Tag: Speeches

  • Hilary Benn – 2024 Statement on Violent Disorder in Northern Ireland

    Hilary Benn – 2024 Statement on Violent Disorder in Northern Ireland

    The statement made by Hilary Benn, the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, on 6 August 2024.

    This morning, I joined Cabinet, where I expressed my support for the police for their continued hard work, and that of the dedicated people who are helping to rebuild communities in the wake of the damage caused.

    I remain in contact with the First Minister and deputy First Minister, Justice Minister and the Chief Constable, and will continue to offer them my full support.

    The violence which has sowed fear in local communities and damaged businesses is totally unacceptable.

    The people of Northern Ireland deserve better.

    Those involved in this violent disorder are damaging the very communities they falsely claim to represent.

    I would like to thank the PSNI for their continuing efforts to keep our communities safe. My thoughts are with all those who have suffered, including the businesses that have been attacked, and the member of the public who was the victim of a serious assault during last night’s disorder.

    I urge those involved to stop this senseless violence and intimidation.

  • Keir Starmer – 2024 Speech on Fixing the Foundations of our Country

    Keir Starmer – 2024 Speech on Fixing the Foundations of our Country

    The speech made by Keir Starmer, the Prime Minister, at 10 Downing Street on 27 August 2024.

    Thank you so much for coming.

    When I stood on the steps of Downing Street – just over there – two months ago.

    I promised this government would serve people like you.

    Apprentices. Teachers. Nurses. Small business owners. Firefighters.

    Those serving our community and our country every day.

    I promised that we would get a grip on the problems we face.

    And that we would be judged by our actions, not by our words.

    I said before the election – and I say it again really clearly today:

    Growth.

    And, frankly, by that I do mean wealth creation is the number one priority of this Labour government.

    That’s why, in our first few weeks, we set up the National Wealth Fund –

    because we want every person and every community to benefit.

    It’s why we’ve unlocked planning decisions –

    Because we are going to build 1.5 million new homes.

    It’s why we’ve set up Great British Energy –

    To create good jobs and cut people’s bills.

    And it’s why we ended the national strikes that have crippled our country for years.

    Because I defy anyone to tell me that you can grow the economy…

    when people can’t get to work – because the transport system is broken.

    Or can’t return to work – because they’re stuck on an NHS waiting list.

    We’ve done more in seven weeks than the last Government did in seven years.

    And these are just the first steps towards the change that people voted for.

    The change I’m determined to deliver.

    But before the election I also gave a warning.

    I said change would not happen overnight.

    When there is deep rot in the heart of a structure, you can’t just cover it up.

    You can’t tinker with it or rely on quick fixes.

    You have to overhaul the entire thing.

    Tackle it at root.

    Even if it’s harder work and takes more time.

    Because otherwise what happens?

    The rot returns.

    In all the same places.

    And it spreads.

    Worse than before.

    You know that – I know that.

    That’s why this project has always been about fixing the foundations of this country.

    But I have to be honest with you.

    Things are worse than we ever imagined.

    In the first few weeks, we discovered a £22 billion black hole in the public finances.

    And before anyone says ‘oh this is just performative’.

    Or ‘playing politics’.

    Let’s remember.

    The OBR did not know about this.

    They didn’t know.

    They wrote a letter saying they didn’t know.

    They didn’t know because the last Government hid it.

    Even just last Wednesday, we found out that thanks to the last Government’s recklessness, we borrowed almost £5 billion more than the OBR expected in the last three months alone.

    That’s not performative – that’s fact.

    But as well as the things we’ve discovered, we’ve also seen shocking scenes across the nation.

    A mindless minority of thugs – who thought they could get away with causing chaos.

    Smashing up communities and terrifying minorities.

    Vandalising and destroying people’s property.

    Even trying to set fire to a building – with human beings inside it.

    And as if that wasn’t despicable enough.

    People displaying swastika tattoos.

    Shouting racist slurs on our streets.

    Nazi salutes at the cenotaph –

    The cenotaph – the very place we honour those who gave their lives for this country.

    Desecrating their memory….

    Under the pretence – and it is a pretence – of ‘legitimate protest’.

    Now they’re learning that crime has consequences.

    That I won’t tolerate a break down in law and order under any circumstances.

    And I will not listen to those who exploit grieving families, and disrespect local communities.

    But these riots didn’t happen in a vacuum.

    They exposed the state of our country.

    Revealed a deeply unhealthy society.

    The cracks in our foundation laid bare –

    Weakened by a decade of division and decline.

    Infected by a spiral of populism…

    Which fed off cycles of failures of the last Government. Every time they faced a difficult problem, they failed to be honest and offered the snake-oil of populism which led to more failure, round and round and round.

    Stuck in the rut of the politics of performance.

    And I saw the beginning of that downward spiral firsthand.

    Back in 2011.

    When riots ripped through London and across the country.

    I was then Director of Public Prosecutions.

    And when I think back to that time.

