Tag: Speeches

  • Diana Johnson – 2024 Speech at the Police Superintendents’ Conference

    Diana Johnson – 2024 Speech at the Police Superintendents’ Conference

    The speech made by Diana Johnson, the Crime and Policing Minister, in Kenilworth on 10 September 2024.

    Hello everyone and thank you for having me.

    Given this is my first time addressing your conference, I’m tempted to ask you to take that into account, particularly in the Q+A.

    But having spent much of my time before the election asking uncomfortable questions as chair of the Commons Home Affairs Committee, including to ministers and policing leaders, I guess I need to get used to the roles being reversed.

    But – seriously speaking – my time in that role gave me a window into your world. The engagement we had with police bodies, including the PSA, helped to strengthen my understanding of the realities and challenges of policing today.

    And one thing I also just wanted to let you know was that I’ve been an MP for 19 years, and one of the very best things I have ever done as a member of parliament was the Police Parliamentary scheme, where I got the opportunity to spend 24 days with my local police force, Humberside, and it gave me a real opportunity to see what was happening on a kind of day-to-day basis for police officers. And I remember doing the kind of early morning shift, and I did nights, and I went out on public order, and I went out with the dogs, and it was just fascinating. So, I’m really pleased I did that, and I have that experience now I’m a Police Minister. So I want to say as well, as the Home Secretary just did, I want to say a heartfelt thank you to all of you.

    From the most routine acts of policing to national-scale operations and painstaking investigations, you make an immeasurable contribution to our society.

    And I do also want to say a few words about the summer disorder. And as you know, it has been an incredibly busy few weeks for this government, since the general election, and the events of the summer have left us all, I think, with much to reflect upon.

    The attack in Southport rocked that community to its core and the impact was felt around the country.

    For three little girls to lose their lives is just unspeakably horrific, and my thoughts are of course with their loved ones. I cannot begin to imagine the anguish they are going through.

    I want to take the opportunity to express my sincere gratitude to every officer involved in responding to that terrible incident. They showed tremendous courage in the most difficult of circumstances, and their actions saved lives.

    We all know what came next; at a time when we should have been focused only on supporting those affected by the attack in Southport, and allowing the urgent police investigation to get under way, we instead found ourselves responding to an outbreak of widespread violent disorder.

    The various incidents around the country have been catalogued in extensive detail so I will not get into a new blow-by-blow account.

    I will simply say that the hijacking of those poor families’ grief at that time was utterly shameful…

    …as was the violence directed towards police officers working to maintain order and protect the community.

    The immediate priority was to get back control of the streets and restore order.

    That’s why the Prime Minister and Home Secretary made clear from the beginning that you had our unqualified support in taking all necessary action to quell the disorder.

    And we sent the message loud and clear that anyone involved in criminality should expect to be caught and face the consequences of their actions.

    The swiftness of the response by policing and the wider criminal justice system was fundamental to getting the situation under control and restoring order.

    As part of the national mobilisation plan coordinated by NPoCC, more than 40,000 officer shifts were worked by public order officers over that 10-day period, with over 6,600 public order officers deployed on one day alone. Rest days, as you know, were cancelled and additional hours were worked.

    The fact that arrests were being made within hours and convicted offenders behind bars facing prison time within days not only showed we were serious when we said there would be a price to pay for criminality on our streets, but it also demonstrated to the law-abiding public that this behaviour will not be tolerated.

    So, I want to echo the Home Secretary’s words of enormous thanks to everyone across policing for your tireless efforts during what was an exceptionally difficult period.

    But I also want to say this: I’m appalled that new figures revealed today show that assaults on our women and men in uniform are still far too high.

    Even preceding the violent disorder of this summer – assaults on police officers are up, with a quarter of those incidents resulting in injury.

    The Home Secretary was right to call this a ‘stain on our society’ and to say that it will not be tolerated.

    So, we recognise your service and your sacrifice.

    Whether it’s responding to violent disorder, running towards danger, attending emergencies or investigating serious crimes, we know that the heroic daily work of the police exerts a huge strain on officers and their families.

    That’s why we will always support you, as you support your teams to serve our communities.

    It’s why we support the Police Covenant and why we are determined to work with you to ensure it delivers for all officers, staff and volunteers, recognising that wellbeing and mental health support is vital in maintaining a healthy and engaged police workforce who can effectively serve and protect the public.

    Turning now to the safer streets mission, which the Home Secretary referred to, I think it’s clear that those unacceptable attacks on the police speak directly to this Government’s wider Safer Streets mission.

    And that is to restore respect for the rule of law on British streets, including restoring respect for the police, which has sadly been eroded over many years.

    To do that, we will ensure that you have everything you need to get back to tackling the issues that matter most to the public.

    Too many town centres and high streets across the country have been gripped by an epidemic of anti-social behaviour, theft and shoplifting, which is corroding our communities and cannot be allowed to continue.

    There are thousands of incredible police officers and support staff doing an admirable job. But we do have to face the reality that there are still too many victims of anti-social behaviour who feel that when they call the police, no one listens, no one comes and nothing is done.

    Our neighbourhoods and police forces have suffered enough after a decade of decline, and this government will help restore neighbourhood policing, with skilled, resilient and dedicated local cops.

    We must rebuild these bonds of trust and respect between the police and local communities that have always been so central to our proud British tradition of policing by consent.

    That’s why we will implement a new Neighbourhood Policing Guarantee, restoring patrols to town centres, recruiting thousands of additional police personnel, and ensuring every community has a named local police officer to turn to.

    And as part of that plan, I can announce today that the government has agreed initial funding to support the College of Policing in rolling out a specialist new training programme for neighbourhood officers.

    The Neighbourhood Policing Programme Career Pathway will focus on anti-social behaviour, community engagement and problem solving and equip neighbourhood officers with the skills, knowledge and confidence they need to build local relationships and to tackle the issues that damage communities the most.

    Every community deserves local officers who understand what is needed to keep them safe, and with this new training and our Neighbourhood Policing Guarantee, we will deliver the change our towns and villages are desperate for.

    Supers are the operational leaders, you know what is going on in  forces day to day, and we want to tap into your insight and expertise as we restore neighbourhood policing and crack down on corrosive crimes like anti-social behaviour and shoplifting, which will help to restore public confidence that there will be consequences for criminality in their communities.

    But to deliver on the promise of change we have made to the British people, we also need to crack down on the serious crimes that devastate lives and communities across the country.

    That is why we are acting to address the deadly cycle of knife crime by getting more dangerous weapons off our streets and preventing young people from being drawn into violent crime in the first place, with a radical new Young Futures prevention programme and early intervention for those at-risk.

