Tag: Speeches

  • Charles Kennedy – 2000 Speech to Liberal Democrat Spring Conference

    Charles Kennedy – 2000 Speech to Liberal Democrat Spring Conference

    The speech made by Charles Kennedy on 19 March 2000.

    Just think.

    What have been the key issues in the last few days?

    Rover and GMs.

    What links them? Europe.

    The issue that the government consistently refuses to lead on. We all know that there must be European action on GMs. And if the government had acted to bring down the exchange rate, So that we could join the euro, Rover would not be in its current situation. No wonder that people say politicians are losing touch. No wonder that the people who vote are a dwindling band.

    We know the reasons. People tell us. Daily. They say to us. You’re all the same. You don’t tell the truth. You break your promises. There’s no point to politics. It doesn’t change anything. We can’t trust any of you. Well we have to change all that. Reconnect. Or politics will have no future. And we start by restoring a sense of idealism to politics. Saying why we, Liberal Democrats, are different. Explaining that our principles are different. And that those principles matter. At the heart of our philosophy is liberty. A wholehearted commitment to freedom. These are my values. Your values too. Liberty, freedom of the individual. The rights of the private citizen Before, above and beyond the self-interests of the state. Community rather than class-based, self-centred values.

    The other parties don’t really believe in that. Liberty is the word that’s missing from New Labour’s ‘Third Way’. Labour sees diversity and individuality as troublesome. Their instinct is to control. They tried it in Wales. Thanks to us, they failed. They got their priorities all wrong. Their Objective One wasn’t about matched funding. You know all about that here. Objective One for Labour, save Alun Michael. Objective Two, stop Rhodri Morgan. Objective Three, make the Assembly work for New Labour, not for Wales.

    And William Hague’s Conservative Party? They talk about freedom a lot. But it’s a false freedom. Opting out of society. Opting out of social responsibility. Opting out of Europe. The Tory freedom led to Clause 28. Mind you, they are good street theatre. Did you see them on the back of that truck? I wonder if they’ll flog the lorry when they’ve finished with it? Would you buy a used lorry from either of them? William Hague and Michael Portillo. The Rodney and Del-Boy of the Privy Council.

    What a contrast we are. We want genuine freedom. Not the Tory false freedom. Freedom of the individual is about equal rights for all. That means basic civil rights. It means more decentralisation. Regionally across England. And where better to start than right here – in the South West? Freedom means stopping government telling you how to live your life. But it also means social justice.

    Nearly a hundred years ago, Hobhouse said ‘the struggle for liberty … is the struggle for equality’. He was right. He was right. If you live in a high rise flat, bringing up a child on your own, or struggling on a pension, freedom isn’t about government making you buy healthcare or education. If you live in those conditions, freedom is about social justice. Employment. Decent public services. Decent welfare support when times are hard. A first class education system. Whatever your income, whatever your background. And, whatever your income, whatever your background.

    The one issue which should concern us all is the environment. That’s what I want to talk to you about today. Go back to that high rise flat, in a polluted city, Freedom is also about a decent environment. The greatest freedom we can hand on to future generations, is a planet with a future. The environment is not something that you inherit from your parents. It is something that you preserve for your children. John Stuart Mill talked about the “tyranny of the majority”. Today we should recognise that pollution is the most pernicious tyranny of all. And it affects the poor the most. Yet all too often, politicians shy away from that. Even we, Liberal Democrats, too many of us, certainly myself included, have ducked some tough questions. We haven’t talked about the environment nearly enough in the past few years. We’ve been criticised for that by people like Friends of the Earth. It’s a fair point. I accept it. Too often, environmental concerns have been seen as constraints. Stopping people doing things. But they are actually the reverse. The reverse.

    Protecting the environment is the most fundamental liberation politics. Broadening choice at ALL levels of society. Creating jobs. Building a better, more sustainable, more cohesive society. The essence of Liberal Democracy. So it’s vital that we start persuading the British people. Persuading them that the environment is one of the biggest issues in politics. And that it has a massive impact on quality of life. Let’s look at the facts. The facts. Climate change. The major problem. Latest figures show that global warming is happening fast. Much faster than we have ever imagined. And if action isn’t taken to cut greenhouse gasses, temperatures will rise even more dramatically. Faster rises than at any time since the end of the last ice age. Britain will face particular problems It’s not just Plymouth that has palm trees. My own constituency does too. Yet, in fact it’s on a similar latitude to Moscow. But if the Gulf Stream changes, as it could, we will be in real trouble.

    Yet the public policy response? What was once a Labour manifesto pledge is now only a goal. A vague aspiration. A familiar story, isn’t it? We’ve seen the evidence of global warming in Mozambique. You know, I couldn’t actually believe it. The politicians were talking about helicopters. How many. And when they should have been sent. How much more powerful it would be, if they spent as much time stopping it becoming an everyday event. That means each individual making changes to their lives. To make a difference to the environment. But it also means changes for government. It’s time now for the British government to make a real difference. To commit to getting 20% of our energy from renewables by 2010. It’s a real issue for all of us. Consider this. Nearly 10% of our best agricultural land is less than 5 metres above sea level. Around 40% of our manufacturing is on or near the coast. 26 million people in this country living near the coastline. As sea levels rise, so our economic fabric will sink.

    So what does the government do? Number ten is pathetic. Absolutely pathetic. There is no joined-up thinking on the environment. We’ve seen that on GM foods. Ask the others what they think GM is. Labour will say “grant-maintained”. Tories will say “General Motors”. Liberal Democrats have constantly urged caution. We see science as a servant, never a master. But it took sustained public pressure to make the PM recognise that. The government must now go the whole hog. Back our policy of a five-year moratorium on commercial GM crops.. A fundamental part of the green cause in the future, will be pushing the case internationally. Taking the lead.

    I am a pro-European. That’s partly because I know that Europe can help the environment. Many environmental problems can only be tackled at an international level. Events in Seattle told us that. So the environment should be part of a genuinely ethical foreign policy. And only by playing a constructive role in Europe can that happen. For the good of the environment, there’s one issue the government must take seriously. Transport. This is John Prescott’s job. Good old John. He tries hard. After the last election he said, “I will have failed if in five years time there are not far fewer journeys by car.” That’s coming back to haunt him. Soon, he’ll wish he hadn’t said it.

    So for those people without two Jags, we must tackle failing public transport. An integrated transport system. Fuel rebates for community transport. Bus lanes. And we all know that Susan Kramer has the best tube policy for London. No surprise there that Frank Dobson’s going well and truly down the tube. And let me set you a challenge for the next election. I want our party to turn the phrase “on your bike” into a compliment, not an insult. And what about walking? John Prescott doesn’t really understand walking. Or talking for that matter. And as for walking and talking. The mind boggles. But we can manage it. We’re rather good at it – walking. ‘Safe Routes’ to schools. Home zones. Look at the school bus experience in the United States. Children need more freedom from parents. And parents need more freedom from fear.

    Environmental politics adds up to more family-friendly politics. Getting that message across will change attitudes. That, ultimately, is the challenge. Without a ‘green culture’, government will legislate in vain. Nobody should think that changing a culture is impossible. Cast your minds back ten years ago. It was unconventional to recycle anything. But it’s now common practice throughout Britain. As a party, we can claim some credit. Our councils in particular. And the pressure groups. Even the government loves it. It recycles everything. Its policies. Our policies. But most of all, they love recycling their funding commitments. So I want us to lead a cultural change. People say that they want a better environment. We need to help people understand that our policies will give them that. Take one issue that links health, the environment, social policy.

    Fuel poverty. Why is it that so many of the poorest people, often the oldest, can’t afford to heat their homes. It’s so costly because homes are not properly insulated. They pump heat into the skies, and their homes remain cold. Because they remain cold, they get ill. And even, sometimes, they die. Over 40,000 died last winter alone. An absolute scandal. So come on colleagues. Let’s think imaginatively. Why can’t GPs issue prescriptions for home insulation? It will promote better health. Save heating costs. And lead to a better environment. A green policy to end fuel poverty in 15 years.

    But the environment is also good for the economy. Green growth, in other words. Jobs – insulating homes. Jobs – in conservation schemes. Jobs – investing in public transport. We’ve got to get that message across. We have to make that case. It’s a different agenda, a distinctive identity. More choice, not less. Positive gain, not pain. Modern, efficient and progressive. An agenda for a forward-looking party. And that’s the kind of party I want to lead. That’s why today I’m launching our Green Budget. The government has its very own Brown Budget. We’ve proposed a green programme to end fuel poverty in 15 years. Taxes on dumping waste, to fund more recycling. Changes in VAT to stop urban sprawl. 20% of British energy from renewable sources by 2010. Scrapping road tax for the most fuel efficient cars. There’s much more. And we will go on producing more and better green policy.

    But Labour won’t do that in next week’s Brown Budget. I’ll tell you what else won’t be tackled properly in the Budget. Health and education. You know, the PM says that Nye Bevan was one of his heroes. Can you imagine Nye arguing for tax cuts when the NHS is crying out? Crying out for more doctors, more nurses, more beds? I can’t see it at all. So I challenge the Chancellor today. Gordon, listen to what people are saying. Gordon, unlock your war-chest. Right now, people don’t want a tax-cut. Right now they want the money put into schools, hospitals and pensions. Go on Gordon. Do it, just do it.

    That’s what we’ll be putting to the people of Romsey. Sandra Gidley is an excellent PPC. Sandra, we’re all right behind you. At that election, and the next general election, our country will have some clear choices. The clearest choice will be over which party will promote freedom for all. Which party will fund schools and hospitals?

  • Charles Kennedy – 2000 Speech on Fuel Prices

    Charles Kennedy – 2000 Speech on Fuel Prices

    The speech made by Charles Kennedy on 18 September 2000.

    Sometimes – just sometimes there are defining moments for a country and its character.

    Perhaps – just perhaps Britain came across one of those moments last week.

    A sense of perspective is called for in all of this.

    Ours is a stable country. Ours is a sensible country. And ours is a fundamentally decent country.

    Stability – sense – decency.

    These are not assets lightly to be squandered.

    A society which is liberal democratic has to operate – it cannot function otherwise on a sense of mutual consent.

    Last week mutual consent showed signs of breaking down.

    If it had it would have broken all of us. It almost did. But it didn’t.

    Sense – sanity – decency prevailed.

    Put to one side the issue at stake. Put to the forefront the principle involved.

    A society which is liberal democratic cannot have public policy determined upon the basis of who has got the loudest voice – or who can brings things to a halt.

    However just. However well behaved. However well meaning.

    The petrol protesters – to their credit – knew that. They conducted themselves accordingly.

    The issue now is that the government must conduct itself accordingly. Democracy demands trust. It demands that sense of mutual understanding. And – it’s a two way street. You’ve got to give – as much as you take.

    The government is taking a lot. It’s not giving nearly as much. No wonder public confidence collapses.

    We say two things. First – fuel tax policy has to be fair. If it’s not it won’t work. Second – let’s be up front about the environmental agenda. And let’s be clear about what we would do.

    We want a fair deal on fuel. We call on the government:

    1. To place a cap on fuel taxes (in real terms) for five years so that the government does not profit from future increases in fuel prices.

    2. To use the VAT windfall that it has received from the higher than expected fuel prices to ease the burden on the travelling public.

    3. To ensure that oil companies recognise their social responsibilities, both in respect of pricing and security of supply.
    If they fail to do so, we will take measures to tax their excess profits.

    4. To support people in rural communities who rely on fuel through, for example, rate relief on rural fuel stations and increased investment in community public transport.

    Those are the principles that we want the government to accept. That is a fair deal on fuel. The events of the past week have also highlighted a more profound consideration.

    It’s time to pause and reflect.

    Why do citizens think that they’re more likely – more able – to influence the course of public policy by direct action, rather than by conventional party politics? Why do less and less people bother to vote? Why do so few folk even bother to join political parties? You’ve got to ask questions before you answer them.

    I’ve been asking these questions for quite some time now.

    This party – and this party conference has got to start providing answers.

    And it is – and it will.

    People won’t be spoken to as they’ve been spoken to in the past.

  • Charles Kennedy – 2000 Speech to Liberal Democrat Conference

    Charles Kennedy – 2000 Speech to Liberal Democrat Conference

    The speech made by Charles Kennedy in Bournemouth on 21 September 2000.

    Potentially, politics is at a crossroads.
    We saw that last week.
    The opinion polls have recorded that this week.
    That’s been the backdrop for this,
    I think, one of our most successful conferences ever.

