Tag: Speeches

  • Nadhim Zahawi – 2022 Statement on Education and Living With Covid-19

    Nadhim Zahawi – 2022 Statement on Education and Living With Covid-19

    The statement made by Nadhim Zahawi, the Secretary of State for Education, in the House of Commons on 21 February 2022.

    Today, I would like to set out what the Government’s ‘Living with covid-19’ strategy means for education and childcare settings. As we move towards the endemic stage of covid-19, it is right that we empower people to make sensible decisions and trust in our fellow Britons to be sensible and look out for each other.

    As of 21 February, all staff, students and pupils of secondary age and above in mainstream education and childcare settings are no longer advised to continue regular twice-weekly testing. This change is in line with the very latest public health advice, and because we now know that the risk of severe illness from covid-19 for most children, young people and fully vaccinated adults is much reduced.

    Staff and students of secondary age and above in SEND settings, Alternative Provision settings, and SEND units within mainstream settings or equivalent in FE colleges are advised to continue twice-weekly testing. Staff in residential units in Children’s Social Care (Open and Secure Children’s Homes) and children of secondary age and above in Open Children’s Homes are also advised to continue twice-weekly testing. Children and young people arriving in Secure Children’s Homes should test on arrival.

    The education testing delivery channels will remain open so that staff and students of secondary age and above can access tests if needed to respond to local public health advice, in particular in relation to outbreaks. Staff and students are also able to access test kits from their local pharmacy or via www.gov.uk.

    Mainstream settings will be advised to use any remaining stock of test kits to ensure access for students and their workforce in response to an outbreak if advised to do so by their local health protection teams.

    From 24 February, the Government will remove the legal requirement to self-isolate following a positive test. Adults and children who test positive will continue to be advised to stay at home and avoid contact with other people for at least five full days, and then to continue to follow the guidance until they have received two negative test results on consecutive days. In addition, the Government will:

    No longer ask fully vaccinated close contacts and those aged under 18 to test daily for seven days, and remove the legal requirement for close contacts who are not fully vaccinated to self-isolate.

    End self-isolation support payments and national funding for practical support, and the medicine delivery service will no longer be available.

    End routine contact tracing. Contacts will no longer be required to self-isolate or advised to take daily tests. Staff, children and young people should attend their education settings as usual. This includes staff who have been in close contact within their household, unless they are able to work from home.

    End the legal obligation for individuals to tell their employers when they are required to self- isolate.

    As part of the Government’s decision in January 2022 to move back to Plan A, face coverings are no longer recommended in classrooms, teaching spaces and communal areas. Directors of Public Health may recommend temporarily re-introducing precautionary measures such as face coverings or testing in individual settings or across an area, informing my Department of their intention to do so to ensure any extra measures are proportionate.

    We have now exceeded our public commitment to deliver 300,000 CO2 monitors, with over 360,000 monitors delivered in the autumn term. We are also making up to 9,000 air cleaning devices available to all of those settings that need them. Over 6,000 have already been successfully delivered to eligible settings; the majority of the remaining deliveries will be completed by the end of February. And we continue to share advice and best practice on how settings can ensure that their occupied spaces are adequately ventilated, including a short video clip we recently filmed with Professor Cath Noakes, Professor of Environmental Engineering for Buildings.

    From my previous role as vaccines Minister, overseeing one of the fastest roll outs in Europe, I know the importance of the vaccination programme in the fight against covid-19. Vaccinations remain our very best line of defence and I continue to encourage all eligible staff and students aged 12 and over to take up the offer of a vaccine to protect themselves and those around them. The recent extension of the programme to all five to 11-year-olds will enable all school-aged children to be vaccinated. The NHS will prepare to extend this non-urgent offer to all children during April so parents can, if they want, take up the offer to increase protection against potential future waves of covid-19 as we learn to live with this virus. This group will be offered two 10 microgram doses of the Pfizer vaccine eight weeks apart—a third of the amount used for adult vaccinations. The Government have also announced today that we have accepted the advice from the independent Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation to offer, from spring, an additional covid-19 booster jab to people aged 75 years and over, residents in care homes for older adults, and people aged 12 years and over who are immunosuppressed.

    Vaccines are critical as a first line of defence, and antivirals now form a vital part of our approach as we learn to live with covid-19 by preventing the most vulnerable from being hospitalised. The Government have therefore agreed deals to secure a total of 4.98 million patient courses of oral antiviral treatments in our efforts to reduce the impact of covid-19 and the Omicron variant across the UK.

    While we make this shift to living with covid-19, we know that education and childcare settings may continue to experience workforce pressures. To help with this, the covid-19 workforce fund has now been extended, providing financial support to eligible schools and colleges for costs incurred due to staff absences from Monday 22 November 2021 until Friday 8 April 2022. The fund is available to support schools and colleges facing significant staffing and funding pressures in continuing to deliver high-quality face-to-face education to all pupils.

    Updated guidance for all education and childcare settings will be published in line with the implementation of the ‘Living with covid-19’ plan.

    Finally, I want to acknowledge the incredible efforts of the education and childcare settings who have continued to provide provision and support to children and young people throughout the pandemic.

  • Jeremy Quin – 2022 Statement on the Defence Equipment Plan

    Jeremy Quin – 2022 Statement on the Defence Equipment Plan

    The statement made by Jeremy Quin, the Minister for Defence Procurement, in the House of Commons on 21 February 2022.

    I am pleased to place in the Library of the House a copy of the 2021 Defence Equipment Plan Report, which sets out our plans to deliver the equipment needed by our armed forces to defend the country and protect our national interest.

    This year’s equipment plan report is one of the most important in recent years as it implements the strategy and financial reset provided by the integrated review, the defence Command Paper and the spending review. The integrated review outlined the evolving nature of the threats we face. This equipment plan sets out how our military capability will evolve to meet these threats within an affordable financial envelope.

    This equipment plan sets out how we are funding the capabilities we need, including more ships for the Royal Navy, a new batch of F-35s, a new medium helicopter and a major upgrade to our land equipment. This represents a significant enhancement on last year’s capability plans while, through additional investment and tough prioritisation, we have reversed the £7.3 billion pressure on the plan outlined last year to a surplus.

    This year is the first since 2018 when we have entered a new financial year with a funded contingency for the equipment plan. We have funding set aside to deal with urgent operational requirements and funding set aside for future research and development and its exploitation. We have made good progress in the first year of delivery end for the first time in many years, we expect to live within budget without Ministers having to take decisions on savings measures in year or running central savings exercises.

