Tag: Therese Coffey

  • Therese Coffey – 2022 Comments on NHS Car Parking Charges

    Therese Coffey – 2022 Comments on NHS Car Parking Charges

    The comments made by Therese Coffey, the Deputy Prime Minister and Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on Twitter on 16 October 2022.

    There have been inaccurate reports we are changing free hospital car parking. We have delivered our manifesto pledge to provide free parking for those who need it most at all NHS trusts. This will not change. #ABCD is about putting patients first and I’m determined to deliver it.

  • Therese Coffey – 2022 Comments on the Dismissal of Kwasi Kwarteng

    Therese Coffey – 2022 Comments on the Dismissal of Kwasi Kwarteng

    The comments made by Therese Coffey, the Deputy Prime Minister, on 14 October 2022.

    The PM is right to act now to ensure our country’s economic stability – key for families and businesses – and reassure the markets of our fiscal discipline, especially in light of the worsening global economic conditions with Putin’s illegal invasion of Ukraine.

  • Therese Coffey – 2022 Comments on Covid Backlog

    Therese Coffey – 2022 Comments on Covid Backlog

    The comments made by Therese Coffey, the Deputy Prime Minister and Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 11 October 2022.

    My number one priority is delivering for patients and we’re getting on with the job of tackling the issues that affect people most – ambulances, backlogs, care, doctors and dentists.

    Today I’m announcing the approval of 10 new community diagnostic centres which are helping to bust the COVID-19 backlogs by delivering vital tests, checks and scans in local areas.

    They have delivered over 2 million checks over the past year, diagnosing conditions from cancer to lung disease – and we’re on track to open up to 160 centres across the country by 2025, delivering an additional 17 million checks.

  • Therese Coffey – 2022 Speech to Conservative Party Conference

    Therese Coffey – 2022 Speech to Conservative Party Conference

    The speech made by Therese Coffey, the Deputy Prime Minister and Health & Social Care Secretary, in Birmingham on 4 October 2022.

    Conference, I am delighted to be here in Birmingham for my first speech as Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, and as Deputy Prime Minister.

    I was here just a couple of months ago for the Commonwealth Games,

    And I was absolutely blown away,

    by the Games themselves,

    and also by how the city has been transformed since we were last here.

    And that is thanks to Conservative Mayor, Andy Street.

    Andy has shown,

    That being ambitious for the people and communities he represents,

    getting on with the job at hand,

    and focusing on delivery,

    is exactly what our voters want,

    and why he was re-elected,

    resoundingly.

    Conference, as a Conservative government,

    we believe in the Great British people,

    and we are ambitious for our country.

    Despite the severe challenges facing the global economy, in the wake of Putin’s illegal invasion of Ukraine, and the aftershock of Covid,

    Now is the time we must come together,

    to tackle the issues that we have long faced.

    And we will take decisive action

    to get Britain moving again….

    … from getting Britain building,

    to channelling investment into local areas,

    to helping families get on in life.

    We will deliver, deliver, deliver…

    Conference,

    Our National Health Service has the admiration and gratitude of the British people, particularly for getting us through COVID.

    The doctors, the nurses, the midwives, the paramedics, the chemists, the cleaners, and all the clinical and support staff,

    As well as all the carers, working in care homes or our communities.

    They regularly go the extra mile.

    They are the pride of Britain.

    The NHS is and always has been a national endeavour.

    That was set out in 1944, when it was a Conservative politician, Sir Henry Willink, who put forward the proposals for “A National Health Service”.

    That’s right, a Conservative MP,

    from my home city of Liverpool,

    who conceived the NHS,

    – a good omen, I think!

    And I continue to be proud of the many doctors, nurses, and dentists serving as Conservatives in Parliament,

    far more than we see in the Labour Party.

    And it is because of our Conservative Party’s commitment to the NHS,

    …That we will be spending 173 billion pounds this year on health and social care, in England alone,

    …up from 124 billion pounds when we entered office in 2010,

    …and that’s accounting for inflation –

    This has resulted in more doctors and nurses than ever before.

    But, as Health Secretary, it’s my job to be honest, and level with you about the scale of challenge ahead of us.

    And frankly,

    I won’t be turning to Labour for solutions.

    If you want to see the Labour Party running the NHS,

    just look across the border into Wales,

    where around 60,000 patients are still waiting for more than 2 years for treatment, higher than last year.

    This isn’t the time for brickbats though.

    It is precisely because healthcare matters so much

    that we need to have honest discussion

    and be prepared to hold the NHS to account

    forging a partnership with them focused on delivery, not on dogma.

    So, let’s be honest.

    While most patients receiving care in our NHS have a good experience,

    Too many do not…

    …Whether it’s the 8am scramble to see a GP…

    …Or the long waits to get tests or treatment…

    Or the struggle to see an NHS dentist at all.

    Much of this has been made worse by the pandemic.