    Politics is about leading.
    You might expect me to say that.
    But politics is also about listening.
    The events of the past ten days,
    have demonstrated,
    graphically,
    that the current government,
    neither leads nor listens enough.

    So it’s not just that people are estranged from politics.
    It’s that politicians are estranged from people.
    I know that.
    You know that.
    The country knows that.

    We’re different.
    That’s what our conference this week has been all about.

    Next time we meet like this,
    in twelve months,
    politics may have changed even more out of all recognition.
    We have to be part of that process of change,
    central to it.
    Before, during and after the coming general election.

    That’s why,
    in our pre-election manifesto,
    “Freedom in a Liberal Society”,
    we’ve been exploring themes,
    reiterating values and principles,
    setting out policy directions.
    All of which will take us a long way forward.

    Now today,
    I don’t just want to talk to Liberal Democrats.
    Pleasant though that may be.
    I want to talk to potential Liberal Democrat voters.
    I want to talk to the country.
    And I want to be explicit about why Britain – needs the Liberal Democrats.

    I’ve done a huge amount of travelling across the country this year.
    You know my principal impression?

    Put quite simply it’s this.
    There are too many,
    far, far too many anxious people out there,
    anxious – for themselves and their families,
    too anxious ever to have time to feel ambitious about our country.
    Well we are ambitious.
    Very ambitious for our country.
    That’s why Britain – needs the Liberal Democrats.

    People want a better level of political dialogue.
    And they deserve it.
    They’re not getting it.
    Just look at the crime debate.
    Ann Widdecombe and Jack Straw.
    You know the only difference between the two?
    Ann got done for speeding.
    Jack’s got a driver to speed for him,
    They’re competing in a dismal Dutch auction.
    Going for lowest common denominator politics.
    Over-claim.
    Over-blame.
    Over-reach.
    Undermine the entire point of the political process along the way.
    —-
    You can’t change human nature.
    But poverty.
    Unemployment.
    Drugs.
    These are major causes of crime too.
    Someone needs to be saying that.
    That’s why Britain – needs the Liberal Democrats.

    Let me be quite clear.
    I’m not one of those who believe that all Britain’s problems
    began on the first of May 1997.

    But Labour’s poverty of ambition is quite remarkable.
    With a parliamentary majority – of one hundred and seventy nine,
    they behave like John Major did – with a majority of three.

    It’s all about what will play well in the opinion polls.
    Britain was promised an ethical foreign policy.
    Britain demands legislation on the arms trade.
    But instead we get arms sales to Indonesia.

    And all too often, they seem scared of their own shadows.
    Remember that leaked Prime Ministerial memo?
    What was it he said?
    “a sense that the government … are somehow out of touch with gut British instincts”.

    So I ask you,
    Labour voter last time,
    maybe for the first time was it?
    Did you believe,
    that things could only get better?
    And have they?
    For you?
    Your family?
    Your community?
    Your local school?
    Your local hospital?
    Your sense of job security?
    Your sense of reassurance that your elderly parents would be looked after?
    Your belief that your students,
    wouldn’t be up to their ears in debt.
    Millions of people believed it.
    Millions of people are disappointed.

    The Conservatives won’t improve these things for you.
    But the Liberal Democrats can.
    We can improve a lot on Labour.

    They are continually terrified to be called the party of boom and bust.
    That old Labour habit of splashing out in their first years in power,
    and then having to cut back at the end.

    Gordon Brown certainly hasn’t done that.
    He’s cut back and now he’s splashing out.
    Bust followed by pre-election boom.

    We said that wasn’t good enough.

    I’d like to think he saw the light.
    But the truth is, he felt the heat.

    Now what of the Conservative Party?

    Today, I want to address the millions of previous Conservative voters,
    who feel that William Hague’s Party offers them – nothing.
    I share many of the values, the beliefs, the concerns,
    of the people who used to be called One Nation Conservatives.
    Tolerance, decency, fair-play.

    If you believe in those things,
    and you look at your party.
    And it’s not got room any more,
    at the top table,
    for the likes of Ken Clarke, Michael Heseltine, Chris Patten.
    Then your party’s got no room for you.

    To you,
    I say this.
    You have friends in the Liberal Democrats.
    You have a home.
    Come and talk to us.
    You will be very, very welcome.

    What’s gone wrong with the Conservative Party
    – oh, so wrong –
    is not even so much the individuals
    – it’s the issues and the instincts
    which today guide William Hague’s Conservative Party.

    William jumps in with both feet,
    in the wrong place,
    at the wrong time,
    and for the wrong reasons.
    Desperate for a headline, desperate for a quote.
    Desperate to get attention.
    He’s the world’s first unpopular populist.

    So how come the Tories have come up in the polls?

    I know the answer.
    It’s not William’s popularity.
    It’s the people round about him that the country’s warming to.
    It must be John Redwood, Michael Portillo and Ann Widdecombe the country loves.

    Just look at what William’s been up to this year.
    January -Patient’s Guarantee.
    Ditched.
    February – tax guarantee.
    Ditched.
    March – the moral case for low taxation.
    Ditched with the tax guarantee.
    April – bogus asylum seekers.
    May – Romsey.
    June.
    He was quiet in June.
    Perhaps he had a 14-pint hangover.
    Or perhaps it was that Romsey hangover.

    I ask you.
    Is that opposition?
    Is that a positive view of Britain.
    Is that anything,
    of any use,
    to anybody?
    Why does Britain need the Liberal Democrats?
    That’s why Britain needs the Liberal Democrats.

    And remember their record?
    Recessions.
    Crime doubled.
    Larger class sizes.
    Fewer nurses.
    Pensions slashed.
    Interest rates – through the roof.
    Arms to Iraq.
    BSE.
    Cash for questions.
    Sleaze.
    It must never,
    ever,
    be allowed to happen again.
    That’s why Britain needs the Liberal Democrats.

    William Hague is not the serious leader of a serious political party.
    That’s the serious point.

    We are serious.
    Our purpose is here in this document.
    It’s the F word.
    Freedom.
    That’s why we’re in politics.

    We want politicians to promote freedom for all.
    So people can make the most of their lives.
    That means excellent local hospitals and schools.
    Fair and decent pensions.
    Safer streets.
    A clean environment.
    Civil liberties.
    Stopping government interfering in people’s private lives.
    That’s why Britain needs the Liberal Democrats.

    I am determined we will get our message across.
    But as part of that,
    it is vital,
    absolutely vital,
    that we persuade people,
    that for every area where government can do more,
    there’s an area where government should be doing less,
    or doing different.

    That’s why I want to make an early announcement today,
    about the contents of our manifesto for the next election.
    In our pre-manifesto, we have policies for green action in every chapter.
    The manifesto will do that too.
    But it will also show,
    in every chapter,
    where government must do less,
    to give people more freedom.
    We would scrap a range of regulations,
    that burden small businesses.
    We will cut bureaucracy in schools.
    And we will let people,
    not politicians,
    decide how some of their tax revenues are spent.

    Tax and spend?
    Every party taxes and spends.
    But our priorities,
    are the people’s priorities.

    That’s what freedom means.

    It’s not left of Labour.
    It’s not right of Labour.
    It’s ahead of Labour.

    It’s also honest.
    Where there is a cost,
    we say how we will pay for it.
    Saying that if necessary,
    we will pay for better schools,
    by asking everybody to pay just one pence more on the basic rate of income tax.
    And to fund decent pensions,
    we will ask those fortunate enough to earn over one hundred thousand pounds per year,
    to pay a little more.
    That’s the way to be honest with people.
    And remember,
    when you’re talking to people,
    remind them,
    that’s still less than the self same people were paying
    under Margaret Thatcher.

    That makes us clear on what we will then do.

    On health:
    Nurses and doctors – more of them.
    Prescription charges – abolish them.
    Eye and dental check-ups – free once again.
    That’s why patients need the Liberal Democrats.

    Schools and colleges,
    cut class sizes for all 5 to 11 year olds.
    Abolish tuition fees for higher education.
    Jim Wallace and our colleagues have done it in Scotland.
    Let’s do it for the rest of Britain as well.

    The mountains of bureaucracy that burden teachers.
    Flatten them.
    So that teachers can actually teach more,
    and stop being bureaucrats.
    That’s why parents and children need the Liberal Democrats.

    And what about the pensioners?
    Forgotten and insulted by Gordon Brown.
    Pensions were introduced by a Liberal government.
    By a man called Lloyd George.
    And today, we retain that commitment to a decent pension for all.
    So we will give pensioners more, above inflation.
    £5 extra every week for every pensioner,
    If you’re over 75, it’s going to be £10 extra.
    If you’re over 80, it’s going to be £15 extra.
    Now that will make a real difference.
    That’s why pensioners need the Liberal Democrats.

    The environment.
    The great challenge facing our generation.

    We say that a clean environment relates to health.
    To poverty.
    To transport.
    To education.
    To civil liberties.

    We understand that,
    instinctively so.

    And again, we’re honest.
    We’re clear,
    fuel taxes should be used,
    to improve the environment.

    In the months and years to come,
    we have got to get that message across.
    To show that good environmental policies,
    are about more choice, not less.
    Positive gain, not pain.
    And that we can all make a difference.
    That’s why the environment needs the Liberal Democrats.

    And let me say something about the single currency.
    If there is an election next year,
    then a referendum on the Euro can’t be long delayed.
    Labour will no longer have anywhere to hide.

    It shouldn’t be a party political issue.
    But let me make our position crystal clear.
    As pro-Europeans we are not in favour,
    of rushing into the euro head first.
    We don’t believe Europe is perfect.
    And we will work to see that reform takes place.

    But we do believe that Britain can and must lead in Europe.
    Lead reform in Europe.
    Lead on the euro’s benefits for Britain.

    That’s why, earlier this year,
    I asked a panel of experts,
    to report on what the government should be doing.
    They’ve done so.
    And if the government chooses to ignore the experts,
    British businesses will lose,
    British workers will lose,
    British consumers will lose.
    Britain will lose.

    So those of us in favour of the euro,
    must go out there and argue the case.
    We have a duty to do so.
    We cannot sit on our hands.
    That’s why Britain needs the Liberal Democrats.

    This has been an outstanding year for the Liberal Democrats.
    The local elections – our biggest ever share of the national vote.
    Sandra’s triumph in Romsey.
    Real votes, cast in real elections.

    And we are making a difference,
    On real issues throughout the country.
    I can look round this hall,
    and see the faces of people,
    who are making a serious difference across Britain today.
    Mike German and his colleagues
    have made a significant impact on the Welsh Assembly.
    Our colleagues in the London Assembly.
    The singular contribution – of Susan Kramer.

    And the enormous contribution,
    that the Alliance Party of Northern Ireland.
    has made to the peace process.
    We wish it and them well.

    And I am particularly proud of our record in Scotland,
    where Jim Wallace has been running the government.
    Liberal Democrats have helped deliver.

    In Scotland,
    we are delivering,
    better hospitals.
    More money for education.
    More police officers.
    Freedom of Information.
    A new approach to farming and rural affairs.
    And, the abolition of tuition fees.

    In Scotland we’ve shown that the SNP are an irrelevance.
    In Wales we’ve shown that Plaid Cymru are an irrelevance.
    And both will be an even greater irrelevance at the next Westminster election.
    They really are the wasted vote in British politics.

    The Liberal Democrats are the party for the whole of Britain.
    And that’s why the whole of Britain needs the Liberal Democrats.

    We’ve shown,
    that the others are now the old parties of the 20th century.
    We are the party of the 21st.
    Our policies,
    our principles,
    our practical approach,
    our philosophy of freedom,
    can lead us to even greater triumphs.

    Let us connect with the people
    – and the people will connect with us.
    At the next election, I believe we will win more votes, and more seats.
    1997 was a staging post.
    It wasn’t a high-water mark.

    In the months and years to come,
    our message of freedom,
    is one that we have to get across to the British people.

    For me, and for my family,
    that’s a very personal message.

    For my grandfather,
    freedom meant putting on a uniform,
    and going to fight in the Dardanelles in the 1st World War.

    For my mother and father,
    freedom has meant the chance to give their children
    – youngest son included –
    better life opportunities than they could ever have aspired to for themselves.

    For me,
    freedom is about being grateful for the opportunities I’ve had,
    and my friends at school had,
    – and doing something for our country to help make that freedom commonplace.

    I have great pride in our party,
    in what we stand for.
    Pride in our principles.
    And I have a pride in Britain.
    In what it can be.