    I see just how far we have fallen.

    Because responding to those riots was hard – of course it was.

    But dealing with the riots this summer was much harder.

    In 2011, I didn’t doubt the courts could do what they needed to do.

    This time – to be honest with you – I genuinely didn’t know.

    Let me tell you this. Every day of that disorder – literally every day – we had to check the precise number of prison places we had and where those places were.

    To make sure we could arrest, charge and prosecute people quickly.

    Not having enough prison places is about as fundamental a failure as you can get.

    And those people throwing rocks, torching cars, making threats.

    They didn’t just know the system was broken.

    They were betting on it.

    Gaming it.

    They thought – ‘ah, they’ll never arrest me.

    And if they do, I won’t be prosecuted.

    And if I am, I won’t get much of a sentence.’

    They saw the cracks in our society after 14 years of populism and failure – and they exploited them.

    That’s what we have inherited.

    Not just an economic black hole.

    A societal black hole.

    And that’s we have to take action and do things differently.

    And part of that is being honest with people – about the choices we face.

    And How tough this will be.

    And frankly – things will get worse before they get better.

    I didn’t want to release prisoners early.

    I was Chief Prosecutor for five years.

    It goes against the grain of everything I’ve ever done.

    But to be blunt – if we hadn’t taken that difficult decision immediately.

    We wouldn’t have been able to respond to the riots as we did.

    And if we don’t take tough action across the board.

    We won’t be able to fix the foundations of the country as we need.

    I didn’t want to means test the Winter Fuel Payment.

    But it was a choice we had to make.

    A choice to protect the most vulnerable pensioners.

    while doing what is necessary to repair the public finances.

    Because pensioners also rely on a functioning NHS.

    Good public transport.

    Strong national infrastructure.

    They want their children to be able to buy homes.

    They want their grandchildren to get a good education.

    So we have made that difficult decision –

    To mend the public finances.

    So everyone benefits in the long term –

    Including pensioners.

    Now that is a difficult trade off.

    And there will be more to come.

    I won’t shy away from making unpopular decisions now…

    If it’s the right thing for the country in the long term.

    That’s what a government of service means.

    This shouldn’t be a country where people fear walking down their street.

    Their TVs showing cars and buildings being set on fire.

    This shouldn’t be a country where the Prime Minister can’t guarantee prison places.

    This shouldn’t be a country where people are paying thousands more on their mortgage.

    Or waiting months for hospital appointments they desperately need.

    Where our waters are filled with sewage.

    Where parents worry that their kids won’t get the opportunities they did.

    Where nothing seems to work anymore.

    So, when I talk about the inheritance the last government left us…

    The £22 billion black hole in our finances…

    This isn’t about a line on a graph.

    That’s about people’s lives.

    Your lives.

    This Government won’t always be perfect, but I promise you this:

    You will be at the heart of it…

    In the forefront of our minds…

    At the centre of everything we do.

    That’s why I wanted to invite you here today.

    To show that decent, hard-working people who make up the backbone of this country belong here.

    This government is for you.

    A garden and a building that were once used for lockdown parties…

    Remember the pictures just over there? With the wine and the food.

    Well this garden…

    And this building…

    are now back in your service.

    Those things happened precisely because the government itself lost its focus.

    on the hopes and ambitions of working people.

    During those recent riots, I made huge asks…

    of the police and of the criminal justice system –

    People already stretched to the limit.

    They knew I was making big asks of them.

    And I’m not going to apologise for it.

    But let me tell you this – they delivered.

    They deserve our gratitude.

    And that’s why I went to Southport…

    To Lambeth…

    To Belfast…

    To thank them personally. To shake the hands of the first responders who rose up to the ask I made of them.

    They deserve a government that trusts them.

    Supports them.

    And works with them.

    That is the sort of government we will be.

    One that works with people, not does things to them.

    One that believes in hard graft, not gimmicks.

    Honest about the challenges we face…

    And working tirelessly to fix them.

    That is how we will always work.

    Now, next week, parliament returns.

    The business of politics will resume.

    But it won’t be business as usual.

    Because we can’t go on like this anymore.

    Things will have to be done differently.

    We will do the hard work to root out 14 years of rot.

    Reverse a decade of decline.

    And fix the foundations.

    Between now and Christmas, we will carry on as we have started.

    Action not words.

    We will introduce legislation and take decisions to protect taxpayers’ money.

    To take on the blockers by accelerating planning.

    to build homes and boost growth.

    We’ll move forward this autumn with harnessing the full potential of AI.

    for growth and the public good.

    We’ll bring rail service into public ownership, putting passengers first.

    The biggest levelling up of workers’ rights in a generation to give people security, dignity and respect at work.

    And Great British Energy will be owned by the taxpayer, making money for the taxpayer.

    Producing clean energy and creating good jobs.

    That is our focus for the rest of the year.

    But I will be honest with you.

    There’s a budget coming in October.

    and it’s going to be painful.