    This has been possible by setting a clear vision for the armed forces through last year’s integrated review and defence Command Paper, which has allowed us to retire less relevant equipment and refocus our programme on the kit we need for the future. We are making progress on delivering this change, including cancelling the Warrior sustainment programme and setting out plans for a more high-tech and agile Army as set cut in our recent Future Soldier publication. This equipment plan relies on fewer low confidence efficiency measures than in previous years and our plans to reduce costs are supported by significant investments in acquisition, support and digital programmes to improve the way the Department operates.

    We have, alongside capability investments, reversed the decline in defence R and D spend with a £6.6 billion ringfenced commitment. This will help reduce the risks associated with identifying and bringing into development the game-changing future capabilities we will need to meet the future threat.

    However, delivering state of the art defence capabilities carries inherent risk. On a plan of this scale and over this timeline there will always be risks to affordability. We are clear-eyed on those risks and set them out in our report. As the National Audit Office have said, the MOD is responsible for some of the most technically complex, risky and costly procurement programmes in government. New, large and complex programmes like the Future Combat Air System, which will deliver the next generation of combat air capability, and the replacement warhead, which will allow us to renew the UK’s nuclear deterrent, are extraordinarily complex endeavours. We continue to carry out and publish our own independent challenge of costings to help us understand and mitigate financial risk. Excluding Dreadnought, which has its own contingency funding, the risk identified in programmes which were reviewed both last year and this reduced by £0.3 billion, showing an improvement in the Department’s costing and management of risk. However, additional risk inevitably arises from new programmes entering the plan, including the warhead programme.

    Planning over 10 years is inherently uncertain and we must be able to respond to changing threats and project-specific circumstances. As challenges emerge on programmes which delay expenditure, we will be flexible in accelerating other programmes to maintain momentum and where possible reduce cost. The HM Treasury £10 billion contingency for Dreadnought shields the rest of the equipment plan from changes in annual spend on our largest and most complex programme. We continue to reduce risk through the forward purchase of foreign currency.

    New funding has enabled key decisions to be taken and priorities set but this alone is not enough to deliver on time and to budget. Having the right skills, tools, data and processes are critical. The Department has made real progress, which we set out in our report, but we recognise there is more to do. To deliver value for money for the taxpayer we have invested in our acquisition reform programme which aims to improve the speed and agility of our procurement processes and we are working to improve the capability and availability of senior responsible owners for programmes.

    The nature of defence means that the plan is not without risks to which we will be agile in responding, however, new funding, a clear vision and a balanced plan mean that this is a very different programme to those of recent years.

  • John Glen – 2022 Statement on Collective Money Purchase Schemes

    John Glen – 2022 Statement on Collective Money Purchase Schemes

    The statement made by John Glen, the Economic Secretary to the Treasury, in the House of Commons on 21 February 2022.

    Collective money purchase pension schemes, which are also known as collective defined contribution pension schemes, are a new style of pension scheme. Contributions into the scheme are pooled and invested with a view to delivering an aspired level or benefit at a fixed cost, and without guarantees. The framework for these schemes was set out in the Pension Schemes Act 2021 and the tax regime was set out in the Finance Act 2021.

    The Government’s policy intention has always been that payments made from a collective money purchase pension scheme in wind-up should be treated as authorised payments. Following the publication of the draft Occupational Pension Schemes (Collective Money Purchase Schemes) Regulations 2022, the Government are aware of two instances where there is some uncertainty about how benefits from such a scheme would be treated in tax terms, should it ultimately become necessary to wind it up.

    The first is about whether a member of such a scheme which is winding up can designate their funds into drawdown before transferring to another scheme. The Government can confirm that the policy intent here remains that this would be an authorised payment.

    The second is whether such a scheme, in winding up, could pay a member a periodic income as an authorised payment. Here, too, the Government confirm that the policy intent continues to be that this would be available as an authorised payment.

    This statement reconfirms that the original policy has not changed following the publication of the regulations and sets out the Government’s commitment to ensuring that this policy intent is delivered, including by pursuing further legislative change where necessary. Tax guidance and any necessary draft clauses for tax legislation will be published in due course as part of the usual tax policy-making process.

  • Kwasi Kwarteng – 2022 Statement on Storm Eunice

    Kwasi Kwarteng – 2022 Statement on Storm Eunice

    The statement made by Kwasi Kwarteng, the Secretary of State for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy, in the House of Commons on 21 February 2022.

    With your permission, Madam Deputy Speaker, I would like to make a statement on the electricity disruptions as a result of Storm Eunice and set out exactly how we are working to ensure that power is restored to people’s homes as quickly as possible. Storm Eunice brought severe weather, including wind gusts of up to 122 mph. That is among the highest speeds ever recorded in England. The Met Office took the unprecedented step of issuing a double red weather warning for Friday. Ensuing hurricane-force winds have caused extensive damage to buildings and trees. They have also caused power outages and widespread travel delays. After a day of disruption caused by Storm Eunice on Friday, Storm Franklin made landfall last night. It must be remembered in this difficult time that four people have tragically lost their lives in incidents related to the storms. My thoughts, and I am sure the thoughts of the whole House, are with the families and friends who have lost loved ones.

    The Met Office estimates further strong gusts today, though not on the same scale as Storm Eunice. Some people, particularly in the south and east of England, have been without power for more than 72 hours. I want to reassure them that we have dedicated teams of engineers working night and day to get them reconnected as soon as possible. Continuing poor weather conditions have hampered those efforts, but I am pleased to say that, as of now, over 98% of those affected by the storms—more than 1.4 million customers—have had their power supply restored. However, as of 4 o’clock today, just under 30,000 households are still without power.

    Today, the Minister for Energy, Clean Growth and Climate Change, my right hon. Friend the Member for Chelsea and Fulham (Greg Hands), has been in Sevenoaks in Kent to see the impact of the storm and to observe repairs. This weekend, I spoke directly to leaders at Scottish and Southern Energy Networks, and today I had conversations with leading managers at UK Power Networks and Western Power Distribution. They have given me assurances that restoration is happening as quickly as possible. The UK has been particularly badly hit by storms this year, but I am pleased to say that overall, our network operators and our brave emergency services have learned lessons about how we can improve our response, and we will continue to learn those lessons.