    So we must go into the next election,
    and tell people about our message of freedom.
    The difference between the Liberal Democrats
    and the disaster of William Hague’s Party.
    The difference between the Liberal Democrats
    and the disappointment that Labour has become.

    Go out there and tell it to people as it is.
    What you see is what you get.
    This is what we will deliver.

    A truly modern,
    truly free,
    21st century Britain.
    A Liberal Democrat Britain.

  • Charles Kennedy – 2002 Speech to Liberal Democrat Conference

    Charles Kennedy – 2002 Speech to Liberal Democrat Conference

    The speech made by Charles Kennedy, the then Leader of the Liberal Democrats, to the party’s conference in Brighton on 23 September 2002.

    One year ago we gathered as a party conference against the backdrop of September 11th. The images of that terrible day will remain with all of us for evermore.

    One year later and the world is still a precarious place.

    Parliament will meet tomorrow. Despite the recall coinciding with this Conference, I make no complaint. I was after all the first party leader to call for Parliament to be reconvened. It should have happened before now – but it is essential and welcome that it is at last taking place.

    We shall be contributing constructively and responsibly to those parliamentary exchanges. It is the very fact that free and open discussion and debate can take place in a parliamentary democracy which is a fundamental distinction between a democratic society and a totalitarian regime.

    On Wednesday we will have a debate on Iraq situation. I want the British public to hear and reflect upon what the Liberal Democrats have been saying on this matter. So I also want to hear from you. We need to know and understand each other just as much.

    And there’s another strand of opinion which we need to take into account in reaching our conclusions – the sensitivities of the Muslim community at home- and the views of the Arab world abroad .

    Now with events developing day by day – and with so much at stake – it is vitally important that what we say is clear, coherent and rooted in first principles.

    From the outset of our conference I want to enunciate those first principles. For us. Hence this statement.

    One year ago I said to you that our country was correct to stand shoulder to shoulder with the United States. That we were well placed to be a candid friend. And that a feature of such friendship was closeness and the ability to offer the occasional cautionary tap on the shoulder.

    Twelve months later and I see no reason to revise that assessment, whether we are confronting international terrorism or weapons of mass destruction in Iraq.

    But we should not lose sight of the fact that there is still no definitive evidence linking the Iraqi regime with Al Q’aida and the atrocities of September 11th.

    We have spoken on behalf of this party with principle, common-sense and consistency. And in so doing I believe that we have spoken for a huge body of concerned and informed public opinion across our country. Opinion that straddles the conventional divisions of purely party politics.

    We have continually emphasized, we will do so again in parliament tomorrow and thereafter, our legitimate concerns.

    Terrorism is a most fundamental assault on individual human rights. And we are a party of the individual and of human rights.

    We are also, instinctively so, a party of internationalism. To cope with, to combat, the sheer, sustained evil of international terrorism, we must work with others.

    You have not heard – and you will not hear – from me criticism of this or any other British Prime Minister whose efforts are directed to that end. For us, that would be to deny a central element of our point and purpose.

    But we will not suspend our critical faculties either. That would be to abandon the necessary and obligatory role which is effective parliamentary opposition.

    Am I alone in feeling increasingly concerned about this concept called “regime change?” I think not. Who decides the legitimacy of such change? On what basis in international law? And with what ultimate objective in mind? I have yet to hear a satisfactory answer to these questions. There is more than a hint of imperialism here.

    Am I alone in worrying about the undermining of the moral, legal and practical authority of the United Nations? Again, I think not. The first priority of the British Government must be the return of the UN weapons inspectors . Anything less than unfettered access anywhere in Iraq is unacceptable.

    The unconditional return of the inspectors requires a clear timetable. And no ruling out of an ultimate resort to military action as a last resort if that necessary compliance is denied or thwarted. But we are not there yet.

    The United Nations, despite all its imperfections, and under the proven leadership of Secretary General Kofi Annan, has to remain central in these affairs.

    We need evidence to help us reach the right decision. We are promised more evidence tomorrow and I welcome that fact. But the UN inspectorate must be allowed its opportunity to establish evidence as well.

    It also requires respect for the operational judgement of Hans Blix, head of the inspection team, as to whether his inspectors have been systematically obstructed by the Government of Iraq.

    And in all of this we have to maintain pressure for re-starting the Middle East peace process. The scenes of the past days and months make that more urgent than ever before. There must be a just settlement, giving Israel security and the Palestinians a state of their own.

    Tomorrow there will be no specific proposal before Parliament to commit British troops to military action. If or when there is, we shall insist on the right of the British House of Commons not only to be consulted, not only to be kept informed, but also to be able to vote on any proposal which might involve our military personnel in action.

    But we Liberal Democrats will do everything we possibly can to ensure that the route of unconditional inspection within the UN structure is followed rather than the extreme uncertainties and dangers of the use of military force.

    That was the specific substance of the last question I put to the Prime Minister, on the floor of the House of Commons, just before the summer recess. And again, that remains our unaltered position.

    What has been said in the name of this party in the past few weeks constitutes a sane and measured approach. I commend it to this conference and to our party as a whole.

    And I believe equally that it commends itself to our country as well.

  • Charles Kennedy – 2003 Speech to Liberal Democrat Spring Conference

    Charles Kennedy – 2003 Speech to Liberal Democrat Spring Conference

    The speech made by Charles Kennedy, the then Leader of the Liberal Democrats, on 16 March 2003.

    This won’t be a normal spring conference speech. We’re not this weekend living in normal political times. There is a real possibility that our armed forces may be at war within the next seven days.

    In those circumstances, I feel it’s appropriate for me to focus this speech entirely on the Iraq crisis.

    It’s the right thing to do because of the seriousness of the situation. But it’s also right because of the central role which our party has played, is playing and will continue to play in the national debate on the issue.

    This is a worrying and difficult time for our country. The summit today in the Azores holds out little hope of peace. It has all the makings of a final council of war between the so-called coalition of the willing.

    I see it as a council of despair. I believe that it’s too early to give up the hope of a peaceful outcome. But the signs are that President Bush and Tony Blair have decided to abandon that hope.

    They say that they’re going the extra mile for peace. I don’t see how. This meeting looks highly unlikely to go a single extra inch for peace. If the President and the Prime Minister were serious about finding a peaceful solution, they’d be talking to Kofi Annan, not to each other. And they’d be heeding the warning which the Secretary-General has given against military action without a further explicit UN resolution.

    “The legitimacy and support for any such action”, he’s said, “will be seriously impaired. If the USA and others go outside the Council and take military action, it will not be in conformity with the Charter.”

    If this was a genuine effort to explore alternatives, there’d be other Heads of Government in the Azores today too – the President of France, the German Chancellor, the leaders of the other nations which currently have seats on the Security Council. Instead, this looks like one of those summits where the final communique is already written before a single word has been spoken.

    The British Government may have signed up in the ranks of the willing. But the British nation has not. This will not be a war which most in our country have sought or support.

    George Bush and Tony Blair say there is no other option – Saddam Hussein is dangerous – this is the only way to disarm him. I have questioned this approach all along – and I continue to question it now. But don’t be mistaken. This is not because I have the slightest sympathy for Saddam Hussein.

    Saddam is a brutal dictator. He has used chemical weapons on his own people. He has defied the Security Council. He needs to be disarmed. The question is how.

    There is one group of people who are uppermost in our minds at the moment – our British forces. Politicians can debate issues like Iraq in the safety of a party conference or the Palace of Westminster. Our armed forces are required to risk their lives. If the fighting begins, everyone in this hall would wish a speedy and successful conclusion to hostilities and the safe return of all members of our armed forces.

    They are risking their lives in our name. All through this crisis, I have paid tribute to their courage and skill. I do so again now. They are the bravest and the best. We are proud of them.

    Let no one be in any doubt. The Liberal Democrats are backing our armed forces in the Gulf wholeheartedly.

    Our critics may not acknowledge that. But the country understands our position very well. And the majority of our fellow citizens agree with us. There is no inconsistency between criticising the strategy of the Government and supporting the service people whose duty is to carry that strategy out.

    But we also have in mind another very important group of people – the innocent civilian population of Iraq. They have suffered terribly under Saddam Hussein’s dictatorship. There is no question about that. But war could so easily make their plight so much worse. There are no bombs sufficiently sophisticated, sufficiently smart, to avoid causing civilian casualties. And bombs aren’t the only danger they face.

    Any war will cause a refugee crisis of huge proportions – not to mention the dangers of famine and disease.

    There are concerns nearer home. There is a real danger that the war could alienate British Muslims. Many moderate Muslims already feel that they are victims of prejudice. Action against Saddam could fuel that prejudice and leave the law-abiding Muslim population of Britain feeling excluded and aggrieved.

    Those are factors which have to be weighed very carefully in the balance before any decision is taken to go to war. They’re factors which I fear haven’t been considered nearly hard enough.

    When I went on the march last month to Hyde Park, I was proud that our party played its role in the largest demonstration in British history.

    Our slogan was not peace at any price. It was give peace a chance. I feared then that the British and American governments were denying that chance. That is still my fear today.

    Our position is founded on principle. There are three fundamental beliefs which have always guided the Liberal Democrats – and the Liberal Party before us. First the principle of internationalism – of nations working together. Second, respect for universal human rights. And third the commitment only ever to use force as a last resort.

    Before the Second World War, the Liberal leader Archibald Sinclair was one of the first to support Winston Churchill against Chamberlain’s policy of appeasement. But then Jo Grimond was the first party leader to oppose Suez. And in more recent times our party backed action in the Gulf War, in Kosovo, in Bosnia and in Afghanistan.

    All along, our commitment has been to support action by the international community where that action will promote the causes of peace and security. And to oppose action which has the opposite effect.

    For months now, I have been putting a series of questions to Tony Blair on the floor of the House of Commons. They are questions which people want answered – questions which the official opposition has not been asking. Questions which have probed the Government’s commitment to the United Nations and its relationship with the United States. Questions about the circumstances in which British troops would be sent into battle. Straight questions to which I have had no straight answers.

    Throughout this crisis, we have insisted on a number of crucial tests. We have said that decisions must lie with the United Nations.

    Only the UN can command a legitimate political mandate based on an unquestioned moral authority. And that means that any military action has to be sanctioned by a second resolution of the Security Council of the UN. UN decisions in their turn, we say, should be based on adequate information. They have to be informed by the assessment of Hans Blix and the weapons inspectors – not by some arbitrary verdict of the Bush administration.

    Thirdly we say that the British House of Commons has to sanction any deployment of British troops by vote.

    And we also say that war should only be a last resort after all other diplomatic and political options have been exhausted.

    We have asked wider questions too. What benefits will military action bring? What legitimacy does it have? What will be the consequences for Iraq, the region and the wider world?

    We have always been the party of the United Nations. If George Bush and Tony Blair are about to act without the authority of the UN, they risk undermining our most important international institutions. They put in jeopardy almost sixty years of painstaking work to build an international order. They weaken not only the UN, but NATO and the European Union as well.

    Let me offer you a quote: “We must not allow ourselves to get into a position where we might be denounced in the Security Council. While force cannot be excluded, we must be sure that circumstances justify it and that it is, if used, consistent with our belief in and pledges to the Charter of the United Nations. And not in conflict with them.”

    The speaker, the Leader of the Labour Party – Hugh Gaitskell at the time of Suez. He understood the importance of the United Nations. He understood how damaging it is for Britain to be seen to be ignoring it.

    What a tragedy that his successor Tony Blair has betrayed his legacy. I’ve never questioned Tony Blair’s sincerity. But I do question his judgement.

    The United Nations is fundamental to our vision as Liberal Democrats. It’s not perfect. It needs reform. But its basic principles are sound. When it comes to issues of war and peace and security, there is everything to be said for pooling our national sovereignty with others to mutual advantage. The large and complex problems which face the world are smaller and more soluble when we face them together.

    Action without a UN mandate by the United States or the British Government will have severe consequences. I will undermine the authority of the United Nations not just with regard to this particular operation – serious though that in itself may be – but with regard to future operations for a very long time to come.

    The debates in both Houses of Parliament at the end of last month addressed many of the issues which we have been raising. Politicians from all political parties probed and questioned the build-up to war. There was great concern about the motive for an attack – concern which unhappily the Prime Minister has been unable to alleviate.

    MPs and peers alike were troubled about what is being planned in our name. Is the object regime change – a moral crusade to rid the world of a tyrant? If so, however desirable it might be to take action, there is no justification for such action under international law.

    Or is the issue some connection between Saddam and Al Qa’eda? Is this part of the war against terrorism? If so, we have not been shown the proof. Or is it a straightforward question of depriving Saddam of his weapons of mass destruction?