    We have no other choice given the situation that we’re in.

    So those with the broadest shoulders should bear the heavier burden.

    And that’s why we’re cracking down on non-doms.

    Those who made the mess should have to do their bit to clean it up.

    That’s why we’re strengthening the powers of the water regulator.

    and backing tough fines on water companies that have let sewage flood our rivers, lakes and seas.

    But just as when I responded to the riots –

    I’ll have to turn to the country and make big asks of you as well.

    To accept short term pain for long term good.

    The difficult trade-off for the genuine solution.

    And I know that after all that you’ve been through – that is a really big ask and really difficult to hear.

    That is not the position we should be in.

    It’s not the position I want to be in.

    But we have to end the politics of the easy answer that solves nothing.

    But I also know that we can get through this together.

    Because the riots didn’t just betray the sickness.

    They also revealed the cure.

    Found not in the cynical conflict of populism.

    But in the coming together of a country.

    The people who got together the morning after.

    All around the country.

    With their brooms, their shovels, their trowels.

    And cleared up their community.

    They reminded us who we really are.

    I felt real pride in those people who cleaned up the streets.

    Rebuilt the walls.

    Repaired the damage.

    And I couldn’t help thinking about the obvious parallels.

    Because imagine the pride we will feel as a nation.

    When, after the hard work of clearing up the mess is done.

    We have a country that we have built together.

    Built to last.

    That belongs to every single one of us.

    And all of us have a stake in it.

    Our hard work rewarded – a dozen times over.

    Because we’ll have an economy that works for everyone.

    An NHS not just back on its feet, but fit for the future.

    Streets that everyone feels safe in.

    No longer dependent on foreign dictators…

    because we’re producing our own clean energy right here.

    And giving every child – wherever they come from.

    Whatever their background.

    The chance – to go as far as their talent will take them.

    I won’t lose sight of that prize.

    I won’t lose sight of what we were elected to do.

    And most importantly – I won’t lose sight of the people that we were elected to do it for.

    You.

    This is our country.

    Let’s fix it – together.

  • David Lammy – 2024 Statement on Situation in Bangladesh

    David Lammy – 2024 Statement on Situation in Bangladesh

    The statement made by David Lammy, the Foreign Secretary, on 5 August 2024.

    The last 2 weeks in Bangladesh have seen unprecedented levels of violence and tragic loss of life. A transitional period has been announced by the Chief of the Army Staff.

    All sides now need to work together to end the violence, restore calm, de-escalate the situation and prevent any further loss of life.

    The people of Bangladesh deserve a full and independent UN-led investigation into the events of the past few weeks.

    The UK wants to see action taken to ensure Bangladesh a peaceful and democratic future. The UK and Bangladesh have deep people-to-people links and shared Commonwealth values.

  • Mohammad Yasin – 2024 Speech on the Economy, Welfare and Public Services

    Mohammad Yasin – 2024 Speech on the Economy, Welfare and Public Services

    The speech made by Mohammad Yasin, the Labour MP for Bedford, in the House of Commons on 22 July 2024.

    It is a pleasure to speak in support of the King’s Speech under a Government committed to putting country before party to improve lives in this country. That is what I pledged to the people of Bedford and Kempston, whom I thank for putting their faith in me again to work hard for them and to restore their faith in politics as a force for positive change.

    The last Government reduced our public services to a shadow of their former selves. In 2019 a study jointly funded by Bedford borough council and the NHS found that Bedford borough was 40% under-provided for in the primary care estate, despite a rapid growth in population since 2011. HMP Bedford has been in and out of special measures, so I am pleased that the Government have already taken action to improve the crisis in prisons.

    I am also pleased to see early priority given to strengthening community policing by increase numbers of officers and giving them greater power to deal with the antisocial behaviour that blights our communities. I hope this Government succeed where the last Government failed in implementing a fairer funding formula for Bedfordshire police. Wrongly funded as a rural force, it is one of the lowest-funded forces in the UK despite a £10 million year-on-year increase to £156 million for 2024-25.

    The housing crisis is causing untold misery to many of my constituents, so I am pleased that building houses will be a priority for our Government. It is indefensible that I know of parents who are beginning the summer holidays living in hotel rooms without access even to a fridge or a microwave to prepare food for their children because no suitable social housing properties are available. Even food bank vouchers are not helping when basic staples such as UHT milk cannot be kept fresh once opened.

    More than 15,000 children and 17,000 adults are on waiting lists for mental health treatment in the area covered by the NHS Bedfordshire, Luton and Milton Keynes integrated care board. For years the NHS provider has had the capital funds to bring in desperately needed in-patient mental health facilities, but the previous Government consistently refused to provide the capital expenditure cover so that we could have those facilities in Bedford. I hope the new Government’s plan to get the NHS back on its feet includes an overhaul of how new projects are funded, because the existing capital departmental expenditure limits are not working.