    And it is why we have set out an unprecedented mission to halve violence against women and girls over the next decade, working right across government, as well as with the police and the criminal justice system, on everything from prevention work in schools, to pursuing dangerous perpetrators and to getting survivors the support and the justice they need.

    Underpinning all of this is an unwavering commitment to protecting our national security, and those working to counter threats from terrorism, hostile states or any other source, and they have our full and enduring support.

    Law enforcement has an instrumental role in delivering this ambitious mission. So as with neighbourhood policing, we will be looking to you and your teams to work with us so we can deliver real and lasting improvements for the public.

    As the Home Secretary has said to many policing colleagues since the election – we will not be politicians who just shout from the sidelines. We will work in lockstep with you to deliver change – championing your successes, recognising your sacrifices and, yes, of course, holding you to account and asking difficult questions along the way to ensure that progress is being made in every corner of the country.

    Because for this mission to be successful, it will be critical to secure and maintain the confidence of the people you serve.

    The vast, vast majority of officers I know are decent, hardworking and professional. When standards are not met or powers are abused, I know that you all feel it deeply and it undermines your excellent work.

    That is why, together, we have to ensure behaviour and cultures are beyond reproach, right across the system.

    In charting a new path, I know that none of this is easy. There are deep-rooted issues that need to be reckoned with.

    One thing we know for sure is that none of our goals will be achieved unless there is close alignment between government and policing.

    But with the Home Secretary’s knowledge and leadership, I wholeheartedly believe we can chart a new, successful way forward.

    And I know this because I have seen first-hand how dedicated the Home Secretary is to supporting each and every member of the policing family.

    I know how keenly she feels her responsibility to ensure you have the powers and tools to fulfil your critical functions.

    And I can assure you that when she says she wants to work with you to get British policing performance at its very best, she means it.

    As superintendents and chief superintendents, but also as police leaders, you have an important and rightful role to play in helping us deliver safer communities.

    You have a wealth of knowledge, insight and expertise that we absolutely want to tap into to help us deliver on our mission.

    Whether that’s about the threats you and your teams are tackling day in and day out, or about more strategic policing issues, we want to and we need to hear from you in shaping our approach.

    In conclusion, again I want to offer my thanks again to the PSA for all the work they do and for giving me the opportunity to address you today.

    As Policing Minister, I intend to be your voice within government.

    And I do want to champion your successes, understand your needs and support your teams.

    As the Prime Minister and Home Secretary have made clear, we are serious. We are very serious about tackling crime, rebuilding confidence and putting neighbourhood policing back at the heart of our communities.

    You and your colleagues will all have an integral part and role to play in that mission.

    And I know it’s not going to be delivered overnight.

    I’m conscious – I think I’ve been post about 11 weeks, so I know that you know this is going to take some time,

    But what I have seen in my short time in my role has given me a renewed confidence that we will succeed.

    The dedication, the skill, the bravery, the willingness to make sacrifices…these are the core elements of British policing at its best and they have been on display in abundance over recent weeks.

    I will finish by saying how grateful I am to everyone across the service, and I very much look forward to working with you all as we strive to protect the public and make our country safer.

    Thank you very much for your time.

  • David Lammy – 2024 Statement on Edmundo González Urrutia’s Decision to Leave Venezuela

    David Lammy – 2024 Statement on Edmundo González Urrutia’s Decision to Leave Venezuela

    The statement made by David Lammy, the Foreign Secretary, on 10 September 2024.

    Edmundo Gonzalez’s decision to seek political asylum abroad follows months of repression and intimidation against opposition figures and civil society in Venezuela. It is a decision that no politician should ever have to make.

    The UK continues to pay testament to the millions of Venezuelans who turned out to vote in the presidential election on 28 July. Along with the UN and international allies, we remain deeply concerned about allegations of serious irregularities in the declared results. Despite repeated calls, Venezuela’s National Electoral Council has still not produced full results or credible evidence of a victory for Nicolas Maduro. Publicly available records appear to show Edmundo Gonzalez secured the most votes by a significant margin. The UK has also publicly expressed the unacceptability of the ongoing repression in Venezuela. Human rights must be protected, and arbitrary detentions and harassment must stop.

    The UK continues to work with international partners to achieve a peaceful solution in Venezuela. Dialogue remains the only solution to ensure that the will of all Venezuelans is respected.

  • Hilary Benn – 2024 Speech at the  British-Irish Association Conference

    Hilary Benn – 2024 Speech at the British-Irish Association Conference

    The speech made by Hilary Benn, the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, on 7 September 2024.

    Thank you very much to Dominic and to all of you, for your kind invitation.

    And my heartfelt thanks to you Micheál, not only for your warm and extremely wise words, but also for the way in which you have embraced the opportunity we now have for a genuine and lasting reset in the relationship between our two countries.

    It is a privilege for me to be here, for the first time since my appointment as Secretary of State for Northern Ireland.

    I’ve only ever been to one other BIA conference, that was two years ago when I was a late substitute for my good friend Peter Kyle. I suspect it was my work as Chair of the Brexit Select Committee that made him think of me.

    And over many years Dominic, you and I have shared many views about the choices the then-Conservative government made about our departure from the European Union, and the consequences of that decision still reverberate – and will continue to do so.

    It was William Faulkner who once said: “The past is never dead. It’s not even past.”

    But what a remarkable history the BIA has borne witness to, over these past 52 years, as this truly unique annual conference has continued to provide an opportunity for a very wide range of people to come together and reflect on the ties that bind our two countries together.

    Two countries that share so much… history, culture, ideas, politics and friendships.

    And it’s a story that runs like a thread through these islands and through the lives of so many of our families, including my own: on my side, it was an Ulster Scot from Fermanagh who made that journey that millions made across the Atlantic to Ohio which is where my mother came and, on my wife’s side, Irish Catholics from Cork, Mayo and Kilkenny including her grandfather who was born in your constituency.

    Now the history of these islands has not been benign. Over the centuries there have been terrible wrongs, great violence, revolution, bitterness but in recent years – reconciliation.

    And throughout all that time that thread has remained in place, and it has found new expression in ways that would truly have seemed unimaginable to us in the past.

    I must be frank, The Good Friday Agreement was something I never believed that I would see in my lifetime. But I did. We did.

    It ushered in an end to three decades of bloody violence, and its founding commitment was to self-determination and the principle of consent.

    Unionists and Nationalists sitting side by side in government. As you said Micheál, the seemingly impossible made possible.

