Tag: Speeches

  • Robert Halfon – 2024 Speech at the Landex Conference

    Robert Halfon – 2024 Speech at the Landex Conference

    The speech made by Robert Halfon, the Minister of State at the Department for Education, on 29 February 2024.

    Introduction

    Good morning. It is great to be meeting so many college leaders and seeing their fantastic provision during national colleges week! Only this morning I was at Tresham College’s Kettering campus a few miles from here.

    I feel privileged to be with you today to talk about land-based colleges, and the real difference you make at a local and national level across the country. From horticulture to agricultural engineering, your teaching is an incredible asset to our skills infrastructure. What you do might not always receive the recognition it deserves from those of us who live in cities. But our quality of life greatly depends upon the work and stewardship your fantastic students will go on to do. And I am incredibly grateful. Thank you.

    Of course, all skills education supports economic growth. But green skills training has a particularly important part to play in supporting sustainable jobs for future generations. Land-based colleges are uniquely placed to drive green skills development and enrich rural economies and communities.

    My favourite author, JRR Tolkien, enriched his writing with both traditional skills education and Britian’s incredible landscapes. Northeast of Northamptonshire (where we are today), Lancashire’s Ribble Valley inspired some of his most dramatic and vivid chapters in The Lord of the Rings.

    The best known Tolkien apprentice is the apprentice-gardener in the novel, Samwise Gamgee.

    I’ve no doubt he would have studied horticulture at Myerscough College to the east of the Valley, which has been providing ‘technical training in both practical and theoretical agriculture’ since 1894.

    Tolkien demonstrates the worth of skills training throughout his writing, with his apprentice heroes often defying low expectations. Samwise Gamgee not only helped Frodo deliver the Ring to Mount Doom; he was eventually elected Mayor of the Shire seven times, and became an advisor to the King. I believe the work we’re doing here today is a continuation of this – amplifying the extraordinary value of land-based skills and apprenticeships.

    Because this skills training has the power to change lives! I recently visited Suffolk New College, where I met a student doing a Level 2 Skills Bootcamp in Practical Environmental and Conservation Skills. He had so much enthusiasm for what he was learning, because he could see it was the gateway to a new career. It’s a great example of how high-quality training can provide a vital stepping stone, enabling young people to climb the ladder of opportunity to a good job and a great career.

    A worldclass skills system

    Since 2010 we’ve been building a worldclass skills system, providing high quality 16-19 education, apprenticeships and adult training. This will drive productivity and economic growth by nurturing talent across the country, addressing current skills shortages, and creating a technical education system ready to respond to evolving skills needs.

    High quality runs through the DNA of our skills offer, which includes a broad range of land-based courses and programmes. The Institute for Apprenticeships and Technical Education co-designed each apprenticeship’s rigorous standards with the relevant sector. This means that from Farrier to Crop Technician, each now gives learners the tuition, practical experience and credibility they need to build a successful career.

    We are now building that rigour into our shorter courses for adult learners. Skills Bootcamps offer free, flexible training for adults to get a head start in the sectors that really need them. They already include Ecology & Conservation and Green Technology courses – and we’re currently developing new bootcamps in Woodland Management and Arboriculture.

    Your tuition is specialised and practical, and that comes at a price. I understand what it takes, and the higher costs and dedicated resources required to teach land-based programmes. That’s why I fought to be able to announce a significant increase to the specialist programme cost weighting from 1.75 to 1.975 for the 2023/2024 academic year. This means that young people attending your institutions now attract a 97.5% uplift on the core funding rate. So, overall, young people attending your institutions attracted average programme funding of over £7,800 in AY23/24, up from c.£6,800 in AY22/23.

    Landex Roundtable

    In January I held a roundtable with Alex Payne (Landex Chief Executive), and some familiar faces in this room. We discussed how we can work together to raise the profile of your institutions, and help others see the amazing contribution you make to the national infrastructure. I set out how we can co-design a national strategy that puts land-based colleges at the heart of the skills agenda to create a greener, more sustainable economy. Officials at the department have been working closely with you to co-design this strategy, and I’d like to share more details of it today.

    A national strategy for key priorities

    The underlying principle of our strategy is that the Government recognises the central role that land-based colleges have to play in supporting the delivery of key national priorities.

    Your institutions already help ensure food security for the nation and promote responsible management of our natural resources and biodiversity. You are equipping the next generation with the green skills the country will need in coming decades. Now and in the future, your courses will help employers to meet our 2050 Net Zero targets.

    There are three core elements to the strategy we’re developing:

    • the national role that land-based colleges can play, especially in green skills and protecting the environment;
    • how we position land-based colleges as hubs of skills training and innovation;
    • Land-based colleges’ impact on their local communities, as places of vital social capital.

    Land-based colleges’ national role

    Land-based colleges are key to creating the innovative rural workforce we need to achieve national environmental goals. I’m looking forward to collaborating with you to ensure that local advancements in provision align with national priorities.

    A key part of the new national strategy will be to identify where we have shortages of land-based skills. We will work together to develop a profile of these shortages and how to meet them. I’m pleased that you’re already supporting the Government’s Green Jobs Delivery Group to deliver its wider Green Job Plan later this year.

    My department has an important role to play in connecting young people with land-based colleges, so you can: inspire them to consider land-based professions; provide them with innovative learning environments and help them access the skills and knowledge we need for our green skills revolution.  The DfE recently launched the Skills for Life campaign to inspire people to explore skills and technical education opportunities to build a foundation for their chosen career. The campaign website can direct them to the National Careers Service, which now has a Green Careers page as well as an Environment and Land page. Both demonstrate the breadth roles and skills, across many sectors, that support the environment.

    Hubs of skills training and technical innovation

    The strategy will also recognise that land-based colleges stand at the forefront of land-based skills training and technical innovation. You hold the power to change people’s prospects, by boosting take-up of skills training for sought-after jobs in rural areas.

    One way land-based colleges can drive change and engagement with their courses is through collaborating with their local Institute of Technology. IoTs are employer-led – offering specialised courses tailored to local business needs, for local students. We have invested £300 million in the 21 IoTs, which are leading the development of technical qualifications in STEM-related areas. This investment will increase their capacity to deliver technical skills, by providing access to industry standard facilities and equipment.  I would urge everyone here to look-up your local IoT, if you haven’t already, and consider how a partnership could boost your skills training and your students’ prospects.

    It’s also really important that land-based colleges engage with their Local Skills Improvement Plan to ensure their provision is aligned with local business needs. The aim of these employer-led local plans is to ensure that high quality, updated technical qualifications are available in every area – including apprenticeships, T Levels, and Higher Technical Qualifications.

    I want to thank Landex for its help in developing and implementing LSIPs. The programme is not only increasing collaboration between providers and employers, but also between different provider types, such as land-based colleges and other providers of post-16 technical education. This has resulted in some truly innovative projects, designed specifically to meet local skills needs. In the Northwest, Myerscough College is galvanising providers across the region to respond to challenges identified in the Lancashire LSIP. This includes attracting new workers to farming, agriculture and hospitality – industries critical to the local economy.

    But if your college hasn’t yet got involved, please search for your local LSIP and become part of an essential, employer-led dialogue about local skills needs. It’s worth saying that the programme is backed by the £165 million Local Skills Improvement Fund to kick start changes to local provision. Colleges across the country, from East Durham to Chichester, have already benefitted from the first round of funding announced in November. Warwickshire College Group were awarded £490,000 to establish an Agriculture Sustainability Hub at Pershore College. The funding will provide the latest equipment and resources, as well as updating the glasshouses in the college’s Agri-Tech Research Centre.

    Assets to local communities

    Land-based colleges are valuable economic assets to their communities because they are uniquely placed to provide skills training, in their local areas, all the way from entry level to highly specialised technical training and research. The strategy will look at ways to help you maximise your economic contribution by fostering close working relationships with local employers. By proactively collaborating with businesses – through LSIPs, IoTs, and in less formal ways – you will help to meet local skills gaps and build a future talent pipeline for the rural economy. This will, in turn, drive entrepreneurship and open-up local career opportunities.

    Our vision also includes colleges using their expertise to improve the sustainability of rural businesses through supporting their resilience and productivity.

    The strategy will also recognise that land-based colleges are all places of social capital. Your courses enable people of all backgrounds to gain sought-after skills and climb the Ladder of Opportunity to good jobs and higher earnings. I know many here share my outlook that skills education has a unique power to promote social justice. Your colleges are lighthouses for people in rural areas and it’s up to us to ensure that the right opportunities reach the people who really need them, so they can build a strong career within their local community.

    In contrast to the hobbits in Lord of the Rings, Tolkien placed another of his apprentice characters at the centre of a village community. Alf, in the story ‘Smith of Wootton Major’, initially learns his trade from the Master Cook in the large Village Kitchen. His skill is not always prized as it should be by the villagers, though it is an extraordinary asset to his community. He perseveres calmly through their prejudice, and at the end of the story is revealed to have been the King of Faery all along.

    Skills students can face many challenges, and I applaud Landex’s work to support physical and mental health in rural communities. Last summer, the Minister for Farming and I wrote to you about mental health in the sector, highlighting the Yellow Wellies campaign from the Farm Safety Foundation. They have launched a conversation on how we can all positively impact the mental health of young people in farming communities. I’m keen that we continue this dialogue as part of the strategy.

    Conclusion

    The national strategy we’re co-creating will support you and your institutions to be leaders in the country’s green skills revolution. The skills you teach, such a rewilding and agriculture, have a crucial part to play in this. Suffolk New College, which I mentioned at the beginning, demonstrates how agriculture, animal husbandry and hospitality can be taught on one site, with their farm-to-fork café. By teaching so many trades at their rural campus, which includes a Land-Based Service Engineering workshop, they offer their students many different routes up the Ladder of Opportunity.

    I hope that the vision for the strategy I have outlined today demonstrates the impact your college can have on the nation’s future prosperity. You can help us deliver Net Zero, energy security, climate adaptation and environmental recovery. You already safeguard our food security, and your students play a vital role in maintaining our natural infrastructure and the rural economy.

    Tolkien once said that true education is:

    “a matter of continual beginnings, of habitual fresh starts, of persistent newness.”

    We want more and more people to build the skills needed for good employment in this age of

    ‘persistent newness’ – skills for new and shifting industries, that business leaders are crying-out for.

    I want to thank you again for the unique work you do, and I look forward to working together further on the areas I’ve outlined, for the nation’s economic and ecological future. I’ve been talking about a strategy but that’s just a means to an end – to help get the conditions right so your colleges can flourish. If we get this right then we’ll see students reaching their potential, rural skills boosted and our country leading the way in green skills. That’s something we all want to see and I’m really grateful for the opportunity to meet with you today. Best wishes for the rest of your conference.

  • David Cameron – 2024 Statement on Aid Worker Deaths in Gaza

    David Cameron – 2024 Statement on Aid Worker Deaths in Gaza

    The statement made by David Cameron, the Foreign Secretary, on 2 April 2024.

    The news of the airstrike that killed World Central Kitchen (WCK) aid workers in Gaza is deeply distressing.

    These were people who were working to deliver life-saving aid to those who desperately need it.

    It is essential that humanitarian workers are protected and able to carry out their work.

    We have called on Israel to immediately investigate and provide a full, transparent explanation of what happened.

  • Andrew Griffith – 2024 Speech at LEAP ’24

    Andrew Griffith – 2024 Speech at LEAP ’24

    The speech made by Andrew Griffith, the Science Minister, in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia on 4 March 2024.

    Good afternoon.  It’s a pleasure to be here.

    I must start by thanking the patron of this conference and our gracious host, His Excellency Minister AlSwaha, and all of the teams behind this fantastic event.

    This is my second visit to the dynamic City of Riyadh in a few months and it is good to be back.

    The immense science and innovation ambition of the Kingdom in its Vision 2030 is clear and commendable.

    In its four priorities – health and wellbeing, sustainability, energy and economies of the future – Saudi Arabia has shown that it is ready to harness the power of research to tackle some of the greatest shared challenges of our time.

    Projects like NEOM which seeks to harness the power of AI and net zero technologies to establish the most advanced human habitat on Earth  have the potential to drive forward innovation at a scale and pace almost without precedent in human history.

    I am here because I believe that Britain has a vital role to play in that story.

    With four of the world’s top ten universities, we have one of the most formidable research and innovation bases on the planet.

    And according to the World Intellectual Property Organisation, the UK is one of the most innovative economies.

    Like Saudi Arabia, we too, are unapologetically ambitious in capitalising on our strengths to grow our economy and improve lives for people in Britain and around the world.

    Our Science and Tech Framework sets out our ambition to become a science and technology superpower by 2030, with plans to lead in transformative technologies such as artificial intelligence, quantum, and synthetic biology.