    If so, why does the American President keep insisting that he will attack Iraq whatever Hans Blix and the weapons inspectors might or might not determine.

    The worries I’ve expressed are shared extremely widely. Here are the words of Kenneth Clarke. “How many terrorists”, he asked in that Parliamentary debate, “will we recruit in the greater, long-standing battle against international terrorism? It will be far harder to win. What will we do to the stability of Saudi Arabia, Pakistan or Egypt?”

    He went on: “The next time a large bomb explodes in a western city, or an Arab or Muslim regime is toppled and is replaced by extremists, the Government must consider the extent to which the policy contributed to it.”

    Or take the powerful case made by Chris Smith from the other side of the House. He argued that there was no weakness involved in opposing an attack. “Strength”, he said, “does not lie simply in military might. Strength lies in having an unanswerable case. It lies in making the right moral choices. It lies in maintaining the pressure, and it lies in securing the furthest possible international agreement.”

    The doubts have come from senior politicians of all parties. And the Government doesn’t have the confidence of senior military men either. These are the words of Field Marshall Lord Bramall, a former Chief of the Defence Staff and architect of the victory in the Falklands War.

    “If anything goes wrong,” he said, “certainly in the short term but probably in the longer term, serious questions will undoubtedly be asked about why the Government went down that road in the first place.” And he pointed out that there was a better alternative: “continued containment of Iraq and concentrating on the more imminent threat posed by Al Qa’eda and other terrorist organisations.”

    This is a formidable array of wise and expert opinion. At the very least it should give the Government cause to stop and think.

    War is sometimes unavoidable. I do not believe that this war is unavoidable at this time.

    But if there is a war and if Saddam is defeated, the international community will still face huge problems.

    Iraq will prove enormously difficult to administer if and when any fighting is over. The Americans appear to favour a regime headed by one of their generals. This is a task which is clearly much better entrusted to the United Nations. There must be doubt about the scale on which other nations would fund and resource a programme run by the USA to deal with the aftermath of a war instigated by the USA.

    Post-war Iraq will pose not only security problems but a huge humanitarian challenge.

    Let me give you some idea of the scale.

    Nearly a million children under five in Iraq already suffer from chronic malnutrition.

    Iraq has the highest increase in infant mortality anywhere in the world.

    Almost three quarters of the country’s population depend on food aid.

    Many more face starvation because of successive years of drought.

    The water supply and sanitation system in Iraq have almost completely collapsed.

    Half a million tons of raw sewage go into the Tigris every day and half of the country’s sewage treatment plants don’t work.

    War will certainly make all these problems far worse.

    In addition, another two million people could be displaced from their homes within the country.

    Others will flee, many of them across areas which are heavily mined. Iran alone expects almost a million refugees from Iraq.

    So the international community has an enormous task on its hands.

    The precedents are not encouraging. Before the attack on Afghanistan, President Bush said: “To the Afghan people we make this commitment. We will not walk away, as the outside world has done so many times before.”

    But look what has happened. The United States has not been prepared to leave enough troops behind to help rebuild a nation shattered by war. The transitional government has been unable to exert its authority over most of the country.

    The problems facing a post-war Iraq would be just as daunting.

    The prospects for security look bleak. The prospects for the democracy which the Americans say they want look bleaker still.

    The country could easily become less rather than more stable, given all the tensions which exist between Sunnis, Shias and Kurds. And instability could easily spread throughout the whole region.

    Regime change is a thoroughly flawed doctrine. There is nothing in international law to justify it. Yet it is increasingly clear that this has been the objective of the Bush Administration all along.

    The more the United States pursues this doctrine, the more chance there is that it will increase rather than diminish the threat of international terrorism. It is easy to see terrorists exploiting the post-war situation. They could recruit more easily and operate more freely if governments are destabilised and resentment is swelling against the west.

    So what’s the alternative? Well, it’s to give Hans Blix and the weapons inspectors time to do their job thoroughly – to make inspections, conduct interviews and scrutinise documents. If the inspectors say that they are being refused co-operation, then the time might have come for force to be used. But not until then. The most effective way to rid Saddam of weapons of mass destruction must be to ensure that there’s an inspector there to watch the weapons being destroyed. That’s far more precise than any bombing campaign.

    And what of the continuing issue in the Middle East, the question of Israel and the Palestinians? This should be the first priority for the international community. It has been ignored to a worrying extent. President Bush has at last put it back on the agenda. But months have already been wasted.

    It is vital that the peace process is resumed with all possible urgency. We need to see action, not just words. We must not lose sight of the goal: the state of Israel at peace within secure borders and an independent state for the Palestinians.

    It would be the height of cynicism if the Bush administration were to use a new-found concern for tackling the Palestinian question just to try and make its policy on Iraq more acceptable.

    As for our own Prime Minister, when a million people marched through the streets of London, it should have been a wake-up call. He should have listened. But he didn’t.

    This war should not begin before all peaceful means are exhausted.

    It should not begin at the cost of the great international institutions which have guaranteed world security since the end of the second world war. It has put at risk NATO and the UN and split the family of European nations.

    And Britain should not go to war without the formal approval of the House of Commons. Nearly, fifty years ago, Jo Grimond complained that the House was not consulted before the action over Suez. Half a century onwards we still have no legislation which compels a Government to go to Parliament before it goes to war. In this respect, the British Prime Minister is less accountable even than the President of the United States. That’s a scandal.

    This war is a very high price to pay to disarm a country which is weaker now than it was in 1991, when a huge coalition under a UN mandate drove Saddam Hussein from Kuwait. I can only hope that if we are now embarked on the final stages of this crisis that the end will come quickly and with the minimum of bloodshed and that our armed forces will come safely home.

    We can be proud of the stance which our party has taken – and proud of the fact that it is a united stance. I’m proud of the way we’ve conducted ourselves this weekend – and proud of the quality of the debate which we had yesterday.

    I leave you with this. There has never been a time when the country has had more need of the Liberal Democrats.

  • Charles Kennedy – 2003 Speech on the Spending Review

    Charles Kennedy – 2003 Speech on the Spending Review

    The speech made by Charles Kennedy, the then leader of the Liberal Democrats, at the Social Market Foundation on 15 July 2003.

    The central command and control approach has failed Britain. It has failed to promote efficiency and failed to foster fairness.

    It’s time for a fresh approach. It’s time that we re-structured Britain’s Government so that it is part of the solution to Britain’s problems, not part of the problem itself.

    We have two clear priorities. First to direct investment where it’s needed most. And second to set the people who run our public services free from the dead hand of central government.

    This is not about spending less. It’s about saving money where it’s doing little good and redirecting it to where it’s needed most.

    We need less spent on subsidies, less spent on central government, less spent on ministers’ pet projects and more on getting real value for our taxes. The money saved should not be handed back in tax cuts. It should be used to spend more on public services.

    This process will mean hard choices. It will mean scaling back some Government Departments and their spending programmes in order to free up the money that’s desperately needed for doctors, teachers and police, for better schools, better hospitals, better transport and better protection from crime.

    This approach will be at the heart of our plans as we prepare for the next General Election. And it will be this philosophy which distinguishes us most clearly from other parties.

    We want to see the most fundamental restructuring of government that there’s been since the Second World War. If we’re going to make a real difference in our hospitals and schools and police stations, we need radically to reshape and slim down central government. The plans that we’re developing would lead to the abolition of at least eight Government departments, with a net reduction in the number of Ministries from nineteen to fourteen and in the number of ministers from over ninety to around sixty.

    Let me give you an idea of some of the changes which we’re considering.

    First, with the Scottish Parliament and the Welsh Assembly, it’s obvious that the Scotland and Wales Offices have outlived their useful lives. They should be abolished along with the Northern Ireland Office once devolution is complete.

    Next there’s the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister – set up mainly to keep John Prescott out of trouble. That should be abolished too.

    The remaining functions of all four departments should be subsumed into a Department of the Nations and Regions.

    It’s time too to sound the death knell for the old departments set up to defend the interests of producers – departments which have only succeeded in presiding over the decline of the industries which they have tried to serve.

    Why not instead have a Department of Consumer Protection and Enterprise?

    That would mean axing that corporatist relic, the Department of Trade and Industry. Many of the industrial subsidies which it oversees could be cut. Many more of its functions could be decentralised.

    We don’t need a Department for Culture, Media and Sport either. Much of what it does should be decentralised too, with its industry functions going to the Department of Consumer Protection.

    Defra could go the same way – with a new department of environment and transport taking responsibility for rural issues.

    How much money would this free up?

    Altogether, we believe that by both restructuring and slimming down central Government and by cutting back on less productive spending programmes, we can secure significant savings. This will involve some hard choices. We don’t believe that significant amounts of money can be found for education and health simply by cutting out waste and fraud.

    I have decided to set a target of finding savings of at least one per cent of total annual government spending to re-allocate to priority areas like education, health and tackling poverty.

    One per cent of total government spending is realistic and achievable.

    One per cent may sound modest, but it is one per cent, of course, of a very large figure.

    By the time of the next Election, one per cent will be equivalent to savings of around five billion pounds a year – enough , for instance to fund over 150,000 extra nurses, teachers and police every year.

    Bitter experience has proved that grand schemes to save billions by cutting down the number of paper clips never get anywhere. We are talking about deep and fundamental change. It is a change which goes to the heart of our philosophy as Liberal Democrats – a philosophy which rejects the nanny state in favour of an enabling state – a state which allows individuals to make the most of their lives and their talents.

  • Michael Heseltine – 1994 Speech on the Coal Industry Bill

    Michael Heseltine – 1994 Speech on the Coal Industry Bill

    The speech made by Michael Heseltine, the then Secretary of State for Trade and Industry, in the House of Commons on 18 January 1994.

    I beg to move, That the Bill be now read a Second time.

    In our election manifesto, we pledged to privatise British Coal. Last spring, in our White Paper “Prospects for Coal”, we renewed that pledge. Before I deal with the specific measures in the Bill, it is worth spending a few moments on the wider issues of nationalisation.

    The British coal industry is one of the last major industrial sectors left in the public sector. Nationalisation of our industries was a central feature of post-war Labour Governments. It was resisted fiercely by the Conservative Opposition of the day, and there are few people left who would deny that, as a policy, it imposed intolerable economic and legislative burdens on our country and contributed to the decline of our regional economies.

    The policy was designed to transfer the commanding heights of the economy to state control. The naive political rationalisation at the time was that control would be vested in the people. In reality, power rapidly shifted to monopoly providers and monopoly producer unions. What power the people possessed was exercised by civil servants, who rapidly became both protector and confidant of the industries’ self-interest, and, worse, by the political convenience of the party in power.

    The traditional—and, in the end, the only effective—disciplines of the marketplace were replaced by ill-disciplined compromises and cash-consuming delay. The objectives of enhanced efficiency, increased productivity and a high quality of service played little part in the day-to-day practices or assumptions.

    Industrial management, hitherto widely dispersed throughout the regions of the United Kingdom, was replaced by top-heavy bureaucracies that were located largely in London. Perhaps most damaging of all, in virtually every case our key industries withdrew from or were denied access to the markets of the world. I say this to reinforce the case for the Bill, if such reinforcement were necessary. Today, the concept of state ownership is bankrupt. Across the world, country after country is turning to the discipline of the marketplace as each seeks to dispose of its nationalised industries.

    Even the Labour party has lost the will to fight for this arcane concept of industrial organisation and management. Of course it parades and re-parades the weary arguments that a tiny body of its constituents, and of course its union paymasters, want to hear, but it knows that the tide of freedom that we have brought to the nationalised industries is now as irreversible here as it is in so many countries, under Governments ranging from the socialists of China to the right-wing Government in France.

    Mr. Dafydd Wigley (Caernarfon)

    Does the Secretary of State accept that one of the worries of many ex-coalminers and miners’ widows is that the benefits and agreements that they had with the National Coal Board will not be continued after privatisation? Will he give a categorical assurance on the matter?

    Mr. Heseltine

    I shall deal with the specific objects of concern case by case, as I consider the detailed contents of the Bill.

    Before I leave the overwhelming case in favour of privatisation at large, which rests behind the Bill, I must point out that, as hon. Members will know, the facts are stark. In 1979, the nationalised industries were costing the taxpayer £50 million per week in losses. Today, they pay £60 million per week in taxes on the profits that they earn as private sector companies and, most chilling of all for the Labour party, 6 million shareholders are willing to testify and to vote for the success that privatisation has brought.