    When I commissioned the review into our response to Storm Arwen in November, I made it clear that the very long delays some people faced to be reconnected were unacceptable. I am pleased to say that, where practical, network operators have already implemented improvements to their procedures. Additionally, operators are sharing resources and ensuring that engineers are sent to the worst affected areas. Welfare provisions are in place for those who are most in need, particularly the vulnerable members of our communities. Network operators are engaged with local partners to ensure that people are being supported. Catering units are travelling to badly hit areas, and smaller welfare units are providing hot water and other facilities to people who are adversely affected. I am extremely grateful to the network operators and the emergency responders who have been working very hard to keep people as comfortable as possible. I am aware that during Storm Arwen, the people experiencing the worst effects of the devastation had difficulty in communicating, and that people are still experiencing issues today. However, I am pleased to say that if they call their network operator by dialling 105 from their mobile, they should get a speedy response. That action will automatically route them to the right operator based on their physical location.

    I believe this is the first time that three named storms have come in such quick succession, day after day, since the storm-naming convention was introduced a little less than a decade ago. This is a difficult time for many, but I have been reassured that operators are working extremely hard to make sure people are reconnected as quickly as possible, and in the next couple of days at the latest. My Department and I will continue to provide support and apply pressure, where needed, to ensure people are reconnected in a timely way.

  • Ian Blackford – 2022 Speech on Covid-19

    Ian Blackford – 2022 Speech on Covid-19

    The speech made by Ian Blackford, the SNP’s Westminster Leader, in the House of Commons on 21 February 2022.

    This statement was billed as the Prime Minister’s moment of pride, but it is clear that this morning was a moment of panic for this Government. Disagreement across Whitehall and the lack of any serious engagement with the devolved nations show that these decisions are bereft of science or consultation. It appears that these dangerous choices are purely political and have been made up on the hoof—another symptom of a Government in turmoil.

    The illogical reality of UK finance means that these decisions, made for England by a failing Prime Minister, affect the money the devolved nations have to provide testing. It is unacceptable that the ability to protect—[Interruption.] I hear “Money!”, but we are talking about protecting the people of Scotland, something that this Prime Minister is turning his back on. It is unacceptable that the ability to protect our population can be imperilled on the basis of a political decision taken by a Prime Minister in crisis. His decisions directly affect whether Scotland has the funding required to keep its people safe. That is the ridiculous reality of devolution, but it is a reality that must be addressed.

    Will the Prime Minister now confirm what the residual funding for testing will be, to enable the Scottish Government to pick up the pieces of this chaotic withdrawal of support? It makes the case for Scotland to take the necessary measures to keep our people safe. We need the financial ability to make our own choices, and that only comes with independence. [Interruption.]

    Mr Speaker

    I will also hear the right hon. Gentleman in silence. I do not need the barracking. He certainly does not need it and I do not need it.

    Ian Blackford

    Thank you, Mr Speaker.

    PCR testing, the legal requirement to self-isolate and access to lateral flow testing have been instrumental in containing the virus. As we move forward to live with covid, these are the very safeguards that support a return to normal life. These short-sighted decisions have long-term implications. They also hamper vital surveillance efforts and impede the ability to respond to new variants. The reality is that we have a Prime Minister beset by chaos and mired in a police investigation for breaking his own covid laws.

    The Prime Minister indicated dissent.

    Ian Blackford

    He can shake his head, but that is the reality—a Prime Minister who has no moral authority to lead and is desperately seeking to appease his Back Benchers. We know that this reckless statement flies in the face of advice from scientists at the World Health Organisation. That is because this statement is not about protecting the public; it is about the Prime Minister scrambling to save his own skin.

  • Keir Starmer – 2022 Speech on Covid-19

    Keir Starmer – 2022 Speech on Covid-19

    The speech made by Keir Starmer, the Leader of the Opposition, in the House of Commons on 21 February 2022.

    May I start by sending my condolences to the family of Christopher Stalford? Christopher was a dedicated servant of the people of South Belfast and his loss will be deeply felt.

    I also send our best wishes to Her Majesty the Queen; as the Prime Minister said, the whole House wishes her a speedy recovery.

    I thank the Prime Minister for the advance copy of his statement and for the briefing earlier this afternoon.

    Huge efforts have been made over the past two years and we would not be where we are today without the heroism of our NHS and key workers, without those who pioneered and rolled out the vaccines and without the sacrifices that people made every day to follow the rules and protect our public health. We must honour the collective sacrifices of the British people and do everything possible to prevent a return to the loss and lockdowns that we have seen over the past two years.

    The Prime Minister promised to present a plan for living with covid, but all we have today is yet more chaos and disarray: not enough to prepare us for the new variants that may yet develop and an approach that seems to think that living with covid means simply ignoring it. This morning, he could not even persuade his own Health Secretary to agree to the plan, so what confidence can the public have that this is the right approach?

    Let me be clear: the Labour party does not want to see restrictions in place for a moment longer than necessary—[Interruption.] Mr Speaker, we have to take the public with us, and that requires clarity—[Interruption.]

    Mr Speaker

    Order. I call on Members to show some respect. Just as I expect the Prime Minister to be heard in silence, so, too, should the Leader of the Opposition. If you do not wish to be in here, there is plenty of room outside this Chamber. I suggest that you start using it, and I will be helping you on your way. Let us have silence.

    Keir Starmer

    We have to take the public with us, and that requires clarity about why decisions are being made. Will the Prime Minister publish the scientific evidence behind his decision to remove the legal requirement to self-isolate, including the impact on the clinically extremely vulnerable for whom lockdown has never ended?

    Having come this far, I know that the British people will continue to act responsibly and that they will do the right thing: testing and then isolating if positive. What I cannot understand is why the Prime Minister is taking away the tools that will help them to do that. Free tests cannot continue forever, but if you are 2-1 up with 10 minutes to go, you do not sub off one of your best defenders.

    The Prime Minister is also removing self-isolation support payments, which allow many people to isolate, and weakening sick pay. These are decisions that will hit the lowest paid and the most insecure workers the hardest, including care workers, who got us through the toughest parts of the pandemic. It is all very well advising workers to self-isolate, but that will not work unless all workers have the security of knowing that they can afford to do so.

    The Prime Minister mentioned surveillance and the ONS infection survey. This is crucial to ensuring that we can ramp up testing and vaccination if the virus returns, so can the Prime Minister confirm that he has put the funding in place to ensure that the ONS infection survey will not see reduced capacity and that it will be able to track the virus with the same degree of detail as it can today? We cannot turn off Britain’s radar before the war is won. “Ignorance is bliss” is not a responsible approach to a deadly virus. It actually risks undoing all the hard-won progress that the British people have achieved over the last two years.