    But, even though we are competitive, we are clear that no country can become a science and tech superpower in isolation.

    Just as the history is of humankind becoming more prosperous, living longer, and building great civilisations through free trade, global innovation is not a zero-sum game.

    And so today, my message is this:

    With our shared strengths and our levels of ambition, the UK and the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia can form a formidable research and innovation partnership for the future.

    That’s why I’m delighted to have today signed a Memorandum of Understanding between our two governments.

    This agreement will encourage our worldQ-leading researchers to form productive partnerships in the years to come.

    And I lay down the challenge to British Universities and institutes: come now and seek opportunities to collaborate in the innovative and fast growing Saudi economy.

    Our two countries’ collaborations in this space are young, but we already have over 50 formalised partnerships.

    Over the last decade, they have delivered everything from joint centres of excellence, to research collaborations and visiting researcher programmes.

    Based on scientific publications, I am proud that Britain is already the Kingdom’s third largest collaborator in research and innovation.

    Actions matter, not just words, and that is why this May, I and a very senior delegation of UK businesses and ministers will return to Saudi Arabia in full force to launch our GREAT Futures Campaign – another chance to turbo-charge our innovation agenda.

    Honoured attendees, it is hard to think of a single challenge we face which won’t require innovation.

    The ‘to do’ list for global research and innovation has never run to so many lines.

    The horrifying consequences of anti-microbial resistance or future zoonotic disease pandemics.

    Protecting societies from extremist ideologies and keeping our children safe online.

    The growing challenges of obesity, cancer and dementia – whilst not neglecting the hunger and disease still faced by too many in the developing world.

    And that’s before we contemplate the need for new low carbon energy systems, creative ways to support mass urbanisation or urgent action to protect nature on our congested and fragile planet.

    Global challenges require a global response.

    And each of us in our national governments have a critical role to play.

    From revolutionary stem cell treatment for reversing sight loss to the first transatlantic flight run on 100% sustainable aviation fuel, the UK shows how publicly-funded research working with private capital and business can help transform the world for the better.

    Perhaps there is no better example than the COVID-19 vaccine, which went on to save an estimated 6 million lives and freed billions more across the globe from lockdown.

    The success of the vaccine only happened as the result of the excellence of Britain’s Universities combined with the innovation of our life sciences companies.

    Saudi Arabia is on a similar path.

    Government-led investment – combined with reforms designed to unleash innovation, like the establishment of the Research, Development and Innovation authority – is already delivering impressive results from public health to energy and the environment.

    NEOM and KAUST are employing digital twinning technology to set up the world’s largest coral reef restoration project.

    And like the UK’s BioBank, the Saudi Human Genome project, is capturing the genetic blueprint of Saudi society to tackle disease with personalised medicine.

    Our commitment is strong and unwavering.

    Last month saw UK annual investment in research and development reach its highest ever level.

    The UK will spend £20 billion across the coming financial year.

    As a country That’s one fifth of all government capital expenditure.

    And it adds up to more than £100 billion between now and 2030.

    Now, we are laser-focused on building an innovation ecosystem where it is simple and rewarding to take that world-leading research, and use it to start and scale a successful business in Britain.

    This is not just happening in world-renowned powerhouses like Oxford, Cambridge and London, but in every corner of the country.

    Take Stevenage – I don’t imagine many of you have heard about this town that sits squarely in the middle of England.

    Yet the Bioscience Catalyst science park in Stevenage is the single largest cluster of cell and gene therapy companies in Europe.

    This is no coincidence. Cutting-edge companies from around the world have chosen the UK to start-up and scale-up precisely because of those public-private partnerships I have been talking about.

    From small satellite manufacturing in Glasgow to semiconductors in South Wales, our thriving R&D ecosystem means that there are stories like this up and down the UK.

    In fact, my team have developed a new Cluster Mapping Tool to make it easier for investors, entrepreneurs and government to identify these hot spots of innovation.

    Of course, success will never be exclusively about raw investment.

    We in government also have a responsibility to ensure that regulators can provide innovative businesses with the clarity and certainty that they need to get their products and services to market  quickly.

    I have run businesses myself, and I know how frustrating it can be to have a brilliant idea you are unable to execute, because clunky rules, risk averse regulators or out-of-date laws don’t allow for it.

    Good regulation should encourage innovation, not stifle it, even as we refuse to compromise on safety.

    Even in fast moving technologies, the right balance of regulation can help provide certainty to invest.

    A good example is the UK’s approach to the safety of Frontier AI and last years summit at Bletchley Park.

    It is why we have made delivering an ambitious regulatory reform agenda a top priority in the UK, and a key pillar in our science and tech framework.

    To conclude my remarks:

    We all in this room have an incredible opportunity.

    It’s an exciting time in innovation and an exciting moment to be an innovator.

    That’s true individually but it is also true at the whole economy scale where countries like the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and the United Kingdom seek to be innovator economies; to grow and to improve the lives of their citizens and make a wider contribution.

    But at a time of shared global challenges, none of us can do it alone.

    We in government must work together – such as in the agreement the UK has today signed with Saudi Arabia – and by doing so we can support bigger, better, bolder science than we could ever do alone – and take on and solve the challenges that will define the future.

    Thank you.

  • Rachel Reeves – 2024 Speech at the Mais Lecture

    Rachel Reeves – 2024 Speech at the Mais Lecture

    The speech made by Rachel Reeves, the Shadow Chancellor, on 19 May 2024.

    Thank you. It is a privilege to be here at Bayes Business School this evening.

    To look back over past Mais Lectures is not just to survey the thoughts of the key figures in British economic policymaking over four and a half decades. It is to trace the shifting contours of conventional economic thought. To grasp how crises have forced its re-evaluation. To appreciate how the challenges confronting policymakers have changed over time – and how, in important respects, they have stayed the same.

    When the governor of the Bank of England, Gordon Richardson, delivered the very first Mais Lecture in February 1978 describing a ‘historical juncture when the conventional methods of economic policy are being tested’ he spoke in the context of a Britain plagued by high inflation, rising unemployment, dysfunctional industrial relations, and recurrent balance of payments crises. A Britain wracked by a sense of perpetual crisis and decline.

    What I want to argue today is that, as in the 1970s, we are in a moment of flux; in which old certainties about economic management have been found wanting, the economic mainstream is adapting, but a new political consensus has yet to cohere. Once again, we have found ourselves in a moment of political turbulence and recurrent crises with the burden falling on the shoulders of working people – with at its root, a failure to deliver the supply side reform needed to equip Britain to compete in a fast changing world.

    I suggest that the answer today is an economic approach which recognises how our world has changed. Building growth on strong and secure foundations, with active government guided by three imperatives:

    First, guaranteeing stability.

    Second, stimulating investment through partnership with business;

    And third, reform to unlock the contribution of working people and the untapped potential throughout our economy.

    The challenges we face now are perhaps even more acute than those which Richardson described half a century ago. The central challenge is our growth performance. Last month, the Office for National Statistics confirmed that the UK entered recession at the end of last year.

    But this is just the latest chapter in a longer story of economic decline. Since 2010, Britain’s GDP performance has hovered in the bottom third among the 38 OECD countries. To put into perspective, if the UK economy had grown at the OECD average over the past decade, it would be £140bn larger today, equivalent to £5,000 per household, an additional £50 billion in tax revenues.

    What we are facing today is decline of a materially different sort to that which preoccupied British policymakers in the past. In the 1960s and 1970s, governments grappled with questions of productivity, investment and how to pay Britain’s way in the world, in a context of economic convergence, in which British decline was relative – a result not of British failure but the catch-up success of other Western European economies. Today, as the historian Adam Tooze suggests, we are in a moment of deconvergence, trailing and falling further behind our counterparts.

    This has had serious consequences for living standards, with real household disposable income set to be lower at the end of this Parliament than it was at its beginning. Today, the average British family is ten percent worse off than their French counterparts and a full twenty percent worse off than their German counterparts.

    At root, productivity remains the key medium term determinant of wages. It is the collapse in our productivity growth which explains our wage stagnation.

    What is demanded is a fundamental course correction. The stakes have rarely been higher. Not only for the living standards of working people; not only for Britain’s competitiveness in a fast-changing world – though both are at stake. But also for the health of our democracy.

    As Joan Robinson understood when she wrote sixty years ago, economics is not just about quantitative models and abstract theory – it is about values, rooted in political, philosophical and moral questions, about human nature and the good society. Robinson’s thinking finds powerful echoes today, in Mark Carney’s warning that economic policymaking has become detached from values broader than those of competition and efficiency – even while competitiveness and efficiency deteriorate, and in the Australian Treasurer Jim Chalmers’ call for a values-based capitalism.

    The political economist Karl Polanyi who came to Britain from Austria as fascism rose in the 1930s wrote of the tendency of market economies that become disembedded from their societies to undermine the conditions for growth and provoke powerful political counter-movements of both left and right. Polanyi’s insights remain prescient.

    Because when mainstream politics cannot offer the answers to our predicament; when vast swathes of Britain are written out of our national story; when hope for the future is allowed to wither, and decline becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy; then we know the result. We see it all across the world:  the rise of populists who offer not answers but recriminations.

    My argument today is this: a new model of economic management is needed. Because a model based on the pursuit of narrow-based, narrowly-shared growth – with ever-diminishing returns – cannot produce adequate returns in growth and living standards, and nor can it command democratic consent.

    I want to make this argument in three parts.

    First, to place our economic challenges in context.

    Second, to outline the contours of an alternative approach – an approach that builds growth on strong and secure foundations;

    The only viable strategy for growth in today’s world.

    And third, to set out the pillars of that approach.

    There is no single cause for our present plight.

    Jonathan Haskel has demonstrated how our productivity slowdown in the 2010s was driven by a slowdown in total factor productivity. And when we compare ourselves to our faster-growing competitors, it is clear that we have been underperforming across all the factors of growth.

    Weak investment, with Britain alone among the G7 in having investment levels below 20 percent of GDP. Low levels of basic skills, gaps in technical and vocational education, and comparatively poor management capability. Vast regional disparities, with all of England’s biggest cities outside London having productivity levels below the national average. And, particularly since the pandemic, a significant weakness in labour supply, with 700,000 more people economically inactive.

    We have an accumulation of problems.

    First, there are long-standing weaknesses, which generations of politicians have struggled to address. It is not enough simply to point to these failings. We must confront their underlying institutional, cultural and political causes.

    Second, there are the products of political and policy choices made over the last fourteen years, and of the instability that has accompanied them. Like the stop-go cycle of capital investment – the new ‘British disease’ – in which short-term instability inhibits investment and drives up infrastructure costs, resulting in fewer, and smaller, new capital projects. And a rushed and ill-conceived Brexit deal that has brought further disruption, with the Resolution Foundation estimating that new trade barriers are equivalent to a 13 and 21 percent increase in tariffs for our manufacturing and service sectors respectively, and the OBR finding that long-run GDP is expected to be 4 percent lower as a result of the government’s Brexit deal.

    And third, those structural vulnerabilities, and that political instability, have been exposed and exacerbated by our move from the great moderation into an age of insecurity, marked first by stalling growth, stagnant living standards and political turbulence and increasingly by global shocks, escalating geopolitical tensions, and the challenges of climate change and the net zero transition.

    Let me put this in some perspective. In 1984, Nigel Lawson’s Mais Lecture offered one of the clearest expositions of the economic thought which underlay what he called ‘the British experiment’. His central contention was that the proper roles of macro and microeconomic policy were the exact reverse of the post-war accepted wisdom. That the primary role of macroeconomic policy was not, as it had once been, the maintenance of full employment but the control of inflation. Responsibility for growth and employment then, in Lawson’s formulation, was the responsibility of microeconomic policy.

    The reality is: Lawson failed to follow the logic of his own analysis, stoking an inflationary boom at the end of that decade, which was followed by a deep recession in the early 1990s.

    But today it is evident that Lawson was wrong not only in application but in theory. First, because his microeconomic reforms were hitched to an inadequate view of the appropriate policy levers, assuming that the state had little role in shaping a market economy and that the people and places that matter to a country’s success are few in number.

    The outcome was an unprecedented surge in inequality between places and people which endures today. The decline or disappearance of whole industries, leaving enduring social and economic costs and hollowing out our industrial strength. And – crucially – diminishing returns for growth and productivity.

    But today, we can see the shortcomings in Lawson’s analysis on the other side of the equation too. Because in a world that has been repeatedly shaken by supply-side shocks, it is inadequate to see the fight against inflation as a matter for macroeconomic policy alone.  Our resilience in the face of shocks brings microeconomic policy – in questions of energy security, our domestic productive capacity and the strength of our supply chains – to the fore in the fight against inflation.