    What are the facts about the nationalisation of the mines? At the time of nationalisation in 1947, there were 720,000 mineworkers employed by the National Coal Board. By 1980, that figure was down to 230,000—a reduction on average of around 15,000 a year. The rundown was as much a characteristic of Labour as of Conservative Governments.

    The number of operating pits also declined throughout that period. Opposition Members will recall, for example, that between 1964 and 1970, and between 1974 and 1979, the number of producing pits fell by 313. Indeed, since 1979, it is a Conservative Government who have injected by far the largest support for British Coal in the history of British Coal—nearly £20 billion.

    Mr. Ronnie Campbell (Blyth Valley)

    That was redundancy pay.

    Mr. Heseltine

    Yes, the Conservative Government made very generous redundancy payments. However, the hon. Gentleman is not prepared to face up to the fact that £8 billion of that £20 billion was capital investment in the industry. So, since the war—

    Mr. Campbell

    I can give the Secretary of State one example of what happened in my colliery. A transport system, which cost £300,000, was bought, put in the timber yard, set up and kept there, and charged to that colliery when it closed. That is only one example. What happened at the other collieries in which the Government invested?

    Mr. Heseltine

    The hon. Gentleman can quote his £300,000 example, but does the House seriously believe that it stands up against the £8 billion that has flowed into capital investment in the Coal Board since 1979? The Opposition talk as though they cared about the industry, but they ran it down. There has never been such a large investment programme in the coal industry as under Conservative Governments since 1979.

    Mr. John Evans (St. Helens, North)

    Is the Secretary of State aware that, at Parkside colliery in my constituency, a £6.5 million investment in a new face, which was in production for a fortnight before it was closed down under his regime, is now rotting in the ground?

    Mr. Heseltine

    The hon. Gentleman might ask himself whether the decision to invest such large sums of money was justified in the face of a falling market for the product. That is an example of precisely the lack of discipline that I have been referring to—a lack that was characteristic of nationalised industries throughout the post-war period.

    Mr. Eric Clarke (Midlothian)

    The accounts of the National Coal Board show that it repaid to the Government, at a very high interest rate, loans that it had received over some years. The money that the right hon. Gentleman was crediting the Government with investing in the industry was paid back before the so-called profit was decided. The Secretary of State can investigate that fact if he likes.

    Mr. Heseltine

    The hon. Gentleman must understand that most of the £20 billion invested in the National Coal Board since 1979 will be written off, which means that it will be charged in perpetuity to the taxpayer. I admire the fact, however, that he is now a director of a private sector coal company. I know that the House will wish him all the very best good fortune.

    Mr. Clarke

    I am not a director of a private company: the right hon. Gentleman has been misled. I am an adviser to a company which has the involvement of the Scottish trade union movement.

    Mr. Heseltine

    I would not wish to misrepresent the hon. Member. If his advice is successful, however, he might soon be a director of the company.

    Since the war and nationalisation, the coal industry has lost its market for producing town gas, it no longer sells coal to the railways or mines coking coal, and it has lost the greater part of sales of coal for home heating and industrial use. During the debates of the past year or so, we have been all too familiar with the fact that British Coal is now very dependent on sales for electricity generation, and we are equally and starkly aware that it is coming under increasing pressure in that market as well.

    Mr. Derek Enright (Hemsworth)

    If there is no market whatsoever for coal, can the President please explain why five applications are being processed for opencast coal mining in my constituency, when the opencast coal will be dearer than that from Grimethorpe?

    Mr. Heseltine

    The explanation is entirely a matter for those people who have submitted the applications to carry out the mining. It seems extremely unlikely to me that people are bidding to take on onerous responsibilities for mining coal in an opencast field when they could get it cheaper from the deep-mined industry. However, that is a judgment for those people who are prepared to invest their money in the process.

    The Government’s position is clear. We have given an undertaking to ensure that the Coal Board offers to license the deep mines to the private sector, and I am glad that there are a number of cases in which agreements have been reached or the negotiations are well advanced. I much admire all those Opposition Members who are playing a role in facilitating negotiations and encouraging the prospects that those pits might find an alternative life in the private sector.

    Several hon. Members rose—

    Mr. Heseltine

    I cannot give way to three people at once, but the lady must of course have preference.

    Ms Joan Walley (Stoke-on-Trent, North)

    Will the President tell us exactly why he is not prepared to set up a target for the amount of opencast mining, and why it is that in, north Staffordshire, Trentham and Silverdale have been closed, and we now expect even more opencast mining to go ahead? Why are not environmental issues at the heart of his energy policies?

    Mr. Heseltine

    The hon. Lady mentions a most important subject, and she must be aware that consultation is now under way on mineral planning guidance 3. It is a matter for my right hon. Friend the Secretary of State for the Environment, but it raises important issues of balancing the environmental and economic arguments that are—superficially at least—in conflict. I have great sympathy with the hon. Lady’s arguments.

    Mr. John Cummings (Easington)

    The right hon. Gentleman has confused me. I agree with him that successive Governments, Labour and Tory, have invested heavily in the mining industry during the past 30 years. Indeed, with the closure of Easington colliery, tens of millions of pounds of taxpayers’ money have been left in a flooded mine. Is it not obligatory for the President to underpin that £20 billion-worth of taxpayers’ investment by assisting in working a market for the benefit of a British industry, providing British coal?

    Mr. Heseltine

    The hon. Member has obviously missed the point: that, with the approval of the House, we offered to put more taxpayers’ money behind the production of deep-mined coal if people would come forward and find an additional market for that coal. In some cases, negotiations have been concluded or are proceeding. It would be wrong for me to give artificial assurances that I can sustain economic activities for which there is no market justification.

    Mr. Terry Lewis (Worsley)

    Will the President explain the logic of taxpayers’ money subsidising the acknowledgedly inefficient Spanish coal industry through the European Union?

    Mr. Heseltine

    I challenge that logic constantly. My department, as the custodian of much of the trading interest of this country, has the responsibility of constantly challenging the existence of subsidies. The aim is not for us to introduce them into our economy; it is for us to try to eliminate them from the rest of the European Union. That is the task in which we are engaged.

    Mr. Paddy Tipping (Sherwood) rose—

    Mr. Heseltine

    Will the hon. Gentleman forgive me? Madam Speaker, you introduced a ten-minute limit, and I suspect that I am beginning to intrude into rather more speeches than I would wish to do. I must ask hon. Members to allow me get on to the detail of the Bill.
    There is one last point that I wish to record about my judgments on the industry. I have not the slightest doubt that our coal industry would be in a much healthier position today if the adjustment which has taken place under every Government, and too late, had taken place in the post-war period of economic expansion, when the diversification of the economy could have proceeded faster and when the highly desirable employees of the coal industry could have found jobs in growth industries of that time.

    I will go further. I have little doubt that, if the coal industry had had to face the challenge of the marketplace much earlier, it would have achieved productivity gains which recently, and under pressure, it has begun to achieve, but it would have achieved those productivity gains in time to head off at least part of the dash for gas, and thus it would have secured for itself a larger share of the marketplace than is today realistic.

    Mr. Simon Hughes (Southwark and Bermondsey)

    If the President is arguing that a secure future for coal required privatisation some time ago, there have been 14 years of his government during which that could have happened. Is not the criticism the same—that a lack of strategic energy policy has been the consistent feature of every year of his Department and its predecessor since 1979? That is why coal is in difficulty; it has never known what place it would have and never been given any security as part of a diverse market supply, as the best resource that we have available.

    Mr. Heseltine

    That was an interesting intervention by the hon. Member from the Liberal party. I do not pretend to have been shadowing with great care Liberal policy statements for the earlier part of the past decade, but I do not remember, Madam Speaker—perhaps you do, and perhaps I owe the hon. Member an apology—the Liberals making a major demand in all those years that we should privatise the coal industry.

    Indeed, if the Liberals had ever come forward with any firm demand at all, especially one that might contain any element of controversy, it would have come as a surprise to me. The Liberals would demand privatisation of the coal industry only in sections of industry, or of the electorate, where there was no coal industry, for fear that otherwise they might offend someone. That is a classic example of the Liberal Democrat party waiting until all the policy options have been closed, and then asking, “Why don’t you do it some other way?”

    Mr. Dennis Skinner (Bolsover)

    Will the President of the Board of Trade give way?

    Mr. Heseltine

    I cannot resist.

    Mr. Skinner

    The right hon. Gentleman has not been following Liberal policy closely enough. I know that he has been ill and has been missing, and that for a long time he was not a Cabinet Minister. However, if he would check the facts, he would find that, in true Liberal Democratic fashion, that party was in favour of privatisation before the general election, but is now against it.

    Mr. Heseltine

    The hon. Gentleman reveals the sort of inconsistency on doctrine that we have come to expect from the modern Labour party. I congratulate him on having read the documents. It shows that he is preoccupied with “back to basics”, and has learnt to read effectively after all this time.

    Mr. Bill Etherington (Sunderland, North)

    I took great note of the right hon. Gentleman’s long diatribe against nationalisation. Is he prepared to tell the House how many private companies have made as many gains in productivity as the Coal Board has made over the past two years?

    Mr. Heseltine

    The hon. Gentleman will know that British Steel is now a world-class company, that British Gas is trading in more than 45 foreign countries, that British Airways is now one of the most successful airlines in the world, and that our electricity, our power and our telecommunications industries are straddling the world in the best interests of Britain.

    Why? It is because we privatised the companies that have made that possible. Let us remember that we did that in the teeth of the opposition of the Labour party. If it had had its way, we would still have huge bureaucracies of politicians and civil servants suffocating the entrepreneurial zeal that the Conservative party has let loose on the world market.

    Mr. Jack Thompson (Wansbeck)

    Will the Secretary of State give way?

    Mr. Heseltine

    For the last time.

    Mr. Thompson

    I have followed the right hon. Gentleman’s argument closely for the last few minutes, and he rightly claims that £20 billion has been put into the industry in the period concerned—£8 billion in capital investment. But does he recall that the Conservative party has been in power for the past 15 years, and that he and his predecessors were responsible for policy? Surely policies could have changed over those 15 years so as to accommodate the situation that has developed now.

    Mr. Heseltine

    If I had to plead guilty to the hon. Gentleman’s accusations, I would have to say that I wish that we had privatised the coal industry in the early 1980s. I must make that clear. However, the implication is that, in doing so, we would have gained the serried support of the Labour party, whereas actually it was encouraging the National Union of Mineworkers in any obdurate political action that it could devise to stop the modernisation of the industry. The coal industry has found itself at the end of the queue. More’s the pity, and, I suspect, more’s the price that the coal industry has paid as a result.

    The Bill contains the Government’s proposals for restructuring and privatising British Coal. It sets out the necessary provisions for safeguarding pension rights and concessionary fuel entitlements, and those affected by mining subsidence. It also reflects our determination to ensure that the high safety standards in the industry are maintained or improved in the light of the advice of the Health and Safety Commission.

    We believe that a competitive energy market is the best guarantee of secure, diverse and sustainable energy supplies in the forms that people and companies want, and at competitive prices. Electricity and gas privatisation have changed the nature of the energy market from a producer-led to a consumer-led market. We have made it a priority to establish a range of substantial privately owned energy companies free to take strategic decisions within a proper framework of regulation. The time has come for the coal industry to enjoy the same freedom.

    We examined the prospects for coal within the energy market very carefully during the coal review. On the basis of all the evidence that was presented to us, we had to conclude that there was every prospect that the market would continue to be difficult.

    Despite that, it remains the case that coal accounts for over half of all fuel used for electricity generation. On any calculation, coal will continue to be one of the chief sources of energy for the electricity supply industry in the years ahead. The House will remember that we accepted the key recommendation of the Select Committee and have introduced a subsidy for additional sales for electricity generation from deep mined coal. However, the real test is the rate at which the industry can improve its competitiveness.

    The industry, as Opposition Members have said, has made considerable strides in improving productivity over recent years. It is only by building on those gains that the industry will compete effectively in future. Privatisation will best ensure that prospect. Time and again, privatisation has demonstrated the ability of industries which had previously lagged behind their international competitors to catch up and, increasingly to set the pace. That is true whether one looks at the docks, at steel, or at a whole range of public utilities. There is every reason to expect that the coal industry will do the same.

    Mr. William O’Brien (Normanton)

    Will the President give way?

    Mr. Heseltine

    If the hon. Gentleman will forgive me, I think that I have given way enough.