    And what happened on that Good Friday 26 years ago was, and remains, an inspiration to many around the world, precisely because it was a triumph of political courage and patient diplomacy over bitter sectarian fatalism. And of compromise over intransigence.

    Mo Mowlam’s words during the negotiations still resonate today, she said:

    “Everybody is going to get something. No-one is going to get 100% of what they want. That is the nature of negotiation and accommodation”.

    And all of those involved chose to do that in order to get something far more valuable.

    Today the UK and Irish Governments stand on the shoulders of those who negotiated the Agreement. We are the co-guarantors of it and all of us in these islands are its custodians.

    The Good Friday Agreement, and the peace and prosperity it has brought to Northern Ireland, is in my view the greatest achievement of the last Labour Government which I had the privilege to serve.

    So let me be absolutely clear. This Labour Government’s commitment to the Good Friday Agreement – in letter and in spirit – is absolute.

    Our support for the European Convention on Human Rights, which underpins the Agreement, is unwavering.

    We will implement the Windsor Framework with pragmatic good faith, not least because we need to do so in order to negotiate a veterinary agreement with the European Union, but also in order to protect the open border on the island of Ireland.

    The Prime Minister and the Taoiseach have agreed to hold annual summits as part of a renewed commitment to the strand 3 institutions.

    And the Prime Minister and I – indeed the whole Government – will work with all parties and all communities in Northern Ireland to support reconciliation, equality, respect for human rights and parity of esteem.

    Now, the stability of Northern Ireland’s devolved government – a government that can work for all the people of Northern Ireland – is absolutely fundamental to making these things happen.

    And I want to pay a warm and genuine tribute to the First and deputy First Ministers – to you Emma and to Michelle – and indeed to the whole Executive, for the positive start that you have made, the impression you have created and I warmly welcome the draft programme for government that was announced this week.

    The Executive now has the foundation provided by that programme. It has a needs-based funding formula that was agreed with the previous government, and we are committed to putting in place a longer-term fiscal framework.

    But like every government, difficult decisions need to be taken about how to balance the books and raise additional revenue, not least because there are deep-seated deep-seated challenges that Northern Ireland faces.

    You highlighted one of those Emma yesterday in your wonderful contribution, the economic inactivity rate which is 27% of the working age population which is 5% higher than the UK as a whole.

    The longest health service waiting lists in the UK, a third of patients waiting more than two years for treatment. And only 47% of A&E waits meeting the 4-hour target.

    I think all of us agree that can’t really continue. That is why we are absolutely committed as the government to working with the Executive as it seeks to transform Northern Ireland’s public services.

    It is also incumbent upon all of us to uphold the devolved institutions, to ensure they endure and that they act for all the people in Northern Ireland.

    Now I recognise that mandatory coalition is really difficult, imagine those of us with different political persuasions were having to cope with mandatory coalition in Westminster. But we all know that for over a third of the time since 1998, the institutions have not functioned fully. I don’t think this would be accepted anywhere else.

    My feeling is surely the people of Northern Ireland and the political parties and all of us must recognise that what’s happened in the past cannot happen again and were it to occur, our two governments as co-guarantors of the Good Friday Agreement, working with all the parties, would need to find a new way forward.

    Turning to the economy, we should clearly look at the opportunities for the UK and Irish Governments to work collaboratively on projects to help improve growth in Northern Ireland including in its border regions.

    And, while being strong supporters of the Union, this Government and this Secretary of State see no contradiction in also being supporters of North-South cooperation.

    And in that context, I applaud you Micheál for your work in developing and taking forward the Shared Island Programme which you referred to and the Fund, which makes a valuable contribution in so many ways. And when it comes to the all-island economy, and I know this is up for some debate, my feelings are very simple, it is a fact it is a success.

    And I don’t quite understand why there should be an argument about somehow denying its existence when so many businesses and livelihoods are sustained by it: the all-island dairy industry, big multinationals, like Lidl, McDonalds, Coca-Cola and so many small and medium-sized businesses which operate on an all-island basis.

    On the Windsor Framework, let me be absolutely frank. There have been some very painful moments in the UK-Ireland relationship in recent years.

    I bear too many scars from the approach of the previous UK government to our departure from the European Union, but this Government will ensure the smooth flow of goods within the UK internal market.

    So, as I have said, we will implement the Windsor Framework in good faith while seeking the maximum pragmatism and proportionality. It is not without its challenges – I think that is probably the understatement of the year – but it is necessary because we do want to do more to improve our trading relationship with the EU, in particular to negotiate a sanitary and phyto-sanitary agreement with the European Union which really would help. I think everybody knows that.

    And with a sustained period of stability, political and economic, the opportunities are enormous, not least because of the talent, ingenuity and enterprise that exists right across Northern Ireland, and the unique trading position that Northern Ireland enjoys – what a wonderful opportunity for foreign direct investment – all within the UK internal market.

    As I have travelled around Northern Ireland, both in opposition and now in Government and seen some of the world class businesses operating in life sciences, high-tech engineering, making composite aircraft wings and the buses of the future – electric and hydrogen – services and film and television, education – I am struck that all these firms have seen something in Northern Ireland and its people.

    With continued political stability and optimism – and I’m the third speaker at the forum who will say I am an optimist. It is the only way, I don’t know how you can get up if you are not an optimist. We can help others to see the same thing and so encourage them also to invest in Northern Ireland’s future.

    Now, the other rift in the relationship in recent years has been over ofcourse how we approach the terrible legacy of the Troubles.

    I have met many families who lost loved ones in the most appalling circumstances. I have to be honest with you. I have found it very difficult to listen to their stories. To look them in the eye. To hear about the sheer brutality of the killings. The way some of them were treated afterwards. The search for answers, and the passing of the years without finding them.

    The abandonment by the previous Conservative Government of the Stormont House Agreement, and the unilateral approach taken in the Legacy Act, were wrong. From my first visit to the Wave Trauma Centre, and that had a profound impact on me, many of those families have told me about the deep hurt and upset and anger it has caused them. And it was legislation of course that was rejected by all of the Northern Ireland political parties and by the Irish Government.

    It could never be the basis for reconciliation or progress on legacy.

    And that is why the Prime Minister and I committed to repeal and replace the Legacy Act.

    Now as you know earlier this year its central provision – the conditional immunity scheme – was ruled by the High Court in Belfast to be incompatible with the European Convention on Human Rights.

    In July, we wrote to the Northern Ireland Court of Appeal to withdraw the previous UK Government’s appeal on ECHR grounds.

