber attacks.

    Just like, for example, the production of drones in Ukraine. For those who invest, this is the economy. And for those who then use drones – depending on their class – it’s safety, it’s comfort or work.

    Again: I don’t want to take up a lot of your time and I don’t want to repeat what you’ve probably already heard and know.

    But I want to emphasize this point – any significant human effort leads to a long chain of consequences. Any significant effort of a business or a businessman leads to such consequences that directly or indirectly can affect the lives of other people – can do good. And this is achieved not even simply by giving money somewhere.

    But also by the fact that you work morally, work consciously, conduct your business in such a way that your investments, which give you profit, simultaneously help others have a better life – safer, more satiated, more educated, healthier, wealthier.

    Business has this power. And I urge all of you to boldly use this power of business – to invest in such a way that it is at the same time an aid to the normal life of various peoples.

    I invite you all to Ukraine! Thank you for your interest and faith in Ukraine, which you definitely have, otherwise I would not have this address of mine now.

    I sincerely believe that we will be able to restore justice for our country and restore peace as soon as possible.

    Glory to Ukraine!

  • Volodymyr Zelenskyy – 2022 Speech at the 77th Session of the UN General Assembly

    Volodymyr Zelenskyy – 2022 Speech at the 77th Session of the UN General Assembly

    The speech made by Volodymyr Zelenskyy, the President of Ukraine, on 22 September 2022.

    Greetings to all people of the world who value peace and unity between different and equal nations!

    I wish you all peace!

    I thank you that we are united in our striving to restore peace and to guarantee peace for any nation that has become a victim of the armed aggression.

    A crime has been committed against Ukraine, and we demand just punishment.

    The crime was committed against our state borders. The crime was committed against the lives of our people. The crime was committed against the dignity of our women and men.

    The crime was committed against the values that make you and me a community of the united nations.

    And Ukraine demands punishment for trying to steal our territory. Punishment for the murders of thousands of people. Punishment for tortures and humiliations of women and men.

    Punishment for the catastrophic turbulence that Russia provoked with its illegal war and not only for us, Ukrainians, but for the whole world. For every nation that is represented in this Hall of the UN General Assembly.

    I am speaking on behalf of the state, which is forced to defend itself, but has the formula for peace. I am speaking to everyone who wants to hear how to achieve peace.

    I will present a formula that can work not only for us, but for anyone who may find themselves in similar circumstances as we did. It is a formula that punishes crime, protects life, restores security and territorial integrity, guarantees security, and provides determination.

    There are five preconditions for peace.

    Dear Mr. President of the General Assembly!

    Dear Secretary-General of the United Nations!

    Dear heads of states and governments!

    Dear journalists! 

    Nations of the world!

    Ukraine wants peace. Europe wants peace. The world wants peace. And we have seen who is the only one who wants war.

    There is only one Entity among all UN Member States who would say now, if he could interrupt my speech, that he is happy with this war – with his war. But we will not let this Entity prevail over us, even though it is the largest state in the world.

    Ukraine showed strength on the battlefield, using its right to self-defense in accordance with Article 51 of the UN Charter. And no one will reproach us now or in the future with weakness or inability to fight for ourselves, for our independence.

    We are achieving a result in this fight and we see what the end of this war will be, and what will be the guarantees of a stable peace.

    The UN Charter proclaims the equality of nations – and we proved that Ukraine is equal among the equals.

    The UN Charter protects the inviolability of borders – and we confirm our state borderline by expelling the occupiers outside.

    The UN Charter stipulates the value of human rights, dignity and life, and we also stipulate them – with every Ukrainian city freed from Russian occupation.

    We did not provoke this war. We held 88 rounds of talks in various formats to prevent this war, just from the beginning of my presidency until February 24 this year.

    But Russia – instead of stopping the crime of aggression, which it started back in 2014 – turned it into a full-scale invasion. And we have no choice but to defend ourselves. We do it. We push the aggressor beyond the internationally recognized border of the Ukrainian state.

    And this is the first item of our peace formula. Comprehensive item. Punishment.

    Punishment for the crime of aggression. Punishment for violation of borders and territorial integrity. Punishment that must be in place until the internationally recognized border is restored. Until the aggression stops. And until the damages and losses for the war are fully compensated.

    Therefore, sanctions against the aggressor are part of the peace formula. Blocking the trade and relations with the aggressor is part of the peace formula. All this is a punishment.

    So long as the aggressor is a party to decision-making in the international organizations, he must be isolated from them – at least until aggression lasts. Reject the right to vote. Deprive delegation rights. Remove the right of veto – if it is a Member of the UN Security Council. In order to punish the aggressor within the institutions.

    We should not turn a blind eye to propagandists who justify aggression, but apply a full package of personal restrictions against them. That is a punishment for lying.

    Citizens of the aggressor state should not be allowed to enjoy tourism or shopping in the territory of those who value peace, but should be encouraged through visa restrictions to fight against the aggression of their own state. Punish for abetting the evil.

    A Special Tribunal should be created to punish Russia for the crime of aggression against our state. This will become signal to all “would-be” aggressors, that they must value peace or be brought to responsibility by the world.

    We have prepared precise steps to establish such Tribunal. They will be presented to all states.

    Ukraine will appeal to the UN General Assembly to support an international compensation mechanism.

    We count on your support.

    Russia should pay for this war with its assets. It is also a punishment. This is one of the most terrible punishments for Russian officials, who value money above everything else.

    The second item of the peace formula is the protection of life. The most concrete item.

    Now, while the sessions of the General Assembly continue, in the Ukrainian town of Izyum, Kharkiv region, the exhumation is under way… of bodies from a mass burial, which happened when the territory was controlled by Russian troops. The bodies of women and men, children and adults, civilians and soldiers were found there. 445 graves.

    There is a family that died under the rubble of a house after a Russian airstrike – father, mother, 6- and 8-year-old girls, grandparents. There is a man who was strangled with a rope. There is a woman with broken ribs and wounds on her body. There is a man who was castrated before the murder, and this is not the first case.

    Ask, please, the representatives of Russia why the Russian military are so obsessed with castration. What was done to them so that they want to do this to others?

    The only thing that differs the mass burial in Izyum from what the world saw in Bucha is, in fact, the burial. The Russian army was in Izyum for a longer time, and therefore the bodies of the killed people were buried, and not scattered on the streets.

    So, how can we allow the Russian army somewhere on Ukrainian soil, knowing that they are committing such mass murders everywhere? We cannot.

    We must protect life. The world must protect life. Every state suffering the armed aggression needs the opportunity to protect its citizens and liberate its territory.

    If it requires help with weapons or shells – they should be provided. If you need financial help for this, it should be given. If for this, it is necessary to help with the intelligence data – just do it. But what is not needed is lies.

    We can return the Ukrainian flag to our entire territory. We can do it with the force of arms.

    But we need time.

    We tried to speed it up. We tried to implement the basic provisions of the UN Charter for Ukraine through negotiations.

    But Russia is afraid of real negotiations and does not want to fulfill any fair international obligations. It lies to everyone. As it is typical for aggressors, for terrorists.

    Even now, when Russia talks about negotiations, it only wants to slow down its retreat. Russia wants to spend the winter on the occupied territory of Ukraine and prepare forces to attempt a new offensive. New Buchas, new Izyums… Or at least it wants to prepare fortifications on occupied land and carry out military mobilization at home.

    We cannot agree to a delayed war. Because it will be even hotter than the war now.

    For us, this is a war for life. That is why we need defense support – weapons, military equipment and shells. Offensive weapons, a long-range one is enough to liberate our land, and defensive systems, above all, air defense. And we need financial support – to keep internal stability and fulfill social obligations to our people.

    Physical and social protection are two elements of any nation’s life. So, the second item of our peace formula is the protection of life. By all available means – allowed by the UN Charter.

    The third item of our peace formula is restoring security and territorial integrity.

    Look at how many elements of global security Russia has undermined with its war – maritime safety, food safety, radiation safety, energy safety and safety from weapons of mass destruction.

    We are already restoring maritime safety and food security. And I thank Mr. António Guterres for his personal involvement. Algeria, Ethiopia, Egypt, Libya, Kenya, Somalia, Sudan, Tunisia, Bangladesh, Israel, India, Iran, Yemen, Cyprus, China, Korea, Lebanon, Türkiye, Belgium, Bulgaria, Greece, Ireland, Spain, Italy, Netherlands, Germany, Romania and France have already received Ukrainian agricultural products.

    And we have to increase the supply by sea. Both under market conditions and within the UN Food Program, for which Ukraine is always a reliable partner.

    By the way, despite all the difficulties caused by the war, we decided to provide humanitarian aid to Ethiopia and Somalia, so we will send them an additional amount of our wheat.

    But it is more difficult with other security elements.

    On the eve of the General Assembly meeting, Russia fired missiles at the South Ukraine Nuclear Power Plant. The explosion hit the station buildings – windows were broken, walls were damaged. The rockets exploded only three hundred meters from the walls of the reactors!

    And this is after the IAEA’s clear appeal to Russia to stop any hostile activity against any nuclear facilities of Ukraine and, in particular, against the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Station – the largest one in Europe, which Russia has turned into a target.

    And that makes all of you a target.

    Russian radiation blackmailing is something that should concern each and every one of you, because none of you will find a vaccine against radiation sickness.

    The cost of living crisis continues in dozens of countries, it roots in the destabilization of the energy market. It is necessary to remove the main factor of global price turbulence, namely: Russian energy blackmailing.

    It is necessary to cap the prices at which Russia exports its energy resources. It is necessary to make Russian oil and gas – just ordinary goods again. Currently, oil and gas are Russia’s energy weapons. And that is why it manipulates the markets so that electricity, gas, petrol and diesel become the privilege of few instead of being a common good available to all.

    Limiting prices is safeguarding the world. This is the way to restore energy and price security.

    But will the world go for it? Or will it be scared? Will it be scared of Russian threats?

    It is necessary to take only one strong step, after which everything will become clear. The time has come for this.