    Our intention is to offer British Coal’s assets for sale in five regional businesses. Those will be based on Scotland, Wales, the north-east, and two parts of the central coalfield. Potential purchasers will be able to bid for one or more packages, and all bids will be considered on their merits. Our proposals will attract new outside management, and they will give the industry’s existing managers and employees the chance to make proposals to take over their own industry.

    The Government have made it clear that we are prepared to offer financial support to help potential management and employee buy-out teams to carry their proposals forward.

    Mr. William O’Brien

    Will the President of the Board of Trade give way?

    Mr. Heseltine

    No.

    On receiving Royal Assent, the Bill will end immediately the existing statutory restrictions that limit the scale of operations of private sector mines that can be licensed by British Coal. It will provide for a new Coal Authority to carry out those functions of British Coal which would not be appropriate for the private sector.

    The new Coal Authority will be based in Nottinghamshire. Its main functions will be licensing of coal mining, owning and granting access to our coal reserves, carrying out British Coal’s responsibilities for the physical legacy of past mining to the extent that they are not taken over by the private sector, and making available mining records and geological information.

    The Coal Authority must be fully impartial in carrying out its licensing duties, so it will not, therefore, be allowed itself to participate in commercial mining. British Coal will become a licensee of the Coal Authority prior to privatisation. The Bill contains scheme-making powers, similar to those in previous privatisations, for the transfer of property, rights and liabilities of British Coal to other parties as necessary for the privatisation of the business. The Bill provides for the dissolution of British Coal in due course.

    I turn now to the critical issue of safety. The coal industry in the United Kingdom has one of the best safety records in the world. I made it clear as soon as I arrived at the DTI that I would do nothing to prejudice that record. I repeat that pledge today. In 1992, we sought—

    Mr. Ronnie Campbell

    Will the President give way?

    Mr. Heseltine

    The hon. Member has had a go.

    In 1992, we sought the advice of the Health and Safety Commission on the safety implications of privatisation. The commission’s full and considered advice was received in October. The Government published that advice, and accepted it in full.

    The essence of the commission’s advice is that it should continue to be the health and safety regulatory body for the coal industry, that the Health and Safety Executive should be the enforcement authority, and that the framework of legislation must be sufficiently robust to command the continued confidence of the industry and to ensure that health and safety standards are maintained or improved.

    Mr. Ronnie Campbell

    On that point—

    Mr. Heseltine

    The commission’s advice is that there is already a comprehensive framework of law governing the mining industry, with a rigorous inspection and enforcement regime. The commission believes that the work that it has been doing since 1983 to modernise that framework will make an important contribution to ensuring that it is adequate to the demands of a privatised industry.

    The commission has also taken steps to ensure that the best practice in British Coal’s existing owners’ instructions continues to be applied throughout the industry. The work to achieve that is now largely completed. Draft regulations were laid by my right hon. Friend the Secretary of State for Employment on 1 October last year to give legal status to a number of the most important requirements of British Coal’s safety instructions.

    The commission has also recommended that there should continue to be a national rescue service. The commission will consult widely about the way forward. The Bill reflects the advice that we have received from the commission.

    Another issue of fundamental concern to employees and former employees of British Coal is pension provision. I am determined that the pension entitlements of those who have given their working lives to the industry, and their dependants, should be fully respected and safeguarded in the process of privatisation. A consultation paper on proposals for British Coal pensions after privatisation was published in September last year. Comments were received from the trustees of the British Coal schemes, from the corporation, from industry unions and from more than 1,000 individuals.

    After careful consideration of all the responses to the consultation paper, on 2 December we announced our decisions. All pensioners and deferred pensioners of the mineworkers’ pension scheme and the staff superannuation scheme and all currently contributing members will be able to leave their past service entitlements in the schemes, which, on privatisation, will be closed to new members. New industry-wide pension schemes will be created for employees of British Coal and its subsidiaries who are transferred to employment in successor companies.

    The Bill provides for the closed schemes to be given a Government solvency guarantee that will ensure that pensions and deferred pensions are increased annually after privatisation, in line with the retail price index by reference to their level at privatisation. In addition, beneficiaries will be able to benefit from any fund surpluses through pension payment increases over and above RPI levels. The new industry-wide schemes will provide the same package of benefits as the corresponding main scheme. Employees transferred to the new schemes will be given protected person status under the Bill.

    The Government believe that those proposals meet in full our commitment to protect pensions under the two existing schemes. The proposals will provide security for pension entitlements earned from service with British Coal and will provide protection for pension entitlements from future service with successor companies. The Bill provides the necessary statutory underpinning for all the- safeguards proposed.

    Next, I refer to concessionary fuel entitlements. I am again determined that they should be properly safeguarded. A consultation paper on this subject was published in October. My hon. Friend the Minister for Energy yesterday announced our conclusions. Responsibility for meeting the entitlements of former employees and their dependants will be transferred to the Government. Successor companies will be responsible for the entitlements of British Coal employees who transfer to them.

    I believe that our policies for the treatment of pensions and concessionary fuel fully meet the Government’s commitment to safeguard entitlements, and are fair to beneficiaries and to taxpayers. They will provide welcome and essential reassurance to many mining families that their hard-earned entitlements will not be jeopardised.

    Mr. Eric Illsley (Barnsley, Central)

    Will the right hon. Gentleman give way?

    Mr. George Foulkes (Carrick, Cumnock and Doon Valley)

    Will the right hon. Gentleman give way?

    Mr. Heseltine

    No. I have given many times.

    The Bill addresses the issues of subsidence. There must be proper protection for the rights of householders and others who may be affected by coal-mining subsidence. A large part of the Bill is devoted to establishing a strong regulatory regime for that purpose.

    The Coal Authority will take over all British Coal’s existing responsibilities for subsidence, except in clearly defined areas where licensees will be responsible. Householders will therefore be in no doubt against whom to claim. It is an enabling power. We have yet to take final decisions as to the extent of the areas for which licensees will be responsible. Obviously, that will need careful consideration, bearing in mind the interests of the industry, the taxpayer, and, of course, the claimants.

    The Coal Authority is given a strong duty to ensure that licensees make proper financial provisions for meeting claims, and the power to require that security, possibly in the form of a trust, is provided.

    Mr. Foulkes

    Can the President give an assurance that the beneficiaries of concessionary coal will continue to receive coal if that is what they wish, and will not be forced to take cash in lieu?

    Mr. Heseltine

    The answer is yes. But as happens now, there will be arrangements for a financial exchange of those rights if it is agreed with the individuals concerned. The hon. Gentleman’s point is well made.

    After nearly 50 years in the public sector, the coal industry has acquired exactly the same myths as those that used to haunt other nationalised industries. It is commonly suggested that they can never match the efficiency of their competitors; that their future lies only in an endless continuation of taxpayers’ subsidies of one sort or another; that somehow or other they cannot attract significantly worthy management for the task in their control; and that, in the end, only politicians are fit to take the strategic decisions affecting their future. Time and time again, all those myths have been exposed and exploded. In case after case, they are myths.

    This Bill will give the coal industry the opportunity to demonstrate that it can compete, it can stand on its own feet, it can attract managers who are the best in the world, and it is fit and able to take control of its destiny. I do not have the slightest doubt that the industry will make good use of that opportunity.

    I look forward to the day when private sector coal companies will join other privatised companies as free-standing, competitive enterprises, carrying a new entrepreneurial spirit into the marketplaces of the world. To enable that to happen, we will privatise the coal industry. We will set the industry free to meet the challenges of the marketplace, to innovate, to compete and to win its rightful share in the diversified energy market in the years ahead. That is the Government’s policy, and I commend the Bill to the House.

  • Michael Heseltine – 1993 Speech on Trade, Industry and Deregulation

    Michael Heseltine – 1993 Speech on Trade, Industry and Deregulation

    The speech made by Michael Heseltine, the then Secretary of State for Trade, in the House of Commons on 24 November 1993.

    When I returned to the House not many weeks ago—I thank the hon. Member for Livingston (Mr. Cook) for his kind remarks—someone asked me, “How’s life?” I replied, “A great deal better than the alternative.” As I listened to the hon. Member for Livingston today, I wondered whether I had been a little rash in my judgment.

    The Gracious Speech made clear the importance that the Government attach to a successful outcome to the present general agreement on tariffs and trade round. It was fascinating that not a word was said about that, although it is perhaps the single biggest opportunity facing the entire world, to improve living standards and trading opportunities—not a word about that from the hon. Member for Livingston. However, Conservative Members will welcome the boost which the passage of the north American free trade agreement has already given to the Uruguay round. There must be no doubt that no country will work harder than we will for a successful conclusion to that round.

    The calculations show the excitement of the possibilities. The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development claims that a successful outcome could raise annual world income by about $270 billion during a decade. That estimate could well prove to be on the cautious side, once the effects of trade in services and the dynamic benefits of trade liberalisation are taken into account.

    We all realise that the timetable is perilously tight and, frankly, all the Governments of the world must face the understandable criticism that it has taken seven years of negotiation, yet we now face trying to conclude the deals on so many issues with just three weeks to go.

    It is also important to remember that a successful outcome to the GAIT round would not only be welcomed on trade grounds, important though they are; the less-developed and poorer countries in particular stand to gain far more in extra trade and investment than they could ever expect in extra aid from the more prosperous countries.

    Within a more open trading environment, our policy is to enable and assist British-based companies to gain the largest possible share of world trade.

    On any detached analysis, there are growing signs today of success. We heard virtually not a word from the Opposition about the direction in which the economy is moving or about the news, which is more encouraging by the day. Inflation is at its lowest level for 30 years. Headline inflation has been below 2 per cent. for 10 months—the best performance since the 1960s. With the base rate now cut to 5.5 per cent., since October 1990 interest rate reductions have added about £12 billion a year of benefit to business. Investment is rising; manufacturing investment in the third quarter of this year was up by 2 per cent. on a year earlier, a point which also seems to have passed the hon. Member for Livingston by—it certainly passed his colleagues by when they drafted the amendment on the Order Paper.

    Our GDP has been rising for 18 months. It was 1.9 per cent. higher in the third quarter of this year than a year earlier. Perhaps most excitingly of all, exports are at record levels. The volume of manufactured exports going outside the EC was up by 16 per cent. on a year earlier. Characteristically, the hon. Member for Livingston sought to diminish the world trade that this country has achieved by claiming that our share of it had risen under the Labour Government. The only way he can do that is by talking about cash and ignoring exchange rate calculations. In fact, persistently and under all Governments, since the war we have lost our volume share of world trade. Our share has now stabilised, however. The task is to ensure that we build up our export success, to make sure that it increases in the right direction.

    It is particularly encouraging to realise that this is now beginning to happen, given the depth of the recession affecting our principal markets in the European Community. Within the single market, it is this country’s economy that is leading the recovery. There are clear background signs now that we can look forward to persistent growth. Our prime task, which my right hon. Friend the Prime Minister has spelt out with great clarity, is to enhance the competitiveness of our economy.

    Opening the debate on the Gracious Speech, my right hon. Friend the Prime Minister covered many of the essential ingredients of this enhanced competitiveness when he set out our central strategies for education, training, research and development, infrastructure and macro-economic management—to which my right hon. and learned Friend the Chancellor will return tomorrow.

    In the Gracious Speech, my Department, as the hon. Member for Livingston rightly said, has three Bills: the deregulation Bill, the trade marks Bill and the Bill to privatise the coal industry, and the House would expect me to comment on each of them. I wish to make it clear that the deregulation Bill will not be about destroying the environment, imperilling safety or exposing the unsuspecting to fraud and cheating. We believe it is vital to keep red tape to a minimum. I expected that phrase to provoke a response from the Labour party—I thought that its members might have welcomed it. Why? Because those were the words of the Leader of the Opposition to a small firms conference that he held the other day.

    It is all very well for the right hon. and learned Gentleman to come out with these wonderfully ringing words—with which I agree—when he is away from the House and away from the parliamentary Labour party—and when he is not being listened to by his supporters. But when he comes here, he dismisses deregulation, as he did in his remarks on the Queen’s Speech, as almost irrelevant to our national recovery.

    The truth is that the only thing that is marginal, in the context of a party that has lost four elections in a row, is the policy of that party on deregulation. We want to make sure when we regulate that we protect the vulnerable, protect the public, protect our heritage and protect the countryside, but in such a way as to deal best with the real risks and to put the fewest obstacles in the way of wealth creation. We must keep paperwork to a minimum and keep the intrusive nature of bureaucracy under the tightest possible control.

    There are three thrusts to the policy that we intend to introduce. The first is the new regulations; we will ensure that regulators count the cost of their proposals before they publish them. Secondly, there is no point in taming domestic regulators in Whitehall if European directives keep piling on the burden. Last year, we persuaded our European colleagues to put the cost of business into account and to publish it when new European measures are proposed.