    The Labour party has published a comprehensive plan for living well with covid. Our plan would see us learn the lessons of the past two years and be prepared for new variants. The Prime Minister’s approach will leave us vulnerable. Where is the plan to secure the UK’s supply of testing? Why are schools still not properly ventilated? There is no doubt that, as a nation, we need to move on from covid. People need to know that their liberties are returning and returning for good, but this is a half-baked announcement from a Government paralysed by chaos and incompetence. It is not a plan to live well with covid.

  • Boris Johnson – 2022 Statement on Covid-19

    Boris Johnson – 2022 Statement on Covid-19

    The statement made by Boris Johnson, the Prime Minister, in the House of Commons on 21 February 2022.

    With permission, Mr Speaker, I will make a statement on our strategy for living with covid. Before I begin, I know the whole House will join me in sending our best wishes to Her Majesty the Queen for a full and swift recovery.

    It is a reminder that this virus has not gone away but, because of the efforts we have made as a country over the past two years, we can now deal with it in a very different way by moving from Government restrictions to personal responsibility, so that we protect ourselves without losing our liberties, and by maintaining our contingency capabilities so that we can respond rapidly to any new variant.

    The UK was the first country in the world to administer an approved vaccine, and the first European nation to protect half its population with at least one dose. Having made the decision to refocus our NHS this winter on the campaign to get boosted now, we were the first major European nation to boost half our population, too. And it is because of the extraordinary success of this vaccination programme that we have been able to lift our restrictions earlier than other comparable countries—opening up last summer while others remained closed, and keeping things open this winter when others shut down again—making us one of the most open economies and societies in Europe, with the fastest growth anywhere in the G7 last year.

    While the pandemic is not over, we have now passed the peak of the omicron wave, with cases falling, hospitalisations in England now fewer than 10,000 and still falling, and the link between infection and severe disease substantially weakened. Over 71% of all adults in England are now boosted, including 93% of those aged 70 or over. Together with the treatments and scientific understanding of the virus we have built up, we now have sufficient levels of immunity to complete the transition from protecting people with Government interventions to relying on vaccines and treatments as our first line of defence.

    As we have throughout the past two years, we will continue to work closely with the devolved Administrations as they decide how to take forward their own plans. Today’s strategy shows how we will structure our approach in England around four principles. First, we will remove all remaining domestic restrictions in law. From this Thursday, 24 February, we will end the legal requirement to self-isolate following a positive test, and so we will also end self-isolation support payments, although covid provisions for statutory sick pay can still be claimed for a further month. We will end routine contact tracing, and no longer ask fully vaccinated close contacts and those under 18 to test daily for seven days. We will also remove the legal requirement for close contacts who are not fully vaccinated to self-isolate. Until 1 April, we will still advise people who test positive to stay at home, but after that we will encourage people with covid-19 symptoms to exercise personal responsibility, just as we encourage people who may have flu to be considerate to others.

    It is only because levels of immunity are so high and deaths are now, if anything, below where we would normally expect for this time of year that we can lift these restrictions. And it is only because we know omicron is less severe that testing for omicron on the colossal scale we have been doing is much less important and much less valuable in preventing serious illness. We should be proud that the UK has established the biggest testing programme per person of any large country in the world. This came at vast cost. The testing, tracing and isolation budget in 2020-21 exceeded the entire budget of the Home Office; it cost a further £15.7 billion in this financial year, and £2 billion in January alone, at the height of the omicron wave. We must now scale this back.

    From today, we are removing the guidance for staff and students in most education and childcare settings to undertake twice-weekly asymptomatic testing. And from 1 April, when winter is over and the virus will spread less easily, we will end free symptomatic and asymptomatic testing for the general public. We will continue to provide free symptomatic tests to the oldest age groups and those most vulnerable to covid. And in line with the practice in many other countries, we are working with retailers to ensure that everyone who wants to can buy a test. From 1 April, we will also no longer recommend the use of voluntary covid-status certification, although the NHS app will continue to allow people to indicate their vaccination status for international travel. The Government will also expire all temporary provisions in the Coronavirus Act 2020. Of the original 40, 20 have already expired and 16 will expire on 24 March. The last four, relating to innovations in public service, will expire six months later, after we have made those improvements permanent via other means.

    Secondly, we will continue to protect the most vulnerable with targeted vaccines and treatments. The UK Government have procured enough doses of vaccine to anticipate a wide range of possible Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation recommendations. Today, we are taking further action to guard against a possible resurgence of the virus, accepting JCVI advice for a new spring booster offered to those aged 75 and over, to older care home residents, and to those over 12 who are immunosuppressed. The UK is also leading the way on antivirals and therapeutics, with our Antivirals Taskforce securing a supply of almost 5 million, which is more per head than any other country in Europe.

    Thirdly, the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies advises that there is considerable uncertainty about the future path of the pandemic, and there may of course be significant resurgences. SAGE is certain that there will be new variants, and it is very possible that those will be worse than omicron. So we will maintain our resilience to manage and respond to those risks, including our world-leading Office for National Statistics survey, which will allow us to continue tracking the virus in granular detail, with regional and age breakdowns helping us to spot surges as and where they happen. And our laboratory networks will help us understand the evolution of the virus and identify any changes in characteristics.

    We will prepare and maintain our capabilities to ramp up testing. We will continue to support other countries in developing their own surveillance capabilities, because a new variant can emerge anywhere. We will meet our commitment to donate 100 million vaccine doses by June, as our part of the agreement at the UK’s G7 summit to provide a billion doses to vaccinate the world over the next year.

    In all circumstances, our aim will be to manage and respond to future risks through more routine public health interventions, with pharmaceutical interventions as the first line of defence.

    Fourthly, we will build on the innovation that has defined the best of our response to the pandemic. The vaccines taskforce will continue to ensure that the UK has access to effective vaccines as they become available, and has already secured contracts with manufacturers trialling bi-valent vaccines, which would provide protection against covid variants. The therapeutics taskforce will continue to support seven national priority clinical trial platforms focused on prevention, novel treatments and treatments for long-covid. We are refreshing our biosecurity strategy to protect the UK against natural zoonosis and accidental laboratory leaks, as well as the potential for biological threats emanating from state and non-state actors.

    Building on the five-point plan that I set out at the UN and the agreements reached at the UK’s G7 last year, we are working with our international partners on future pandemic preparedness, including through a new pandemic treaty; an effective early warning system or global pandemic radar; and a mission to make safe and effective diagnostics, therapeutics and vaccines available within the first 100 days of a future pandemic threat being identified. We will host a global pandemic preparedness summit next month.