    This step will put everything in place. After the Russian missile terror. After the massacres. After Mariupol. After the burning of Ukrainian prisoners in Olenivka by the Russian military. After blocking the ports. After the strikes of Russian tanks and missiles on nuclear power plants. And after threats to use nuclear weapons, which have become the rule, not the exception, for Russian propagandists…

    We must finally recognize Russia as a state sponsor of terrorism. At all levels. In all countries that confess the values of peace and protection of human life. Legally. Politically.

    If you don’t have a legal mechanism, you can make a political decision – in the parliaments. This is the foundation for restoring global security. If this strong step is taken, doubts will disappear – whether to take other important steps.

    And what is very sensitive – is the border, the territorial integrity.

    When one country tries to steal the territory of another state, it puts all world nations under attack.

    Global security cannot be restored without restoring the territorial integrity of the nation which suffered the armed aggression.

    So, the third item of the Ukrainian peace formula is the restoration of security and territorial integrity. The fourth item is security guarantees.

    Every nation has the right to security guarantees. Not only the largest nations. Not only the most fortunate ones.

    We have proposals to upgrade the security architecture for Ukraine, and for Europe and the world, which will not allow any more aggression against us. We are already presenting them to partners.

    Proposals for legally binding multilateral and bilateral treaties. These are the conditions for the guarantors to act, and the timeline for their actions to bring results – results on land, at sea and in the air; in diplomacy and politics, in economy and finance, in providing weapons and intelligence. Each of you, who will receive the text of our peace formula will also see the details of what we offer as security guarantees.

    I do not want to compare our offers with the guarantees of any alliances that exist on the planet now. I want to stress that it is always much better to guarantee the security of a nation, preventively, rather than to stop a war after it has already begun.

    And the fifth item of the Ukrainian peace formula is determination. Something without which the other four items will not work.

    This is our determination to fight. This is the determination of the partners to help us, and also themselves. And this is the determination of the world to unite around the one who fights against armed aggression and to call to order the one who threatens all.

    So, all five items of our formula: 

    • punishment for aggression;
    • protection of life;
    • restoration of security and territorial integrity;
    • security guarantees;
    • and determination to defend oneself.

    This is the formula of crime and punishment, which is already well known to Russia. And this is the formula of justice and law and order that Russia has yet to learn. As well as any other potential aggressors.

    What is not in our formula? Neutrality.

    Those who speak of neutrality, when human values and peace are under attack, mean something else. They talk about indifference – everyone for themselves. Here’s what they say. They pretend to be interested in each other’s problems. They take care of each other formally. They sympathize only for protocol. And that is why they pretend to protect someone, but in reality they protect only their vested interests. This is what creates the conditions for war. This is what needs to be corrected in order to create conditions for peace.

    All you need is determination.

    There was a lot of talking about reforming the UN. How did it all end? No result.

    If you look carefully at our peace formula, you will see that its implementation is already becoming a de-facto reform of the United Nations. Our formula is universal, and unites the North and the South of the world. It calls for the world’s majority, and encourages to expand the representation of those who remained unheard.

    This is an imbalance when Africa, Latin America, most of Asia, Central and Eastern Europe comply with the right of veto, that they themselves never had.

    And this is what Ukraine is talking about. And have you ever heard such words from Russia? But it is a permanent member of the Security Council. For some reason. For what reason, not Japan or Brazil, not Türkiye or India, not Germany or Ukraine. The day will come when this will be resolved.

    As for the talks between Ukraine and Russia.

    Probably you have happened to hear different words from Russia about the talks – as if they were ready for them. But. They talk about the talks but announce military mobilization. They talk about the talks but announce pseudo referendums in the occupied territories of Ukraine.

    What is true then? The military mobilization in Russia is true. Sham referendums are also true. Russia wants war. It’s true. But Russia will not be able to stop the course of history. Mankind and the international law are stronger than one terrorist state. Russia will be forced to end this war. The war it has started.

    I rule out that the settlement can happen on a different basis than the Ukrainian peace formula. The further the Russian terror reaches, the less likely it is that anyone in the world will agree to sit at one table with them.

    And if my words will be followed by new Russian missiles and acts of terrorism it will only prove the weakness. Russia’s weakness. Its inability to prevail over us, its inability to prevail over the world.

    It will only prove that 5 items of the Ukrainian peace formula must be implemented as soon as possible.

    We are ready for peace. But true, honest and fair peace. That’s why the world is on our side.

    And finally.

    I want to thank one hundred and one countries that voted for my video address to take place. It was a vote not only about the format. It was the vote about principles.

    Only seven countries voted against: Belarus, Cuba, North Korea, Eritrea, Nicaragua, Russia and Syria.

    Seven. Seven who are afraid of the video address. Seven who respond to principles with a red button. Only seven.

    One hundred and one – and seven.

    Friends! If this coalition is against our determination, then I congratulate you all. Because this means that peace will prevail over any aggression, and that there is no obstacle for us to implement the peace formula.

    I thank you for your attention!

    Once again, I wish you all peace!

    Glory to Ukraine!

  • Volodymyr Zelenskyy – 2022 Speech at the Global Food Security Summit

    Volodymyr Zelenskyy – 2022 Speech at the Global Food Security Summit

    The speech made by Volodymyr Zelenskyy, the President of Ukraine, on 21 September 2022.

    Dear colleagues!

    Ladies and Gentlemen!

    I am grateful for the opportunity to participate in this meeting.

    Given the meeting is taking place on the margins of the UN General Assembly, I will mention one of the fundamental documents of the modern international legal system.

    This is the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. 30 articles about the most urgent things for every person out of the billions of people who have lived, live and will live on our planet. I will now quote Article 25:

    “Everyone has the right to a standard of living adequate for the health and well-being of himself and of his family, including food, clothing, housing and medical care and necessary social services, and the right to security in the event of unemployment, sickness, disability, widowhood, old age or other lack of livelihood in circumstances beyond his control.”

    This is a very important definition – the definition of the right, not the privilege, the right, not the fortune, the right, not the vagaries of climate. The right to food. The right to protection against hunger. The right!

    Ukraine considers this right inalienable for all people, for all countries. Every person in the world should be free from hunger and even the threat of it. Every country in the world should be reliably protected from famine.

    And any state that provokes famine, that tries to make access to food a privilege, that tries to make the protection of nations from famine dependent on the smile of fortune or the mercy of some dictator – such a state must get the toughest reaction from the world. Reaction as for the use of weapons of mass destruction – chemical, biological or nuclear. Because the spread of famine is the same immoral and inhumane weapon of mass destruction as the spread of deadly bacteria or radiation.

    This is Ukraine’s position. This is the position of a nation that has lost millions of people to Holodomors. Therefore, we particularly feel what the words “food security” really mean. What the right to protection against hunger is. What the right to food is.

    We feel why this is not a privilege, why it should not be an accident and why anyone who destroys this right should face a tough response.

    That is why we are making so much effort to restore our agricultural exports. This is not only an economic issue for us. This is a question of basic values and respect for life as such.

    In 8 months of last year, Ukraine exported almost 38 million tons of agricultural products. In 8 months of this year, the world market has received almost 10 million tons less already.

    Minus 10 million tons of our agricultural exports is plus tens of millions of people who found themselves on the brink of starvation or are starving. And these are only the initial consequences of the Russian blockade of our ports, Russian attempts with missile strikes to prevent us from building new export logistics, and the immoral political game with fluctuations in food prices.

    Russia must bear responsibility for this.

    Why did it need all this? To supposedly graciously give food in exchange for sovereignty. In exchange for political submission. In exchange for vulnerability. Vulnerability of many African, Asian and European countries.

    That is why Russia wants to make protection from hunger not a right, but a privilege, and wants to make food – not an inalienable right, but something to beg for.

    We categorically do not accept that. We consistently fight against that. Even in the conditions of a full-scale war, we help those who cannot provide agricultural products for themselves with our agricultural products. And I want to assure the UN that Ukraine will continue to be a guarantor of the UN World Food Programme.

    In particular, we are already helping Somalia and Ethiopia. Africa, Asia, Europe, the American continent… Wherever food is needed, we are ready to export and help.

    And we call for your solidarity.

    Stand in solidarity with us in holding Russia to account. Stand in solidarity with us in guaranteeing the right of any person and any country to protection from hunger, the right to food.

    This is a right, not a privilege. It should be so. I believe that we will be able to guarantee it.

    I am grateful to UN Secretary-General Guterres. I am grateful to Türkiye and President Erdoğan. Our grain export initiative is working steadily. And I am grateful to all Ukrainians – each and every one who turns our ability to guarantee global food security into an objective reality.

    I thank all of you for your support and attention!

    Glory to Ukraine!

  • Ursula von der Leyen – 2022 Speech at Princeton University

    Ursula von der Leyen – 2022 Speech at Princeton University

    The speech made by Ursula von der Leyen, the President of the European Commission, at Princeton University on 22 September 2022.

    Dear Dean Jamal,

    Dear Andy, Professor Moravcsik,

    Thank you very much for welcoming me back to Princeton,

    Distinguished members of the Princeton faculty and administration,

    And most importantly, dear students,

    Indeed, this is the United Nations General Assembly week right now. And you can imagine that one dominant topic was and is the war that Russia unleashed against Ukraine. It was 24 February when Russia invaded Ukraine and brought war back to Europe. I visited Kyiv for the first time since the beginning of the war round about five to six weeks after the invasion started. And I went to the town of Bucha. Before the war, Bucha was a quiet, friendly suburb on the outskirts of Kyiv. It has been occupied by Russian troops. Two days before I went to Bucha, it had been liberated by Ukrainian armed forces. When I went there, I saw mass graves; I saw the body bags lying there – men, women, children. I saw these brutal scars of missiles and bombs that had been aimed deliberately at residential areas, hospitals, schools kindergartens. So I basically saw first-hand the reality of Putin’s war.