    Many of my constituents will be very happy to see planned legislation to bring rail back into public ownership and to reform bus services and franchises, including by allowing local control and supporting public ownership, but one of the most significant transport issues in my constituency is East West Rail. Bedford is uniquely adversely impacted by the East West Rail project, because the preferred six-track route requires the demolition and blighting of homes. Residents have been in limbo for more than five years in unsellable homes. The proposed planning and infrastructure Bill will speed up planning decisions for major infrastructure and house building and seek to reform compulsory purchase compensation rules to ensure that the compensation paid to landowners is fair. The statutory consultation stage is imminent, and I hope the Government will listen to the concerns expressed by my constituents and will not leave people in limbo while decisions are made without their knowledge, as has happened before. If we want to restore faith in politics, we have to ensure that our communities come with us on plans to affect their lives.

    The Universal Studios plan to build a park near Kempston is exciting, and I look forward to working with the Government to make sure we get this potentially huge investment opportunity for Bedford and Britain over the line.

  • Kirsty Blackman – 2024 Speech on the Economy, Welfare and Public Services

    Kirsty Blackman – 2024 Speech on the Economy, Welfare and Public Services

    The speech made by Kirsty Blackman, the SNP MP for Aberdeen North, in the House of Commons on 22 July 2024.

    I congratulate all those who have made their maiden speeches today, particularly the hon. Member for Whitehaven and Workington (Josh MacAlister), who gave an excellent speech. As with many of the maiden speeches, now I really want to visit his constituency. It just sounds like an absolutely amazing place. I particularly congratulate all the new Members who have come from a council background. Being a local councillor sets them up fantastically for coming here. It means they are under no illusions about the hard work that is required to be put in for their constituents and the people who live in their area. Congratulations to all of them.

    I also congratulate the Chancellor on being the first female Chancellor. As the first woman in this place ever to lead on the economy, although I have been followed by a number since, I am incredibly glad to see one on the Government Benches. I hope that, as she said, her tenure lasts significantly longer than those of some of the Chancellors we have seen in recent times.

    Today’s debate is taglined “Economy, welfare and public services”. Apart from the maiden speeches, speeches focusing on anything other than economic growth have been fairly few and far between. I will not for one second deny that economic growth is important, but the whole point of it is what we then do with it. It is about what we do with the extra tax take generated from the growth we have created. There is no point in having growth for growth’s sake. There is no point in having economic growth, and no point in the Conservatives saying how fast the UK is growing compared with other countries in the G7, if the same handful of people are getting richer and richer and the vast majority of our constituents are struggling harder than they ever have before.

    We need to ensure that the economic growth and the increase in the tax take that the Labour party is hoping to deliver involves a benefit for all those who live in these islands and in our constituencies. It is massively disappointing to hear that the five pledges and priorities for the Labour party in government do not have eradicating child poverty at the heart of them. I am really glad the Government are bringing together a discussion taskforce to reduce child poverty, but today they could bring 300,000 children out of poverty and move 700,000 children into less deep poverty simply by scrapping the two-child cap.

    One of my previous colleagues in this place, Alison Thewliss, campaigned incredibly hard on the rape clause—everybody will know of the work she did on that. There are 3,000 women across these islands who are eligible for an exemption from the cap because they have applied under the rape clause. They have had to tell the Government they were raped in order to get an uplift in their benefits. That is horrific, and even if the Government are unwilling to move on the two-child cap they should be doing something about the rape clause and what people are having to prove in order to get the exemption.

    It would be very easy to increase growth, again overnight, by increasing migration. Migration to these islands increases the amount of growth. The economy would immediately have grown if the Prime Minister had gone to the summit with the EU leaders this week and said “Yes, free movement benefits us: it benefits our economy, benefits our society, benefits our young people, benefits our musicians, and benefits so many different groups and individuals. It benefits our culture; it makes this place a better place to live. Therefore we are signing up again to free movement.”

    We need only look at some of the past Budgets, such as a Budget George Osborne gave from the Dispatch Box, when it has said in the Red Book that increasing migration will increase the tax take because of the economic growth it will bring. My constituents and people across Scotland recognise that, and we will always argue for a better migration policy—and if the Government are not willing to do it for all of these islands, we will argue for one tailored specifically to Scotland so that we can make our own decisions that suit the needs of our communities and encourage that economic growth.

  • Josh MacAlister – 2024 Maiden Speech on the Economy, Welfare and Public Services

    Josh MacAlister – 2024 Maiden Speech on the Economy, Welfare and Public Services

    The maiden speech made by Josh MacAlister, the Labour MP for Whitehaven and Workington, in the House of Commons on 22 July 2024.

    Thank you, Mr Deputy Speaker. I pay tribute to the fantastic maiden speeches that we have heard from across the House this evening, including that of the hon. Member for Didcot and Wantage (Olly Glover); I am sure that the whole House is reassured to know that he is not an alien.