    I also set out to Parliament our commitment to reverse the Legacy Act’s ban on bringing civil litigation, to propose measures to allow – in the first instance – halted legacy inquests to continue, and to strengthen the Independent Commission on Reconciliation and Information Recovery.

    That body, which is being ably led by Sir Declan Morgan, was deemed by the court to be capable of conducting human rights compliant investigations. It was an important – and often overlooked – finding.

    But I believe that measures to strengthen the Commission, we talked about these yesterday when we met, are also necessary, and I am committed to working with you on this.

    Because there is more we can do to address concerns about the Commission’s independence. To strengthen its powers. And to ensure there is the capacity for effective cooperation with the Gardaí over investigations.

    This is the work we have now begun – but its success in the end, all of this legislation will be judged by those families many of us have met, who have waited so long for answers.

    So we are now undertaking a period of consultation with victims and survivors, the Northern Ireland political parties, the Irish Government, veterans and others in seeking to find a practical way forward that can command support, the broadest support across communities in Northern Ireland and beyond.

    I recognise, I am not naïve, that this process will involve difficult conversations, and many stakeholders do, and will hold different views about the best way forward.

    But it is also clear that a resolution to addressing the legacy of Northern Ireland’s painful past will not be reached without a willingness, by all, to listen, to understand the perspectives of others, and in the spirit of Mo Mowlam’s wise words to compromise.

    I also want to acknowledge the dedicated service of the vast majority of police officers, members of the armed forces, and the security services who did so much during the Troubles to keep people in Northern Ireland safe. Also the work of the Police Service of Northern Ireland for their continuing efforts to do the same for communities right across Northern Ireland.

    The scenes we saw last month in Belfast, in Derry/Londonderry and in many other parts of the UK, were shocking, there’s no other word for it and we must stand resolutely against senseless violence, intimidation and – let’s be blunt – racism.

    I visited three business owners who had been attacked on that terrible day. I saw the Café that was burnt out. Three people that come to Northern Ireland to make their lives, to make it their home specifically targeted because of who they were.

    The Prime Minister and I had the opportunity three weeks ago to convey our thanks directly to some of the officers of the PSNI who were injured when standing up to that violence, when we visited the PSNI training college in Belfast. It was a great honour to be able to do so.

    The similarities with the scenes we saw in Dublin last year are hard to ignore.

    The willingness of far-right thugs and online agitators to whip up hatred and spread misinformation online pose a shared threat, but I know it is a threat which I know our two governments, with the Executive, will continue to face down together.

    There are other areas in which the UK and Irish Governments can do more.

    Not only because it is in our mutual economic interest, but in these febrile and uncertain times, we have shared values, and a shared commitment to democracy and the rule of law.

    And given our geography, and the ties of friendship and kinship that bind us, look at the opportunities.

    Just to take one example, energy infrastructure, cooperation on energy resilience, climate – where are both blessed with huge potential for more renewable wind power – and investment in Northern Ireland by GB Energy, which in turn will support the Shared Electricity Market.

    And given increasingly uncertain geopolitics of the world, and I agree with every word you said about the threat to the international order which created out of the actions of the second World War and which has stood us in reasonable good stead is being undermined by people and political forces, it also makes sense to collaborate further on security.

    The UK has a range of world-class capability and we will continue to work with Ireland as we together grapple with threats like cyber security, terrorism, organised crime and the threats posed by Russia and other states to the security of our nations.

    On a much happier note, the UK-Ireland Euros in 2028 will allow us to celebrate our nations working together to put a once-in-a-generation footballing spectacle before a worldwide audience, although I must admit that at 5pm precisely this evening that co-operation will temporarily be suspended as Ireland take on England at the Aviva stadium.

    So, in conclusion there is a lot for us to do.

    Northern Ireland stands at a crossroads.

    And the sense I get is that the vast majority of people just want to move forward to embrace a better future.

    So let us be bold, let us get on with it and let us take inspiration from those who did make the impossible possible 26 years ago.

    Thank you very much.

  • David Lammy – 2024 Speech on 75 years of the Modern Commonwealth

    David Lammy – 2024 Speech on 75 years of the Modern Commonwealth

    The speech made by David Lammy, the Foreign Secretary, on 4 September 2024.

    Well your Excellencies, guests, friends,

    It’s wonderful, really, really quite wonderful to host so many remarkable people here today. Together, you tell a wonderful, modern, diverse story about what is our Commonwealth.

    A network which connects people around the world – athletes, artists, activists, authors. An organisation which I believe is vital to tackling the challenges before us today. And a family which I am very, very proud to call my own.

    This is personally a very, very special moment for me as Foreign Secretary. As many of you will know, my parents came to Britain from Guyana, as part of the Windrush generation.

    And I stand before you as Foreign Secretary, tracing my lineage back to Africa through of course the trans-Atlantic slave trade. So I feel the pain and anguish of that heritage, as did my parents.

    But I share with them a keen awareness of my Commonwealth roots, a sense of belonging and solidarity with all members of the Commonwealth diaspora and the powerful optimism for what a multicultural society can be.

    And this spirit drives me as Foreign Secretary, as I seek to reconnect Britain with the world. A task in which I believe a revived, reinvigorated Commonwealth has a significant role to play. This belief reflects the fact that the world has changed radically in 75 years since the Commonwealth was born.

    You could argue there have been 3 phases to our organisation’s history:

    • an imperial phase under His Majesty George VI
    • a post-colonial phase under Her Majesty Elizabeth II
    • and now, under His Majesty Charles III, we have entered a new multipolar phase

    And this mirrors changes in the wider world. We are now well and truly in a multipolar age. And we face global challenges which can only be overcome if we all – all of us, the Global North and the Global South – focus on tackling them together.

    The Commonwealth must show how we can contribute then to achieving that unity of purpose. In doing so, we benefit from an array of legacies.

    Like that of my dear friend Baroness Scotland, who has overseen the establishment of the Climate Finance Hub and the Blue Charter, the growth in our membership, and ensured the Commonwealth’s voice is heard at the top tables of diplomacy across the world.

    And that of the late, great Guyanese Secretary-General, Sir ‘Sonny’ Ramphal, Who embedded the Commonwealth’s reputation as a unique platform for taking action on global challenges, for giving a voice to small states, for helping to forge closer, more equitable, relations between the Global North and the Global South.

    Next month, we will select our new Secretary-General. Africa is central to the world’s future – demographically, economically, and of course geopolitically. So I am excited that our next Secretary-General will hail from one of our African members. And I look forward to working with them to build on their predecessors’ efforts.