    Last week, as you said, Andy, I was again in Kyiv and I was in Irpin, also on the outskirts of Kyiv. You still see the scars of the bombing of houses and hospitals and schools. I spoke, for example, to schoolchildren. And while we were speaking, when I visited that school, there was a missile alarm so we had to go to the shelter. And they told me that it was the third time on that day that they went to the shelter. That is their daily experience. But I also saw that life has come back to Kyiv. The streets were filled with people, the shops were open. People in Kyiv try to win their life back. The Ukrainian army is making impressive advances, liberating many towns and villages, and forcing the Russian army to retreat. Of course, I know that this all needs consolidation, but the success of the last days is lifting spirits – and not only the Ukrainian ones.

    I know that some are calling to stop the fighting. But I must say that the reality is as follows: If Russia stops fighting, the war is over. If Ukraine stops fighting, there will be no more Ukraine. Much is at stake. Not just for Ukraine – but also for Europe, for the international community and for the global order. Russia has invaded Ukraine with the goal to wipe the country from the map – that is what Putin says and writes. So Ukrainians are fighting for their survival, but they are also fighting for global values. This is not only a war that Russia has unleashed against Ukraine. This is a war on our values; this is a war on the rules-based international order. This is an attack on the UN Charter. I mean, Russia is a permanent member of the Security Council of the United Nations, we should not forget it. This is trampling on the UN Charter. And this is a war about autocracy against democracy. And I tell you: Many, many worldwide are watching very precisely what the outcome is going to be.

    From day one on, the United States and the European Union and many other friends have stood at Ukraine’s side with weapons, and it is amazing to see the bravery of the Ukrainians fighting for their survival; with funds; with hospitality, on the European Union side, for more than 8.1 million refugees in seven months; and with the toughest sanctions the world has ever seen. Let me tell you that these sanctions have only been possible because of a very, very close cooperation with our friends in the United States. As you said, I have been in politics now round about 20 years, 14 of them in the government of Angela Merkel. Never ever have I experienced such an intense, trustful and detailed cooperation with the White House. And therefore, I think the saying is right: When you face a crisis, you know who your true friends are. Since last year already – it was around Christmas or New Year when Putin had started, as you might remember, to deploy 10,000 troops to encircle Ukraine –, our teams started to work on the sanctions to align the European system with the American system. They are very different but the effect of the sanctions should be the same. And we do not want extraterritorial effects but sovereign effects from the European Union but also all the other G7 members that joined us and, of course, the United States. And this intense work over weeks then had as consequence that when the invasion started – on day two, day four, day six –, we could immediately deliver three very heavy packages of sanctions that are unfolding their effect right now. The sanctions are biting. Russia has tried everything to camouflage the effects. And as this is not a free country, you can twitch and turn around facts and figures into what you want them to be. Or you can say what you want and hide what you want. But if you look at the financial sector in Russia, it is on life support now. Russia’s industry is in tatters. It is very interesting to see the military complex, because the military complex now has a very hard time to replenish what is necessary for the armed forces. Because the updated technologies are missing, these are coming from our side and are no longer delivered, there is a ban on the exports. The spare parts are missing. So you observe now that the Russians are cannibalising their refrigerators and their dishwashers to get semiconductors they can use for the military complex. Basically, the Kremlin has put Russia’s economy on the path to oblivion. And I want to make it very clear that the sanctions are here to stay. This is the time for resolve and not for appeasement.

    The same is true for our financial support to Ukraine. So far, Europeans have provided more than EUR 19 billion in financial assistance since the beginning of the war. And that is without counting our military support. The message is: We are in it for the long haul.

    I grew up in a divided country. I was lucky. I was born in West Germany, in the western part of Europe, in a free and democratic country. I vividly remember the times of the Iron Curtain. When I was your age, student age, when we wanted to drive to the island of West Berlin that was surrounded by the GDR, I remember, still today, the feeling of being terrified when you were driving on the corridor through the death zone. Because you knew, one false move and there is no rule of law anymore to protect you. So I remember this feeling very well, what the Iron Curtain and the Wall, and the death zone were all about. I also remember, of course, in 1990 the jubilant days, when the Iron Curtain came down, when the Wall in Berlin came down, and when the countries behind the Iron Curtain broke free. Indeed, the Baltics, Poland, Romania, Hungary, Slovakia, Slovenia, Bulgaria, Czechia – you name it, so many others. Today, there is the same wind of change that is once again blowing across the continent. Because Ukraine has now applied for membership in the European Union. With their decision to apply for the candidate status in order for Ukraine to join the European Union, they have very clearly chosen the path of freedom. And with our decision to grant them candidate status, we have chosen to stand by Ukraine as long as it takes.

    This war will change Europe and the world fundamentally. Take energy, I want to speak a little bit about energy. At the beginning of the war, Europe was heavily dependent on Russian fossil fuels: coal, oil, gas. 60% of the Russian budgets’ revenues at that time was from fossil fuels. So you can imagine how important the fossil fuel export was and is. Putin has built very strategically, and later on used, our dependency to blackmail us, basically to suffocate us, with lowering – already in hindsight, I see it – the gas supply last year to the storage to make sure that we have not enough gas in the storages to make it through the winter, and slowly but surely cutting the gas supplies to one Member State after another. At the moment, he prefers to flare the gas – that is literally burning the gas – instead of delivering it, as he should, if you look at the contracts. I guess that he obviously thought that he could intimidate us and divide us. But let me tell you that just the opposite is the case. This blackmailing has really united us. And it is a turning point, because we have decided, as a European Union: We will end our reliance on Russian fossil fuels.

    Meanwhile, Europe has banned Russian coal imports completely. We have been winding down and are winding down the oil imports from Russia, down to 10% by the end of the year. Gas is interesting. Let me give you three figures: If you look at the overall global pipeline gas demand, 75% was the demand of the European Union on global pipeline gas supplies. So we are a huge client – very important. Half of it was imports from Russia. Today, we are down, on Russian imports, to 25%. One quarter is left. How are we doing this? We are diversifying away from the Russian supply towards other suppliers that are democratic friends and trustworthy. First of all, of course, our friends in the United States. I closed an agreement with President Biden on LNG imports that really, really helped us and saved us in these difficult times. It is very successful. The second point that we are doing, besides diversifying away, is saving energy. The energy that is not being used is good energy. We save it to the storage for the coming winter.

    Of course, this comes at a price. So let me tell you that we all feel that the global energy market is very tight. The whole Russian supply is missing, so we are demanding energy on the global market. Therefore, the global market is really tight. Energy prices are skyrocketing, as you will observe in Europe. This is a heavy burden on people’s and businesses’ shoulders. We are taxing now the windfall profits of electricity-producing companies to have a targeted support for vulnerable households and vulnerable businesses. We are doing all this not only because it is necessary but also because we know that this is the way to dry out Putin’s war chest. And we know that we are doing this because with energy independence and energy freedom comes greater power to defend the global rules. This is the immediate response. But there is of course a mid-term and long-term response.

    Ultimately, the best way to get rid of fossil fuels is a massive investment in renewable energy. Every kilowatt-hour that we are producing electricity from sun, from wind, from hydropower, from geothermal, from biomass, from green hydrogen – you name it – is not only good for the climate – it is also good for the climate that is the most important part – but it makes us independent. It is home-grown; it is security of energy supply; it created good jobs at home. If you look at the price today of solar and wind energy, it is cheaper by now than fossil fuels. This is why, for example, we are investing heavily in offshore wind parks. The biggest one worldwide is now starting in the North Sea. When it is ready to go, it will heath 50 million European homes throughout the whole year.

    So in sum, the era of Russian fossil fuels in Europe is coming to an end. And this is a big geopolitical shift, because if you look at the map, the demand and supply from Russia is coming to an end. This demand from the European Union will now switch towards the Global South. Because if we do it right, we are not only diversifying to other gas or fossil fuel suppliers, but we massively invest now in renewable energies, in regions where the resources are in abundance. If you look at the other side of the Mediterranean, in the European Union, it is the African continent: sun, wind, partially hydropower, in abundance. And if we invest in the infrastructure, we do not only gain freedom from the blackmail that we have experienced with Russia, but we are also fighting the right cause against climate change.

    The fight against climate change is the biggest one. And I want us – the Europe Union and the United States – to be allies in that fight. Global warming is the real crisis that is overshadowing everything. We know that climate change is man-made. The body of evidence is overwhelming. So it is us. The impact is tangible, you know it: floods, droughts, wildfires, hurricanes, tornados, melting glaciers, rising sea levels. I had yesterday a bilateral meeting with the Prime Minister of Pakistan: three-quarter of the country is inundated – climate change, it is nothing but climate change. So it is very bad. But there is a glimpse of hope, because if it is true that climate change is man-made, we can do something about it. That is the good news and the bad news. And that is what the European Green Deal is all about. When I came into office in 2019, this was the first initiative I took. Our strategy, the European Green Deal, wants to transform our economy, so that we preserve and restore nature. We need to decarbonise our economy; we need to move towards the circular economy; we need to develop a way of life and work that gives our planet a real fighting chance for the next generation, for you. So we have, as the European Union, cast in law our goals for 2030 and climate neutrality for 2050. We want to be the first climate-neutral continent by 2050. And we are the first highly industrialised continent that has put a concrete plan on the table on how we want to get there. So pieces of legislation, legal acts to make this transformational change happen.

    What are the principles? The first one is: CO2 needs a price, because nature cannot pay the price anymore. Those who emit CO2 must pay. Therefore, we have put in place an Emissions Trading System: If you want to emit CO2, you pay. If you want to avoid that, you go and innovate into clean technologies. Second principle: The transition has to be just, otherwise it will not happen. So we invest massively to support the regions that have to leapfrog forward, for example coal-abating regions that have to leapfrog forward into completely different industries. And we have a Social Climate Fund to support the small incomes and the vulnerable businesses that have no leeway to adapt to cleaner mobility, to insulated houses, to better heating systems and all that is necessary to change. The third principle is: We need massive investments in innovation and infrastructure. That is the point where NextGenerationEU comes into play. I called it NextGenerationEU because we raised EUR 800 billion on the capital markets to invest in projects that will serve the next generation. EUR 360 billion of these will go into projects of the European Green Deal. And I am very glad that the United States is matching that now. I was happy to hear that from this climate package, USD 369 billion, I think, are going into green projects, projects fighting climate change. The fourth principle is, and that follows from it, that the fight against global warming is a global one, a global task. Europe is responsible for 9% of the global emissions. We need everyone on board. Therefore, I very much welcome President Biden’s strong commitment to also become climate-neutral by 2050. And last but not least, the fifth and last principle is: We consider the European Green Deal as a huge business opportunity – our new growth strategy. If we master the turnaround, those who have innovated and developed the clean solutions will be the front-runners. They will have the first-mover advantage. Then the whole world will be asking for their technologies. This is the reason why we have to prepare now if we want to be competitive in the future.