    Thirdly, there is the subject matter of the Bill. We are reviewing existing regulations. Under the guidance of Lord Sainsbury, eight task forces from business and the voluntary sector have been examining regulations on the statute book to see whether they can be scrapped, modified or improved.

    Even then, primary legislation can stand in the way of reform. That is why we are introducing a deregulation Bill to cut the red tape and open up the opportunities for business. The Bill will include specific deregulation measures, as well as a means to deregulate in the future. [HON. MEMBERS: “Ah.”] The hon. Member for Livingston was deeply immersed in creating fear, at which he is a past master. A parliamentary process will be involved in our proposals.

    In the same Bill, we will be removing statutory obstacles to market-testing and contracting-out programmes of both Government and local authorities because we want to see better value for money for the taxpayer in all our policies.

    Mr. Bill Etherington (Sunderland, North)

    I am pleased to welcome back the President of the Board of Trade after his illness. He seems to fail completely to comprehend that some Labour Members do not correlate cutting red tape and minimising death and injury in the industry. Why does he fail to comprehend that?

    Mr. Heseltine

    I do so for precisely the same reason that the Leader of the Opposition made it absolutely clear that he wanted to cut red tape to a minimum as well. The hon. Member for Sunderland, North (Mr. Etherington) and other Labour Members cannot understand that in a competitive world we have no choice but to make absolutely sure that every avoidable cost is avoided in our legislative programme.

    It must be recognised that deregulation is not simply about the letter of the law. The law gives rise to a plethora of guidance notes, circulars, inspectors and forms—all the familiar trappings of bureaucracy. Our review covers the impedimenta of legislation, as well as the legislation itself.

    Mr. Anthony Steen (South Hams)

    Conservative Members are finding this speech extremely invigorating, and I hope that we will hear a little more of this wonderful stuff. I wonder whether my right hon. Friend will bear in mind that it is not simply about deregulation—it is about the over-zealous interpretation by officials not only in Whitehall but at local level. It is an attitude problem which we must address from the top.

    Mr. Heseltine

    My hon. Friend is absolutely right, and that is why I referred to the impedimenta of legislation and all the practices that flow from it. We are well aware that many of the changes that we hope to see will not require legislation; they will require changing practices in a new changed culture. The House will have an opportunity to examine our detailed proposals when we introduce the Bill.

    The speech of the hon. Member for Livingston was anticipated, but he is not the only one. Labour Members are already in full cry and, if I may say so, in characteristic vein. This is not the first time that the hon. Gentleman has had an opportunity to indulge in what might be called slightly exaggerated versions of the truth. Indeed, he has a technique. He is a sort of chill factor in the body politic. We are well aware of how he does it because the record is there. He was shadow spokesman for the health service.

    Mr. Robin Cook

    I was very good.

    Mr. Heseltine

    Let me remind the hon. Gentleman, if he needs any reminding, of what he said before the election about Conservatives seeking a health service where organisations were put on the second floor of buildings to discourage people who were disabled and therefore expensive to treat from enrolling, or where casualty patients died because no one could pay for them. The hon. Gentleman knew that that was not true; it was a great distortion of anything that we had in mind, but if he could find people to frighten, frighten them he would, regardless of the facts.

    The Leader of the Opposition had an even more brazen charge. He said that it is all the Government’s fault—we heard that again from the hon. Member for Livingston — because we are simply reviewing our own regulations. Nothing so reveals the fossilised inherent approach of the socialist in practice as that allegation.

    A communications revolution can sweep the world. The globalisation of markets can overwhelm national boundaries. The Asian-Pacific rim can transform the competitive threat. Industry and commerce must change. The one thing that must never change is the good old British regulation. Like the pint and the good old British banger—once a regulation, always a regulation. What a battle cry for the modernised Labour party.

    But who can be surprised? The Labour party is the regulator’s natural ally. About the only things left of the trade union movement are the white collar affiliates of the Trades Union Congress who dream up the regulations, inspect the regulated, regulate the regulators and drown the rest of us under the weight of the burden. That is typical of those socialists in their approach, with their ideas frozen in time and practices set solid in concrete. That is the image that one would think they wanted to portray—no change; and when it is done, leave it there.

    Hon. Members will want to consider carefully whether that argument is applied as consistently by Labour Members as they would have us believe. They may not be prepared to change one dot or comma of the most outdated regulation. Not a hair on the head of the most lowly inspector must be subjected to the wind of change, but when it comes to their fundamental socialist beliefs, which have cost them four consecutive elections, they want us to believe that the whole lot have been flung out the window. They fought against Europe for 30 years. Now they take every nugget of Euro-speak before the red ink is dry on the paper. Nationalisation was once the essence of their industrial strategy. Now it has become the word that dare not speak its name.

    I shall give one example of what can be achieved when the yoke on nationalisation is removed. In 1983, we privatised the ports. In 1989, we abolished the dock labour scheme. The hon. Member for Kingston upon Hull, East (Mr. Prescott) doubtless reacted with a characteristically moderate and balanced judgment. The modesty of his language was exceeded only by the energy with which he rushed around the docks spreading the news of impending disaster.

    I took the liberty of doing a little research. In 1980, less than 4,000 tonnes of cargo went through Hull. In 1992, it was nearly 9,000 tonnes. The figure had more than doubled. The only other difference that I have detected over the years of Hull’s growing success is the absence of the hon. Gentleman, who, I am told, has not visited the thriving new dock company since its inception. Like the scarlet pimpernel, they seek him here, they seek him there. But the first sign of real success in his constituency brings forth in the hon. Gentleman a unique contribution to the political debate—absolute silence.

    Mr. Dennis Skinner (Bolsover) rose—

    Mr. Heseltine

    There is someone who has never known what absolute silence is.

    I can only say that when the hon. Member for Kingston upon Hull, East describes my deregulation proposals as a return to the killing fields, nothing persuades me more that I have got them more or less right.

    Mr. Skinner

    Give way.

    Mr. Heseltine

    Yes, why not?

    Mr. Skinner

    I have a little tablet here that the President can put under his tongue. Is he aware that when he talks about imports into Hull, he is talking about the massive increase in coal imports which have enabled him 475and his fellow Ministers to encourage pit closures? As a result, the 31 pits that he said he would save now look as if they will be closed. He should be ashamed of himself for putting all those workers on the dole.

    Mr. Heseltine

    The hon. Gentleman gives the game away. In the real world, employment in the docks is the preoccupation. He cannot understand that there has been a container revolution and that the efficiency of the ports today makes them competitive. What he would really like to see are the days of old when thousands of men carried the loads in sacks on their backs. Then he could have a national union of sack carriers. Doubtless we would have Members of Parliament sponsored by the national union of sack carriers, paying their funds into the Labour party and shackling the competitive instinct of this country, at which the hon. Gentleman is one of the greatest experts.

    I should be the last person to wish to do the Labour party any sort of injustice. I have said that it would regulate everything. I am prepared to believe that every rule has an exception. I have missed out one area where no doubt the deregulating zeal of the Labour party would be at the forefront of its political agenda: the trade unions would be deregulated. Here we would find a veritable bonfire of controls: strikes, go-slows, no-gos, Labour in power, socialism in practice—all back to an agenda that we drove from the country 14 years ago. The painful sacrifices accumulated over 20 years that have given the country the best industrial relations for a century would be thrown away in a single Act of Parliament.

    On this issue at least let me accuse the hon. Member for Kingston upon Hull, East of no silence. He has made it absolutely clear that Labour would repeal all our trade union legislation. There is nothing to keep. It all has to go. The House will want to contrast that with the charge made by the hon. Member for Livingston that, because we talk to leaders in the construction industry, with a view modestly to changing the regulations to lighten the load on our system, we are indulging in corruption. Yet the Labour party is prepared to sweep from the statute book all our trade union legislation to satisfy its paymasters. What are we supposed to call that? So we shall press on with our deregulation programme as part of our determination to help British industry compete.

    Mr. Malcolm Bruce (Gordon)

    The President of the Board of Trade is making an entertaining speech. Will he tell the House specifically how the regulations will be introduced? Will the House be presented with a detailed Bill that includes the specific regulations, which can be debated, amended and voted on; or will we be presented with an enabling Bill in which each individual regulation will be determined by statutory instrument? If the latter is the case, that is not the way to deal with deregulation.

    Mr. Heseltine

    The good old Liberals are at it again. They want it all ways. Whatever we do, it will be wrong. The hon. Gentleman must contain himself. We will have a Second Reading of the Bill, when he can examine it in great detail. Doubtless he will table some amendments, the scrutiny of which we shall be forced to subject ourselves to. Nevertheless, in the proper, democratic exercise of our duty, the Liberals must have their turn, however small it may turn out to be.

    Mr. Richard Caborn (Sheffield, Central)

    It is good to see the President of the Board of Trade back on form. His speech is entertaining, if in no way factual. I remind him that a great deal of research was done by the Select Committee on Trade and Industry for its report on Europe. Does he recall that the report pointed out clearly to Ministers that the burden of many European Community regulations had been increased by his own civil servants? That was a strong criticism.

    My hon. Friend the Member for Livingston (Mr. Cook) has referred to the increase in regulation. That has arisen directly from the inability of Ministers, particularly those in the Department of Trade and Industry, to control their civil servants, who are adding extensively to EC regulations. Ministers rode on the back of EC regulations that would not have passed through the House had the turnkey of the European Community not been used.

    Mr. Deputy Speaker (Mr. Geoffrey Lofthouse)

    Order. I remind the hon. Gentleman and other hon. Members present that interventions are supposed to be brief. They are not supposed to be mini-speeches.

    Mr. Heseltine

    The hon. Gentleman makes an important point and I thank him for his generous words to me personally. If he wants to help me to a full recovery, he will avoid inviting me to appear before his Select Committee again.

    I now want to say something about the privatisation of the coal industry. The hon. Member for Livingston treated us to a general denunciation of the issues of privatisation, so it may be helpful if first we spend a moment or two looking at the record of privatisation over this decade. We have absolutely no doubt that privatisation drives up standards of efficiency and management, ensures that investment decisions are taken by customers, not Government, leads to increased efficiency and lower costs and encourages innovation, all of which help the privatised companies to get out and become world class players on the international stage.

    Just one sobering statistic—a single sentence—will show why we believe that we have brought about a fundamental and important shift. In 1979, taxpayers paid £50 million a week to subsidise the losses of the nationalised industries. The privatized industries are now paying £60 million a week in taxes to the Exchequer on the profits that they are making. There is no clearer vindication than that of the privatisation policies of the past decade.

    British Steel is now one of the most efficient in the whole world. PowerGen, National Power and the National Grid are international companies. We have a major extension and modernisation of our water and sewerage infrastructure, with a £30 billion investment programme. British Telecom’s prices are down by more than 27 per cent. in real terms since 1984. Domestic and small business prices for gas have fallen by 20 per cent. in real terms since privatisation. British Gas now operates in more than 45 overseas markets.

    The hon. Member for Livingston describes that as the grotesque irrelevance of privatisation. There has been a dramatic transformation of the commanding heights of our economy precisely because they have been privatised. This is the remarkable transformation of great parts of the previously nationalised industries. It is against that background that we believe that the best future for coal is in the private sector. I have no need to repeat the concern shared by everyone in the House for the difficulties experienced by those in the industry.

    Mr. Terry Lewis (Worsley)

    Bloody hypocrisy.

    Mr. Heseltine

    The hon. Gentleman talks of hypocrisy. The Opposition have presided over the run-down of the coal industry every time they have been in office. The figures are startling. In 1948, when the industry was brought into public ownership, there were 958 collieries and 700,000 workers; by 1970, it was down to 300 collieries and 375,000 workers. Everybody knows that the market for coal has been declining persistently for the past half century.

    Another matter has been proved beyond peradventure. Energy markets are too volatile for any kind of central planning system to make sensible decisions for the future. A salient feature of Government forecasts on energy is that they have always turned out to be wrong. It was forecast that oil and gas would become rare and expensive towards the new millennium. In practice, new discoveries are taking place all the time. Production is at a high level and reserves are mounting. As a result, prices are low and look set to remain that way.

    We plan to bring before the House as soon as possible this Session a Bill to privatise British Coal. That would free the industry from the dead hand of state control and allow it to compete within the wider energy market. The Opposition do not see it that way. They have not seen it that way whenever we have privatised an industry and they have always been wrong.