    And I must level with you,

    Backlogs are expected to rise before they fall,

    as more patients come forward for diagnosis and treatment.

    But this isn’t just about Covid.

    There is still too much variation in patient experience.

    I saw that for myself this July when I went to A&E.

    I waited nearly nine hours to see a doctor,

    before being asked to return the next day for treatment.

    Now I knew, from previous experience,

    that would be too late,

    so I took myself to a different hospital,

    and was treated that same day.

    That is the sort of variation we see across the NHS.

    From two hospitals just a couple of miles apart, and it must change.

    That is why my first job in the Department was creating Our Plan for Patients, which puts the needs of patients front and centre.
    Our new Plan for Patients deliberately places an emphasis on primary care, the gateway to the NHS for most people.

    It empowers doctors and nurses by reducing bureaucracy,

    …which gets in the way of them doing their jobs.

    And it seeks to improve performance across the country by unlocking data.

    Now,

    You may have heard ‘ABCD’ are my immediate priorities.

    No, I wasn’t broadcasting my A Level results to the nation.

    Nor was I reciting a new hip hop beat by Dr Dre.

    Those four letters represent my commitment to focus – resolutely – on the issues that affect patients most:

    Ambulances.

    Backlogs.

    Care.

    Doctors and Dentists.

    And with my excellent ministerial team,

    Robert Jenrick,

    Will Quince,

    Neil O’Brien,

    Nick Markham,

    and our very own in-house ministerial medic, Dr Caroline Johnson,

    Together, we WILL focus on the issues that affect patients most

    To deliver their priorities.

    AND be their champion.

    Starting with ‘A’ for Ambulances.

    Access to urgent treatment can be life-saving.

    When people phone 999 because they think they or their loved one is having a heart attack or a stroke, they want to know help will come,

    and will come soon.

    Let’s be clear,

    Average waiting times are too long,

    So, we are increasing the number of 999 call handlers.

    And we must also get ambulances back on the road from handovers at hospitals,

    so we are placing a laser-like focus on our most challenged trusts, because as we saw last winter,

    nearly half of all handover delays were at just 15 trusts.

    We also know to be able to admit more patients,

    we need to open up more space in hospitals.

    So we are acting immediately to create more capacity,

    the equivalent of 7,000 more beds, this winter.

    But it’s not just capacity in our hospitals we need,

    it’s also in our communities,

    to help support people…

    …who could be cared for more appropriately at home or in a care home, rather than being kept in hospital, unnecessarily.

    That is why the ‘C’ for care is such an integral part of Our Plan.

    And why we have invested a further 500 million pounds this winter,

    so local councils and the local NHS,

    can work together to tackle delayed discharges.

    It isn’t all about emergency care though.

    It is also about diagnosis and treatment.

    And that is where we go back to ‘B’ for backlogs.

    The waiting list for planned care, made worse by the pandemic, currently stands at about 7 million.

    This includes people waiting for diagnosis, to know if they need any treatment at all.

    While, in England, we have now virtually eliminated waits of over two years,

    we are speeding up our plans to roll out community diagnostic centres, as well as new hospitals.

    And we will maximise the use of the independent sector too, when patients are waiting too long for treatment.

    Lastly, but key is ‘D’ – for doctors and for dentists.

    Now, I think it is perfectly reasonable when people need to see a GP, they should expect to do so within a fortnight.

    Of course, I would like to be more ambitious, and while I will not be prescriptive on how GPs interact with their patients,

    I am clear Patients must be able to see their doctors promptly.

    To help achieve these priorities,

    I will publish a lot more information for patients,

    so they can see how their local NHS is performing, including their GP practice, and on access to NHS care and treatment.

    Another key element is personnel.

    I have listened to why people say they are leaving the NHS,

    or what is holding them back, from offering more services.

    And I am responding.

    I am empowering GPs to use their funding more flexibly for the recruitment of more support staff, and making significant changes to pension arrangements.

    I am extending the emergency clinical register,

    so that health professionals who have come out of retirement,

    can continue to practise for a further two years.

    I am opening up more prescription capability and services to pharmacists.

    I am investing in IT for telephony and digital appointments.

    And I am making it easier for clinicians registered outside England to be accredited, to get to work more quickly, treating patients.

    It is, frankly, bonkers, that we have restrictions on the recognition of doctors, dentists, and nurses within the UK itself.

    That is why I am laying regulations next week,

    …which will allow the General Dental Council to get on with accrediting dentists to work right across our United Kingdom,

    so we can have oases of oral care, rather than dental deserts.

    This is all on top of our existing commitments,

    to boost the health and care workforce,

    including our manifesto pledge to recruit 50,000 more nurses by 2024.

    Conference,

    Whether you live in a city or a town,

    in the countryside or on the coast,

    this Conservative Government will always be on your side,

    when you need care the most.

    This is just the start of our ambitions for health and care.

    Our Plan informs patients and empowers them to live healthier lives.