    This brings me to one afterthought. I have been speaking about energy, I have been speaking about dependency, the European Green Deal or fighting climate change. The green transition but also the digital transition, I must say, will massively increase our needs for raw materials. Lithium for batteries; silicon metal for chips; rare earths to produce magnets, for example for electric vehicles. Demand for those raw materials and rare earths will presumably at least double until 2030. The good news is: That shows that the European Green Deal and the green transformation overall worldwide is progressing fast. The not-so-good news is: One country dominates the market. Out of the 30 critical raw materials, today 10 are mostly sourced from China. And China basically controls the global processing industry. Almost 90% of rare earths and 60% of lithium are processed in China. We have to avoid falling into the same trap and dependency as we did with oil and gas. So we have to be very careful not to replace one old dependency with a new one.

    And that brings me back to where I started: Democracy versus autocracy. Each of our democracies is very unique and different. Because ultimately, they have been shaped by our people, by our history, by our backgrounds, our cultures, our constitutions. But in the very end, democracies in all forms come down to one single point. And that is: It gives people a voice. It gives the ability to change things at the ballot box. In democracies, we even fight for the right to be against us. That is democracy. To be able to speak you mind. To change your mind, if you want to. To be free to be yourself so that if you are different from the majority, you are equal before the law. It is the accountability to all, and not only to those who have voted for you. That is democracy. A system where power is given and taken away by the citizens and framed by checks and balances. And we see what the alternative is. At the beginning of this year, Russia and China declared an ‘unlimited friendship’. And despite the fact that cracks have appeared in the last days, both continue to aim for a fundamentally different vision of the future. I believe we have to take this challenge very seriously. We need to defend the open and inclusive international order – both in the United States and the European Union, and beyond. Those who were lucky enough to be born and raised in democracies – like me – can often take the democracy just for granted. It was always there. I have always lived in a democracy. But now I realise that it is not going to be here if I do not stand up for this democracy. Those who have lived in autocracies and authoritarian regimes will know all too well how precious freedom is. In Europe, we have learnt that we must always work on improving democracy – because we know how quickly and how devastatingly history can change. We know that the opponents of democracy today are using sophisticated, new tools, modern technologies to oppress and manipulate through systematic disinformation. Disinformation is not a partisan issue, it is a societal one. Because it seeks to muddy the waters so much that truth and facts become impossible to distinguish from lies and falsehoods. So in the very end, democracy needs us – each and every one of us, explicitly. By that, I want to address you, the students, the faculty members, the administration here in this room: You have the privilege to study and work in an institution that is based on a long tradition to unveil truth through critical discourse, through evidence-based research, respect for facts and figures, the understanding of history. These are the tools and the ingredients to dismantle disinformation. You have a mission. As politicians, we have a mission, too, but you have a mission. Or in the words of Princeton’s informal motto: In the nation’s service and in the service of humanity.

    Many thanks for your attention.

  • Lynda Chalker – 2022 Tribute to HM Queen Elizabeth II (Baroness Chalker of Wallasey)

    Lynda Chalker – 2022 Tribute to HM Queen Elizabeth II (Baroness Chalker of Wallasey)

    The tribute made by Lynda Chalker, Baroness Chalker of Wallasey, in the House of Lords on 9 September 2022.

    My Lords, I rise to add my very personal thanks to our beloved late Queen Elizabeth II. Her love of this nation, all its people and all its societies, particularly in the voluntary sector—about which noble Lords have spoken already tonight—was profound. No one could ever count what she has contributed to the growth of voluntary activity in the United Kingdom. We are, in fact, much envied by many countries abroad for that. When the right reverend Prelate the Bishop of Southwark spoke about the volunteering that has to go on, I kept thinking of all those little incidents that the Queen monitored, made note of and often referred to in other circumstances in order to encourage more people to be involved in volunteering and in service. So, if there is one thing that I thank her for above all else, it is her encouragement for people to be involved with their communities.

    It was a very special privilege for me to spend numerous moments with Her Majesty during my 18 years as a Minister in three successive government departments, and indeed since that time. But it was in the Foreign Office, and then when I took on development matters as well, that I began to see her more frequently, because so many of the things in which I was involved were loves of hers and of the late Duke of Edinburgh. It was not just development; it was also the Commonwealth. Many references have been made to the Commonwealth, but there is the sheer fact that, in addition to the 56 member nations of the Commonwealth today, there is a queue of countries wishing to join the Commonwealth. We should be working hard to develop it, and I am certain that His Majesty King Charles III will want that to be a feature of our government going forward.

    Among my many contacts with Her Majesty were two particular incidents on the island of Dominica, which was looked after by Dame Eugenia Charles as Prime Minister. There is probably hardly anybody here who will remember her, but she was a very determined elderly lady. I was to be the Minister in attendance when the Queen went to meet her. Dame Eugenia was absolutely certain that the tea service she had in her cupboard, which, she pointed out to me, only she could clean—I had a slightly raised eyebrow when I looked at it, but never mind—should be used when the Queen came for tea. All went well until the tea came in. Her Majesty was offered a cup of tea, but she decided that she did not want one at that moment. Too many cups of tea on tours are something that Ministers often regret; I am sure Her Majesty regretted it many other times too. I was left to make a diplomatic bridge between the Prime Minister of Dominica, who wanted to use the tea set, and the Queen, who had not given her the tea set. Such is the life in the Foreign Office sometimes.

    On that very same Caribbean visit, on another island, I nearly fell down a hole outside a church into which we were going. I was following Her Majesty and a piece of plywood had been put down which was not a perfect fit. Needless to say, my ankle caught the edge of it. I did not go down the hole as I was saved by a policeman, as ever, but the thing that hit me really hard was that the first thing that was said to me by Her Majesty, when I got into the church in the row behind her, was, “I have sent for some ice for that ankle”. I did not even know that she knew I had nearly gone down the hole. The kindness and the thoughtfulness came up so many times in my experiences of her.

    I always remember being very encouraged by her. On one occasion, when things were not going very well in the then ODA, she said, “What is the main purpose of what you are seeking to do?” Without going into the politics of this in any way, I told her and she said, “Well, why don’t you try—?” She came up with a thoroughly practical suggestion, and if there is one other thing I remember about Her Majesty, it is what a practical lady she was in so many ways. I hope that that practical nature will be continued by His Majesty King Charles III, who I know so well as the Prince of Wales I am not sure how I am going to address him in the future; I think I am going to make mistakes, and I have been forgiven by the Queen so I hope I shall be forgiven by Prince Charles—as he was. You see how easy it is to make the mistake!

    King Charles III, we wish you a magnificent reign, we hope you will continue your mother’s best and most tremendous contributions to this country and we, as ordinary citizens, will do our best to make sure: long live King Charles III.

  • John Healey – 2022 Speech at Labour Party Conference

    John Healey – 2022 Speech at Labour Party Conference

    The speech made by John Healey, the Shadow Secretary of State for Defence, on 27 September 2022.

    Conference, it’s always an honour to address you.

    Thank you for staying the full course today.

    Thank you for the massive welcome you gave the choir and speakers from Ukraine.

    Thank you for your contributions throughout this debate.

    You showed Labour’s total condemnation of Russia; and Labour’s total solidarity with Ukraine.

    You showed we share the same values – democracy, freedom, human rights, respect for international law.

    When Putin invaded Ukraine, Labour – like the British people – wanted faster, tougher sanctions. Faster, more compassionate treatment for Ukrainian refugees. Faster, stronger UK backing for war crimes investigators.

    But on Britain’s military help to Ukraine, and on reinforcing NATO allies, the Government has had – and will continue to have – our full Labour support.

    Conference, we will win a Labour Government.

    So, let’s make clear to President Putin, there will be a change to Labour but there will be no change in Britain’s resolve to confront Russia’s aggression and stand with Ukraine to confound Russia’s attempts to divide NATO, hold Europe hostage over energy and flood our society with disinformation.

    And I say this, conference: those who call ‘stop the war’ more loudly than ‘win the war’ are playing into Putin’s hands.

    A ceasefire cedes new territory to Russia. Risks Russia regrouping their forces; deepening their occupation; legitimising their regime of torture, rape and execution.

    We are not fighting. We don’t decide when it ends. Only Ukraine can make this call. Our duty will be to support Ukraine in negotiations, just as we are now in the fighting.

    Britain’s military have responded magnificently to support Ukraine. And we pay tribute to the serving men and women of our Armed Forces.

    We are the party of public service. Theirs is the ultimate public service.

    They defend the country, at home and abroad.

    Yet over 12 Tory years, they’ve seen their pay cut, numbers cut, family support cut.

    Satisfaction with Service life itself has plunged below half.

    We must renew the nation’s contract with those who serve. We will put the Armed Forces Covenant fully into law. We will make Britain the best country to be a veteran. The Tories won’t; Labour will.

    And over 12 years, the Tories leave Britain weaker in the world.

    They have weakened Britain’s global influence by breaking international law, antagonising our European allies, slashing development aid and failing to stand up for human rights.

    They have cut our full time Armed Forces by over 40 000, axed one in five of the Navy’s surface ships; and taken 200 planes out of RAF service in the last five years alone.

    They have got the big calls wrong. They failed to see and plan for a Taliban take-over in Afghanistan or a Russian invasion of Ukraine. Even as threats to Britain increase, they plan to cut the Army by a further 10 000 troops.

    And they’ve overseen a broken procurement system, wasting over £15 billion through bad MoD management.