    The hon. Member for Livingston is up to his old tricks and trying to suggest that privatisation will threaten the safety of miners. It is despicable how the hon. Gentleman always finds the most vulnerable sectors of society and cynically exploits their legitimate fears for narrow party purposes. When I became President of the Board of Trade, at my first meeting on the subject, I said that I would do nothing to prejudice safety in the mines. I have never been asked to do anything that would do that and, if I were asked, I would not do it. We have fully accepted the advice of the Health and Safety Commission which was contained in its recent report, which has been placed in the Library.

    I look forward to the day when British coal companies are free to seek—and invest in—world opportunities and to export their skills and experience in the huge international market. Furthermore, looking back over the decades, I have no doubt that, had we privatised the industry earlier, British Coal would have saved more jobs and we would have had a larger and more viable industry than the market can now sustain.

    Mr. Robin Cook

    The President must have missed out a page of his speech. Before he leaves the issue of privatisation of the coal industry, will he answer the question put to him? If privatisation is to work such a wonderful transformation of the coal industry, how many pits will survive to be privatised?

    Mr. Heseltine

    It is an illusion of the Opposition. When they were in power, the pits closed month after month. They never knew, and no Minister will make such forecasts in a market condition where the customer will determine the market.

    My third Bill covers trademarks, which play a critical part for business. The forthcoming trademarks Bill will deregulate procedures. It will open the door to the use of international trade mark registration systems under the Madrid protocol, thereby allowing businesses to protect trade marks overseas in all contracting states by a single application. That will achieve substantial savings for other businesses.

    The Gracious Speech debate and the Opposition’s amendment go wider than the specific legislation that I propose to introduce. I should like to update the House on the position of Leyland Daf because nothing so illustrates the difference in policy as the differing approaches of the Government and the hon. Member for Livingston on that issue.

    The House will remember that the company went into receivership in February this year. The hon. Member for Livingston was on his feet demanding instant intervention. “Bail the company out” was the instant policy. I refused, not least because, having put £3.5 billion into Leyland, we did not seem to have succeeded in doing the trick by bailing the company out with taxpayers’ money. Instead, we backed the entrepreneurial skills of the management, receivers, banks and financial houses to let them find a commercial market solution. The van and truck businesses were able to set themselves up as two independently run companies. Half the jobs were saved, as was the supply and distribution chain. The cost to the British taxpayer was £5 million in regional assistance.

    While my Department was encouraging and helping all that intricate, detailed work to save half the jobs at minimum cost to the taxpayer, the hon. Member for Livingston was not idle. He was leaping about, flying to the continent, and climbing on any old soap box urging me to do what the Belgian and Dutch Governments were doing. It all made good headlines at the time, and nudged the hon. Member up the shadow Cabinet pecking order a bit. But, as always, when the facts come out, they do not fit the scare stories in which the hon. Gentleman trades.

    The Dutch and Belgian work forces were reduced! by virtually the same proportions as ours, but the poor old European taxpayers were £100 million worse off as a result of their Governments’ hasty involvement. That is what the hon. Gentleman really believes in—spend money first and then try to find solutions. That is what the last Labour Government tried, but it costs money and it does not work.

    The news for us is even better. Both Leyland DAF Vans and Leyland Trucks have recovered well. The vans business is maintaining its production volume and has recently announced an £8 million development programme. Leyland Trucks has been able to increase civilian volumes by 30 per cent. and win export markets, and is discussing joint development of a new medium weight truck.

    However, to the hon. Member for Livingston, all that was grist to the mill. Some of my hon. Friends, who do not need to concern themselves with the details of those matters, may have missed a little press release that he put out at the time. It was in characteristic language and was headed: Labour reveals the threatened ‘dossier of disaster’ if Leyland Daf closes”. The hon. Gentleman had identified 6,000 firms that would be pushed into closure by the loss of business. He produced a “dossier of disaster”. Are my right hon. and hon. Friends in the Government in whose constituencies a Leyland van had ever been seen were listed for that hideous impending disaster—6,000 fingers stretched out in blame, reaching to tear the throat from the hapless President of the Board of Trade.

    My poor old right hon. Friend the Foreign Secretary was up to his eyes in it simply because the Rover car company in his constituency had supplied parts to Leyland Daf. Rover would be hit, we were warned. What happened? Rover is selling cars like there was no tomorrow, recruiting extra employees and setting world quality standards.

    It was not just the big fish. Even the junior Ministers were not to be spared the ruthless scourge of the hon. Gentleman’s searing foresight. He said that my hon. Friend the Member for Solihull (Mr. Taylor), the Parliamentary Secretary, Lord Chancellor’s Department, was about to see Land Rover knocked off its perch. What happened? Land Rover has taken on 300 extra staff, and sales of the Discovery have doubled in Japan and Australia.

    What has happened to those 6,000 fingers? They are stuck in the dykes of Labour’s crumbling allegations, as every day the recovery reveals the bankruptcy of its statements. If the hon. Member for Livingston is searching around for another press release, why does he not put out one containing good news stories from the constituencies of his colleagues in the shadow Cabinet? I do not want to impose any unnecessary burden or strain on him. Let us have just a press release of good news stories from his constituency—£20 million investment in NEC semiconductors by 1994; 300 new jobs at VRG International in the next four years; 200 new jobs at Mitsubishi in the next two years; 300 new jobs at Marshall Food Group in the next three years; 400 new jobs at David Hall in the next four years; 400 new jobs at IMTEC. I could continue with the list in his constituency alone.

    So why are there no press releases about all that? Where are all those menacing fingers? They are itching to get to work in the hon. Gentleman’s constituency, with the new technologies, new factories and new British opportunities. What else? [Interruption.] The hon. Member for Livingston said that it was a gross misrepresentation.

    Mr. Robin Cook

    The President of the Board of Trade must not run away with a mishearing. What I said was that it was an excellent representation of Livingston.

    Mr. Heseltine

    That is interesting. It brings me conveniently to the next argument. Why are all those companies in the hon. Gentleman’s constituency? What is it that brings them there? They are all seeking a base in Europe and they are choosing Britain because we are competitive and attractive and they are welcome here. Under this Government, Britain will stay that way, but not under a Labour Government.

    I am sorry that the Leader of the Opposition is not here; he is probably looking after some of his new friends in the boardrooms of England. He is famed for his flirtation and carrying-on with the leaders of our great companies—last week, he was at the Confederation of British Industry conference and, week by week, he is among the thick pile and hushed atmosphere of the City dining rooms. I must make it clear to the leaders of our great companies that it is not their smoked salmon that he is after. He has a different agenda. He has a manifesto of Euro-socialism. Of course, he says that it does not mean all that it says, but it has got his name on it, he is a lawyer and it is printed in English.

    The manifesto may not mean much to the Leader of the Opposition or his hon. Friends, but if one asks the directors in the boardrooms of the international companies deciding whether to invest in our country or not, they have no doubt about what it all means. What is the agenda that we have from the Euro-socialists? The manifesto supports a substantial cut in working time including the prospect of a 35-hour or four-day week. to breathe life into the European social Chapter. It supports European works councils, consultations of workings in multi-national businesses and European sectoral collective agreements … a guaranteed minimum wage and Community measures … to avoid a tax-cutting competition between member states”. We shall not even be allowed to cut the taxes to bring the investment to create the jobs in the constituency of the hon. Member for Livingston.

    There is one other little nugget tucked away in the manifesto for Euro-socialism. It supports a European policy on waste”. Let us start by ripping up the manifesto itself. To what does it actually add up? Every competitive advantage that this country possesses will be thrown away. To pursue the international brotherhood of man is one thing, but to sell the dear old country down the river to get it is another.

    The Leader of the Opposition made much play—[Interruption.] There were a great many more people at the Tory party conference than there are Labour Members present today. The Leader of the Opposition made much play of the need for evidence. He asked, “What is it about the Tories? They make all the decisions and announcements—the only thing that is ever missing is evidence.” He accused us of designing policies, against the facts, without regard for evidence, and as a mere reaction to events. I reject that charge absolutely. We are determined to steer the country to a new competitiveness and a sustained recovery.

    If the right hon. and learned Member for Monklands, East (Mr. Smith) wants evidence, I shall give it to him. We have the highest proportion of our population at work among the major Community countries. Unemployment has fallen by 137,000 this year. Inflation is persistently lower than at any time since 1960. Exports are at record levels. Interest rates are among the Community’s lowest. Industrial relations are excellent. That is the evidence upon which a sustained recovery can be based and on which I invite my right hon. and hon. Friends to vote for the motion.

  • Ministry of Defence – 2022 Statement on Ben Wallace’s Visit to Ukraine

    Ministry of Defence – 2022 Statement on Ben Wallace’s Visit to Ukraine

    The statement issued by the Ministry of Defence on 10 June 2022.

    The working visit took place this week to allow the Defence Secretary to hear first-hand how the operational needs of Ukraine’s Armed Forces are developing as the nature of the conflict continues to change. This will ensure that the UK’s continued support is evolving to meet those requirements and is tailored to the situation on the ground.

    The Defence Secretary visited Minister Reznikov on the first of the two day visit, before speaking with President Zelenskyy about how the UK support will continue to meet Ukraine’s needs as the conflict enters a different phase.

    The three agreed to work even more closely going forward in support of their shared goal of enabling Ukraine to liberate itself from illegal Russian occupation. They also discussed the range of equipment and training the UK is currently providing and what further support we can offer to help Ukrainian forces to defend their country.

    The meetings focused on the UK continuing to provide operationally effective lethal aid that meets the current and future threats facing Ukraine and follows up on a number of other in person meetings. In March, Minister Reznikov visited the Ministry of Defence and in April a Ukrainian military and political delegation visited Salisbury Plain training area to discuss UK provision of lethal aid. These face to face meetings allow for in-depth discussions on what support is required to meet the requirements of the Ukrainian Armed Forces.

    Britain was the first European country to send lethal aid to Ukraine and has since sent military aid worth more than £750 million, including thousands of anti-tank missiles, air defence systems and armoured vehicles. The UK has also played a key convening role in the international effort to supply weapons to Ukraine, most notably hosting the first two international donor conferences. The Defence Secretary will ensure the insights and future requirements established from this visit will be used to support the wider international response.

    Following the new phase of the conflict in the Donbas, the UK recently announced it would gift M270 multiple-launch rocket systems (MLRS) to Ukrainian forces defend themselves from Russian long-range artillery, which has been used indiscriminately to devastate population centres.

  • Michael Gove – 2022 Letter to Imam Qari Asim after “Religious Hatred” on Lady of Heaven Protests

    Michael Gove – 2022 Letter to Imam Qari Asim after “Religious Hatred” on Lady of Heaven Protests

    The letter sent by the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities, on behalf of the Secretary of State Michael Gove, on 11 June 2022.

    Dear Imam Qari Asim,

    On 23 July 2019, the Secretary of State at the time appointed you as an Independent Adviser. You are also Deputy Chair of the Government’s Anti-Muslim Hatred Working Group.

    We write now because we have no option but to withdraw the appointment and end your roles with Government with immediate effect. Your recent support for a campaign to limit free expression – a campaign which has itself encouraged communal tensions – means it is no longer appropriate for you to continue your work with Government in roles designed to promote community harmony.

    You have encouraged an ongoing campaign to prevent cinemas screening the film “Lady of Heaven”, a clear effort to restrict artistic expression, and the campaign you have supported has led to street protests which have fomented religious hatred. You wrote on Facebook on 6 June that “We have been working with many brothers and Imams across the country to liaise with the cinemas….Some Imams have taken a view to protest and others are in dialogue with the cinemas trying to resolve the situation”. Resolving the situation, as you made clear, meant cancelling screenings. You wrote that “in some places we have been successful and those cinemas will no longer be showing the movie”.

    Your support for further action was made clear. You advertised “a protest [that] has been organised in Leeds” and provided details of its timing and location. This clear involvement in a campaign to limit free expression is incompatible with the role of a government adviser.

    You will have no doubt seen reports of the scenes outside different cinema venues. These included deeply disturbing videos of sectarian chanting and anti-Shia hatred. As you know, anti-Shia hatred is a long-standing and very serious issue, which must be challenged at every opportunity as part of a wider effort to combat anti-Muslim hatred. We were disappointed to see that you failed to condemn some of the protests complicit in these behaviours.

    Your actions are incompatible with the role of a government adviser on anti-Muslim hatred. This country is proud of its democratic values and freedoms, which include tolerance, freedom of expression, and community.

    From,

    Department of Levelling Up, Housing & Communities