    The first and only time I entered this Chamber before being sworn in as a Member of Parliament was as a secondary school citizenship teacher, bringing dozens of teenagers here to see their Parliament. On that occasion, I was required to use my teacher voice a number of times, but that is not something I plan to make a habit of in this House.

    I begin by putting on record my thanks to my predecessor for the now abolished Copeland constituency, Trudy Harrison. We may disagree on matters of policy, but she has been unfailingly gracious to me and generous with her time, demonstrating the “country before party” approach that we can all learn so much from.

    I may be new to this House, but I am not new to pushing Governments to get things done, as Opposition Members will know only too well, and I have worked with a number of Education Secretaries over the years. I founded and led a national charity to get more people into fulfilling careers on the frontline of children’s social work to ensure that every vulnerable child has a champion fighting their corner. From that, I was asked by the last Government to chair a landmark independent review of the children’s social care system. That review found that the disadvantage faced by the care-experienced community in our country should be the civil rights issue of our time. Evidence of that disadvantage is found in worse education outcomes, worse health outcomes and shorter lives, but that disadvantage is fuelled by something that politicians often find too hard to discuss, and that MPs certainly find too hard to mention in this Chamber: the absence of love. I believe every child has the right to be loved, and we have the ability to build a care system that can provide that for them. I hope this Parliament will take up the challenge of addressing this moral outrage. The problem is huge, but the solutions are known, and with enough will, tens of thousands of lives can be transformed.

    It is a great honour and privilege to stand here as the first Member of Parliament for the new Whitehaven and Workington constituency. Whether it is the people of Whitehaven or the good people of Workington who are the jam eaters continues to be a source of fierce debate. Of course, I will remain neutral on that question, as I will on all rugby league-related matters.

    Nowhere is more blessed than my constituency, home to the highest peak and the deepest lake in England, with miles of beautiful coastline and the stunning western part of the Lake district, which has inspired millions. Let me here pay special tribute to our amazing mountain rescue volunteers, our Royal National Lifeboat Institution volunteers—just this week, it will be celebrating its 200th anniversary—and all those who give up their time to volunteer in search and rescue services. I have an interest to declare as a serving mountain rescue volunteer, and I will champion volunteer search and rescue services at every opportunity.

    Behind the doors of the towns and villages across my constituency, you will find the warmest and friendliest marras in the country, people forged by the drama and confidence of the surrounding landscape and people with humility, respect and determination at their core. These are people such as Gary McKee, who ran a marathon every day for a year to raise over £1 million for cancer support; those in the growing network of Andy’s man clubs in our community, tackling the crisis of male suicide that my area faces; and community leaders, such as Rachel Holliday of Calderwood House, giving people a route out of homelessness.

    Our area has also forged those who were not born West Cumbrian, but who made our corner of the world their home, including pioneers and entrepreneurs such as Frank Schon, later Baron Schon of Whitehaven. Frank was an Austrian refugee who fled the Nazis, was bombed out of London and was taken in by a kind Cumbrian farmer. He went on to set up and lead a global chemicals company based in Whitehaven, before later chairing Harold Wilson’s development corporation and going on to serve in the other place. Today, my community is home to dozens of Ukrainian families that could well have the next Frank Schon in them. I hope we can offer those who wish to stay a permanent home here in this country.

    Lord Schon is one famous example, but there are thousands of men and women like him—from Whitehaven to Workington, Gosforth to Egremont, Cleator Moor to Seascale and Flimby to Seaton in the north of the constituency—pioneers, entrepreneurs and grafters who have helped west Cumbria to lead the world. It is because of this graft that my constituency is home to the UK New Balance trainer factory—I am not wearing them right now—and the Iggesund paper mill, which has been experimenting with leading carbon capture technology. It is home to Forth Engineering and React Engineering, and hundreds of other businesses represented by Britain’s Energy Coast Business Cluster, from the coal and iron mines to the steelworks.

    Of course, there is the world’s first civil nuclear power station at the site now famously known as Sellafield, home to a world-leading decommissioning mission, which is stimulating innovation in robotics and AI. We led the world, and we can again. We have the people, the will, the determination and now, thankfully, the Government to do it. Our nuclear heritage and our skilled workforce mean we have what it takes to be the ideal location for the next generation of nuclear power. The Government are determined to make the most of new jobs in the energy transition, to reform our broken planning system and to decarbonise the grid, and these three things offer the opportunity for the people of Whitehaven and Workington to fly.

    A Labour Government with a proper industrial strategy and the right targeted investment could completely transform the economic geography of my community. These are decisions that need to be made to create the growth we have promised and to tackle the climate crisis our planet faces. I am determined to play my part to deliver this Labour Government’s mission and to ensure that west Cumbria feels the maximum possible benefit of the change we want to bring about for our country.

  • Olly Glover – 2024 Maiden Speech on the Economy, Welfare and Public Services

    Olly Glover – 2024 Maiden Speech on the Economy, Welfare and Public Services

    The maiden speech made by Olly Glover, the Liberal Democrat MP for Didcot and Wantage, in the House of Commons on 22 July 2024.