    The NLAW anti-tank missiles have been vital to Ukraine. This is day 216 of Putin’s war. Yet there’s still no MoD contract signed, still no production to restock for Ukraine and for our own Army.

    The Tories are failing British troops, and British taxpayers.

    When a country is facing threats or forced to fight, its Armed Forces depend on the strength its industry and resilience of its people.

    Attlee and Bevin understood this in the late 1930s. And yes, so did Nye Bevan.

    As the Party of working people and trade unions, we know when done well spending on defence strengthens our UK economy and our UK sovereignty.

    So, in government, we will make it fundamental that British defence investment is directed first to British business, with a higher bar set for any decisions to buy abroad.

    The first test is the Navy’s new fleet support ships. The Tories want to build them abroad, in cut-price shipyards with non-union labour.

    Conference, I say to you today:

    Under Labour, these ships will be built in Britain by British workers.

    Under Labour, trade unions will be industrial partners.

    Under Labour, defence spending will help lead our mission to buy, make and sell more in Britain.

    Conference, let us draw one more lesson from Ukraine.

    Ukraine is winning because its people – people of diverse faith, age, ethnicity and language – have a national story of hope to unify them.

    To be a democratic country at peace with its neighbours, free to determine its own future. A people with security, prosperity and respect.

    These are Labour’s hopes for the British people.

    Our surest defence for Britain is to build a country where security, prosperity and respect are guaranteed to all.

    A country worth defending and determined to defend itself.

    A country whose citizens can say proudly: in the face of the most severe threats, we stood with Ukraine, we stood with our allies, we stood with each other.

  • Nick Thomas-Symonds – 2022 Speech at Labour Party Conference

    Nick Thomas-Symonds – 2022 Speech at Labour Party Conference

    The speech made by Nick Thomas-Symonds on 27 September 2022.

    Conference,

    We meet at a time when so many people are struggling to make ends meet.

    After twelve years of a Tory rule, it’s time for the radical change only a Labour Government brings.

    These Tory Ministers are getting desperate – the only ideas they have left are to avoid taxing energy giants and try to pump up bankers’ bonuses.

    It’s the worst elements of Thatcherism put in the microwave and offered back up as fresh meat.

    So the job falls to us – the Labour Party – to stand up and show we have a plan to tackle this crisis and change lives.

    Growing our economy is about giving people hope – for a decent job and good prospects for the future.

    International trade is a vital part of that.

    With a Labour trade policy, we can deliver jobs at home, and be a force for good in the world, on principles from workers’ rights to facing the epic challenge of climate change.

    We have always believed in internationalism not just to protect our nation’s safety but to protect our economic security.

    This is as true now as ever before, as major forces reshape our world.

    A revolution in technology.

    The race to net zero.

    Putin’s illegal invasion of Ukraine.

    With the Conservative Cost of Living Crisis at home, we know that decisions now will define our economy for decades ahead.

    Friends, I’ve just published a biography of Harold Wilson and what he said about our place in the world can apply now:

    “The strength, the solvency, the influence of Britain, which some still think depends upon nostalgic illusion…these things are going to depend… on the speed with which we come to terms with the world of change…from now on Britain will have just as much influence in the world as we can earn, as we can deserve.”

    And I know the British people have what we need to succeed: scientific and academic excellence, a skilled workforce, brilliant businesses.

    But it is Conservative failure is holding our people back.

    A trade deal with the US completed by the end of this year…not going to happen.

    80% of all trade around the world conducted under free trade agreements…miles off the mark.

    And most of the deals that Liz Truss claims she delivered were just roll over deals – a truly cut and paste job.

    That is a disgrace.

    It doesn’t have to be this way.

    Our Labour vision is pro-worker and pro-business.

    We have a vision for a dynamic, trading Britain that seize opportunities and thrives.

    We will stand beside our great exporters. Areas like life sciences, artificial intelligence, creative industries and transport services have huge growth potential.

    And we recognise that the biggest challenge and opportunity Britain faces is climate change.

    Anyone who has not woken up to the urgency of the crisis by now is part of the problem.

    Take for example, Kemi Badenoch, the new International Trade Secretary, who called net zero targets “arbitrary” and “Unilateral economic disarmament.”

    How broken can a party be, when a way to drum up members’ support is through climate denial.

    I am so proud of Labour’s climate investment pledge.

    It will be a catalyst to drive innovation, creating the jobs of the future and helping save the planet.

    But we can’t stop there.

    Keir Starmer has announced that under his Government Labour will build a power system run entirely on cheap, home-grown renewables and nuclear.

    But conference, I can go one step more. That’s why today I’m setting out Labour’s plans to help drive green British exports.

    We must capture the innovation of our climate investment pledge of 28bn and we will create a nationwide network of Climate Export Hubs.

    The hubs will work with businesses, universities and other innovators, to take UK climate science innovations and export them to the world.

    These would be export hubs to support every region in the country – helping to create skilled jobs and opportunities nationwide.

    Working in partnership with a Government on the side of British business.

    This is as part of our commitment to Make, Buy and Sell more in Britain.

    There are so many parts of the country advancing green technology that can shape our sustainable future.

    But these must be harnessed and accelerated across the country.

    To be truly global leaders in net zero we must give it our all.

    That’s why we will go further.

    We can’t go on with a situation where only 1.4% of exporters are from the North East and less than 5% from the East Midlands.

    The next Labour government will establish firm rules to ensure that trade negotiators have binding responsibilities to help deliver economic opportunities across the whole of the UK.

    So for every new trade deal Labour negotiates – we will do everything possible to ensure that it will work for communities, livelihoods and businesses nationwide.

    This is a country with talent in every corner: a Labour government will help it flourish.

    We can’t allow this great country to continue to be held back by a Conservative Party devoid of ideas for the future.

    The stakes couldn’t be higher – so let’s get on and win.

  • Preet Gill – 2022 Speech to Labour Party Conference

    Preet Gill – 2022 Speech to Labour Party Conference

    The speech made by Preet Gill on 27 September 2022.

    Can I just start by paying tribute to David? What a fantastic Foreign Secretary you will be.

    22 years ago, Nelson Mandela stood before this Conference. He told us then that Labour’s solidarity had “helped make those years of exile bearable”.

    Conference, today, international solidarity and Britain’s leadership has never mattered more. The world faces energy, debt and food crises. The climate emergency wreaks havoc, from drought in East Africa to floods in Pakistan. 100 million people are now displaced around the world. 50 million people are on the brink of famine.

    But Conference, when times are tough, that is exactly when we stand up to be counted. The last Labour government changed lives at home, from Sure Start to the minimum wage. But we also changed lives overseas: creating the world-class Department for International Development; and, at Gleneagles, canceling hundreds of millions of pounds of unjust debt.

    But Conference, twelve years of Tory rule has taken its toll: DFID shut down; aid repurposed and diverted away from tackling poverty; our international reputation in tatters. And in the middle of a global pandemic, they carried out the cruellest cuts imaginable to life-saving aid programmes.

    The Tories were warned by their own impact assessment that cuts would devastate women and girls at risk of violence. But they went ahead anyway. They were warned by the security services that aid cuts would risk our national security. But they went ahead anyway. Ex-PMs and International Development Secretaries from their own party queued up to warn that the cuts would cost hundreds of thousands of lives. But they went ahead anyway.

    Well, Conference, their development strategy has failed. And Boris Johnson’s ideological merger has failed.

    It now falls to Labour to undo that damage and earn back the trust of Britain’s partners. Keir was absolutely right when he called the closure of DFID “totally misguided” and “wrongheaded”, and his commitment to international development speaks to who he is.

    So, just as 25 years ago, DFID was created to tackle the global challenges we faced, a Labour government will put in place a new model with the independence needed to meet the challenges of the 21st century: one that recognises the link between development and climate. Its mission will be to deliver on the Sustainable Development Goals.

    We will reinstate Britain’s commitment to spend 0.7% of income on aid.

    And we will deliver a distinct development programme that brings value for money and ends the government’s wasteful and transactional approach.

    The climate emergency is this century’s biggest threat to humanity. That is why I am also announcing today that Labour will legislate to make sure that, as a priority, Britain’s aid budget helps address climate change.

    Conference, I didn’t grow up with much. My mum was a seamstress, my dad a bus driver. But I did grow up knowing the importance of helping others. From when I first joined my dad volunteering at the local Sikh Gurdwara where he was president, I saw that helping neighbours makes us richer, not poorer.

    Those values of service and solidarity flow through every corner of our movement and our country. When the British people give up their homes to Ukrainians fleeing Putin’s war, when we give to charity appeals in the middle of a cost-of-living crisis, we do so not because it’s easy, but because it is right.

    And frankly, when the Tories won’t support the British people’s solidarity to the world; when they won’t even keep their manifesto promises to voters on aid; when they throw more than £100 billion of your money at the energy bosses, but then tell you they can’t afford £5 billion to save lives overseas and make Britain safer; well, Conference, I say: not in our name!

    I for one will not rest until our values – Britain’s values – are once again shaping what our government does in the world. In Opposition, we are forcing U-turns from the Tories and winning over voters fed up with their basic lack of compassion. So, Conference, let’s keep the pressure up.

    22 years ago, Mandela urged us to “become once more the keepers of our brothers and sisters, no matter where they find themselves in the world”. It is time to heed that call again. Our record on international development gave hope to our allies in fighting for a better world and with labour in government it will do so again.

    We will back the next generation at home and abroad, demanding a fairer, greener, global future. Conference, this is a reset moment for the Sustainable Development Goals. It is time to renew our movement to fight poverty and inequality and the climate crisis.

    Keir Starmer, our leader, knows that a Labour party that is true to its principles is a Labour Party dedicated to winning power. So, let’s get Keir Starmer into Downing Street, Labour back into power, and a fairer, greener future for Britain.

    Thank you.

  • David Lammy – 2022 Speech to Labour Party Conference

    David Lammy – 2022 Speech to Labour Party Conference

    The speech made by David Lammy on 27 September 2022.

    What an honour it was to listen to Lesia Vasylenko from Ukraine’s Parliament. Please stand up.