    Of course, we are also building on the enormous legacy of Her late Majesty The Queen. Two years since her passing, we treasure her role in cementing ties between us. The warmth and affection in which she is held across the Commonwealth testifies, both to her skills as a diplomat – she was, quite simply, the greatest diplomat of our time and to her vision for how to do diplomacy – a vision, frankly, far ahead of its time.

    A vision of leaders in the Global North and Global South working together, in a spirit of partnership. A vision that the Commonwealth exemplifies, as a forum in which voices from all corners of the globe – one third of the world’s population – are heard and respected.

    His Majesty the King, as Head of the Commonwealth, has been clear that he shares the vision of a family of nations in tackling the challenges of our time, strengthened by sharing diverse perspectives and experiences. And it is a vision embraced by the new British Government as well.

    This government will only succeed in reconnecting Britain with the world on the basis of mutual respect. And so it is natural for us to want to seize the opportunities the Commonwealth offers, particularly with leaders gathering in Samoa in October.

    Friends, at that meeting, I believe passionately that leaders should come together, listen to one another, engage in a spirit of respect.

    But it is also vital that we:

    • focus on the existential challenges we share
    • focus on the actions which can make the biggest difference
    • focus on how we maximise the Commonwealth’s enormous, enormous potential

    And I set just 3 priority areas that we could look at.

    The first of these is supporting economic growth. The Commonwealth’s combined GDP is expected to reach nineteen-and-a-half trillion dollars by the end of 2027 – nearly double what it was ten years before. We should take advantage of that, focusing more on increasing investment flows.

    In Samoa, with other members, I will launch a comprehensive plan of action to pool our shared expertise, boost investment opportunities, and harness new technologies for all over the next 2 years. Growth must be shared. Growth must be sustainable. And we must deliver it together.

    The next area, of course, is tackling the climate emergency. There is no long-term geopolitical stability without climate stability. And there can be no climate stability without a common sense of purpose coordinated action in the Global North and Global South. I therefore want the Commonwealth to play a clearer, more powerful role in building a green and sustainable future.

    In Samoa, we must further raise our ambitions for the Climate Finance Access Hub commit to stronger support for Small Island Developing States and step-up action to protect nature and the ocean. Climate action is essential for passing a liveable planet to future generations. And we must deliver it together.

    And the final area that we could focus on is education of course and the skills of wonderful, beautiful young people. As Member of Parliament representing an inner city constituency here in London, I know what it does to young people to be told that they have no future.

    And as someone who was fortunate enough because of that hard work of my parents, that great Windrush generation I was fortunate enough to have the chance to study at Harvard University, I know how educational opportunities can set you on a completely different path.

    In Samoa, we must support even more scholarships, places and learning via our various excellent education programmes. Sixty percent of Commonwealth citizens are not yet 30 years old. They deserve the chance to benefit from greater opportunities in life. And we must deliver this together.

    Delivering together – I have tried to give a small flavour of how we can do this in Samoa. I am very grateful to the Government and people of Samoa for preparing so effectively for CHOGM and our gathering – and welcome the first such meeting in a Pacific Island Country.

    In his final address as Secretary-General, Sir ‘Sonny’ Ramphal reflected on how such gatherings feel like a bit of a club. Members share a special relationship, an intimacy, with one another. And this creates a particular chemistry.

    In Samoa, leaders with different points of view, facing different circumstances, will nevertheless come together, understand each other’s point of view and perspective, and agree to deliver things together.

    That is what makes the Commonwealth unique. That is the vision of Her Late Majesty The Queen. The vision she championed. And that is the spirit which I engage with the Commonwealth, in Samoa and beyond.

    Thank you so much for the privilege to serve.

  • Hilary Benn – 2024 Statement Following the Resignation of the Northern Ireland Veterans Commissioner

    Hilary Benn – 2024 Statement Following the Resignation of the Northern Ireland Veterans Commissioner

    The statement made by Hilary Benn, the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, on 5 September 2024.

    I would like to thank Danny Kinahan for his dedicated work on behalf of veterans and families living in Northern Ireland.

    Over the last four years, he has worked on a range of important issues that affect veterans in everyday life, including health, housing and welfare and we will continue to engage with him on these issues.

    We are committed to continuing to support veterans in Northern Ireland through the Veterans Welfare Service NI and the Armed Forces Covenant Fund Trust.

  • Jacqui Smith – 2024 Speech at Universities UK Conference

    Jacqui Smith – 2024 Speech at Universities UK Conference

    The speech made by Jacqui Smith, the Skills Minister, at the University of Reading on 4 September 2024.

    I thank you very much for that welcome, and it’s an enormous honour to be here, and thank you very much to Universities UK for the kind invitation. I’m also very pleased and proud to be back in government again, 25 years after I first arrived at the Department for Education in my first ministerial job, but it’s great this time to be here at the beginning of a new government too.

    The Prime Minister and the Chancellor have rightly been outlining the enormous challenges and tough choices that we face in the coming months. But despite that, I’m really excited. I’m excited to be part of a mission led government determined to create a new era of opportunity and economic growth and a fairer society for everybody, where excellence is a given, not just something that the most fortunate get to enjoy. And I’m excited to be working with you. Bridget Phillipson has been absolutely clear that we are resetting the approach, that we’re taking an approach that will focus on working in collaboration. I want to have a constructive relationship with all of you, all of us working together, talking to one another to build a more sustainable future based on partnership, not picking fights.

    So I’d like to spend my time with you today reflecting on my early impressions in this role, and then I’d like to hear your ideas and respond to questions. Our universities and the higher education offered in this country is up there with the very best in the world, and we should be rightly proud of it. And as I said in my maiden speech, which you’ve heard referenced in the House of Lords, our university sector is one of this country’s greatest enablers. It provides opportunities for people to follow their passions and to expand their horizons through research and teaching. It enables us to challenge our understanding and develop new ideas in many communities, it provides an anchor for wider economic development.

    So, our universities are vital engines of economic growth and of opportunity for everybody throughout their lives. That’s my starting point, but I also recognise that now, more than ever, we need to work together to put higher education on a strong footing so that it continues to deliver for everybody, for students, obviously, but also for universities themselves, for our economy and for all of us well into the future. And I hadn’t been in the job an hour before people were outlining for me the real financial peril that the sector faces.