    Thank you, Mr Deputy Speaker, for the opportunity to give my maiden speech today. I aspire to match the eloquence of the previous speakers in this debate, including the hon. Member for South Antrim (Robin Swann), who gave the most recent maiden speech; his passion for his constituency is very clear.

    I start by paying tribute to my immediate predecessor, David Johnston. I admire the fact that Mr Johnston entered politics because of his passion for social mobility. I have met constituents who have been personally helped by him, and I aspire to follow his lead. I was pleased that the first email in my parliamentary mailbox came from Lord Ed Vaizey of Didcot, Member for the predecessor seat of Wantage between 2005 and 2019, offering his congratulations. That was a warm and encouraging gesture. I arrive in Parliament following a career on the railway, serving the public, and I hope to apply my knowledge and experience to working with others to advance both rail infrastructure and public services in my seat.

    The name of the new Didcot and Wantage constituency is an improvement on the previous name, Wantage, but remains imperfect. While Wantage and Didcot are the larger towns of the three in the seat, residents from Wallingford are aggrieved by their omission. Mr Deputy Speaker, I can assure you and this House that all three towns will have my attention and care. The same applies to the dozens of villages in the seat; I am fortunate enough to live in one of them, Milton. All our villages have a unique character and set of attractions. Pendon museum in Long Wittenham includes an homage in model railway form to the 1930s Vale of White Horse landscape, and there is also the ancient Uffington white horse and the beautiful chalk streams of the Letcombes. The constituency’s economy is diverse: we have the technology and science centres of Milton Park, Harwell campus and Culham near to farms that have been passed down through generations. Didcot hosts many industrial and business units, and residents benefit from the great western main line for fast commuting to and from London. Organisations such as Didcot TRAIN, the DAMASCUS youth project and Sustainable Wantage illustrate the strong culture of public service and volunteering.

    My constituents rightly have high expectations. During the election campaign, one of them highlighted the lack of biographical detail in a leaflet about me, and asked me whether I was a doctor, a surveyor, a banker, a teacher, or an alien from outer space. Despite my love of the voyages of the crew of the USS Enterprise, Mr Deputy Speaker, I can reassure you and everyone in this House that I am not an alien. Of course, my constituency contains many non-humans, albeit perhaps not aliens. Many a local party volunteer has come to tire of my frequent canvassing of cats as well as humans. On occasion, this has helped my cause: while I was in conversation with one voter, his cat, Matthew, intervened. Matthew took a strong liking to me, with a great deal of leg-rubbing, even sitting on my lap on the pavement. The voter, astonished, told me that Matthew hates nearly everyone, and that his favourable verdict on me would be taken into account.

    Turning to the subject of today’s debate, my constituency shares many of the same challenges as the wider country. Access to GP appointments is often difficult, particularly in Didcot, which continues to yearn for a new GP surgery in Great Western Park. NHS dentistry barely exists, and sewage dumping in our waterways is a great concern, as are proposals for a large reservoir near Steventon and the Hanneys. Many residents desire to walk and cycle more, but need pleasant and safe routes and paths in order to do so, and while the constituency benefits from fast railway connections, the reliability and capacity of the service provided can be somewhat patchy, and we continue to lack a railway station serving Grove and Wantage.

    Perhaps the greatest issue on constituents’ minds is the cost of housing and recent, very substantial increases in the numbers of houses. I commend the Government on their commitment to genuinely affordable housing, but ask them to bear in mind that residents would be more supportive of housing growth were the health, education, and transport facilities needed to support it delivered in parallel. I promise to work tirelessly for my constituents in the pursuit of progress on these issues, and thank them again for the opportunity to serve. It is a genuine honour to be stood here, and I look forward to working with Members from across the House to achieve those aims.

  • Chi Onwurah – 2024 Speech on the Economy, Welfare and Public Services

    Chi Onwurah – 2024 Speech on the Economy, Welfare and Public Services

    The speech made by Chi Onwurah, the Labour MP for Newcastle upon Tyne Central and West, in the House of Commons on 22 July 2024.

    I congratulate all the hon. Members who have made their maiden speeches on their passion and their commitment to their constituency, which has come across so well. Age does not wither, nor custom stale the privilege of being in this place, and I too want to thank my constituents, who have returned me to Parliament to represent them all and the wonderful city we call home.

    I spent 14 years on the Opposition Benches, standing up for my constituents against a Government who were bearing down on them. It is absolutely fantastic to speak from the Government Benches in support of a Government who will help and empower them. Some Conservative Members have been painting a rosy picture of our economic inheritance, but the message of working people in Newcastle upon Tyne Central and West was clear and consistent: “We need change.” It is not hard to see why. People are worse off; over a third of children in Newcastle upon Tyne Central and West live in poverty; and over 2,000 households in Newcastle are homeless. Those are just a few of the issues that my constituents face, so please, let us not pretend that we should be grateful to the last Government.