    Let’s show our support for Ukraine one more time.

    As the motion before us from Holborn and St Pancras, Derby South, Streatham, the GMB and NUM says, the Labour Party will stand side by side with you, providing the military, economic, diplomatic and humanitarian support Ukraine needs.

    Conference my parents would never have believed that their skinny son in NHS prescription glasses who got stopped and searched on the streets of Tottenham would have ended up as Shadow Foreign Secretary.

    Surprised not only because MPs at that time didn’t look like me.

    Surprised not only because I had barely travelled beyond London’s Zone 3.

    They would have been surprised because our ancestors knew what it was like to have their freedom taken away.

    They heard the twisted lies of imperialism as they were stolen from their homes in shackles and turned into slaves.

    No act of imperialism is ever the same.

    But Vladimir Putin’s barbaric invasion of Ukraine this year was just the latest front in an age-old war between democracy and dictatorship. Freedom and subjugation. Empire and independence.

    As Vladimir Putin continues to wage his barbaric war, let us send a message directly to him:

    We will create a special tribunal to prosecute you for your crime of aggression.

    And whether it takes six months, three years or ten, Ukraine will win.

    Conference, the world faces more challenges today than at any other time in my 22 years in Parliament.

    The rise of China.

    Conflicts in Yemen, Syria, Ethiopia and South Sudan.

    A global food crisis.

    And a climate crisis.

    Twelve years of Tory government means we face this world with a weak economy, damaged relationships with our allies and our reputation for the rule of law in tatters.

    Every time the Conservatives come to office, they take our foreign policy backwards.

    They were wrong in the 1980s to support apartheid in South Africa.

    They were wrong in the 1990s with their endless damaging quarrels about Europe.

    They were wrong in the 2010s when they created a hostile environment for the Windrush generation.

    And today they are wrong once again.

    Cutting aid as millions face starvation across the globe, they are wrong.

    Attacking the European Convention on Human Rights, they are wrong

    Undermining the Good Friday Agreement, they are wrong.

    The Climate crisis is the biggest challenge the world faces.

    Devastating millions of lives.

    Just as Robin Cook introduced an ‘ethical dimension’ to our foreign policy in the 1990s the next Labour government will introduce a ‘Green dimension’.

    While Liz Truss tries to row back on our net Zero Commitments. Labour’s Foreign policy will be Green.

    Never again will we be dependent on fossil fuel dictators.

    We will push for climate action to become a fourth pillar of the United Nations as recommended by my colleague Lord Collins’ Review.

    And we will seek to work with allies and partners to create a new international law of ecocide to criminalize the wanton and widespread destruction of the environment.

    Conference, we are outside of the European Union but we are still a part of Europe.

    And unlike Liz Truss who could not say if France is a friend or a foe, we know that European nations are among our closest allies.

    Liz Truss’ protocol Bill is a shameless breach of international law.

    Labour will ditch it get round the negotiating table and fix the Tories’ damaging deal.

    And we will strengthen cooperation with the European Union with a new security pact to complement NATO’s role.

    Strengthening our defence and security and keeping people safe.

    Conference, a Labour Government will restore the moral compass to Britain’s foreign policy.

    British shelves will never be stocked with the products of modern slavery.

    We will end cotton imports from Xinjiang.

    After 12 years of the Tories polluting our society with dirty Russian money, Labour will finally implement the Russia report.

    Conference I met Palestinians and Israelis working for justice and peace in the West Bank this summer.

    After seeing their resilience, my conviction is clearer than ever.

    Even though it may seem distant today, we must stand for international law, human rights and a negotiated peace based on a two-state solution with a safe and secure Israel alongside a sovereign and prosperous Palestinian state.

    International development is one of the proudest achievements of the last Labour government.

    Lifting three million out of poverty each year.

    Last week at the United Nations in New York, I heard first-hand the implications of Britain’s aid cuts.

    A Labour government will restore our 0.7 per cent aid target.

    And we will fix the problems of the government’s badly mismanaged merger with a new model to deliver development.

    Labour is clear.

    No more cuts to international aid.

    No more cuts to the British Council.

    No more cuts to the BBC World Service.

    Soft power is how we defend our values in a divided world.

    And Conference, there remain too many Britons detained unjustly abroad too often let down by Tory ministers.

    It is wonderful that Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe was finally released.

    But it is shameful she was detained for nearly six years and it is totally wrong that British nationals Morad Tahbaz, Alaa Abd el-Fattah and Jagtar Singh Johal are still denied their freedom.

    Their families continue to fight tirelessly on their behalf.

    Labour will end the notion that help from the British state is a privilege from Tory ministers not a right of citizens.

    We will legislate for a new legal right to consular assistance.

    Conference, I’m proud that my parents arrived in the UK as part of the Windrush generation.

    They taught me that Britain at its best is an outward looking nation.

    We are all here today because we share in that belief.

    So when the Conservatives say they want to trash our human rights we say no, we won’t do it.

    When the Conservatives say they want to start rows with Europe for the sake of it we say no, we won’t do it.

    When the Conservatives say they want to slash international aid we say no, we won’t do it.

    When the Conservatives say they want to sell weapons to dictators and despots we say no, we won’t do it.

    When they Conservatives say they want to deport refugees to Rwanda we say no, we won’t do it.

    The Conservatives’ ideology does not represent our country.

    Their time is up.

    A Labour government will forge a different path for our foreign policy.

    A United Kingdom that looks outwards instead of inwards.

    A voice for peace, development and freedom across the globe.

    Thank you very much.

  • Keir Starmer – 2022 Speech to Labour Party Conference

    Keir Starmer – 2022 Speech to Labour Party Conference

    The speech made by Keir Starmer, the Leader of the Opposition, on 27 September 2022.

    “Fairer, Greener Britain”

    Thank you, Conference. It’s great to be here in Liverpool.

    After all the changes we’ve made, all the hard work we’ve put in, finally we are seeing the results we want.

    Yes, Conference, we can say it at last: Arsenal are top of the league.

    But before I begin, I want to address something important. This is our first conference in Liverpool since 2018. And that means it’s our first conference since this city’s call for Justice for the 96 became Justice for the 97.

    For too long his city has been let down. So, when Labour wins the next election, one of my first acts as Prime Minister will be to put the Hillsborough Law on the statute book.

    I know how much this matters. I’ve spent a lifetime helping those who have been failed by the system. I worked with Stephen Lawrence’s family and Jane Clough’s to get them justice. I promise you we will get this city the justice it deserves.

    Conference, we’ve seen two sides of Britain in the last few weeks.

    On one side, a nation united by a profound purpose – to pay its respects to a remarkable sovereign. And that queue. 5 miles at its peak. Even in death our Queen found a unique way to capture the British spirit.

    But Conference, the other side of Britain never went away. A Britain all at sea, where a cloud of anxiety hangs over working people.

    At moments of uncertainty like this we must provide clear leadership. We must stand with working people. Meet their ambitions for real change. Walk towards a better future. And build a new Britain, together.

    A Britain that is fairer, greener, more dynamic. And that isn’t afraid to use the power of government to help working people succeed.

    Because we can’t go on like this. What we’ve seen in the past few days has no precedent.

    The Government has lost control of the British economy – and for what? They’ve crashed the pound – and for what?

    Higher interest rates. Higher inflation. Higher borrowing. And for what?

    Not for you. Not for working people. For tax cuts for the richest 1% in our society. Don’t forget. Don’t forgive.

    The only way forward is to stop this – with a Labour Government.

    And our problems don’t end there. Raw sewage in our rivers and seas. Backlogs everywhere – at our borders, in our courts, in our hospitals. Crimes like burglary totally unpunished. People told to drive themselves to hospital after a heart attack. And millions of families, pensioners, the poorest in our society still facing the coldest winter of their lives.

    I said on Sunday that a fitting tribute to The Late Queen would be to turn our collar up and face the storm. And we will. Because Britain never won its battles with wishful thinking.

    Our success comes, first and foremost, from the hard work, the graft and the common sense of the British people. A common sense that teachers up and down the country drum into their pupils: “fail to prepare and you prepare to fail”.

    Conference, that is how the Tories have governed our country for twelve long years. That’s why our economy has been more brittle than others in the face of crisis. They used to lecture us about fixing the roof when the sun was shining.

    But take a look around Britain. They haven’t just failed to fix the roof. They’ve ripped out the foundations, smashed through the windows and now they’ve blown the doors off for good measure.

    My government will be different. We will run towards the challenges of tomorrow. We will get us out of this endless cycle of crisis. And we will do it with a fresh start, a new set of priorities and a new way of governing.

    But it won’t be easy. And the first step must be to tackle the cost-of-living crisis. The Prime Minister has finally accepted there’s no alternative to Labour’s plan to freeze energy prices.

    When she was arguing against “handouts”, Labour provided the clarity our nation needed. We said: this winter not a penny more on anyone’s bills.

    But politics is about choices. And the choice – the political choice – is: who pays? Working people? Or the oil and gas companies making huge profits from higher prices?

    The Head of BP has said that this crisis is a “cash machine” for his company. But that’s a cash machine fed by working people.

    So our choice, the only choice, the Labour choice is to put those profits to work. This party is always on the side of working people in times of crisis.

    And Conference, I know this will shock you but the Tories aren’t on the side of our NHS either.

    My Mum worked for the NHS. My sister worked for the NHS. My wife still works for the NHS. The NHS runs through my family like a stick of rock.

    But I tell you what – I’m really worried about how many lives are at risk this winter.

    Talking to doctors in my local hospital, I said “the NHS is on its knees, isn’t it”. They said “no Keir, it’s face down on the floor”. And the pathetic response of the Government last week left it there.

    The way to get it back on its feet is with a stronger NHS workforce. That’s the main barrier to capacity right now – staff.

    So as Rachel announced yesterday, we will take on an extra 7,500 medical students every year, we will double the number of district nurses, 5,000 new health visitors, 10,000 extra nursing placements.

    If it’s a choice between a tax cut for those earning hundreds of thousands of pounds or supporting our NHS that is not a hard choice for us – Labour will always deliver for our NHS.