    For a decade, the last Labour government offered stable politics alongside a stable economic environment. In New Labour’s analysis, growth required on the one hand macroeconomic stability, a on the other supply side policies to enhance human capital and spur innovation. What followed was a decade of sustained economic growth, stability, and rising household incomes. Average household disposable income rose by 40 percent. Two million children and three million pensioners were lifted from poverty. Public services were revitalised.

    But the analysis on which it built was too narrow. Stability was a necessary, but not a sufficient condition to generate private sector investment. An underregulated financial sector could generate immense wealth but posed profound structural risks too. And globalisation and new technologies could widen as well as diminish inequality, disempower people as much as liberate them, displace as well as create good work.

    Economic security was extended through a new minimum wage and tax credits, but our labour market remained characterised by too much insecurity. Despite sustained efforts to address our key weaknesses on productivity and regional inequality, they persisted, and so too did the festering gap between large parts of the country and Westminster politics. Most of all, the ‘great moderation’ could not last. And as the global financial crisis unfolded, these weaknesses were exposed.

    Since 2010, economic policymaking has been characterised by two major failings.  First, austerity, then instability. Austerity: the decision, in the context of historically low interest rates and slack in the economy, to sharply tighten fiscal policy. Not only did it do severe damage to our social fabric and to our public services, but at a time when government could borrow and invest more cheaply than at almost any previous point, the failure to do so was an act of historic negligence. Not just wrong in the short-term, macroeconomic sense, but also a failure to grasp a unique opportunity to undertake much-needed investment in our productive capacity. Investment was suffocated. Our supply-side weaknesses – in terms of both human and physical capital – were exacerbated.

    The so-called ‘mini budget’ – with its programme of unfunded tax cuts, amidst a concerted attempt to undermine our independent economic institutions – dramatically changed the fiscal circumstances in which we must operate. In October 2021, the Bank of England base rate was 0.1 percent. In little over two years, that has risen to 5.25 percent.  In October 2021, the OBR forecast that net debt interest would cost £29 billion this year. They now expect that cost to be £82 billion.

    These changed circumstances explain the decision that Keir Starmer, the Shadow Cabinet and myself recently reached over the scale of government spending attached to Labour’s Green Prosperity Plan, to strike the necessary balance between the imperatives of the energy transition and the real economic constraints we face.

    Honestly, I don’t want to make this a party political speech any more than you want me to, but nor would it be right or honest to downplay the impact of the upheavals of recent years. Five Prime Ministers. Seven Chancellors. Twelve plans for growth. Institutions undermined. Decisions ducked and deferred. That political instability has fuelled economic instability and deterred investment.

    That brings us to our own historical juncture: On top of a decade of weak growth and stagnant living standards, the coexistence of stagnation and inflation; significant pressure on government borrowing; caused by, and exacerbating the urgent need for, overdue supply-side reform. An economy lacking resilience in the face of shocks, with public services at breaking point, and one in three working-age families having less than £1,000 in savings to fall back on.

    It is not only the failings of the past however, but the uncertainties of the future, which necessitate a new approach. Let me explain.

    In 2000, I graduated from university and began my career at the Bank of England. The Cold War had ended a decade earlier. The ‘great moderation’ was underway. We appeared to be entering a moment of unprecedented economic expansion and geopolitical stability, underpinned by the promise of ever-closer global economic integration.

    Today, the world looks very different. Gordon Brown called the 2008 financial crisis ‘the first crisis of globalisation’. We can now see that the financial crisis marked a more fundamental shift: the onset of a new age of insecurity.

    There are myriad causes and symptoms of this age of insecurity but let me stress three in particular.

    First, shifting geopolitical dynamics, as we move from a post-Cold War, unipolar world, to one of unbalanced multipolarity, where China looms large on the world stage and Russia is asserting itself more than it has in three decades. War in Ukraine and the Middle East threatens to spill across borders. The impact of Houthi missile attacks in the Red Sea shows how, inescapably, questions of defence and security are entangled with economic ones.

    Second, rapid technological change. Generative AI has the potential to bring about revolutionary improvements in the way we live, but also the threat of profound disruption to labour markets and the distribution of income, wealth and opportunity between people and countries.

    And third, the climate crisis. The energy transition presents great opportunities – improved resilience, lower energy costs, jobs and growth from new technologies – for those swift to grasp them. But even in the best-case scenario, we know the world will face dramatically intensified competition for food, energy and water, affecting trade patterns and displacing populations. We have already seen shortages on our supermarket shelves as a result of droughts, storms and rising temperatures. More will follow. We know too – as the Office for Budget Responsibility has argued – that the future costs of failure to address the climate crisis will far outweigh the cost of action today.

    As disruptions have multiplied, and governments around the world have taken steps to strengthen their own self-sufficiency it has become evident that globalisation, as we once knew it, is dead. That is not to say we live in a less interconnected world, as each crisis sends tremors along supply chains that span continents. Nor to pretend that the laws of economics have gone into reverse; or to deny the role of free trade in lifting billions of people from abject poverty. But it is to say that, in a more dangerous world, we must be clear-eyed about where trade-offs exist, and strategic about the directions in which we choose to deepen our economic relationships.

    We can no longer indulge complacency. A growth model reliant on geopolitical stability is a growth model resting on increasingly shallow foundations.

    The task then is to build for growth on strong foundations – broad-based, inclusive, resilient, and anchored in the realities of a fast-changing world.

    Let me be unambiguous: there is no viable growth strategy today which does not rest upon resilience for our national economy and security for working people.  No trade-off between a more secure and resilient Britain, and a more dynamic Britain.

    The onset of this age of insecurity has returned to the fore issues commonly ignored in a world of floating exchange rates, but which would be very familiar to politicians of earlier generations. Questions of how Britain can pay its way in the world; of our productive capacity; of how to drive innovation and diffusion throughout our economy; of the regional distribution of work and opportunity; of how to mobilise investment, develop skills and tackle inefficiencies to modernise a sclerotic economy; and of energy security.

    Indeed, in recent years, we have paid the price for neglecting our energy security – with households and businesses left acutely exposed to a terms of trade shock, and its inflationary consequences.

    In a changing world, Britain has been behind the curve.

    We have seen the cost of neglecting the delicate balance between flexibility and security; between the allure of just-in-time production and the demand for resilience; and of turning a blind eye to where things are made and who they are owned by.

    The philosopher Bernard Williams wrote of the ‘first political question’ – ‘the securing of order, protection, safety, trust, and the conditions of cooperation.’ The ‘first’ political question, ‘because solving it is the condition of solving, indeed posing, any others.’ That question pertains not just to the size of our military or the strengths of our borders, but to economics too.

    Now, you might ask: doesn’t ‘economic security’ imply a denial of ‘risk’, the motor of innovation and entrepreneurship? So let me say this. Without the promise of stability, how can business invest with confidence? Without security, how can we ask an entrepreneur to take the plunge and start a new business? Without a safety net to fall back on, how can we expect an ordinary person to retrain, take a new job or change career?

    When change increasingly appears disruptive and the future darkly uncertain, there is a natural urge to recoil from change and seek shelter from the future altogether. Securonomics is about providing the platform from which to take risks; not to retreat from an uncertain future, but to embrace change and the opportunities it brings with clarity of purpose and stability of direction. To know that people can stand and fall on their own merits, not on the basis of events far beyond their control.

    But what does it mean to translate that idea into political and economic reality?

    It means embracing the insights of an emergent economic consensus. The Harvard political economist Dani Rodrik speaks of a new ‘productivist paradigm’. The US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has branded the Biden administration’s agenda ‘modern supply side economics’. Across the world, related ideas appear under different banners. I use the term ‘securonomics’.

    Governments and policymakers are recognising that it is no longer enough, if it ever was, for the state to simply get out of the way,  to leave markets to their own devices and correct the occasional negative externality. Recognising that the security and prosperity of working people is integral to the strength, dynamism and legitimacy of a market economy. And recognising too the dangers of what Rodrik terms ‘hyperglobalisation’ – because to pursue ever closer global economic integration as an end in itself, not as a means to domestic prosperity, is economically naive and politically reckless.

    I know there will be those – perhaps some of them are even in this room – who worry that this argument is to embrace protectionism and to retreat from the world. So let me be exact. The truth is, in recent years, we have become at once too open – too exposed to global disruption – but also too closed to global trade. Queues at our ports, empty shelves, soaring prices, and red tape holding our exporters back.

    Trade increases competition, aids the diffusion of technologies, and it allows for gains from specialisation and comparative advantage. That basic reality hasn’t changed. This is not a question of retreating into fortress Britain – indeed, success will rest on forming new bilateral and multilateral partnerships, and forging a closer relationship with our neighbours in the European Union. We want to make it easier to export and import. But we must strike the appropriate balance between openness to global trade and resilience at home, acknowledging the centrality of trade to our prosperity, our competitiveness, and our supply of consumer goods but appreciating that there must be red lines – things for which we should not rely on states whose interests conflict with our own.

    This is not only a matter of expanding our domestic productive capacity, but of forging stronger and more diverse supply chains for critical technologies. As other countries build up their own homegrown industries and forge new strategic partnerships, to prevaricate – to cling to old dogmas – is to fall behind.

    There is a political reality to this too. With populists and protectionists the world over offering false solutions to vast and complex problems then the only defence of an open society and a trading economy is an approach which tackles the grievances on which they prey at root.

    A new Washington consensus is taking shape. I believe it is in our interest to embrace that consensus. But today Britain is little more than a spectator.

    Our ability to embrace that consensus will depend on an active state. There are those who warn that to embrace the active state is to return to the big state: to the top-down, Whitehall-knows-best government of the past. So again – let me be precise about what I mean.

    The reality is we are already stumbling blindfolded into an era of a bigger state, the unavoidable corollary of sticking plaster politics. The inevitable response when disruption hits an economy with depleted resilience, inadequately prepared for shocks, its public services overstretched, its government unprepared. Securonomics advances not the big state but the smart and strategic state.

    And to those who assume that industrial strategy amounts only to the state picking winners and propping up uncompetitive industries, let me explain. This is to misunderstand what a modern industrial strategy looks like. It is not the crude model of the state directing industrial development and correcting externalities as seen from the centre, but instead an approach that recognises the informational and capacity constraints of government, working in genuine partnership with business to identify the barriers and opportunities they face. Working together to form an assessment of the industries which will be critical in determining our future – across our broad based services strengths and our manufacturing specialisms, and being strategic about our real choices and our limits. Accepting that a country the size of Britain cannot excel at everything. Acknowledging those sectors in which we enjoy – or have the potential to enjoy – comparative advantage and can compete in a global marketplace; those sectors where strategic concerns might shape our approach; and those sectors where we must rely on others.

    There are no easy answers, no quick fixes, no short cuts here. What is demanded is a decade of national renewal, shaping the institutional architecture of the British economy in the direction of mission-led government. And the most central mission of all: to restore the economic growth essential to meeting all Labour’s ambitions in government.

    When I hear it questioned whether sustained growth of the sort that characterised our twentieth century history is achievable, even whether it is desirable – when people ask, why do we focus on economic growth?  It is because I believe two things.

    First, that it is through growth and only through growth that we can sustainably resource strong public services, raise living standards, and compete internationally. Growth, ultimately, is what generates higher living standards for households, raises incomes, lifts people out of poverty, and gives people more choices about how to lead a good life. And second, that the idea of a trade-off between the strong economy and the good society is a mirage that belongs in the 1980s.

    I see Britain’s potential wherever I go, in our fantastic creative industries, our world-leading professional and financial services, and in pioneering work in general purpose AI and other digital technologies, in life sciences, and renewable energy – happening right here in the UK. There is no one-size fits all approach – different sectors have different needs, and face different barriers. But if we can get the policy right, then the rewards are immense.

    That must begin with getting the institutional framework right, and enshrining that core growth mission within our economic architecture.

    In 1997, the last Labour government established the Treasury’s Enterprise and Growth Unit, squarely focused on driving economic growth. It was a source of important policy ideas, including the reform of competition law and the creation of a longer-term science funding framework. However, as the Institute for Government noted last month, that Unit is underpowered, its influence diminished compared to twenty years ago. And crucially it is not involved in the management of fiscal events.

    So we will build on that success, hard-wiring growth into budget and spending review processes, with a reformed and strengthened Enterprise and Growth Unit embedded in the existing fiscal event process.

    I want to use the rest of this lecture to set out the three pillars of a strategy for broad-based and resilient growth. Growth that we can achieve. Growth that we must achieve.

    First, stability – the most basic condition for economic security and international credibility.

    Second, investment – fostered through partnership, between dynamic business and strategic government.

    And third, reform – to mobilise all of Britain’s resources in pursuit of shared prosperity.

    So first, stability. If we want to see businesses invest, if we want to build economic growth on strong foundations, then it will rest on stability.