    But everything changed on 4 July. Indeed, as I was buying my fish supper last Friday at one of the excellent fishmongers in Grainger market—locally smoked cod, since you ask—they told me that on 5 July, sales of halibut soared. That is an expensive fish, so they took that as a sign of celebration, but also of optimism, hope, and confidence in a better future. There is nothing fishy there, because the Bills set out in the King’s Speech will give Newcastle our future back. Our destiny will be in our own hands, with the English devolution Bill and the better buses Bill giving local leaders such as our fantastic Mayor Kim McGuinness the powers needed to drive growth and prosperity locally. Our region’s immense potential in the green industries of the future will finally be unlocked through the national wealth fund and Great British Energy; planning reform will take the handbrake off building new homes and spaces for business, making us an even greater city with an economy that provides great jobs and good homes for all Geordies; and by expanding the rights of workers, tenants and minoritised groups, the Government will make sure that work pays and everyone in Newcastle enjoys their fair share of our national prosperity.

    Having worked around the world as an engineer, I have been proud to champion science and innovation in Newcastle and across the UK. I am now privileged to have both of Newcastle’s fantastic universities in our constituency, and our city is looking forward to building a proper industrial strategy once again—one that can boost our universities as drivers of inclusive economic growth. Unlocking private investment through measures such as the national wealth fund and the recently announced pensions review will super-charge spin-outs and start-ups in the north-east, and I believe that sites such as Helix—home to innovative businesses and entrepreneurs in cutting-edge industries—are a tantalising glimpse of the future of Newcastle.

    Technology has the power to make our constituents’ lives so much better, and measures such as planning reform will make that a reality. As an ex-shadow science Minister, I have spoken to Lord Vallance, as he begins his ministerial role, to offer my support, and to make the case for investment in regional research and development. I know that the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology team are already committed to opening up careers in science to everyone, getting money outside the golden triangle and connecting science to industrial strategy, healthcare and economic growth.

    As I have said, this Government inspire hope that has been lacking in Newcastle— that is, apart from on match days. That is why, as the MP for St James’ Park, I welcome the football governance Bill. From Mike Ashley to the Saudi Public Investment Fund takeover, football governance has been a thorn in our side, and Geordies around the world will welcome the safeguarding of our precious football club.

    My constituents sent me to this place because our party promised change.

  • Robin Swann – 2024 Maiden Speech on the Economy, Welfare and Public Services

    Robin Swann – 2024 Maiden Speech on the Economy, Welfare and Public Services

    The maiden speech made by Robin Swann, the Ulster Unionist Party MP for South Antrim, in the House of Commons on 22 July 2024.

    It is with honour and humility, and a sense of trepidation, that I rise to make my maiden speech. I think of those who have spoken here before and the gravity and seriousness of the issues that have been debated and discussed. I hope that this Parliament is no different in how it discharges its duties, and that we in this intake of new Members live up to those standards. I congratulate the many new Members on their maiden speeches, which have set a high bar.

    Like everyone else in this House, I wish to thank sincerely those who placed their faith and trust in me by electing me. I am indebted to the electorate of South Antrim for the support that I have received from across the entire community—indeed, entire communities—in my election to this place. I also thank the dedicated campaign team who supported me during what was an honourable campaign.

    I pay tribute to my predecessor, Mr Paul Girvan, not just for his tenure as a Member of this House, but for his time as a Member of the Northern Ireland Assembly and as a local councillor. South Antrim has moved between Paul’s party and my Ulster Unionist party on a number of occasions. With that, I carry the privilege and honour of returning the UUP to this place after a seven-year absence, and the charge and responsibility of bringing a moderate and reasoned Unionist voice from Northern Ireland, in my party’s tradition of working positively and constructively with all to achieve the best outcomes for all our people, and of working across this House to strengthen our Union and to deliver a Union for all.

    I turn now to my constituency of South Antrim. I want those here this evening to know what a fantastic part of our country it is. Like so many constituencies, it has a mix of main towns—Ballyclare and Antrim—and a range of what were once small villages but are growing into large villages, such as Toome, Doagh, Crumlin, Randalstown, Templepatrick, Ballynure and many more. Much of the constituency is a large and productive rural area, while part of the expanding urban area of Glengormley is merging with north Belfast in Mossley and Mallusk.

    South Antrim is home to industry, research and cutting-edge business in large and small employers. Indeed, I look forward to working with the Chancellor and her Government in further supporting those businesses through the Bills in the King’s Speech, and especially through the national wealth fund. South Antrim is the base of Belfast international airport, which I believe has a real opportunity if it gets its much-needed rail link and the further expansion of Aldergrove and our Royal Air Force base. That is why I believe that we also need a UK air transportation strategy, which I may raise later in the Adjournment debate—if the hon. Member for Strangford (Jim Shannon) will take an intervention from me!