    Higher education providers are rightly independent from government and have a responsibility to plan prudently to ensure their long-term sustainability. However, I am well aware that providers are under financial strain, and that’s why we took immediate action. Sir David Behan, who carried out the recent independent review of The Office for Students, has now been appointed as its interim chair, and Sir David will oversee the important work of refocusing the Office for Students’ role to concentrate on a number of key priorities, including prioritising the sector’s financial stability. And I will be working closely with the OfS to understand the sector’s changing financial landscape. And I am committed to making sure that there are robust plans in place to mitigate risks as far as is possible. And we’re determined in government that the higher education funding system should deliver for our economy, for universities and for students, and we are carefully considering all options to deliver a more robust higher education sector, working on it now, but this isn’t something that’s going to happen overnight. It will take time to get it right, and we’re doing it – as I started by outlining – in an era of enormously difficult and tough fiscal choices that we need to make.

    So, financial stability is the foundation, but we are more ambitious for the future of higher education than that. We need to use that foundation to build wider reform. The OfS has an important role to play in that too. Sir David’s review of The Office for Students is a serious and sobering read, and it makes very clear that the regulator should focus its work on clearly defined key priorities, alongside financial stability, those will also include making sure that quality is of a high standard, that public money is protected, and that the interests of students are paramount, and that’s the right focus and Bridget and I have been very clear about that. And I know that those are changes in terms of the focus that you want to see yourselves, because many of you have told me so. But there is even more that you can do to contribute to the missions that I outlined, ensuring opportunity and driving growth.

    Firstly, those of us fortunate enough to have gone to university know first-hand about the opportunities that flowed from that. Looking around the room, I can be pretty confident that most of us went at a time when only a small minority got that chance. Many more benefit now, but too many people across our country still don’t get the chance to succeed, because the way ahead is an obstacle course strewn with barriers and dead ends, which is why we are absolutely committed to supporting every young person who meets the requirements and wants to go to university to do so. Because while universities are, as I’ve said, vital to delivering the skills that we need, while the research that you do is vital to shaping the economy of tomorrow, that’s not and it cannot be all that we ask or expect of higher education.

    As the Robbins Report set out over 60 years ago, and as I believe today, universities have a broader role to play in shaping and enriching the society we live in and the culture that we enjoy, not just for each of us, but for all of us, and that’s why it’s vital, absolutely vital, that access to higher education should be based on individual ability and attainment, not fettered by where you happen to live, or simply the success or otherwise of your parents.

    So, improving access and progression for students is key to our ambitions for the future. I know that many of you are already working hard on this, and I’m keen to hear more about what we can do together alongside the refocused OfS, to make further progress on getting all people who can benefit from higher education into university and, alongside that, to ensure that they’re getting the best possible teaching and the most enriching experience when they’re there. A rich and diverse student body is, of course, one of the things that draws people to higher education in the first place, but for some, it will not be that positive, life enhancing time that it needs to be. That’s why I’ve been discussing this with Edward Peck, who’s been briefing me about the disturbing growth of mental health problems among university students in recent years, and what should be done about it.

    I’ve heard how UK members have responded to this challenge, engaging enthusiastically with the university mental health charter so that student wellbeing is supported across every aspect of campus life, and thank you for the work that you’re doing in that and I’ve asked Edward to continue as higher education student support champion, and his task force on mental health intends to publish its second stage report in November.

    So, alongside this enormous contribution to ensuring individual opportunity and wellbeing, the HE sector has a huge role to play locally, nationally and internationally in driving growth. In July, the Prime Minister launched Skills England to drive forward our plans to tackle the skills shortages that are holding the economy back. That new organisation will unify the skills landscape. It will bring together employers, trade unions, universities and other training providers to make sure that the opportunities are there for everybody to get on in life.

    And of course, higher education is an integral part of that skills landscape at a more local level. Why do so many of my colleagues in Parliament lobby and campaign for university campuses in their constituencies? It’s because they understand the economic, the social, the cultural power that they can bring to the communities that they represent. What more then can we do to encourage this role and to ensure that partnership and collaboration with each other, with further education, with local government, with employers and with communities can flourish and on a global stage, I know that higher education has both a global status and a global impact.

    You asked us to make a strong statement about the role of international students, and Bridget did just that in her speech to ambassadors in July. The UK is outward looking. It welcomes international students from all over the world. They make a hugely positive impact on this sector, on our economy and on society as a whole. In fact, of course, attracting the brightest students from around the world is good for our own students too, as it leads to more university places for them and a strong culture of research informed teaching across our campuses, as well as lifelong friendships. So, it’s not just an economic benefit, but a social and geopolitical export, too.

    The impact of those whose formative study has been in the UK going back to their homes with the values of the UK echoing in their ears should not be underplayed. I’d like to state as plainly as I can that international students are and will continue to be welcomed in the UK. So, all these objectives and the financial stability which needs to underpin them will, of course, need effective leadership, strong governance and a focus on efficiency we know that exists in the sector.

    How do we ensure that the best is spread more widely? Before I finish, I just want to touch on one other area where we listened and acted quickly. As you know, we have paused further implementation of the Higher Education Freedom of Speech act to give us time to consider all our options, but we are completely clear that higher education must be a space for robust discussion where students and staff hear and express a host of diverse opinions and are able to challenge each other and ideas.

    But concerns, of course, have been raised about the Act, as it stands, that that wasn’t the way to achieve those ends, and indeed, risk making matters worse, not better. Academic freedom and freedom of speech are too important for us to risk getting this wrong, and that’s why we will consider further, and we’ll be announcing what the future holds for this Act as soon as possible. So, just finally, then my whole professional life has been about making sure people get every opportunity to learn and to get on and to lead better, more rewarding and fulfilled lives. That’s what I’m bringing to this role. I’m very proud to be in a position to work alongside you so that we can all translate our shared objectives into opportunities for all to flourish and for all to succeed wherever they start and whatever the hurdles that they need to overcome. Thank you.

  • Kate Dearden – 2024 Maiden Speech on the Economy, Welfare and Public Services

    Kate Dearden – 2024 Maiden Speech on the Economy, Welfare and Public Services

    The maiden speech made by Kate Dearden, the Labour MP for Halifax, in the House of Commons on 22 July 2024.

    Mr Deputy Speaker, thank you for allowing me to make my first contribution to this House. I thank the hon. Member for Meriden and Solihull East (Saqib Bhatti) for his contribution to the debate.

    Today’s debate is a crucial one for how we rebuild our economy in a way that works for all. I am delighted to be joining my many, many excellent new Labour colleagues in making their brilliant maiden speeches. I am also delighted to follow the incredible Holly Lynch. [Hon. Members: “Hear, hear.”] Holly dedicated her talent and energy to supporting her constituents. She was a casework champion who still found time to push for protections for our emergency service workers and for global causes, such as Fairtrade. Holly’s commitment was second to none, and I will do my best to follow in her footsteps.