    Covid will not suddenly disappear, so those who would wait for a total end to this war before lifting the remaining regulations would be restricting the liberties of the British people for a long time to come. This Government do not believe that that is right or necessary. Restrictions take a heavy toll on our economy, our society, our mental wellbeing and the life chances of our children, and we do not need to pay that cost any longer. We have a population that is protected by the biggest vaccination programme in our history; we have the antivirals, the treatments and the scientific understanding of this virus; and we have the capabilities to respond rapidly to any resurgence or new variant.

    It is time that we got our confidence back. We do not need laws to compel people to be considerate to others. We can rely on our sense of responsibility towards one another, providing practical advice in the knowledge that people will follow it to avoid infecting loved ones and others. So let us learn to live with this virus and continue protecting ourselves without restricting our freedoms. In that spirit, I commend this statement to the House.

  • John Healey – 2022 Speech on Ukraine

    John Healey – 2022 Speech on Ukraine

    The speech made by John Healey, the Shadow Secretary of State for Defence, in the House of Commons on 21 February 2022.

    The Defence Secretary has been busy in recent weeks, so I welcome his statement today and thank him for keeping the Opposition parties updated on Ukraine during these grave escalations of Russian military threats on the Ukrainian border.

    This is the most serious security crisis Europe has faced since the cold war. The Ukrainian people, citizens of a proud, independent and democratic country, face an unprecedented threat from, as the Secretary of State has said, two thirds of Russia’s entire forces now built up on its borders. There is unified UK political support for Ukraine’s sovereignty and its territorial integrity in the face of that continuing Russian aggression.

    The Government also have Labour’s full support in helping Ukraine to defend itself and in pursuing diplomacy, even at this eleventh hour and even though President Putin has proved more interested in disinformation than diplomacy. We also fully support moves to reinforce the security of NATO allies, as the Labour leader and I told the Secretary General at NATO headquarters earlier this month.

    President Putin wants to divide and weaken the west, to turn back the clock and re-establish Russian control over neighbouring countries. The real threat to President Putin and his Russian elites is Ukraine as a successful democracy, choosing for itself its trading and security links with the west. An attack on Ukraine is an attack on democracy.

    We welcome the message from Munich at the weekend that any invasion will be met with massive sanctions in a swift, unified western response. The European Union, of course, will lead on sanctions legislation for most European allies, especially to clamp down on finances or critical technologies for Russia. How is the UK co-ordinating with the European Commission and European Council? What meetings have UK Ministers had to discuss that co-ordination?

    The other message from Munich at the weekend was that allies stand ready for further talks. The Defence Secretary has said this afternoon:

    “I am pleased with the efforts being made by a range of European leaders, including President Macron”.

    What diplomatic initiatives is our UK Prime Minister taking, befitting Britain as a leading member of the NATO alliance and a permanent member of the United Nations Security Council? With the most serious tensions and developments in the Donbas, why did the UK Government remove UK staff from the OSCE monitoring mission there, when those from all other European countries have stayed to do a job that is more vital now than ever?

    The Defence Secretary said, rightly, that we continue to “support Ukrainian defensive efforts”, including with lethal aid. What more will he now do, with NATO, to help Ukraine defend itself? Can he speed up action via the Ukraine naval agreement? How feasible is a no-fly zone? What consideration will he give to support for Ukrainian resistance?

    We cannot stand up to Russian aggression abroad while accepting Russian corruption at home. For too long, Britain has been the destination for the dirty money that keeps Putin in power. Where is the economic crime Bill, which was promised by the Government and then pulled? Where is the comprehensive reform of Companies House? Where is the law to register foreign agents? Where is the registration of overseas entities Bill? Where is the replacement for the outdated Computer Misuse Act 1990? Where are the new rules on political donations? Why does the Government’s Elections Bill make these problems worse by enabling political donations from donors based overseas?

    Whether or not President Putin invades Ukraine, Russia’s long-running pattern of aggression demands a NATO response. Will the Secretary of State report from his meeting last week with NATO Defence Ministers on how the alliance’s overall posture is set to change? Will he explain what action could be taken to better co-ordinate NATO with the joint expeditionary force—for instance, creating a regional readiness force?

    Finally, does not Ukraine expose the flaws in the Government’s integrated review of last year, with its first focus on the Indo-Pacific and its plan to cut the British Army by another 10,000 soldiers? Will the Secretary of State now halt any further Army cuts, and restore the highest defence priority to Europe, the north Atlantic and the Arctic?

  • Ben Wallace – 2022 Statement on Ukraine

    Ben Wallace – 2022 Statement on Ukraine

    The statement made by Ben Wallace, the Secretary of State for Defence, in the House of Commons on 21 February 2022.

    With permission, Mr Speaker, I will update the House on the latest situation regarding Russia’s actions towards Ukraine. As I have already said, I apologise that the Opposition had such late sight of the statement.

    As of 09.00 hours today, there are now more than 110 battalion tactical groups massed around Ukraine’s borders with Russia and Belarus. In addition, in the Black Sea Fleet, there are two amphibious groups, nine cruise missile-equipped Russian ships and a further four cruise missile-capable vessels in the Caspian sea.

    In the last 48 hours, contrary to Kremlin assurances, we have seen a continued increase in troop numbers and a change in force disposition, moving from holding areas to potential launch locations. All the indicators point to increasing numbers and readiness of Russian forces, and, not surprisingly to many of us, the pledge to withdraw Russian troops from Belarus at the end of their joint military drills on 20 February was not carried out, and the exercise has now been extended until further notice.

    Complementing this troop build-up has been the proliferation of false flag operations, propaganda stunts, and Russian news outlets carrying fictitious allegations. These are not the actions of a Russian Government fulfilling their repeated declarations that they have no intention of invading Ukraine. In fact, over the last few weeks, we have seen the Russian “playbook” being implemented in a way that gives us strong cause for concern that President Putin is still committed to an invasion. I believe that he is in danger of setting himself on a tragic course of events, leading to a humanitarian crisis, instability, and widespread suffering—not just of Ukrainians, but of the Russian people.

    Like many of us, the Russians know the consequences of military interventions. The Soviet Union in Afghanistan and the first war in Chechnya are just two examples of where Russia saw too many young men returning home in zinc-lined coffins. The Government therefore urge President Putin—for the sake of his own people and even at this eleventh hour—to rule out the invasion of Ukraine and recommit to a diplomatic process for us to address the perceptions of the Kremlin.

    Over recent weeks, my right hon. Friend the Foreign Secretary and I have engaged numerous times with our international counterparts, including my own visit to Moscow to meet Defence Minister Shoigu and General Valery Gerasimov. We have made clear our determination to uphold the defensive principles of NATO and to defend the right of sovereign countries to make choices about their own security arrangements. As the Russian Government have signed up to, states have

    “an equal right to security. We reaffirm the inherent right of each and every participating state to be free to choose or change its security arrangements, including treaties of alliance.”