    In a world of unparalleled complexity and uncertainty, it is institutions which can provide the stability of direction, coordination, and appropriate incentives for sustained economic success. For much of our history, the strength of our institutions has bestowed credibility in international markets and underpinned our economic success. Politicians who undermine those strengths are playing a dangerous game.

    So let me begin with the Bank of England. The Bank’s Monetary Policy Committee must continue to have complete independence in the pursuit of its primary objective of price stability. And, just so there is no doubt about this: a Labour government will retain the 2 percent inflation target, while the Financial Policy Committee will continue with its core objective of financial stability.

    But monetary policy and financial regulation cannot stand still, in the face of new risks, not least those posed by climate change. The European Central Bank’s Isabel Schnabel has set out the implications for monetary policy of climate change: in losses that could translate onto the balance sheets of financial institutions and reduce the flow of credit; in impacts on labour productivity and health-related inactivity, which could lower the equilibrium real rate of interest and constrain the space for conventional monetary policy; and through the impact of supply side shocks on prices. Given the onus to mobilise investment to achieve our energy transition, these challenges are especially acute.

    Macroeconomic policy has an important role to play in our climate transition. Labour has already set out plans to require financial institutions and FTSE 100 Companies to publish their carbon footprints and adopt credible 1.5-degrees-aligned net zero plans, and to push ahead with a UK Green Taxonomy.

    Tonight, I can say more. I disagree with the current Chancellor’s decision to downgrade the emphasis put on climate change in the remits for both Bank committees. So the next Labour government will reverse these changes, at the first opportunity. Because there can be no durable plan for economic stability and no sustainable plan for economic growth, that is not also a serious plan for net zero.

    Bank of England independence reflected an understanding that politics will always present the powerful temptation to pursue macroeconomic policies that may not be in the medium-to-long term national economic interest – and that without the ability to credibly pre-commit future policy choices, this creates an inflationary bias – as the Barro-Gordon model showed. Similar logic applies to the concept of deficit bias. Politicians may be tempted to put off necessary fiscal decisions, or ignore the long-term consequences of policy choices.

    It remains true, as Gordon Brown understood, that, in a modern economy, ‘the discretion necessary for effective economic policy is possible only within a framework that commands market credibility and public trust.’ That is especially true if government is to be able to take urgent, discretionary action when crisis strikes.

    So we will strengthen the Office for Budget Responsibility, with a new fiscal lock, guaranteeing in law that any government making significant and permanent tax and spending changes will be subject to an independent forecast from the OBR.  And we will not waver from strong fiscal rules.

    So let me be clear about the rules which will bind the next Labour government. That the current budget must move into balance, so that day-to-day costs are met by revenues. And that debt must be falling as a share of the economy by the fifth year of the forecast, creating the space to respond to future crises.

    I will also ask the OBR to report on the long-term impact of capital spending decisions. And as Chancellor I will report on wider measures of public sector assets and liabilities at fiscal events, showing how the health of the public balance sheet is bolstered by good investment decisions.

    The UK has changed its fiscal rules more frequently than any other OECD economy, with the average lifespan of less than four years. That has contributed to instability and uncertainty. So I will end the practice of the Chancellor being able to scrap the rules at any time, with an escape clause that would only suspend the rules if the OBR declared the UK was in an economic crisis.

    Let me be candid. We cannot continue with the short-termist approach that disregards the importance of public investment. But we also cannot ignore the pressing need to rebuild the UK’s public finances, to increase our space to respond to future shocks. That is why our fiscal rules differ from the government’s. Their borrowing rule, which targets the overall deficit rather than the current deficit, creates a clear incentive to cut investment that will have long-run benefits for short-term gains. I reject that approach, and that is why our borrowing rule targets day-to-day spending. We will prioritise investment within a framework that would get debt falling as a share of GDP over the medium term.

    Business needs stability too in the tax system. And for too long our politics has militated against that. So the next Labour government is committed to a single autumn budget every year; to the publication of a roadmap for business taxation, covering the duration of the parliament, within its first six months; and capping corporation tax at its present rate of 25 percent – the lowest in the G7 – throughout the next parliament, to ensure that businesses can plan investment projects today, with the confidence of knowing how their returns will be taxed for the rest of this decade.

    First, stability; second, investment. Investment, through partnership.

    It is not within government’s gift alone to reinvigorate our faltering levels of investment. The lifeblood of growth is business investment. Nevertheless, a strategic state has a crucial role to play.

    Partnership for investment will be embodied in a new British Infrastructure Council, which I have established in shadow form with representatives from some of the biggest UK and global investment funds – and in a revived and strengthened Industrial Strategy Council, placed on a statutory footing.

    A modern industrial policy must be strategic, and it must be selective. Selective, because we cannot do everything and nor should we pretend otherwise. The object rather is to work with business to identify those areas where Britain enjoys or has the potential to develop comparative advantage, but where there are market failures or other barriers that hold back investment. There is already a great deal of excellent work identifying Britain’s potential comparative advantage in crucial sectors, like floating offshore wind and carbon capture and storage, such as that by Anna Valero and her colleagues at the LSE.

    And strategic, because it must be founded on assessment of the wider ramifications of the prioritisation involved, and clear-eyed about where opportunity will lie in the global economy of the future.

    Public investment is one important lever available to governments, with the potential to crowd in private investment. But it is only one lever, and it must be used judiciously. Contrary to siren voices on left and right alike, commitment to growth is not measured by the size of the deficit you are willing to run.

    Public investment will be delivered through Labour’s Green Prosperity Plan, driven by new institutions: a National Wealth Fund and Great British Energy. But unlocking private investment will also require institutional reform.

    Take our pension funds. Although Defined Benefit pension funds necessarily have portfolios that are increasingly geared towards less risky investments, Defined Contribution funds are expected to grow to more than £1 trillion by the end of this decade. But, partly as a result of our fragmented DC landscape, these funds are less invested in productive assets than in many other countries. This means lower returns for British savers, who do not benefit from diversification into private markets, and less patient capital available for growing British firms and our infrastructure. Labour will actively drive forwards DC fund consolidation and will, in government, launch a review of the pension system, to ensure it is serving British savers and UK PLC.

    Investment matters not just for what it can physically build, but for the ideas it can nurture. Innovation is a core part of our history. And still today, we consistently rank in the top five countries in the world on the Global Innovation Index, thanks in no small part to our universities, which, despite the immense challenges facing the sector, stand among the best in the world. And we are at the forefront of global innovation in sectors ranging from life sciences, to AI and tech, to net zero technologies.

    But innovation must be nourished, with reliable sources of funding, and innovators supported, to translate brilliant ideas into commercial reality. So Labour will end the practice of one-to-three year funding cycles for key R&D institutions, giving them instead ten-year budgets to allow for meaningful partnerships with industry to keep the UK at the forefront of global innovation, and we will work with our universities to make sure spinouts can attract private capital as they seek to grow.

    Of course, if we want to boost our national productivity – and wages with it – we should focus not only on those frontier firms, but on incremental gains driven by the diffusion of new technologies and best practice across the long tail of firms behind the productivity frontier. Because a strong economy cannot rely only on the contribution of the few firms at the leading edge.

    Which brings me to my third and final pillar for growth: reform.

    Reform of our planning system, our public services, our labour market, and our system of government, guided by the understanding that growth and competitiveness in the 2020s and beyond will rest on contribution: mobilising all our resources – the human potential found in every town and city – to break free from a vicious cycle in which inequality widens while growth stutters, towards a virtuous circle in which working people play their part in building prosperity and feel its benefits.

    Let me start with our planning system – the single greatest obstacle to our economic success. Our planning system is a barrier to opportunity, a barrier to growth – and a barrier to homeownership too.  Planning dysfunction means that land is costly and inefficiently utilised, making the cost of building infrastructure in the UK significantly higher than in most developed economies, meaning higher energy prices, poorer transport, and inadequate digital connectivity. And it prevents housing from being built where it is most needed – contributing to ever-higher prices and falling rates of home ownership, and constricting the growth of our most productive places.

    We approach this under no illusions. Planning reform has become a byword for political timidity in the face of vested interests and a graveyard of economic ambition. It is time to put an end to prevarication and political short-termism on this question. There is no other choice. This Labour Party will put planning reform at the very centre of our economic and our political argument.

    For infrastructure, the next Labour government will deliver a once-in-a-generation overhaul of the nationally significant infrastructure regime, updating all National Policy Statements within 6 months of coming into office, modernising the regime to reflect the types of infrastructure crucial in our changing economy, and cutting red tape by embedding principles of proportionality and standardisation.

    And when it comes to housing, Labour will reintroduce mandatary local housing targets; recruit hundreds of new planners to tackle backlogs; and bring forward the next generation of New Towns.

    A once-in-a-generation overhaul, to deliver the infrastructure and housing that is fundamental to our ambitions for homeownership, decarbonisation, and growth.

    And to grow our economy, we cannot rely on just a few pockets of the country to drive growth and productivity. First, because we have seen the political consequences – and justified anger – when deep regional inequalities are allowed to open up, opportunity allowed to wither across swathes of the country, while Westminster politics looks away. And second because we know our productivity problem is a regional problem.

    As Raj Chetty, John Van Reenen and their colleagues show, regional inequality robs us of potential inventors and innovators. The squandered potential of all our lost Einsteins and Marie Curies makes us all poorer.

    One hundred and fifty years ago, the economist Mary Paley Marshall observed that the key to Britain’s success in the industrial age lay in clusters, bringing together the skills, the infrastructure and Britain’s natural geography to build strong, regionally-based industries. And these agglomeration economies, particularly those present in urban areas, have been shown by economists like Ed Glaeser to have hugely significant benefits for services firms too.

    As our economy evolves, we need to do far more to unlock the benefits of agglomeration across Britain. That must mean not only investment, not only stability, but also fundamental reform of how we are governed.

    Britain today has one of the most centralised political systems in the world – and some of the highest levels of geographic inequality too. That isn’t a coincidence. OECD research has consistently shown that decentralisation is strongly correlated with better educational outcomes, higher investment, and stronger growth. As with a modern approach to industrial strategy which recognises the informational limits to government acting alone so too do we know that local and regional government often possesses better information about their local economies, and more developed capacity for working with local businesses and institutions. So the next Labour government will hand key economic powers to the regional and local leaders who know their needs, and their assets, best.

    Let me give you one example – skills, one of our most persistent policy failures. As well as replacing the broken Apprenticeship Levy, with a new Growth and Skills Levy, the next Labour government will combine and devolve adult education budgets, with our skills effort overseen by a new national institution, Skills England.

    But today, addressing the skills gap is a necessary, not a sufficient, requirement for economic success. There is now a wealth of evidence that greater in-work security, better pay, and more autonomy in the workplace have substantial economic benefits. IMF research has shown how enabling workers to better combine family life and work can broaden labour market participation. And there are strong statistical relationships between job satisfaction and workplace performance.

    That is what I mean when I say that this is an economic agenda that is both pro-worker and pro-business; that to see that relationship as zero sum is to leave both the poorer. That understanding lies behind Labour’s commitment to a genuine living wage, and to a New Deal for Working People.

    The UK labour market is one of the most flexible among advanced economies, with hiring and firing relatively easy and a low floor of basic statutory rights. This can serve to reduce the risk of taking on new staff, the risk of poor matches, and allow firms to respond more easily to economic cycles. But flexibility is too often manifested as insecurity, corrosive of individuals’ physical and mental health, their ability to plan ahead, and the time they are able to spend with loved ones.

    And the reality is that the one-sided flexibility we have now is not enough on its own to ensure labour markets have the dynamism needed to power growth. What is crucial is that over time workers move to higher productivity firms and higher productivity sectors – this is how workers get higher wages and the economy becomes more productive. Workers who move jobs typically see their pay rise by 4 percentage points more than those who do not. But at present, this is not happening enough – the proportion of workers switching job each quarter fell by 25 per cent between 2000 and 2019.

    The status quo serves neither workers nor businesses. As the Resolution Foundation have argued, ‘the missing ingredient is empowered workers, willing and able to take risks’. Labour’s changes will address this, with flexibility that works both ways – giving workers the security to change jobs.

    I want to be clear here about Labour’s plans, because I know that many in business will have questions.

    We will guarantee basic rights from day one – protection from unfair dismissal, sick pay, and parental leave. But this will not prevent fair dismissal, and we will ensure that businesses can still operate probationary periods with processes for letting go of new hires.

    We will ban exploitative zero hours contracts, by giving all workers the right to a contract that reflects the number of hours they regularly work, based on a twelve-week reference period. But these changes will not stop employers from offering overtime or meeting short-term demand, such as in the build-up to Christmas or seasonal work in agriculture or hospitality.

    And on trade union legislation, we will reverse changes since 2010 that have done nothing to prevent the worst period of disruption since the 1980s, but instead have contributed to a conflictual, scorched-earth approach that has stood in the way of productive negotiation. These policies didn’t exist under Blair and Brown when there were fewer strikes and less disruption. We will work with business as we deliver and implement these policies.  