    In succeeding Holly, I am proud to take my place in one of Parliament’s great traditions: the Labour women of Halifax. Since the election of Shirley Summerskill in 1964, there have only been four years where Halifax has not been represented by a Labour woman. I am lucky to have the support of brilliant women, from the Labour Women’s Network to trade union colleagues and my late teacher Elaine Barker who set me on the road to this House. I am standing on the shoulders of my sisters, and I will not let them down.

    Halifax is a town bursting with history. It was a centre of the wool trade and textile manufacturing, with the Piece Hall the most beautiful and well-known testament to our heritage, but there is far more to the history of Halifax than that. We have a magnificent minster, the imposing Wainhouse Tower, and Shibden Hall, home of lesbian diarist Anne Lister. Halifax’s industrial heritage has meant a close connection to socialist movements. It was a stronghold for Chartists, a centre of trade union activism and the birthplace of Halifax building society, and it has a legacy of co-operative movements. As a trade unionist and now a Labour and Co-operative Member of Parliament, it is a history I am proud to celebrate, and celebrating our history has become a big part of Halifax’s future.

    The Piece Hall is now one of the UK’s best music venues. This summer it is hosting Idles, Tom Jones and the Ministry of Sound, and I will leave it to hon. Members to guess who I would prefer to see. We have reimagined the beating industrial heart of Halifax at Dean Clough mill as a centre for arts, culture, food and shopping. That, combined with the beautiful nature of the Calder valley, has seen Halifax transforming into Haliwood. Many in this Chamber will have seen “Happy Valley”, but there is also “Gentleman Jack” and “Last Tango in Halifax”, and we even hosted Marvel for its “Secret Invasion”. As a Member of Parliament for Halifax, I will lobby for any future editions of “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory” to come and celebrate the home of toffee, Rolos and Quality Street.

    There are so many other things that make Halifax a unique and special town, from our fabulous independent department store Harveys—where I bought today’s lovely dress—to Eureka! the museum where I and every other former schoolkid in the north of England went on school trips, and, of course, the famous Shay, home to Halifax Town and Halifax Panthers.

    I must also mention some of the challenges that my town still faces. Like most of the ex-industrial UK, we have faced decades of neglect and under-investment. Halifax endures significant deprivation, with above-average levels of unemployment and child poverty. Access to housing is a problem, especially for young people, and the availability of GPs came up time and time again on the doorstep. The people of Halifax have struggled for too long with the cost of living crisis, low wages and poor public services. That has been the story of my town and of our country.

    As anyone who knows Yorkshire will guess, the people of Halifax have done much to help each other. Halifax is the home of Andy’s Man Club, which many Members will know from its essential work to support men’s mental health. I met its volunteers as well as those of Healthy Minds, which is another great charity helping tackle mental illness. Noah’s Ark debt centre offers crucial financial support, and the Holy Nativity church in Mixenden is one of several organisations running a food bank and a pay-what-you-can café. Daisy Chain café provides a haven for the elderly to meet and socialise, and St Augustine’s Centre gives much needed support to refugees.

    Those brilliant community initiatives have done their best to help those who have been struggling in recent years, and they have achieved much. However, we know that the buck stops with us and that we must address the issues facing our nation and prove that things can get better. These issues, when not addressed, lead to suffering, despair and anger. We on the Labour Benches can celebrate our success at the election, but a victory for our party is only ever a means to an end. Our goal now is to bring about the change that we promised.

    I am proud to be delivering my maiden speech in this debate, where we set the agenda for what we will do to improve the lives of everyone across the country. Part of this is close to my own heart: the new deal for working people. In my previous role at the brilliant Community trade union, I was proud to be part of drafting those aims alongside trade union colleagues. The agenda on extending workers’ rights, including for those who are self-employed or part of the gig economy, is one that I want to champion over the next five years.

    I would like to end with a few thank yous. First, I thank all the people I have mentioned so far, who make Halifax the wonderful town that it is, for everything they do. Secondly, to the incredible activists of Halifax—the Labour team in our town should be the envy of constituency Labour parties nationwide—I could not be more grateful. As every Member in this House knows, we are here because of those around us—the family, friends and colleagues who support us—so I want to thank my wonderful friends, my mum, my dad, my sister, and my partner Brad. Finally, I thank the people of Halifax for trusting me. I will fight every day to achieve everything that I can for them and reward the faith that they have shown in me.

  • Saqib Bhatti – 2024 Speech on the Economy, Welfare and Public Services

    Saqib Bhatti – 2024 Speech on the Economy, Welfare and Public Services

    The speech made by Saqib Bhatti, the Conservative MP for Meriden and Solihull East, in the House of Commons on 22 July 2024.

    I start by wishing His Majesty the very best of health on behalf of myself and my constituents. As we welcome many new Members to the House, His Majesty sets a clear standard for public service that we can all hope to emulate. I have had the privilege of listening to a number of maiden speeches from across the House—all fantastic, all unique. I am sure all new Members will have received countless pieces of advice, so I will just say this: none of us, new or returning Members, should ever forget what a privilege it is to serve in this House and in this Parliament, the mother of all Parliaments.

    We on the Conservative Benches have much to be proud of in the legacy of the last 14 years. Just last week we have seen inflation remain at the Bank of England target rate of 2%. We created more than 800 jobs a day for the last 14 years. It was under the Conservative Government that, in 2023, the UK became the third most valuable tech economy in the world, worth $1 trillion. We also boast more billion-pound companies than France, Germany and Sweden combined. As has been repeatedly mentioned, we have the fastest-growing economy in the G7.

    I want to address the notion that the Government are trying to push, where they talk down the economy, paving the way for tax rises. It clearly does not stack up. If the Chancellor insists on pushing this alternative narrative, as we have heard today, some questions need answering, because surely all those promises made during the election cannot have been made by the Chancellor, or the shadow Chancellor as she was then, flying blind, especially when the OBR provides the transparency that she now denies she had.

    Throughout the campaign, we heard about how the Government’s policies were fully funded. If the Chancellor did not use the OBR forecasts, what was she using to make those promises in the first place? I do not think anyone is fooled by this narrative or these tactics. Most importantly, if they are going to raise taxes, which will they raise? They need to come clean about that, because the British people deserve the truth, not whatever the Government are trying to peddle to justify their tax and spend policies. The Government can be assured that the Opposition will do our duty and hold this Government to account.