    South Antrim’s agricultural sector is another pillar of our community and contributes significantly to our local economy. Our annual Antrim agricultural show celebrates that agricultural heritage by bringing together farmers, producers and visitors from across the country and showcasing the best of rural life and promoting a strong sense of community. It is on this Saturday at Shane’s castle, and I would encourage and welcome anyone who wants to attend.

    Lough Neagh—the largest freshwater lake in the British isles—is another jewel in South Antrim’s crown, but it is currently struggling because of neglect, like many of our waterways. However, the Stormont Executive’s new recovery programme is in place, and I hope that—with national support, given the need for action on our waterways—Lough Neagh will once more be a tourism and recreational attraction for visitors from far and wide.

    A number of issues debated over the past few days will have a direct impact on the people of South Antrim, Northern Ireland and the United Kingdom—none more so than the future and support that the Government will offer our national health service and those who rely on and work in it. The Government have the opportunity to reverse the past years of neglect. Health may be devolved, but that does not mean that we in this place can abdicate all responsibility for our national health service. We have the excellent Antrim area hospital in my constituency, but it needs resource and support to develop its potential. As a former Health Minister of Northern Ireland, I know that we have plans to deliver better services, but change needs recurrent resources, which have been lacking in recent years. I look forward to working with this Government to rebuild our national health service.

    I know that I am speaking to the converted on how great South Antrim is, because I have been overwhelmed by the number of Members from across the House who have approached me to tell me of a relative or friend who lives in my constituency. Indeed, I look forward to representing them and all my South Antrim constituents in this place.

  • Ruth Cadbury – 2024 Speech on the Economy, Welfare and Public Services

    Ruth Cadbury – 2024 Speech on the Economy, Welfare and Public Services

    The speech made by Ruth Cadbury, the Labour MP for Brentford and Isleworth, in the House of Commons on 22 July 2024.

    It is an honour to be re-elected for the fourth time to the redrawn seat of Brentford and Isleworth, and to follow such impressive maiden speeches, particularly that of my hon. Friend the Member for Cities of London and Westminster (Rachel Blake), in whose constituency we all work.

    After nine years sitting in Opposition it is a pleasure to be on the Government side of the Chamber and to support this Government’s legislative programme, which brings hope, opportunity and change for my constituents and for the country at last. I will focus my response to the King’s Speech on the Government’s ambitious proposals around transport policy—not only because it is an area I have long been involved with, having served on the Transport Committee for five years and chaired five all-party parliamentary groups on transport, but because transport was brought up regularly on the doorsteps in this last election.

    The theme of today’s debate is economy, welfare and public services. Effective transport policies are essential to the change we need to see in all three areas, as well as in addressing our climate crisis, so I am pleased to see the bold and ambitious plans set out by my right hon. Friend the Member for Sheffield Heeley (Louise Haigh) and her team to do just that. For access to work, education and health services, for supplying our manufacturing and retail sectors and for supporting our wellbeing and family life, decent transport choices are essential, and nowhere are they more needed than in the new communities that will be built, if the traffic on the roads to and around them is not to grind to a halt. Whether in city, town or countryside, we need the full range of transport options—ones that are affordable, accessible, efficient and environmentally sound.

    On buses, I am delighted that, through the better buses Bill, the Government will end the ideological and control-freakery policy of banning local authorities from running their own municipal bus companies. Such companies were killed off by the Thatcher Government in a bout of ideological rage, with only London retaining a regulated bus service. The rest of England should have what we have in London: regular day, evening and weekend services, simple fare structures, and high standards of safety, accessibility and passenger information. Those are being developed by the Mayor of Greater Manchester, Andy Burnham, and I look forward to seeing other local authorities—of all parties, I am sure—following his example.

    To be an alternative to driving, and for us to cut road congestion and pollution, rail travel must be reliable. I am therefore delighted to see Bills to create Great British Railways and to bring train operations into public ownership. That is essential for a simplified and unified rail system that focuses on improving passenger services while getting value for the taxpayer. Our constituents, and many Members of this House, have had terrible experiences of cancelled trains, or of sitting on the floor for hours despite booking a seat. We will now see a Government and a Department that do not use transport as a cudgel in our culture wars, or as a crude electoral hammer to override local authorities that want to introduce sensible measures to encourage cycling and walking.

    Transport is at the heart of the challenge of national renewal that we have set ourselves: kickstarting economic growth, boosting jobs and living standards, and building sufficient homes in sustainable communities. Of course there are challenges ahead—not least in further growing capacity in our overloaded rail network. I welcome the plan to improve east-west connectivity across the north of England, but funding further increases in rail capacity will unfortunately be financially unsustainable until we see the economic growth that the Chancellor is working on. Aviation expansion is acceptable only if it passes the four tests that we set ourselves in opposition: cutting carbon dioxide emissions, overcoming local environmental impacts, providing regional benefits across the UK, and deliverability. I know that the new Secretary of State and ministerial team will work across our travel and transport sectors to improve transport connections to the benefit of our country as a whole.