    That statement was signed by the Russians in 1975 in the Helsinki Final Act, in 1994 in the Budapest summit declaration, in 1999 at the Istanbul summit, and, most lately, in 2010 at the Astana summit. We urge Russia to stick to its commitments that it has openly made and signed up to over the years. My counterpart, Defence Minister Shoigu, repeated to me in person that Russia has no intention of invading Ukraine, but, while we take them at their word, we must judge them by their actions.

    At our meeting I also took the opportunity to address the proposals in Russia’s draft treaty, because, while this is not a return to normal UK-Russia relations, it is important that, as one of Europe’s biggest military powers, the UK maintains strong lines of communications with Russia in order to avoid miscalculation and the risk of inadvertent escalations. I also continue to speak regularly to my Ukrainian counterpart, Defence Minister Reznikov, as we continue to support the armed forces of Ukraine.

    Since 2015, the UK—alongside the likes of Sweden and Canada—has responded to Russia’s previous illegal occupation of Crimea with defence capacity building, including training and reform. As I announced to the House last month, we took the decision to also provide lethal aid to Ukraine. That now means that, alongside the United States, Canada, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and the Netherlands, the United Kingdom has not just spoken, but acted.

    I am pleased with the efforts being made by a range of European leaders, including President Macron, to find a way through. We must remain resolute in our commitment to NATO’s formal response to the Russian draft treaties, which all NATO members signed up to. Intimidation and aggression, however, must not be rewarded.

    We should be under no illusion: the Russian forces have now massed on Ukraine’s borders 65% of all their land combat power. The formations present and the action of the Russian state to date not only threaten the integrity of a sovereign state, but undermine international law and the democratic values in which all of us in Europe so strongly believe.

    The Foreign Office has now relocated the embassy further west in the country, and two weeks ago advised that all UK nationals should leave Ukraine via all means possible. The Ministry of Defence will continue to monitor Russian actions, support Ukrainian defensive efforts and contribute to NATO’s response measures. We continue to hope that President Putin will relent and pull back from an invasion, but we must prepare ourselves for the consequences if he does not. I will update the House, as I have done over the past few weeks, both in the Chamber and to colleagues online.

  • Margaret Thatcher – 1986 Speech to Conservative Party Conference

    Margaret Thatcher – 1986 Speech to Conservative Party Conference

    The speech made by Margaret Thatcher, the then Prime Minister, to the Conservative Party Conference in Bournemouth on 10 October 1986.

    Mr President, this week at Bournemouth, We’ve had a most responsible Conference:

    The Conference of a Party which was the last Government, is the present Government, and will be the next Government. We have heard from ministers a series of forward-looking policies which are shaping the future of our country.

    And not only from ministers, but from the body of the hall has come speech after speech of advice, encouragement and commitment.

    We are a Party which knows what it stands for and what it seeks to achieve.

    We are a Party which honours the past that we may build for the future.

    Last week, at Blackpool, the Labour Party made the bogus claim that it was “putting people first”.

    Putting people first?

    Last week, Labour

    — voted to remove the right to a secret ballot before a strike

    — voted to remove the precious right we gave to trade union members to take their union to a Court of Law.

    Putting people first?

    Last week Labour voted for the State to renationalise British Telecom and British Gas, regardless of the millions of people who have been able to own shares for the first time in their lives.

    Putting people first?

    They voted to stop the existing right to buy council houses, a policy which would kill the hopes and dreams of so many families.

    Labour may say they put people first; but their Conference voted to put Government first and that means putting people last.

    What the Labour Party of today wants is:

    — housing—municipalised

    — industry—nationalised

    — the police service—politicised

    — the judiciary—radicalised

    — union membership—tyrannised

    — and above all—and most serious of all—our defences neutralised.

    Never!

    Not in Britain.

    We have two other Oppositions who have recently held their Conferences, the Liberals and the SDP.

    Where they’re not divided they’re vague, and where they’re not vague they’re divided. At the moment they appear to be engaged in a confused squabble about whether or not Polaris should be abandoned or replaced or renewed or re-examined.

    And if so, when; and how; and possibly why?

    If they can’t agree on the defence of our country, they can’t agree on anything.

    Where Labour has its Militant tendency, they have their muddled tendency.

    I’ll have rather more to say about defence later.

     

    CONSERVATIVE MORALITY

    But just now I want to speak about Conservative policies, policies which spring from deeply held beliefs.

    The charge is sometimes made that our policies are only concerned with money and efficiency.

    I am the first to acknowledge that morality is not and never has been the monopoly of any one Party.

    Nor do we claim that it is.

    But we do claim that it is the foundation of our policies.

    Why are we Conservatives so opposed to inflation?

    Only because it puts up prices?

    No, because it destroys the value of people’s savings.

    Because it destroys jobs, and with it people’s hopes.

    That’s what the fight against inflation is all about.

    Why have we limited the power of trade unions?

    Only to improve productivity?

    No, because trade union members, want to be

    Protected from intimidation and to go about their daily lives in peace—like everyone else in the land.

    Why have we allowed people to buy shares in nationalised industries?

    Only to improve efficiency?

    No.

    To spread the nation’s wealth among as many people as possible.

    Why are we setting up new kinds of schools in our towns and cities?

    To create privilege?

    No.

    To give families in some of our inner cities greater choice in the education of their children.

    A choice denied them by their Labour Councils.

    Enlarging choice is rooted in our Conservative tradition.

    Without choice, talk of morality is an idle and an empty thing.

    BRITAIN’S INDUSTRIAL FUTURE

    Mr. President, the theme of our conference this week is the next move forward.

    We have achieved a lot in seven short years. But there is still a great deal to be done for our country.

    The whole industrial world, not just Britain, is seeing change at a speed that our forebears never contemplated, much of it due to new technology.

    Old industries are declining.

    New ones are taking their place.

    Traditional jobs are being taken over by computers. People are choosing to spend their money in new ways.

    Leisure, pleasure, sport and travel.

    All these are big business today.

    It would be foolish to pretend that this transition can be accomplished without problems.

    But it would be equally foolish to pretend that a country like Britain, which is so heavily dependent on trade with others, can somehow ignore what is happening in the rest of the world.

    — can behave as if these great events have nothing to do with us.

    — can resist change.

    Yet that is exactly what Labour proposes to do:

    They want to put back the clock and set back the country.

    Back to State direction and control.

    Back to the old levels of overmanning.