    And an economy built on contribution of the many means recognising that we don’t just need growth to fund strong public services. We need strong public services to support economic growth, including a serious plan to get the long-term sick – let down by ballooning NHS waiting lists, failing mental health support, an inflexible welfare state, and inadequate employment support – back to work. We will swiftly implement the plans we have already set out for an urgent resource injection into our public services: to cut NHS waiting lists, tackle the crisis in dentistry, transform mental health services, recruit and retain teachers, and provide breakfast clubs in every school.

    And if we are to build an economy founded on contribution, we must also think more expansively about the work we value:  Recognising that even the most dynamic of industries must rest on foundations provided not only by businesses at the frontier but what I call the ‘everyday economy’: of retail, care, transport, delivery, utilities, and more. High employment sectors but sectors too often characterised by insecurity and low pay. That means, again, that the concerns of industrial policy, in pursuit of resilience and broad-based growth, should not stop at the high-productivity frontier.

    We know too that it is women who disproportionately work in our everyday economy, and women who have borne the brunt of the economic and social disruption of recent years. I want to champion women in our economy not only because it is the right thing to do. But also because if we fail to offer women the same opportunities as men, we fail to make use of their talents.

    Numerous economists, including Peter Klenow and Oriana Bandiera, have shown that the misallocation of talent that occurs when women are out of the labour market, under-represented in certain professions or at certain levels, or discriminated against, can have significant implications for growth. Claudia Goldin, the first woman to win a Nobel Prize for Economics solo, has shown, the ways in which the labour market penalises mothers remains a crucial driver of unequal outcomes. And the Rose review of female entrepreneurship showed that if the UK were to achieve the same rates of female entrepreneurship and business ownership as our “best in class” peers, that could add £200bn to our GDP.

    So an agenda to harness women’s economic potential must mean an agenda for good work in our everyday economy, renewed efforts towards ending the gender pay gap once and for all, ensuring women can access the finance to start a business, and taking crucial steps towards a modern system of childcare.

    We must be clear-sighted about the inheritance the next government – whoever may form it – will face. Debt at its highest rate in 60 years, with net debt interest payments of over £80 billion this year alone.  NHS waiting lists at seven and a half million. Schools and hospitals crumbling. The first Parliament in history over which living standards have fallen.

    No one election will wipe that inheritance away. We must face the world as it is not as we would have it be. I am under no illusions about the scale of the challenge, nor the stakes; the consequences, should we fail to learn the lessons of our recent past, are severe: for our place in the world, our living standards, our climate commitments, and faith in democratic politics.

    But I remain an optimist about our ability to rise to the challenges we face, if we can bring together public and private sectors, in a national mission – directed at restoring strong economic growth across Britain. When we speak of a decade of national renewal, that is what we mean.

    As we did at the end of the 1970s, we stand at an inflection point. And as in earlier decades, the solution lies in wide-ranging supply-side reform, to drive investment, remove the barriers constraining our productive capacity, and fashion a new economic settlement, drawing on evolutions in economic thought. A new chapter in Britain’s economic history. And unlike the 1980s, growth in the years to come must be broad-based, inclusive, and resilient.

    Growth achieved through stability, built on the strength of our institutions. Investment, through partnership between strategic government and enterprising business. And reform, of our planning system, our public services, our labour market, and our democracy.

    In the face of a more unstable world, the task is not only to recognise the acute risks, but also to identify the huge opportunities. To reject managed decline, renew our common purpose, and rebuild growth on strong and secure foundations.

    Thank you.

  • Keir Starmer – 2024 Speech at the Launch of the Local Election Campaign

    Keir Starmer – 2024 Speech at the Launch of the Local Election Campaign

    The speech made by Keir Starmer, the Leader of the Labour Party, in Dudley on 28 March 2024.

    Thank you Ange, thank you Richard, we’re all excited for the vision you have for the West Midlands.

    It’s great to be here in Dudley to launch Labour’s local election campaign, the path to changing Britain, to national renewal – starts and begins here.

    And you can take it from me, we’re not playing for a draw. We’re looking to win in Dudley, looking to win in the West Midlands, right across the country: from Hastings to Hartlepool, a changed Labour Party. On the march, on your side, returned to the service of working people.

    Look, I do have to be honest, I was hoping we’d be launching a different election campaign here today. But the Prime Minister bottled it. He wants one last, drawn out summer tour with his beloved helicopter. And so – we need to send him another message. Show his party – once again that their time is up, the dithering must stop, the date must be set. Britain wants change, and it’s time for change with Labour.

    Because the choice at these elections is exactly the same as it will be later this year. Stability with Labour, or more chaos with the Tories.

    Unity or division. Renewal or decline. A changed Labour Party ready to serve the interests of working people, or a Conservative Party that has forgotten how to serve anything other than itself.

    We can all see the consequences. Their failure is visible in every community in Britain. The sewage in our rivers. The ambulances that don’t come. The schools crumbling over our children’s heads. Mortgage and rent payments – through the roof.

    And now on top of this, this year, your council tax – rising. A new Tory stealth tax coming soon to your letterbox. £300 per household and they hope you don’t notice. In fact, they tell you they’re cutting your taxes. While at the same time, they’re rifling through your back pocket. Give with one hand, take even more with the other.

    On and on and on – it goes. Say the right thing and do the exact opposite. Say – “we’re all in this together”, but decimate your public services. Say there’s no downsides for business, but rush through a careless Brexit deal. Say – this is for “ordinary people”, but crash the economy to give tax cuts to the richest one per cent. A party that is now so desperate, so broken by its failure to address your problems, that it has completely cut itself adrift from the responsibility of service. Reduced – with no record to defend – to exploiting Britain’s problems for the politics of division.

    But look – here’s the good news. They don’t get to choose. You don’t have to take it anymore. You can stop them.

    That’s the beauty of democracy, the power of the vote rests in your hands. And on 2 May, you can reject the chaos, you can reject division, you can reject decline, and vote for national renewal with Labour.

    Because make no mistake – Labour has a plan to get Britain’s future back. A plan to drag politics in this country back to service, tilt our economy back towards the interests of working people and get us building again, working again, growing again by unlocking the pride and potential of communities like Dudley.

    That’s what we’ll be campaigning on during these elections. And look – I know some of you may have heard this kind of thing before.

    In fact, as Ange said – that is one reason why we came to Dudley to launch this campaign, because of course it was right here that the former Prime Minister, or former, former Prime Minister to be accurate, gave his big “levelling-up” speech.

    A project he said would turn the tide on regional inequality in this country and give a fair share to towns like Dudley. You know, people say to me, the worst thing you can do in politics is to prey on peoples’ fear.

    Yet in some ways, preying on their hopes is just as bad. And that’s what the Tories did with levelling-up. Of course it struck a chord. Of course – a town like Dudley wanted that hope to be real. Not just the promise of a better future – we all need that.

    It’s also how that project knowingly spoke to what towns like this have lost, the way of life that disappeared when the factories or pits closed. The community, the security, the ‘chest-out’ pride that grows when you are certain your contribution is respected.

    That what you do, what you make, matters. Not just for your family, but for your community, your country, and even beyond our shores. A pride that looked out to the world and said: this is our place, this is who we are.

    It was steel here, but the same is true of shipbuilding in towns like Hartlepool, car manufacturing across this region. Mining, everywhere from the chalk and clay of Essex, to the coal seams of the Midlands and the North.

    I mean, just look at the names of our football clubs. Stoke City: the Potters. Stourbridge just down the road: the Glassboys. Ange’s Stockport: the Hatters.

    Now, that pride is still there, of course it is, and why not if you’re gunning for promotion like Stockport.

    But over the years it’s a pride that’s become a little less sure of the ground beneath its feet. In need of a stronger foundation. A government willing to see communities like this, not as a charity case or a political client, but as a source of growth and dynamism ready to be unlocked. A partnership where politics offers you service rather than turning its back once it has counted your vote.

    We understand that in the Labour Party – trust me. What towns like this have been through over the decades. It’s our history, our communities, in many cases, the story which has shaped our families.

    My dad was a toolmaker, he worked in a factory. He always felt, particularly in the 80s, that he was looked down on. Disrespected. But equally, my sister is a care worker now, so I will never accept that it’s only the work of the past which deserves our pride and respect.

    That was the great lesson of the pandemic. It showed exactly who made up the backbone of Britain. The carers, the couriers, the drivers, the teaching assistants, the warehouse workers, the supermarket staff, the nurses and paramedics. The working people of this country, my Labour Party stands with you.

    That’s my biggest frustration with these 14 wasted years. It’s not just the stagnation, not just the price working people have paid. It’s also the countless missed opportunities to give working people the power to drive our country forward.

    To bring people together, outside of crisis. Unlock that pride people have for their community and harness it to change our country.

    Levelling-up is a good ambition for Britain. Taking back control, if it means control for communities, not politicians in Westminster, that is absolutely essential for growth. But moving forward requires, not just a new plan, but also a fundamental shift in how we govern. Britain has an economy that hoards potential and a politics that hoards power and it’s no coincidence – no accident – that this leaves us with more regional inequality than anywhere else in Europe.

    So if we want to change our economy, we must also change our politics, and both these goals require things we know the Tories will never deliver.

    Economic stability. A commitment to service. A recognition that the sticking plaster approach to investment costs Britain more in the long-run. And that economic growth is not something those at the top hand down to the rest of the country.

    And that a more dangerous world needs a more dynamic government, prepared to step in – alongside business and communities – to deliver the security that working people need.

    But perhaps most of all, it needs an end to politics that is done to communities, not with them.

    No more political hero complexes, no more fantasies, no more easy answers that require nobody – politicians or people – to lift a finger.

    Change comes from us all. I mean that. The Tory era of politics as performance art is coming to an end.

    But to get Britain out of this hole, we all need to roll up our sleeves, national renewal is a partnership. I’m not here to tell you everything will be easy. That’s what happened four years ago.

    Labour will give you a plan. We’ll give you new powers to make a difference in your community. But look around your country, we need you.

    After everything you’ve been through in the past 14 years, I know that this is a hard request to make.

    I know how little faith there is in politics to make a difference. But in your heart of hearts, I expect you know that this is what Britain needs right now. A coming together, after all the chaos and division, behind a credible long-term plan. A plan to back your potential, match your ambition, unlock your pride, so together, we get Britain’s future back.

    So here’s what voting Labour means this year, the change we offer for your community and our country.

    The new foundation we lay together that will give your family more security, unlock your community’s potential and generate economic growth from the whole country.

    It’s a plan that starts, as it must – with economic stability. I mean – just look at the Tories now. Once again, in desperation, committing to the madness of unfunded tax cuts. £46 billion to abolish national insurance with no way of funding it other than risky borrowing or cutting your pension and our NHS. They are the only choices whether they admit or not.

    It’s like they think Liz Truss never happened. And maybe for their bills, for their mortgage, for their cost of living, it didn’t. But out here, beyond the walls of Westminster, working people have paid an enormous price.

    No – policies have to be paid for. Every pound is precious. And this Labour Party, with Rachel Reeves as Chancellor, will value every pound as if it’s yours, because at the end of the day, it is.

    And on that rock of economic stability, we lay our new foundation.

    Five national missions. Five new priorities to turn the page on Tory decline and walk towards national renewal.

    One – higher growth. With a reformed planning system, no longer blocking the homes, the infrastructure, the investment this country needs.

    Two – safer streets. With 13,000 extra neighbourhood police officers cracking down on the anti-social behaviour which blights too many of our town centres.

    Three – cheaper bills, with GB energy. A new publicly owned company, harnessing clean British power not foreign oil and gas.

    Four – more opportunities for your children, more mental health support in our schools, expert teachers in every classroom, new technical excellence colleges, training our kids in the skills they need and businesses want.

    And five – our NHS back on its feet. Two million extra appointments every year, a plan to cut the waiting lists, start clearing the backlog, rescue NHS dentists, and end the 8am scramble at your GP surgery.

    And written through every one of these priorities, a new purpose. The fundamental mission of this changed Labour Party. To tilt this country back towards the service of working people.

    A return, not just to the traditional Labour deal, but also the shift we need in the way this country creates wealth, a Britain that serves the interests of working people, as they drive this country forward.

    And so, when we look at the opportunities clean energy and new technology can bring, we do so with a national wealth fund, that stands with business, invests in the critical infrastructure our future growth needs, creates 650,000 new jobs – over 60,000 in the East and West Midlands – a plan that will relight the fires of renewal in communities like this.

    It used to be called industrial strategy – didn’t it? And it’s not an old-fashioned idea. In most countries similar to Britain – it’s seen as the bread and butter of responsible government. Because in a world as volatile as ours, with new technologies – in life sciences, in clean energy, in artificial intelligence all on our horizon, it is our job to make sure regions like this are backed with the investment that they need.