    I want to address a number of things in the King’s Speech. I have to say I was astonished by the lack of respect in the King’s Speech to rural communities. A lot of my communities in my rural area felt incredibly disrespected, and it was incredibly disappointing. I am also disappointed and deeply concerned by the Government’s focus on building on the green belt. We have some of the most precious green belt land in Meriden and Solihull East, not least the Meriden gap, which is a hugely important throughway for migrating wildlife. It is not clear how the Government will protect the Meriden gap.

    In fact, the only thing that has been clear in the early days of this Government is that they are willing to set aside local community opinions, and anyone who challenges that will be accused of being a nimby. My villages in Balsall Common, Hampton in Arden, Marston Green, Knowle, Dorridge, Chadwick End and Hockley Heath have already made huge sacrifices when it comes to green-belt land, not least because of HS2. These top-down targets and vague references to grey-belt land are already causing huge anxiety. This matters because when it comes to setting aside community opinion and disenfranchising whole communities, the tactics that the Government are already employing are the best way to do it. I am deeply concerned by that. We on the Opposition Benches will ensure that we hold this Government to account.

    The title of this debate includes public services, and one of my key campaign pledges was to restore A&E services to the borough of Solihull. My argument on that is simple: we have about 220,000 people in the borough, and if there is an emergency, my constituents have to go all the way to Heartlands hospital or Warwick hospital, which are way too far away. It is clear to me that the case is strong. One thing I will be campaigning for in this Parliament, whether it takes five or 10 or 15 years, if I am lucky enough to be returned repeatedly—I make no assumptions on that, of course—will be to get that A&E service. I will be working with the integrated care board to achieve that.

    I will finish on this: my constituents and the British people have been clear. As we discharge our duties as His Majesty’s official Opposition, their expectations are that we do so with integrity and humility, but always with courage and boldness in what we stand for and who we are. I assure my constituents that for the sake of our country we shall not falter.

  • Keir Starmer – 2024 Speech in Berlin

    Keir Starmer – 2024 Speech in Berlin

    The speech made by Keir Starmer, the Prime Minister, on 28 August 2024.

    Thank you.

    And can I first express my sincere condolences for the shocking attack in Solingen last week.

    Our country knows what it’s like to suffer such senseless and despicable acts…

    And our thoughts are with all the families affected by this terrible event.

    And Olaf – thank you.

    It’s fantastic to be with you here in Berlin.

    Not, alas…

    My first visit here as Prime Minister.

    Football, it turns out…

    Decided to visit it’s second home in Spain, this time.

    But anyway – it was still an incredible experience…

    And a showcase for the fantastic hospitality of this great nation.

    So thank you for hosting yet another episode in English footballing trauma! I’ve been through a lot.

    Anyway – I’m delighted to be back at this moment of opportunity for our two countries.

    Olaf – on every occasion we’ve met, we’ve talked about our ambitions for the future…

    Our values of security, prosperity, respect…

    And our shared determination to harness the power of government…

    For the service of working people.

    That is what we are doing today.

    A new UK-Germany Treaty…

    A once in a generation chance to deliver for working people…

    In Britain and in Germany.

    A new agreement…

    A testament to the depth and potential of our relationship.

    With deeper links on science, technology, development, people, businesses, culture.

    A boost to our trading relations…

    Germany – of course, already the UK’s second largest trading partner in the world.

    And through that – a chance to create jobs here and in the UK…

    And deliver that most precious of goods, for both our countries…

    Economic growth.

    Let me be clear – growth is the number one mission of my Government.

    And what we understand, clearly…

    Is that building relationships with our partners – here in Germany and across Europe…

    Is vital to achieving it.

    That is what our agreement today represents – the chance that we have.

    We’ll also deepen cooperation on shared social challenges…

    For example, on illegal migration.

    Because we cannot smash the smuggling gangs who perpetrate this vile trade…

    Without the help of our partners.

    And I’m really glad that we had substantive discussions today about how we tackle the smuggling gangs and agreed to develop a joint action plan to tackle illegal migration.

    So we will renew our commitment to the Calais Group…

    Enhance our intelligence sharing on organised immigration crime.

    But also – increase collaboration on tackling climate change.

    An important goal for the planet, of course…

    For greater energy security…

    But also – for tackling the drivers of challenges like illegal migration at source.

    And finally – at the heart of this Treaty…

    Will be a new Defence Agreement.

    An agreement that builds upon our already formidable defence co-operation…

    But which expands that relationship to face the threats of a volatile world, together.

    That of course means a shared resolve to stand up for the security of our people and the wider European continent.

    And that begins with our unyielding support for Ukraine – we discussed that in some detail today.

    Because, as Europe’s largest contributors to Ukraine’s war efforts…

    And as the nations with the highest defence expenditure among European countries in NATO…

    We know only too well the debt we owe to the Ukrainian people…

    Who fight not just to defend themselves…

    But for all the people of Europe.

    So today – we reaffirmed our commitment to stand with Ukraine for as long as it takes.

    We also share a common commitment to resolve the crisis in the Middle East, and agree on:

    …Israel’s right to self-defence, in compliance with International Humanitarian Law…

    …the need for de-escalation across the region; and for restraint and caution to be exercised…

    Unfettered humanitarian access into Gaza…

    …agreement to a ceasefire and release of all hostages…

    …and the importance of working together towards a political solution…

    based on the creation of a Palestinian State alongside a safe and secure Israel.

    The only way to provide long-term peace and security for both Israelis and Palestinians.

    That of course – is not an easy goal.

    But it is one that we are committed to pursuing, together.

    Because – as today shows…

    Britain can advance its interests much more effectively…

    When we stand with our friends and partners.

    This Treaty is part of a wider reset – grounded in a new spirit of co-operation… with our shared understanding that this will be developed at pace and that we hope to have agreed it by the end of the year.

    A Britain reconnected…

    Resetting our relationships…

    Rediscovering our common interest…

    Delivering for working people.

    Britain and Germany already have an incredible relationship.

    We invest billions in each other’s countries.

    Thousands and thousands of jobs are supported through trade.

    And every year, millions of people travel between our two countries…

    Exchanging ideas…

    Collaborating, creating and connecting.

    But today – we build on that…

    A bright new future for UK-German relations…

    Two great countries – brought closer together than ever before.

    The strongest strategic partners in Europe and on the world stage.

    Thank you so much for hosting us here today.

  • Grenfell Tower Inquiry – Phase 2 Report (Executive Summary)

    Grenfell Tower Inquiry – Phase 2 Report (Executive Summary)

    The summary of the Grenfell Tower Inquiry Phase 2, the executive summary, published on 4 September 2024.

    Text of Report (in .pdf format)