    Back to the old inefficiency.

    Back to making life difficult for the very people on whom the future of Britain depends—the wealth creators, the scientists, the engineers, the designers, the managers, the inventors—all those on whom we rely to create the industries and jobs of the future.

    What supreme folly.

    It defies all common sense.

    JOBS

    As do those Labour policies which, far from putting people first, would put them out of jobs.

    The prospects of young people would be blighted by Labour’s minimum wage policy, because people could not then afford to employ them and give them a start in life.

    A quarter of a million jobs could be at risk.

    Many thousands of jobs would go from closing down American nuclear bases.

    Labour want sanctions against South Africa.

    Tens of thousands of people could lose their jobs in Britain—quite apart from the devastating consequences for black South Africans.

    Out would go jobs at existing nuclear power stations.

    Whatever happened to Harold Wilson’s ‘white heat of technological revolution’?

    On top of all this, jobs would also suffer as would-be investors in Britain took one look at Labour and decided to set up elsewhere.

    Labour say they would create jobs.

    But those policies would destroy jobs.

    This Government has created the climate that’s produced a million extra jobs over the Past three years.

    Here in Britain, it is encouraging that more of the population are in work than in Italy, or France, or Germany.

    Nevertheless, as you heard yesterday, more has to be done, and is being done.

    Meanwhile, no other country in Europe can rival our present range of help for people to train, retrain and find jobs.

    And I would like just to say, Mr President: training is not a palliative for unemployment.

    Training will play an ever larger part in our whole industrial life.

    For only modern, Efficient industry and commerce will produce the jobs our people need.

    POPULAR CAPITALISM

    Our opponents would have us believe that all problems can be solved by State intervention. But Governments should not run business.

    Indeed, the weakness of the case for State ownership has become all too apparent.

    For state planners do not have to suffer the consequences of their mistakes. It’s the taxpayers who have to pick up the bill.

    This Government has rolled back the frontiers of the State, and will roll them back still further.

    So popular is our policy that it’s being taken up all over the world.

    From France to the Phillipines, from Jamaica to Japan, from Malaysia to Mexico, from Sri Lanka to Singapore, privatisation is on the move, there’s even a special oriental version in China.

    The policies we have pioneered are catching on in country after country.

    We Conservatives believe in popular capitalism—believe in a property-owning democracy.

    And it works!

    POWER TO THE PEOPLE

    In Scotland recently, I was present at the sale of the millionth council house: to a lovely family with two children, who can at last call their home their own.

    Now let’s go for the second million!

    And what’s more, millions have already become shareholders.

    And soon there will be opportunities for millions more, in British Gas, British Airways, British Airports and Rolls-Royce.

    Who says we’ve run out of steam.

    We’re in our prime!

    The great political reform of the last century was to enable more and more people to have a vote.

    Now the great Tory reform of this century is to enable more and more people to own property.

    Popular capitalism is nothing less than a crusade to enfranchise the many in the economic life of the nation.

    We Conservatives are returning power to the people.

    That is the way to one nation, one people.

    RETURN OF NATIONAL PRIDE

    Mr President, you may have noticed there are many people who just can’t bear good news.

    It’s a sort of infection of the spirit and there’s a lot of it about.

    In the eyes of these hand-wringing merchants of gloom and despondency, everything that Britain does is wrong.

    Any setback, however small, any little difficulty, however local, is seen as incontrovertible proof that the situation is hopeless.

    Their favourite word is “crisis”.

    It’s crisis when the price of oil goes up and a crisis when the price of oil goes up and a crisis when the price of oil comes down.

    It’s a crisis if you don’t build new roads,

    It’s a crisis when you do.

    It’s a crisis if Nissan does not come here,

    And it’s a crisis when it does.

    It’s being so cheerful as keeps ’em going.

    What a rotten time these people must have, running round running everything down.

    Especially when there’s so much to be proud of.

    Inflation at its lowest level for twenty years.

    The basic rate of tax at its lowest level for forty years.

    The number of strikes at their lowest level for fifty years.

    The great advances in Science and industry.

    The achievement of millions of our people in creating new enterprises and new jobs.

    The outstanding performance of the arts and music and entertainment worlds.

    And the triumphs of our sportsmen and women.

    They all do Britain proud.

    And we are mighty proud of them.

    CONSERVATIVES CARE

    Our opponents, having lost the political argument, try another tack!

    They try to convey the impression that we don’t care.

    So let’s take a close look at those who make this charge.

    They’re the ones who supported and maintained Mr Scargill ‘s coal strike for a whole year, hoping to deprive industry, homes and pensioners of power, heat and light.

    They’re the ones who supported the strike in the Health Service which lengthened the waiting time for operations just when we were getting it down.

    They’re the ones who supported the teachers’ dispute which disrupted our children’s education.

    They are those Labour Councillors who constantly accuse the Police of provocation when they deal with violent crime and drugs in the worst areas of our inner cities.

    Mr President, we’re not going to take any lessons in caring from people with that sort of record.

    We care profoundly about the right of people to be protected against crime, hooliganism and the evil of drugs.

    The mugger, the rapist, the drug trafficker, the terrorist—all must suffer the full rigour of the law.

    And that’s why this Party and this Government consistently back the Police and the Courts of Law, in Britain and Northern Ireland.

    For without the rule of law, there can be no liberty.

    It’s because we care deeply about the Health Service, that we’ve launched the biggest hospital building programme in this country’s history.

    Statistics tell only part of the story.

    But this Government is devoting more resources of all kinds to the Health Service than any previous Government.

    Over the past year or so, I’ve visited five hospitals.

    In the North west, at Barrow in Furness—I visited the first new hospital in that district since the creation of the Health Service forty years ago.

    In the North East—another splendid new hospital, at North Tyneside, with the most wonderful maternity unit and children’s wards.

    Just North of London I went round St Albans’ Hospital where new wards have been opened and new buildings are under way.

    I visited the famous Elizabeth Garrett Anderson Hospital for women, which this Government saved.

    The service it provides is very special and greatly appreciated.

    And then last week I went back to the Royal Sussex County Hospital in Brighton, to open the new renal unit.

    Many of us have cause to be very thankful for that Brighton hospital.

    Everywhere patients were loud in their praise of the treatment they received from doctors and nurses whose devotion and skill we all admire.

    This Government’s record on the Health Service is a fine one.

    We’re proud of it and we must see to it that people know how much we’ve done.

    Of course there are problems still to be solved.

    The fact that there’s no waiting list in one area does not help you if you have to wait for an operation in your area.

    It doesn’t help if there’s a new hospital going up somewhere else, but not where you’d really like it.