    The gigafactories that will make electric car batteries across the Midlands. The renewable ports ready for the off-shore boom in the North Sea. The clean steel that can bring the next generation of jobs to Scunthorpe or Sheffield. And – when we create jobs in communities like this, we do so with a new deal for working people.

    Not just because work should always provide dignity, but also – because a labour market riddled with insecurity is bad for productivity and bad for growth.

    And so we scrap zero-hour contracts, we end fire and rehire, make work pay with a real living wage, and say unambiguously – this is good for growth.

    And on top of this new foundation, as we deploy the full power of government to deliver security for working people, but we also give power away and put communities in control.

    A new Take Back Control act with new powers for mayors over transport, skills, enterprise, energy, planning, rejuvenating our high streets, and new powers to generate growth in every town and city.

    Local Growth Plans – that’s the commitment we make today, a full-fat approach to devolution.

    But with that, an expectation that those powers will be used to grow the local industries that are so important to unlocking pride. The argument is simple: devolution is absolutely essential for taking on regional inequality. Democratic decisions are better made by local people with skin in the game. I’ve always believed that.

    Because it wasn’t some central planner who built the old Round Oak Steel Factory all those years ago, it wasn’t a big politician who made Stourbridge famous for glass production or the Black Country and Birmingham – the workshop of the world.

    No, that sort of pride is not in the gift of politicians, it’s built up over the decades by the people, the businesses and the workers of a community in partnership with government, absolutely, that is vital.

    Levelling-up doesn’t happen by magic. But the energy and the drive must also come from a place itself. So, when communities across Britain ask – what is our future in the modern economy, I say – Labour will always respect your contribution.

    We will give you the tools you need. We will get the country’s future back. But your destination, your decisions, the pride that defines who you are, that belongs to you.

    And there is a power in that, a power which I believe can change this country.

    Let me put it this way: at some point in your life, many people in here will have heard a doubting voice inside saying “no, this isn’t for you, you don’t belong here, you can’t do that”.

    Working class people certainly hear that voice, trust me. And in a strange way, perhaps it’s that kind of insecurity, industrial communities feel when they look to the future.

    But imagine if instead a whole country said “you do belong”.

    Imagine if a whole country said: we back your potential. Imagine if a whole country commits, properly to unlocking the pride you have for your community, then look what we could build: a Britain where every contribution is equally respected, where you don’t have to change who you are just to get on, where whatever your background, you can feel certain that your effort will be rewarded, and the future will be better for your children.

    A Britain strong enough for you to invest your hope, your potential, your pride, a country we can build together. That is the change we offer. That is Britain’s future. To get it back, vote Labour on 2 May.

    Thank you.

  • Scott Benton – 2024 Resignation Statement

    Scott Benton – 2024 Resignation Statement

    The statement made by Scott Benton, the Independent MP for South Blackpool, on 25 March 2024.

    It’s been the honour of a lifetime to represent our wonderful community in Parliament over the last four years.

    It’s with a heavy heart that I have written to the Chancellor this morning to tender my resignation as your MP. I’d like to thank the hundreds of residents who have sent supportive messages, cards and letters over the last few months and who have urged me to continue and fight the next election. The support that so many local people have given to me has made it all worthwhile.

    A Labour government would be catastrophic for our country. I’m mindful of giving a new candidate the time and space to campaign to prevent that from happening and it is for this reason that I have made this decision at this time.

    As your MP I have always sought to do what I believed to be in the best interests of Blackpool, and of our country. Over the last four years we’ve faced significant challenges with Covid and the cost of living. Despite the economic challenges these have created, our community has benefited through over £400 million in additional government funding and capital investment – the highest amount of any town in the entire country. Most of these projects (including planned regeneration in Revoe, Central Drive & Bond Street; the new multiversity; Blackpool Central Development; and many other Levelling Up projects) have yet to commence but we will reap the rewards of these in terms of regeneration, new jobs and opportunities in the years ahead. Our A&E, schools and Police have also benefited from significant extra funding too and I’m proud of the role that I’ve been able to play in delivering that. Blackpool is a special place and it’s future is bright.

    The most enjoyable part of the job has been being able to meet so many of you, either on the doorstep, or at the over 650 different charities, voluntary groups, sports clubs, churches and businesses I have visited. I will always cherish being able to contribute towards, and to see, the brilliant work which goes on, often by unsung heroes, in our community. I’ve held over 220 surgeries and events and my team and I have assisted over 19,500 local people with different issues and problems, having much success, but sadly some failures, along the way too. Being able to help those who have needed it most has been a privilege and my team and I will continue to work on all existing casework for those who have previously contacted me in this interim period.

    The global events of the past four years would have been extremely challenging for any government to deal with. The optimism and hope felt by many after we delivered Brexit in early 2020 was quickly overtaken by the pandemic and the challenges Covid has led to in terms of the economy and public services have proven incredibly difficult since. The government hasn’t got everything right and I’ve always been robust in speaking out for what I think our community and country needs in Parliament, having spoken on more than 350 occasions – one of the highest of all MPs since 2019. It’s easy for opposition politicians to criticise from the sidelines when they haven’t got any policies or a plan of their own. It’s a lot harder delivering for people when there are no easy solutions to many of the complex problems we face.

    In 2019, I pledged to be an active, hardworking and relatable MP who would listen to your concerns and views and act upon them: I’d like to think that I have more than succeeded in that aim. It’s in the best interests of our community that my successor succeeds and I wish them well.

    With best wishes

    Scott

  • Rishi Sunak – 2024 Speech on Extremism

    Rishi Sunak – 2024 Speech on Extremism

    The speech made by Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister, outside Number 10 on 1 March 2024.

    In recent weeks and months, we have seen a shocking increase in extremist disruption and criminality.

    What started as protests on our streets, has descended into intimidation, threats, and planned acts of violence.

    Jewish children fearful to wear their school uniform lest it reveal their identity.

    Muslim women abused in the street for the actions of a terrorist group they have no connection with.

    Now our democracy itself is a target.

    Council meetings and local events have been stormed.

    MPs do not feel safe in their homes.

    Long standing Parliamentary conventions have been upended because of safety concerns.

    I need to speak to you all this evening because this situation has gone on long enough…

    …and demands a response not just from government, but from all of us.

    Britain is a patriotic, liberal, democratic society with a proud past and a bright future.

    We are a reasonable country and a decent people.

    Our story is one of progress, of great achievements and enduring values.

    Immigrants who have come here have integrated and contributed.

    They have helped write the latest chapter in our island story.

    They have done this without being required to give up their identity.

    You can be a practising Hindu and a proud Briton as I am.

    Or a devout Muslim and a patriotic citizen as so many are.

    Or a committed Jewish person and the heart of your local community…

    …and all underpinned by the tolerance of our established, Christian church.

    We are a country where we love our neighbours.

    And we are building Britain together.

    But I fear that our great achievement…

    …in building the world’s most successful multi-ethnic, multi faith democracy…

    …is being deliberately undermined.

    There are forces here at home trying to tear us apart.

    Since October 7th there have been those trying to take advantage of the very human angst that we all feel…

    …about the terrible suffering that war brings to the innocent, to women and children…

    …to advance a divisive, hateful ideological agenda.

    On too many occasions recently, our streets have been hijacked by small groups…

    …who are hostile to our values and have no respect for our democratic traditions.

    Membership of our society is contingent on some simple things…

    …that you abide by the rule of law, and that change can only come through the peaceful, democratic process.

    Threats of violence and intimidation are alien to our way of doing things: they must be resisted at all times.

    Nearly everyone in Britain supports these basic values but there are small and vocal hostile groups who do not.

    Islamist extremists and the far right feed off and embolden each other.

    They are equally desperate to pretend that their violence is somehow justified…

    …when actually these groups are two sides of the same extremist coin.

    Neither group accept that change in our country can only come through the peaceful democratic process.

    Both loathe the pluralist, modern country we are.

    Both want to set Briton against Briton…

    …to weaponise the evils of anti-Semitism and anti-Muslim hatred for their own ends.

    The faith of Islam, peacefully practised by millions of our fellow citizens…

    …is emphatically not the same thing as the extremist political ideology of Islamism…

    …which aims to separate Muslims from the rest of society.

    Islamist extremists and far rights groups are spreading a poison, that poison is extremism.

    It aims to drain us of our confidence in ourselves as a people, and in our shared future.

    They want us to doubt ourselves, to doubt each other, to doubt our country’s history and achievements.

    They want us to accept a moral equivalence between Britain and some of the most despicable regimes in the world.

    They want us to believe that our country, and the West more generally, is solely responsible for the world’s ills…

    …and that we, along with our allies, are the problem.

    In short, they want to destroy our confidence and hope.

    We must not allow that to happen.

    When these groups claim that Britain is and has been on the wrong side of history, we should reject it, and reject it again.

    No country is perfect, but I am enormously proud of the good that our country has done.

    Our place in history is defined by the sacrifices our people have made,

    …in the service of our own freedom and that of others.

    And when these groups tell children that they cannot – and will not – succeed because of who they are…

    When they tell children that the system is rigged against them or that Britain is a racist country…

    This is not only a lie, but a cynical attempt to crush young dreams, and turn impressionistic minds against their own society.

    I stand here as our country’s first non-white Prime Minister, leading the most diverse government in our country’s history…

    …to tell people of all races, all faiths and all backgrounds…

    …it is not the colour of your skin, the God you believe in or where you were born, that will determine your success…

    …but just your own hard work and endeavour.

    We must be prepared to stand up for our shared values in all circumstances, no matter how difficult.

    And I respect that the police have a tough job in policing the protests we have seen and that they are operationally independent.

    But we must draw a line.

    Yes, you can march and protest with passion…

    You can demand the protection of civilian life…

    …but no, you cannot call for violent Jihad.

    There is no “context” in which it can be acceptable to beam antisemitic tropes onto Big Ben in the middle of a vote on Israel/Gaza.

    And there can be no cause you can use to justify the support of a proscribed terrorist group, like Hamas.

    Yes, you can freely criticise the actions of this government, or indeed any government: that is a fundamental democratic right.

    But no, you cannot use that as an excuse to call for the eradication of a State – or any kind of hatred or antisemitism.

    This week I have met with senior police officers and made clear it is the public’s expectation…

    …that they will not merely manage these protests, but police them.

    And I say this to the police, we will back you when you take action.

    But if we are asking more of the police, we in government must also back up that call with action.

    To that end, this month the government will implement a new robust framework for how it deals with this issue.

    To ensure that we are dealing with the root causes of this problem…

    …and that no extremist organisations or individuals are being lent legitimacy…

    …by their actions and interactions with central government.

    You cannot be part of our civic life if your agenda is to tear it down.

    We will redouble our support for the Prevent programme to stop young minds being poisoned by extremism.

    We will demand that universities stop extremist activity on campus.

    We will also act to prevent people entering this country whose aim is to undermine its values.

    The Home Secretary has instructed that if those here on visas…

    …choose to spew hate on protests or seek to intimidate people…

    …we will remove their right to be here.

    And our Britain must not be a country in which we descend into polarised camps…

    …with some communities living parallel lives.

    It is not enough to live side-by-side, we must live together…

    …united by shared values and a shared commitment to this country.

    And I want to speak directly to those who choose to continue to protest:

    Don’t let the extremists hijack your marches.

    You have a chance in the coming weeks to show that you can protest decently, peacefully and with empathy for your fellow citizens.

    Let us prove these extremists wrong and show them that even when we disagree…

    …we will never be disunited from our common values of decency and respect.

    I love this country.

    My family and I owe it so much.

    The time has now come for us all to stand together to combat the forces of division and beat this poison.

    We must face down the extremists who would tear us apart…

    …there must be leadership, not pandering or appeasement.

    When they tell their lies, we will tell the truth.

    When they try and sap our confidence, we will redouble our efforts.

    And when they try and make us doubt each other…

    …we will dig deeper for that extra ounce of compassion and empathy…

    …that they want us to believe doesn’t exist, but that I know does.

    If we can do that, we can build on our great achievement in creating today’s Britain…

    …a country of kind, decent, tolerant people.

    We can make this a country in which we all feel a renewed sense of pride.

    This is our home.

    So let us go forward together, confident in our values and confident in our future.

  • Michael Gove – 2024 Speech at the Convention of the North

    Michael Gove – 2024 Speech at the Convention of the North

    The speech made by Michael Gove, the Levelling Up Secretary, on 1 March 2024.

    Today is the day the North truly takes back control. Today, at this Convention, we inaugurate the biggest transfer of power and resources to the North in living memory. We all know that power is best exercised by those closest to the people they represent. We all know that the divisions in our society – economic, social, educational – are best bridged by empowering local leaders and local communities to determine the futures of the places where they live and the towns and cities that they love. And that is why today – at this Convention of the North – together – we are bringing about a power surge for the North.