    But these are just the first steps on a much bigger journey. The next Labour Government must restore our sense of collective hope. We should never be left cowering in a brace position.

    It’s time for Britain to stand tall again. To believe in ourselves again. To chart a new course. And to get our future back.

    Now, you may have heard some of this before. I grew up in a pebble-dashed semi. Dad was a tool-maker, Mum was a nurse, our first car was a Ford Cortina – this was the 1970s.

    So, I remember what rising prices feel like. I remember when our phone was cut off because we couldn’t pay the bill. How hard it was to make ends meet. It wasn’t easy.

    But there’s something else I remember about being working class in the 1970s: hope.

    Not a grandiose, utopian dream, kind of hope. A hope that was ordinary. Basic. Taken for granted. Because like all families, although we had our ups and downs, my parents never doubted for one second that things would get better.

    And you know what: they were right. They worked their socks off and gave me the gift of opportunity. That gift drives me to make sure no one, anywhere in this country, is held back by their circumstances.

    That’s not just words – it’s the story of my life.

    And I don’t think these values are special. The opportunity to get on is what everyone wants for their family. It’s more than a British value, it’s what we tell our children: “Work hard and you can achieve anything”. “Work hard and you will get a fair chance in Britain”.

    My parents didn’t just believe this, it comforted them. But is it still true? I don’t think so.

    After twelve long years our spirit is ground down. When I talk to working people now, they tell me they work harder and harder just to stand still. That their graft can’t provide their family with a sense of security. That they’re worried their kids won’t have a better life than them.

    Conference, what does it say about Britain, when families worry like this about their children’s future?

    It says an unwritten contract is broken. A contract where in return for hard work, you get on. Where your contribution is always be respected. And which reaches through the generations to say Britain will be better for your children.

    That’s the deep cost of Tory failure. They keep talking about aspiration, but they don’t understand how they’ve choked it off for working people. And it gets worse.

    Because the other thing people say is politics can’t do anything about it. They don’t think real change is possible anymore. And who can blame them?

    Just look at what they’ve been through. They were told we’re “all in this together” – yet they paid for a mess made by bankers. They cried out for economic change in a referendum, but their calls went unanswered. They united to defeat a virus only to see the Government break all the rules that they respected.

    And now, this. The biggest hit to their living standards in a century. And it turns out there is money — for the top 1 percent.

    Now, I’m not going to stand here and pretend the awful conflict in Ukraine is not the immediate spark of the cost-of-living crisis.

    We will never allow Putin’s threats and imperialism to succeed. We will stand alongside Ukraine and its people fighting on the frontline of freedom. So let this entire conference say together:

    Slava Ukraini!

    But I will never accept that the war is an excuse for how unprepared Britain was to tackle the fallout. The war didn’t ban onshore wind. The war didn’t scrap home insulation. The war didn’t stall British nuclear energy. The Tories did that.

    And in their budget last week they sent out a new message. A message that echoes around the kitchens and workplaces of families right across the country and says your struggles, your hopes, your ambitions don’t matter to us. We are not here for you. You are not our people. We are here for those at the top and the rest of you can shove off.

    And Conference, make no mistake about it in one bold move on Friday the Tory Party gave up on any claim it may have had to be a party of aspiration.

    So we need to get moving. That’s the other thing my background gives me: impatience. If you’re born without privilege, you don’t have time for messing around. You don’t walk around problems without fixing them. And you don’t surrender to the instincts of organisations that won’t face up to change.

    As a human rights lawyer, I took on Governments who wanted to keep the barbaric practice of death by hanging. In Northern Ireland, I worked alongside others to make sure the Police Service worked for all communities. As Director of Public Prosecutions, I overhauled the handling of sexual violence cases to make them work better for victims.

    And this working class impatience is what drives me in this job too.

    I knew in April 2020, when I became leader of this party, we had a big task before us. We had to change our party and prepare for power all in one go. Not change for change’s sake. Change with a purpose. To make our Labour Party fit to serve our country.

    That’s why we had to rip antisemitism out by its roots. Why we had to show our support for NATO is non-negotiable. Show we want business to prosper. Shed unworkable policies.

    Country first, party second.

    But I didn’t do any of this alone. Conference: we did it together. And it shows. We’ve taken councils in Scotland, in Wales, in every part of England from Southampton to Stevenage, Wrexham to Wolverhampton. We’ve shown Labour can win again, anywhere.

    We won in Wakefield, with Simon Lightwood, our first by-election gain for a decade.

    But people need more. They are crying out for change, looking for decisive leadership. They need to know we can be a reforming government with clear answers to the big challenges they face.

    That we can grow the economy and raise living standards for everyone, not just a privileged few. Tackle climate change by creating new jobs, new industries, new opportunities. Redesign our public services to unleash opportunity and provide security. Restore faith in politics as a force for good. Get Britain’s hope, its confidence and its future back.

    So imagine we are looking back at the first term of the next Labour Government. How is Britain different? I’ll tell you. We’ve defeated the cost-of-living crisis and the clouds of anxiety have lifted. Services are there when you need them. Our economy is stable again. Business has the certainty to invest. The NHS is back in good health.

    And people are starting to raise their sights. Believe in Britain again. Britain is fairer. People feel they can get on. There’s more opportunity, more affordable housing, fairer taxes, higher wages, jobs – more secure.

    Families can aspire again. Look forward with hope, again.

    And Britain is greener. We’re leading the world on climate change. People look at us and follow our example. New jobs, industries, technologies benefit all parts of the country.

    We’re proving net-zero can be achieved, the most precious gift to the next generation is within our grasp, a safer, more prosperous world to live in.

    And because we are fairer, because we are greener, we’re also more dynamic. Our entrepreneurial spirit – unleashed. New technology – improving public services. Cutting edge science and world-class services driving economic growth. And working people are respected as the people who create the wealth that drives Britain forward.

    And there’s one more thing. Something important. People have started to notice it’s possible to govern with integrity. To unite rather than divide. To respect other points of view. To see that long term plans, trump short-term fixes. That decline is not inevitable.

    Yes, some people will say “politicians are all the same” – but not as many.

    In Grimsby a few months ago I was really struck by a woman I met. She said something to me which was really simple: “I don’t just want to survive; I want to live”. As I got the train back, that phrase went round and round in my head. “I don’t just want to survive; I want to live”.

    Conference, I want to look her in the eyes after five years of a Labour government and I want to know that she, and millions of people like her, are not just surviving, they’re thriving.

    That’s the difference a Labour government will make. That’s the Britain we’re fighting for.

    But Conference, let’s be honest: missions don’t achieve themselves. You need focus. Determination. And the courage to make very difficult choices. Particularly when managing the country’s finances.

    Rachel Reeves and I have set out a framework for sound money. We’re determined to reduce debt as a share of our economy. Every policy we announce will be fully costed. And we will set up an Office for Value for Money to make sure public spending targets the national interest.

    And we should be clear about what that means. It means not being able to do things – good Labour things – as quickly as we might like. That’s what responsible government looks like. Because if you lose control of the economy, if you act irresponsibly – as the Tories have in spectacular fashion – then you lose the ability to do anything. And working people pay the price.

    We will not let that happen.

    We will only borrow to invest when it’s in the long-term national interest. When the cost of not investing makes it much more expensive for the next generation.

    Conference, the Labour Party is at its best when we glimpse the future and lead our country towards it.

    In 1945, out of the rubble of the Second World War, we built a land fit for heroes. In 1964, we harnessed the white heat of technology to pay our way in a modern economy. And in 1997, we modernised a country held back by crumbling public services and outdated institutions.

    It’s time to write a new chapter of Labour Party history about how we built a fairer, greener, more dynamic Britain by tackling the climate emergency head on and used it to create the jobs, the industries, the opportunities of the future.

    I come at this not just as leader of the Labour Party, but also as a father. And as a father, I am spurred on by the voices of our children, the cry of indignation, demanding our generation act before it’s too late.

    As Labour leader, I see it as a matter of justice and opportunity. About the fairness and better society that I came into politics to create the biggest opportunity we’ve had in decades to make this country work for working people.

    Across the world countries are already gearing up to meet this challenge – we cannot afford to miss out.

    Because some nation is going to lead the world in offshore wind. Why not this one? Some nation will win the race for electric vehicles. Why not us? Some nation will be the first to harness new hydrogen power. Why not Britain?

    That’s why today I’m so proud to launch our Green Prosperity Plan. A plan that will turn the UK into a green growth superpower. And driving the plan forward is a goal that will put us ahead of any major economy in the world: 100 percent clean power by 2030.

    A huge national effort. An effort that will: double Britain’s onshore wind capacity, treble solar power, quadruple offshore wind, invest in tidal, hydrogen, nuclear.

    Back carbon capture. Commit to green steel production. New renewable ports. New gigafactories. And insulate 19 million homes.

    And working with Ed Miliband and his team, we’ll make sure this energy revolution powers up all parts of the country. Let’s get clean hydrogen energy in South Yorkshire, in the East of England, across the river in the Wirral. Offshore wind in Scotland, Teesside, East and North Yorkshire. Solar power growing rural communities, in the South East, South West and Midlands.

    This will require a different way of working – the biggest partnership between government, business and communities this country has ever seen. It will mean new jobs – more than a million new jobs, training for plumbers, electricians, engineers, software designers, technicians, builders. And it will all start within the first 100 days of a new Labour government.

    And what will it mean for working people? Cheaper bills and higher living standards. Take home insulation. I saw this for myself on Abbey Road — not that one. This one’s on a council estate in Kirklees, where the Labour council had the good Yorkshire foresight to do a real job on insulation.

    I went in January. It was freezing cold. I was invited in, the house was warm, the energy bills were next to nothing, and the tenants were grinning from ear to ear. And why not: over a grand off your winter fuel bill – what’s not to like!

    Clean energy is already cheaper than fossil fuels. Nine times cheaper. We just need more of it. This is about fair growth powered by clean British energy everywhere in the country.

    That’s what levelling-up really looks like: practical Labour solutions, not empty Tory slogans.