    We are tackling these problems.

    And we shall go on doing so, because our commitment to the National Health Service is second to none.

    We’ve made great progress already.

    The debate we had on Wednesday, with its telling contributions from nurses and doctors in the Health Service, was enormously helpful to us.

    It’s our purpose to work together and to continue steadily to improve the services that are provided in hospital and community alike.

    This is conservatives putting care into action.

    And we care deeply that retired people should never again see their hard-earned savings decimated by runaway inflation.

    For example, take the pensioner who retired in 1963 with a thousand pounds of savings.

    Twenty years later, in 1983, it was only worth one hundred and sixty pounds.

    That is why we will never relent in the battle against inflation.

    It has to be fought and won every year.

    We care passionately about the education of our children.

    Time and again we hear three basic messages:

    — bring back the three Rs into our schools;

    — bring back relevance into the curriculum;

    — and bring back discipline into our classrooms.

    The fact is that education at all levels—teachers, training colleges, administrators—has been infiltrated by a permissive philosophy of self-expression.

    And we are now reaping the consequences which, for some children, have been disastrous.

    Money by itself will not solve this problem.

    Money will not raise standards.

    But:

    — by giving parents greater freedom to choose;

    — by allowing head teachers greater control in their school;

    — by laying down national standards of syllabus and attainment;

    I am confident that we can really improve the quality of education.

    Improve it not just in the twenty new schools but in every school in the land.

    And we’ll back every teacher, head teacher and administrator who shares these ideals.

    DEFENCE

    Mr President, we care most of all about our country’s security. The defence of the realm transcends all other issues.

    It is the foremost responsibility of any Government and any Prime Minister.

    For forty years, every Government of this country of every political persuasion has understood the need for strong defences.

    — By maintaining and modernising Britain’s independent nuclear deterrent.

    — By membership of the NATO Alliance, an alliance based on nuclear deterrence.

    — And by accepting, and bearing in full, the obligations which membership brings.

    All this was common ground.

    Last week, Mr President, the Labour Party abandoned that ground.

    In a decision of the utmost gravity, Labour voted to give up Britain’s independent nuclear deterrent unilaterally.

    Labour would also require the United States to remove its nuclear weapons from our soil and to close down its nuclear bases:

    weapons and bases which are vital, not only for Britain’s defence, but for the defence of the entire Atlantic Alliance.

    Furthermore, Labour would remove Britain altogether from the protection of America’s nuclear umbrella, leaving us totally unable to deter a nuclear attack.

    For you cannot deter, with conventional weapons, an enemy which has, and could threaten to use, nuclear weapons.

    Exposed to the threat of nuclear blackmail, there would be no option but surrender.

    Labour’s defence policy—though “defence” is scarcely the word—is an absolute break with the defence policy of every British Government since the second world war.

    Let there be no doubt about the gravity of that decision.

    You cannot be a loyal member of NATO while disavowing its fundamental strategy.

    A Labour Britain would be a neutralist Britain.

    It would be the greatest gain for the Soviet Union in forty years.

    And they would have got it without firing a shot.

    I believe this total reversal of Labour’s policy for the defence of our country will have come as a shock to many of Labour’s traditional supporters.

    It was Labour’s Nye Bevan who warned his party against going naked into the Conference chamber.

    It was Labour’s Hugh Gaitskell who promised the country to fight, fight and fight again against the unilateral disarmers in his own party.

    That fight was continued by his successors.

    Today the fight is over.

    The present leadership are the unilateral disarmers.

    The Labour Party of Attlee, of Gaitskell, of Wilson is dead.

    And no-one has more surely killed it than the present leader of the Labour Party,

    There are some policies which can be reversed.

    But weapon development and production takes years and years.

    Moreover, by repudiating NATO’s nuclear strategy Labour would fatally weaken the Atlantic Alliance and the United States’ commitment to Europe’s defence.

    The damage caused by Labour’s policies would be irrevocable.

    Not only present but future generations would be at risk.

    Of course there are fears about the terrible destructive power of nuclear weapons.

    But it is the balance of nuclear forces which has preserved peace for forty years in a Europe which twice in the previous thirty years tore itself to pieces.

    Preserved peace not only from nuclear war, but from conventional war in Europe as well.

    And it has saved the young people of two generations from being called up to fight as their parents and grandparents were.

    As Prime Minister, I could not remove that protection from the lives of present and future generations.

    Let every nation know that Conservative Governments, now and in the future, will keep Britain’s obligations to its allies.

    The freedom of all its citizens and the good name of our country depend upon it.

    This weekend, President Reagan and Mr Gorbachev are meeting in Reykjavik.

    Does anyone imagine that Mr Gorbachev would be prepared to talk at all if the West had already disarmed?

    It is the strength and unity of the West which has brought the Russians to the negotiating table.

    The policy of her Majesty’s Opposition is a policy that would help our enemies and harm our friends.

    It totally misjudges the character of the British people.

    After the Liberal Party Conference, after the SDP Conference, after the Labour Party Conference, there is now only one party in this country with an effective policy for the defence of the realm.

    That party is the Conservative Party.

    OUR VISION

    Mr. President, throughout this conference we have heard of the great achievements of the last seven years.

    Their very success now makes possible the next moves forward, which have been set out this week.

    And we shall complete the manifesto for the next election—within the next eighteen months

    That Manifesto will be a programme for further bold and radical steps in keeping with our most deeply held beliefs.

    We do our best for our country when we are true to our convictions.

    As we look forward to the next century, we have a vision of the society we wish to see. The vision we all serve.

    We want to see a Britain where there is an ever-widening spread of ownership, with the independence and dignity it brings.

    — A Britain which takes care of the weak in their time of need.

    We want to see a Britain where the spirit of enterprise is strong enough to conquer unemployment North and South.

    — A Britain in which the attitude of “them and us” has disappeared from our lives.

    We want to see a Britain whose schools are a source of pride and where education brings out the best in every child.

    — A Britain where excellence and effort are valued and honoured.

    We want to see a Britain where our streets are free from fear, day and night.

    And above all, we want to see a Britain which is respected and trusted in the world, which values the great benefits of living in a free society, and is determined to defend them.

    Mr. President, our duty is to safeguard our country’s interests, and to be reliable friends and allies. The failure of the other parties to measure up to what is needed places an awesome responsibility upon us.

    I believe that we have an historic duty to discharge that responsibility and to carry into the future all that is best and unique in Britain.

    I believe that our Party is uniquely equipped to do it.

    I believe the interests of Britain can now only be served by a third Conservative victory.