    We have already agreed deals – agreed, not imposed or dictated – agreed deals with the mayors of the West Midlands and Greater Manchester to give them greater power over skills, transport and housing so the opportunity to get on, access to the best jobs and a safe, warm, decent home of your own are within reach of many more.

    And today we’re extending these same opportunities to West Yorkshire, South Yorkshire and the Liverpool City Region. In technical terms that means Level 4 Devolution. In real terms it means more money and a bigger capacity to make a difference for Tracy Brabin, Oliver Coppard and Steve Rotheram.

    Yes, I know Tracy, Oliver and Steve are Labour politicians. And in a few months’ time we’ll be arguing passionately about different visions for the country as a whole. But – much more importantly to me, Tracy, Oliver and Steve are directly accountable local politicians with a mandate and a mission and a responsibility to deliver economic growth and improved opportunities for people in Leeds, Bradford, Wakefield, Castleford, Huddersfield, Dewsbury, Sheffield, Rotherham, Barnsley, Doncaster, Liverpool, Knowsley, Runcorn, Southport and the Wirral.

    And what’s important to me, and I know to them, is delivering for people in those cities and towns. Giving local politicians more power – with greater accountability – so local people can enjoy better jobs, higher wages, quicker journeys to work, more opportunities to learn, more attractive homes and an enhanced environment around them.

    The theology is devolution, the reality is improved lives for all.

    And I am also today clear we want to take forward devolution to many more areas across the country. With the North leading the way. I’ll be continuing to support the extended North East Mayoral Combined Authority grow from strength to strength. And I know the Chancellor will be saying more on how we support the north east in days to come. And I want to conclude a Level 4 deal with the great Ben Houchen – the one-man Northern Powerhouse who has done so much to bring investment and hope to the Tees Valley.

    And as well as the Level 3 deal we have with York and North Yorkshire we are also now implementing Level 3 deals with Hull and East Yorkshire, and also with Greater Lincolnshire. There are further Level 3 deals moving forward in Norfolk and Suffolk and, of course, a Level 3 deal has been secured for the East Midlands, and a Level 2 deal for Lancashire. We will also shortly be announcing more Level 2 devolution deals covering other parts of England.

    So we now have 19 devolution deals either established or in implementation covering over 33 million people. This is the most profound change to the way England has been governed in generations, it is a vote of confidence in local democracy and, in particular, a vote of confidence in Northern leadership. We  together are levelling up the North by giving power to its people.

    But that is very far from all we are doing together to demonstrate our commitment to the North of England and our shared determination to level up.

    We are working in partnership with civic leaders to irrigate the soil for the private sector investment which is vital for the enduring economic growth the North needs – which we all need.

    Here in Leeds, we are working with the council and the mayoral combined authority to lever in investment for new housing and new enterprises in Mabgate, the Innovation Arc, in Holbeck, West End Riverside, Eastside and Hunslet Riverside and on of course on the iconic Southbank. We’re working closely with the Royal Armouries here and working to secure and bring into public ownership a site for British Library North at Temple Works. I was also excited recently to meet with the Poet Laureate, Yorkshire’s own Simon Armitage, to hear his fantastic plans  for the UK’s only National Poetry Centre to be situated here in Leeds. I and my department will be doing everything we can to support that endeavour. And we’re also working to ensure that the existing strengths of the universities in Leeds, the life sciences sector, financial services sector, the tech sector and of course the cultural jewels of Opera North, Leeds Art Gallery and Channel Four can all be reinforced.

    And today I can go further.  I am delighted to be able to announce  that we have agreed with West Yorkshire the final plans for their new Investment Zone, focused in particular on health tech.  , It will direct £50m of additional investment to accelerate capital projects here in Leeds, and in Bradford and Huddersfield. And a further £25m of the funding will be used to give local people the skills they need to take advantage of over 7000 new high-quality jobs being created in the region all because of the Investment Zone.

    And to ensure that the Leeds Renaissance can benefit the greatest number of people in West Yorkshire – and beyond – we’re also investing two and a half billion pounds in a mass transit system which will link Leeds with Bradford, Halifax, Huddersfield and Wakefield. The heart of West Yorkshire will be stronger and the arteries which connect Leeds to these proud towns will be enhanced – I don’t believe any  Government for decades has shown this level of commitment to Leeds, to West Yorkshire, to Yorkshire and indeed the North as a whole – and it is central to our shared moral mission to make opportunity more equal for everyone.

    Because Levelling Up – at its heart – is about public and private investment, partnership between central and local government, empowering local people to determine their own future and using all the resources of communities which have been overlooked and undervalued in the past – their educational, cultural, and entrepreneurial talents to shape economic growth and to deliver greater social justice.

    And that is why in our Levelling Up White Paper we set the direction for future central government spending in areas such as tech and culture – the two of the principal motors of growth in the decades ahead. And we are committed therefore to increasing spending on research and development – from both public and private sectors – faster outside the golden triangle of the South East and in the North .

    We are increasing Arts Council spending in the coming years outside of London and the South East and in the North And the Network North transport spending, which was announced earlier this week, sees millions more committed to improving transport links within and between the communities of the North and Midlands.

    Re-directing spending is crucial to Levelling Up – but so is making sure those resources are in the hands of the communities that they’re intended to benefit. That’s why Network North funding goes to councils, why Arts Council spending will support grassroots cultural organisations in the North, and enhanced R&D spend will be delivered through the North’s great universities.

    And we also know that across the North different communities have very specific needs which we can only effectively support by working in partnership with people on the ground to identify obstacles and opportunities.

    So, for example, in Liverpool, we know that the immense potential of the city and the wider region has been held back by an insufficiently coherent approach towards urban regeneration. There are iconic new investments and of course handsome historic buildings, but they sit alongside stalled sites and areas of untapped potential. That is why the vision set out in the Liverpool Strategic Futures Advisory Panel report is so important and we will back it with £31 million of new money  I can announce today for regeneration projects which trace an arc from the Knowledge Quarter to Bramley Moore docks on the waterfront.

    In Sheffield we know that city’s proud industrial heritage – augmented of course by the innovation we see at South Yorkshire’s Advanced Manufacturing Centre – also requires additional investment to reap benefits in the future. That’s why we’re investing £67 million to create over 1,330 new homes and 4,000 square metres of commercial space in the heart of the city. That’s on top of the £12 million we’re already invested through the Brownfield Housing Fund. And by working with Sheffield council and Oliver Coppard we hope to unlock a further half a billion pounds of private sector investment.

    We’re also investing more in Blackpool – a great town which has had to adjust to the changing nature of the visitor economy and has been held back by historically terribly poor housing – so we’re devoting another £90 million to transform some of the most deprived parts of the town centre to power Blackpool’s revival

    I’m also committed personally to ramping up our support in Barrow – where the commitment that we have with British Aerospace to develop and build the next generation of nuclear submarines will generate thousands of new highly-skilled, high-paying jobs for decades to come – but with those jobs must come new housing, improved transport links for Barrow and even better educational institutions, and that’s a mission to which my Department is committed.

    In each of these communities – with diverse needs but all optimistic about the future – we’ve worked together to identify where the additional investment that we’re committing to the North can make the biggest difference.

    And that’s the philosophy driving our Levelling Up Partnerships – new initiatives from my department which lead to  deep relationships between the department and local leaders in Blackpool, Blyth, Grimsby, Middlesbrough, Redcar and Cleveland and now, most recently in Blackburn. Together we identify the barriers to growth, and thendeliver bespoke investments which build on the community’s existing strengths. So in Blackburn our announcement today means £8 million for the arts and community venue King George’s Hall, £1.5 million to redevelop the Cotton Exchange and £1.5 million to revive Tony’s Empress Ballroom – one of the very few original Northern Soul dancefloors in the country. Sadly, I won’t be Out on The Floor for any forthcoming all nighters but as Levelling Up funding goes, do I love it? –  indeed I do.

    The principles governing our Levelling Up Partnerships – and indeed the 4.8 billion pounds worth of investment delivered though the Levelling Up Fund – are also behind our Long Term Plan for Towns. We know that for towns to succeed our great cities need to grow, but we also know that it’s the specific needs of towns, their individual strengths, their particular challenges, that need to be addressed if they are to benefit from the growth that our cities are powering. So that we know that in the towns around Manchester, Leeds, Liverpool, Sheffield and Newcastle and other great cities some, towns are doing better than others, some are better connected than others, some have higher productivity than others, but all have potential.

    In the 55 towns we’ve identified for investment, we’re making £20 million per town available – and we’re ensuring it’s a locally-constituted, grassroots-led town board which will draw up the bespoke plan for how that investment meets specific local needs. So in the Yorkshire towns with which we are currently working – Barnsley, Castleford, Dewsbury, Doncaster, Keighley, Rotherham and Scarborough – it will be local people who will be empowered and  local priorities which will be supported. Under the leadership of my friend Adam Hawksbee – who is committed to driving down power and opportunities much closer to these intimate communities – we will be building on  the success of this programme in weeks to come.

    I want to end on a personal note.

    And I want to end soon because the last time I spoke at this Convention I had so much to say about Levelling Up that Evan Davies had to cut me off. And I can see Clive eyeing his watch carefully.

    The reason why I am so committed to Levelling Up is because I came into politics to tackle inequality, to give a stronger voice to those who’d been cut out of the elite conversation, to uphold the principle that everyone is of equal worth and no one should be held back because of their background, their birthplace or their beliefs.

    Tackling entrenched inequalities, overcoming historic injustices, giving space and opportunities to those who’ve been overlooked and undervalued, it takes time – it requires money, yes, but it also requires us to reach across old political divides, to see the other person’s perspective, and to trust in the spirit of public service that animates so many of those who enter public life.

    In the election months ahead there’ll be arguments, of course, about priorities, policies and people. But at a time when the risks of division and polarisation are heightened I want us all here at the Convention of the North to recall and celebrate what he have in common – to feel optimistic and proud about every community in our country and resolved to ensure that we make the pursuit of greater opportunity for all a fight in which we are all in this room on the same side.

  • Oliver Dowden – 2024 Speech on AI for Public Good

    Oliver Dowden – 2024 Speech on AI for Public Good

    The speech made by Oliver Dowden, the Deputy Prime Minister, at Imperial College on London on 29 February 2024.

    INTRODUCTION

    Ladies and gentlemen…

    The story of technological advancement is one of constant evolution…

    … punctuated by game-changing innovations.

    In my lifetime, the personal computer, the internet, the smart phone, have all made the tech world – and our interaction with it – unrecognisable.

    And they have all – in turn – transformed the way that citizens interact with government, and with public services.

    I believe another such game-changer has arrived…

    … in the form of transformative AI models – including Large Language Models – that enable computers and humans to interact in totally new ways.

    The last fourteen years has been a period of incremental tech improvements.

    The digital interfaces we use are largely recognisable.

    Yes – we have seized new opportunities…

    … such as rolling out gov.uk…

    … and making our services “digital by default”.

    But many of the systems that we use have not kept up with advances…

    … indeed some of them, I’m afraid to say, have not moved on at all.

    Modern AI has the potential to fundamentally change the way that public services operate within just a few short years.

    Indeed, if we are still working off the same systems – and in the same way – in another 14 years… or even frankly another two or three…

    …then we will have failed to embrace the opportunity that now lies before us.

    OPPORTUNITY

    And so, just as the UK is leading the world in the field of AI safety…

    … the Prime Minister has asked me to ensure we are leading the world in the adoption of AI across our public sector.

    The opportunity here is hard to put a value on…

    … although I notice the IPPR have estimated that there is the potential to save £24 billion each year from roll-out of these new technologies.

    So for me it’s only by the rapid adoption of AI that we will drive the savings needed to put us on a sustainable path to a smaller state and better delivery of services.

    The pace of change is such that new opportunities are being uncovered literally on a daily basis, and a new world is opening out before us…

    AI is potentially – and I don’t say this lightly – a ‘silver bullet’…

    … it dangles before us the prospect of increased productivity, vast efficiency savings, and improved services.

    We are already beginning to see glimpses of what these tools have to offer…

    … and so I’d like to paint a brief picture of what the world might look like if we get this right:

    VISION OF SUCCESS

    In healthcare – AI diagnostic tools could transform primary care…

    …with appointments transcribed in real time by ambient AI, then instantly producing prescriptions and referrals…

    …  scans read by AI with far greater accuracy …

    … and medicines tailored to individuals based on their genetics – again using AI.

    In education – … AI could help eliminate excessive paperwork …

    …freeing-up teacher time to focus on what they do best…

    …AI assistants could help teachers to adapt lessons to the specific needs of each pupil…

    … and AI-augmented reality can take interactive learning to another level.