    And Conference, as Rachel announced yesterday – a new British sovereign wealth fund will drive us forward on this mission. We will make sure that the public money we spend building-up British industry spurs on private investment, stimulates growth in construction, life sciences, finance and insurance and the British people enjoy the returns.

    We won’t make the mistake the Tories made with North Sea oil and gas back in the 1980s where they frittered away the wealth from our national resources.

    Just look at what’s happening at the moment. The largest onshore wind farm in Wales. Who owns it? Sweden. Energy bills in Swansea are paying for schools and hospitals in Stockholm. The Chinese Communist Party has a stake in our nuclear industry. And five million people in Britain pay their bills to an energy company owned by France.

    So we will set up Great British Energy within the first year of a Labour government. A new company that takes advantage of the opportunities in clean British power and because it’s right for jobs, because it’s right for growth, because it’s right for energy independence from tyrants like Putin.

    Yes Conference, Great British Energy will be publicly owned.

    None of this will be easy – it won’t be like flicking a switch. It will mean tough battles on issues like planning and regulation. But when the Tories nay-say and carp, remember this: the road to net-zero is no longer one of stern, austere, self-denial. It’s at the heart of modern, 21st century aspiration.

    Technology has turned everything on its head. Green and growth don’t just go together – they’re inseparable. The future wealth of this country is in our air, in our seas, in our skies. Britain should harness that wealth and share it with all.

    British power to the British people.

    That’s why I’ve always said we will fight the Tories on economic growth. Their record is appalling – the worst decade of growth in two centuries. Or as the Chancellor puts it: “a vicious cycle of stagnation”.

    I have to say, as a former prosecutor, it always warms my heart, when someone caught bang to rights, pleads guilty at the first opportunity. And after twelve years what’s their big idea? Unlimited bonuses for bankers? Back the billionaires? Go easy on the oil and gas companies?

    It’s a nonsense – everyone earning less than £155k a year loses out with their plans. They say they don’t believe in redistribution, but they do – from the poor to the rich and they’re loading up the country with debt to pay for it.

    And what about those in the middle? They’re losing £780 pounds. Conference, I’m sure you all heard that tape. Where Liz Truss says Britain’s working people lack “skill” and “application”. That the problem with our economy is they don’t “graft” hard enough.

    Working people don’t graft hard enough.

    No. We’re not going to take this. This is the fight.

    If they want to fight us on redistribution, if they want to fight us on workers’ rights, if they want to tell us working people don’t come first, we will take them on – and we will win.

    And we will win not just because we have fairness on our side but because we have economic reason on our side too. Trickle-down economics doesn’t work. Britain won’t be better off just because we make the rich, richer.

    The real problem is we create too many jobs that are low paid and insecure. Lock too many communities out of the wealth we create. And public services aren’t strong enough to help working people succeed.

    That’s why we struggle to grow – our economic foundations are weak. And the Tory argument is: that’s fine. If the City of London races ahead and the rest of the country stagnates – they think that’s ok.

    Conference, they’re the ones not prepared to graft. They’re the ones not prepared to do the hard yards on growth. But we will.

    We will end the blight of low pay and insecure work with our New Deal for Working People. We will transform the state so the decisions which drive growth in communities are made by local people with skin in the game.

    The people of Liverpool know what’s best for Liverpool. And the same is true in Burnley, Sunderland, Peterborough, Plymouth. If we want fair growth everywhere, communities need a stake. And they need good affordable housing for working people to own.

    I’ve seen home ownership rise almost my entire life – it’s the bedrock of security and aspiration. that pebble-dashed semi meant everything to my family. But now, under the Tories, the dream of owning your own home is slipping away for too many.

    And that’s a political choice. Because if you keep inflating demand without increasing supply house prices will only rise. And homes become less affordable for working people.

    So we will set a new target – 70% home ownership and we will meet it with a new set of political choices. A Labour set of political choices.

    No more buy-to-let landlords or second homeowners getting in first. We will back working people’s aspiration. Help real first-time buyers onto the ladder with a new mortgage guarantee scheme. Reform planning so speculators can’t stop communities getting shovels in the ground.

    My message is this if you’re grafting every hour to buy your own home Labour is on your side. Labour is the party of home ownership in Britain today.

    And let me say something about business too – don’t be fooled into thinking they buy into the Tory trickle-down fantasy.

    Business leaders aren’t knocking on my door saying they want to rip up employee rights. They don’t tell me the problems they face will be solved by corporation tax cuts. They want fair taxes, high skills and the long-term confidence to invest.

    I want to be crystal clear about this: I’m not just pro-business, I want to partner with business. So we will scrap business rates, level the playing-field for start-ups and the high street, give employers new flexibility to invest in the world class training they need.

    And, as Jonny Reynolds said yesterday, invite them to drive forward our modern industrial strategy: a true partnership between government, business and trade unions.

    This isn’t about the size of government – it’s about what government can do. Government can support businesses to innovate and grow. Can bring in the creative genius of our scientists and universities. Can unite us to tackle the country’s challenges on behalf of working people.

    Tory ideology on this is a barrier to growth. And I’ll tell you another one: the mess they’ve made of our public services.

    Strong public services are the foundation of a successful economy– always. Deal with NHS waiting lists and growth improves. Invest in childcare so parents go back to work and growth improves. More mental health support, world class schooling, skills training when you need it and growth improves.

    But we have to be honest. I would love to stand here and say Labour will fix everything. But the damage they’ve done – to our finances and our public services means this time the rescue will be harder than ever.

    It will take investment – of course it will. But it will also take reform.

    One – we need to recruit, train and motivate the very best doctors, nurses, teachers, police officers.

    Two – we need to get the best innovation in their hands, make technology work for us.

    Three – we need to make sure services are built around peoples’ lives, empower them to meet the challenges of the future.

    Four – above all, we must shift towards ‘a prevention first’ policy. I’ve seen it for myself: early intervention saves lives and saves money. Every time I read a serious case review as Director of Public Prosecutions, the story was the same, just a change of name.

    Another life that could have gone in a different direction if someone had stepped in earlier. It’s that kind of injustice that must drive us to think differently about our public services. In health, it’s about moving treatment towards communities, exploring how technology can free up NHS workers to focus on care.

    In education it means not just imparting knowledge but developing the creativity, the resilience, the curiosity young people need in a modern world.

    In crime, it means a model of policing that can focus on prevention and give victims faith in a system that will not let violence go unpunished.

    And Conference, the state of our public services shows you exactly who the Tories are. Shows they fundamentally don’t believe government can help working people succeed.

    Every time they choose a new Prime Minister – and there’s been plenty of them – you get a hymn of lip service to its power, usually from the steps of Downing Street itself. But as soon as the black door swings shut behind them, they retreat to their comfort zone.

    That’s why they don’t plan for the future – they don’t believe it’s their job. And so we lurch from crisis to crisis, always reacting, always behind the curve, a sticking plaster, never a cure.

    And if you want the totemic symbol of this, the biggest failure to grasp the nettle, then look no further than Brexit.

    Conference, the policy of my Labour Government will always be to make Brexit work. It’s no secret I voted Remain – as the Prime Minister did.

    But what I heard, across the country, was people who thought we’d got our priorities wrong. Who wanted democratic control over their lives. But who also wanted opportunities for the next generation, communities they felt proud of, public services they could rely on.

    I didn’t hear that Brexit was about slashing workers’ rights. I didn’t hear people wanting to lower standards on food, animal welfare or the environment. I didn’t hear them wanting to end redistribution.

    So I want to speak directly to the people who left Labour on this issue. Whether you voted Leave or Remain, you’ve been let down.

    And with Liz Truss, the Tories are changing the meaning of Brexit before your eyes.

    If you voted for government to step in on your side for better work, higher wages, more opportunities in your community, for an NHS that is modern and reliable.

    If you voted to take control of your life and for the next generation to have control of theirs, then I say to you: that is what I will deliver.

    I will make work pay for the people who create this country’s wealth. I will make sure we buy, make and sell more in Britain. I will revitalise public services and control immigration using a points-based system. I will spread power and opportunity to all our communities. And I will never be shy to use the power of government to help working people succeed.

    Labour will make Brexit work. Labour will deliver change. You’ll never get that from the Tories. And you won’t get it from the SNP either.

    Conference, the challenges we face – the cost-of-living crisis, climate change, standing up to Putin – are common across our four nations.

    We saw off the threat of fascism and deadly disease, together. We built the NHS and the welfare state, together. But I don’t believe in our union just because of our history. I believe in it because of our future.

    I know we can meet the great challenges to come. Build new beacons of fairness that light up the islands we share.

    Scotland needs a Labour Government that can deliver change. But it also needs the power and resources to shape its own future, whoever’s in power in Westminster. And the SNP are not interested in this.

    For them, Scotland’s success in the UK is met with gritted teeth, seen as a roadblock to independence, and so, they stand in the way.

    We can’t work with them. We won’t work with them. No deal under any circumstances.

    A fairer, greener, more dynamic Scotland. In a fairer, greener, more dynamic, Labour Britain.

    Conference, on climate change, growth, aspiration, levelling-up, Brexit, economic responsibility we are the party of the centre-ground

    Once again, the political wing of the British people and we can achieve great things.

    Yesterday, we even managed to get a Liverpool crowd cheering Gary Neville…

    But let’s not kid ourselves: the next two years will be tough. The Tories want a fifth term and they will stop at nothing to achieve it.

    And because of their record, because of the state of Britain, they are getting desperate. With so little that’s good to defend, they lash out.

    We need to be prepared, disciplined, focused. Spend each day working to earn the trust of the British people.

    Meet their attacks with hope. Provide the leadership this country so desperately needs.

    Because as in 1945, 1964, 1997, this is a Labour moment.

    So, Conference, say it loud and believe it. Britain will deal with the cost-of-living crisis. Britain will get its future back.

    A country where aspiration is rewarded. Where working people succeed. A force for good in the world. A clean energy superpower.

    A fairer, greener, more dynamic nation. That’s my commitment to you. The national mission of the next Labour government. And together with the British people – we will do it.

    Thank you, Conference.