    In crime prevention – AI can direct police to where they are most needed…

    … spot patterns of criminality to discover culprits quicker than ever…

    …and help keep the streets safer for everyone.

    And in all kinds of public sector casework – from immigration processing to benefit claims – AI can be used to summarise complex information…

    … enabling expert case-workers to spend more time actually making decisions.

    I could go on nearly forever to cover all areas of public administration…

    … because there are very few areas of the public sector that don’t have the potential to be enhanced by these tools.

    HOW DO WE GET THERE?

    The question, though, is how do we get there?

    I believe the measures we are bringing forward put in the structures, resources, and mindset…

    … to put the UK on the fastest path to successful adoption of public sector AI.

    Taking advantage of our unique strengths…

    … to revolutionise public services for everyone in the months and years ahead.

    Last year, I established a small team of data scientists, engineers and machine learning experts at the heart of Government – the Incubator for AI – or ‘i.AI’ – under the energetic leadership of Dr Laura Gilbert.

    The idea of these experts was to work with departments to target the biggest opportunities to both save money and deliver better public services.

    The quality of applicants for this program has been phenomenal.

    It is incredibly exciting to see such talented technical people choosing to enter public service…

    … bringing in new ideas to help change the way government delivers services.

    In a few short months this team of just 30 individuals have instigated 10 pilot programs, including…

    • AI to flag fraud and error in pharmacies – that costs the taxpayer £1 billion every single year.
    • A tool that will read and summarise responses to Government consultations, this says something about the scale of Government consultations, but this could save up to £80 million a year in central government alone…
    • And AI algorithms to help move asylum claimants out of hotels more efficiently… helping to save further millions.

    And I can also announce our intention to roll out a new gov.uk chatbot that will provide an interactive interface for people to better navigate Government information and services.

    But this is clearly just the very start…

    …I want to ensure that – where these pilots have proof of concept – we can scale them up as fast as possible…

    i.AI scale-up

    …And so, I can announce today that we will more than double the size of i.AI – to 70 people – recruiting the very best of British talent to drive this work across the public sector.

    This unprecedented influx of cutting-edge expertise into Government will enable us to design, build and – crucially – implement AI swiftly and at scale…

    Of course, there is still a huge role for the private sector – and I welcome the collaboration that we have with so many of the businesses in this room today.

    Nothing will match the strength and depth of the private sector AI innovation that is happening right now – and as all of you know so much of it here in the UK.

    But I believe that by embedding experts at the heart of Government…

    … and upskilling public servants to utilise these tools…

    …we will set ourselves up to deliver the benefits to citizens as quickly – and as efficiently – as possible.

    HORIZONTALS

    The other reason it is so important to have this team at the centre of Government is to ensure that – as AI rolls-out across the public sector – we adhere to the following principles:

    … sharing best practice…

    …deploying individual models to multiple use-cases…

    … finding economies of scale..

    … and, crucially, ensuring interoperability.

    Although I don’t claim for the moment to have the expertise needed to actually build AI models…

    … I can see that – like so many great inventions – there is something beautifully simple about what they are actually doing.

    Indeed, when you boil it down, I think there are four ways AI can be applied to much of public sector activity…

    … spotting patterns of fraud and error;

    … helping the public to navigate services;

    … managing casework;

    … and automating internal processes.

    And so the i.AI team have been looking across these applications with those principles in mind…

    … And I have agreed with the Treasury that we will make all funding for Government AI projects contingent on departments collaborating with i.AI.

    Never again should we be investing money in IT systems without considering how to make them as efficient and interoperable as possible…

    … or without robustly challenging both the timelines and the costs to deliver better value.

    I want to ensure that where we develop a tool for one department – we are considering where else it could be deployed.

    MINISTERIAL FORUM

    And do to facilitate this discussion…

    …to ensure departments are fully integrated into this cross-government effort…

    … we need a regular dialogue between all those involved across government.

    And so I am convening a meeting of the National Science and Technology Council on AI for public sector good …

    … alongside my Co-Chair, Michelle Donelan – our fantastic Secretary of State for Science and Technology.

    Every department has now designated a specific minister to be responsible for AI in their area…

    … and I have asked for them to meet on a regular basis.

    In the Cabinet Office, this work will be led by Minister Burghart…

    … and I want to thank him for the passion, purpose and drive that he has brought to the programme so far, as is often the case when you run a department you get to stand up and make the announcements, but actually Minister Burghart who has actually done the work to bring Government together to do this.

    WIDER PUBLIC SECTOR JOIN-UP

    Of course, central Government can only take this work so far…

    To truly maximise the benefits on offer we need to work with bodies and agencies right across the public sector.

    And so I am delighted to announce today that i.AI will sign a ‘Collaboration Charter’ with NHS England.

    This first-of-a-kind initiative will provide a framework for our experts in the incubator to support the NHS to identify and deploy AI solutions that improve services for patients.

    And I would urge other public sector bodies to consider doing exactly the same thing, I think it can bring enormous benefits

    RESOURCING

    There is no shortage in the Government’s ambition to use AI for public good.

    We have put the expertise and the structures in place…

    … and we are making progress on our early pilot projects…

    …but we also appreciate the investment that will be needed to make good on our ambition to see the UK leading the pack.

    And crucially, investment will be required both to improve services and cut costs…

    But also to pave the way for a leaner public sector.

    MITIGATING RISK

    Through all of this, we are conscious of the need to guard against the risks that have rightly been flagged.

    And, while every effort will be made to eliminate bias, misinformation, and hallucinations…

    … ultimately, we are very clear about the need for human oversight…

    … and a clear distinction between AI suggestions and support on the one hand…

    …and human decision making on the other.

    CONCLUSION

    I believe we can take the worst things about public services…

    …whether that’s the time-wasting, form-filling, pencil-pushing, computer-says-no, the mind-numbing-ness of it…

    … and the kinds of things that make us want to tear our hair out…

    We can take those things and we can turn them around with the help of AI.

    This is not about replacing real people with robots…

    …it is about removing spirit-sapping, time-wasting admin and bureaucracy…

    …freeing public servants to do the important work that they do best…

    … and saving taxpayers billions of pounds in the process.

    We’ve got the political will. We’ve got the world-class civil service. We have the big data. We have the tech companies.

    We are ready.

    So let’s not wait.

    Let’s lead the way…

    …and join me in the AI revolution today.

  • Stuart Andrew – 2024 Speech at the Beacon Philanthropy and Impact Forum

    Stuart Andrew – 2024 Speech at the Beacon Philanthropy and Impact Forum

    The speech made by Stuart Andrew, the Gambling Minister, at Guildhall Yard in London on 29 February 2024.

    Thank you for the introduction, Cath, and good morning everyone.

    It’s a pleasure to be speaking with you, on this extra day of the year.

    It seems apt to mention that today is also the final day of Payroll Giving Month

    And I would encourage us all to consider this fantastic, tax-efficient way of donating to charity directly from your pay or pension.

    Giving is in the DNA of this country

    And the UK is rightly acknowledged as a world leader in philanthropy.

    We know we are one of the most generous countries in the world – the record £12.7 billion given by the public in 2022 is a phenomenal amount.

    We know we have a proud tradition of philanthropy, but there is nonetheless plenty of room for growth.

    As the Minister for Civil Society, I am acutely aware of how central giving is to our communities and charities across the country.

    It’s something I also saw first-hand from my early career in the charitable sector.

    It’s not just across civil society that I have seen the transformative role that philanthropy plays.

    Philanthropy is integral to everything we do in DCMS.

    In sport, fundraising has been fundamental in delivering programmes which seek to deliver social outcomes through participation in sport and physical activity.

    In arts and heritage, philanthropy sustains our most beloved institutions – our museums, heritage sites, and performing arts venues.

    Our partnership with the Wolfson Foundation has played a major role here.

    As has our work with Arts Council England to support arts and cultural organisations to develop their fundraising skills and capacity to attract more private investment.

    The Cultural Gifts and Acceptance In Lieu scheme, meanwhile, has meant treasures such as Tolkien’s manuscripts in Oxford.

    Or the archives of children’s author Judith Kerr in Newcastle.

    Have permanent homes and are made accessible to the public.

    I know philanthropy is not just of critical interest to DCMS.

    Multiple departments are recognising the value of private capital for the public sector.

    The Office for Investment, a joint unit between No.10 and the Department for Business and Trade, has created a new concierge service for high value transformational philanthropic capital.

    Its objective is to increase giving from international donors, in the same manner that it does with inward investment.

    The lead official, Heather Davenport, is here today so please do speak with her to discuss this important topic.

    Spearheaded by the Secretary of State, DCMS is taking the lead role in coordinating efforts across Whitehall to foster a better operating environment for philanthropy in the UK.

    The Secretary of State spoke on this recently at an event I know many of you were able to attend, for the launch of the Onward report.

    She spoke about how we are committed to helping more people give and helping people give more.

    I want to reiterate the three core areas that she mentioned that we can accelerate across Government.

    Firstly, we want to better enable philanthropy and ensure the UK continues to be a good place to give.

    This includes helping people understand how they can give.

    We are working with the Financial Conduct Authority, wealth management firms and the Treasury to explore the possibility of providing greater philanthropy training for financial advisors.

    There is already some innovation in this space, with CFA Society UK recently launching their Certificate in Impact Investing.

    This provides investment professionals with the information they need to advise their clients on how their capital can have greater social and environmental impact.

    Alongside this, my officials are collaborating with HMRC to consider how the tax environment affects philanthropy, and are engaging with them on their potential work to digitalise Gift Aid.

    Complementing this work, we are continuing to support the growth and development of the social impact investing market, which delivers benefits to society alongside financial returns.

    We’re working with large scale investors, such as pension funds, to achieve the change we are looking for.

    We are also focused on unlocking the huge potential of Community Development Finance Institutions (CDFIs).

    These regional lenders provide affordable loans in the UK’s most disadvantaged places.

    Steps like these can make a huge difference for setting in place the right infrastructure across the country for both philanthropy and impact investing.

    Secondly, we want to encourage more philanthropy, particularly at a regional level.

    One example is West London Zone, a social outcomes partnership where philanthropic money is blended with national and local spend that only pays when measurable outcomes are achieved.

    Partly funded by DCMS, it has made a significant difference to children and young people’s life chances.

    Yet we know that philanthropy is still primarily concentrated in London and the south.

    So we want to explore how similar models could potentially be developed around the country that can maximise social impact.

    Can better reach marginalised communities, and can involve people of all backgrounds.

    The sharing of expertise is central to encouraging people to donate.

    Peer influence also makes a huge difference – one-third of wealthy donors report donating after being encouraged by friends or family.

    So we want to help bring together established philanthropists, and high net worth individuals, with the next wave of budding donors

    Who are socially conscious and want to make an impact.

    People like Sir Lewis Hamilton, who has given £20 million to create his charity Mission 44

    And empower young people from underserved communities and diverse backgrounds.

    This leads me onto our third area of focus, of fully recognising how philanthropy transforms lives and communities.

    We’re seeing how alive and kicking philanthropy is in Stoke-on-Trent, for example

    Where philanthropists of all levels of giving are making a difference.

    From Denise Coates, who has donated millions towards projects in the city, including £10 million to University Hospitals of North Midlands during the pandemic

    To 23-year-old Matthew Bridger, who created his own foundation to provide grants for Stoke charities helping vulnerable people.

    Matthew was recognised earlier this year through the Prime Minister’s daily Points of Light award

    Which recognises the exceptional service people give to their communities.

    We want to celebrate more people who give through awards like these, especially through the Honours system

    And I encourage you all to nominate worthy candidates.

    We also want to champion campaigns and events that highlight the impact of giving.

    So we want to help lead this conversation.

    But the Government cannot, and should not, drive this alone.

    To enable philanthropy, there are key evidence gaps we still need to understand.

    We need high net worth individuals and impact investors to play an active role.

    We need to be hearing from those making a difference with their giving, for us to amplify their voices.

    And so we also want to learn from you and listen.

    Today’s forum provides a perfect opportunity for this.

    As the name suggests, Beacon has been shining a light for many years now on the potential for philanthropists to unlock many of the challenges we face today

    bringing together those with a shared social purpose, and the means to drive investment towards the places that need this most.

    I know there will be many rich conversations over the course of today

    Because there is a real buzz around philanthropy right now

    And, as you have said, Cath, a real sense of hope, in what we can achieve together

    There is an opportunity to capitalise on the kindness of the British public and help make their gifts go further

    To help our charities and communities stay resilient and sustainable

    To allow our world-leading sport, creative and cultural sectors to continue to flourish

    So with that in mind, thank you again for inviting me to speak to you.

    I wish you a very successful day ahead and I look forward to continuing to work closely with the philanthropy sector to help it grow to its full potential.