    Because we know prevention is better than cure.

    It is right we continue our longer-term health approach,

    Strengthening mental wellbeing and resilience,

    as well as the physical health of the nation,

    because that is also good for the economic health of the nation.

    We have a record number of people, in work, on the payroll, but there are many vacancies still to be filled.

    We know work is good for you,

    both physically and for mental wellbeing,

    as well as putting more pounds in your pocket.

    That is why I will strive to support

    those not working now due to ill health,

    to help them to start, stay, and succeed in work;

    building on the Prime Minister’s pledge to have more mental health support in communities.

    Because together, we can deliver a healthier, more productive society, all the stronger, to help grow our economy.

    As the Prime Minister said on the steps of Downing Street,

    she has three clear priorities:

    growing the economy,

    tackling energy security and costs for households and businesses;

    and the NHS.

    When I first went into the Department,

    I asked what the biggest risk was this winter and what we could do to help?

    I was told – help with energy bills,

    so older people would not worry about the cost of turning on the heating,

    and for health and care providers too.

    The Prime Minister and the Chancellor listened.

    They acted.

    They have delivered.

    And we need to act on growing the economy too.

    We need a strong economy to have a strong NHS.

    We need a resilient, sustainable economy,

    to have a resilient, sustainable NHS.

    And we need a compassionate, and considered, Conservative government,

    to deliver, deliver, deliver.

    And that, Conference,

    is what we will do.

    Thank you.

  • Therese Coffey – 2022 Statement on Health and Social Care

    Therese Coffey – 2022 Statement on Health and Social Care

    The statement made by Therese Coffey, the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, in the House of Commons on 22 September 2022.

    I am pleased today to set out to Parliament our plan for patients. As the Prime Minister said on the doorstep of Downing Street, she had three clear priorities: growing the economy; tackling energy security and support for households and businesses; and the NHS, with patients being able to get a GP appointment.

    Patients are my top priority and I will be their champion, focusing on the issues that most affect them or their loved ones. Most of the time, patients have a great experience, but we must not paper over the problems that we face. We expect backlogs to rise before they fall as more patients come forward for diagnosis and treatment after the pandemic, and the data shows, sadly, that there is too much variation in the access and care that people receive across the country.

    The scale of the challenge necessitates a national endeavour. As we work together to tackle these immense challenges, I will be proactive, not prescriptive, in our approach as we apply a relentless focus on measures that affect most people’s experience of the NHS and social care.

    Today, we are taking the first step in this important journey by publishing “Our Plan for Patients”, which I will lay in the Libraries of both Houses. It sets out a range of measures to help the NHS and social care perform at their best for patients. The plan will inform patients and empower them to live healthier lives; place an intensive focus on primary care, the gateway to the NHS for most people; use prevention to strengthen resilience and the health of the nation; and improve performance and productivity.

    To succeed, we will need a true national endeavour, supported by our making it easier for clinical professionals to return to help the NHS, as well as drawing on the energy and enthusiasm of the million people who volunteered to help during the pandemic by opening up opportunities for them to help in different ways. That could be by becoming a community first responder, or by, for example, strengthening good neighbour schemes across the country. We will also explore the creation of an ambulance auxiliary service.

    The plan sets out our work on the ABCD of priorities that affect most people’s experience of the NHS and social care. First, on ambulances, I want to reduce waiting times for patients and apply a laser-like focus on handover delays, so that ambulances get back on the road and to patients, where they are needed most.

    Our analysis shows that 45% of the delays are occurring in just 15 hospital trusts. That is why the local NHS will be doing intensive work with those trusts to create more capacity in hospitals—the equivalent of 7,000 more beds—by this winter through a combination of freeing up beds, with a focus on discharge, and people staying at home and being monitored remotely through the sort of technology that played such an important role during the pandemic. In addition, when patients call 999, the speed of answering is critical, so we will increase the number of call handlers for both 999 and 111 calls.

    Next is the backlog, where the waiting list for planned care currently stands at about 7 million, exacerbated by the pandemic. This summer, we announced that we have virtually eliminated waits of over two years, and we remain on track to reach the next milestones in our plan. To boost capacity, we are accelerating our plans to roll out community diagnostic centres as well as new hospitals, and we will maximise the use of the independent sector to provide even more treatment for patients.

    As well as capacity, we are also getting more people on the frontline, making it easier for people to work in and help the NHS. We know that people are leaving the workforce for a variety of reasons. We have listened, and we are responding and addressing a number of those reasons. For instance, pension rules can currently be a disincentive for clinicians who want to stay in the profession or to return from retirement and help our national endeavour. We will correct pension rules relating to inflation; we will expect NHS trusts to offer pension recycling; and we will extend until 2024 measures that will allow people to stay or return to the NHS.

    I can announce today that we will extend the operation of the emergency registers for health professionals for two more years. That is, of course, on top of commitments to boost the health and care workforce, such as our manifesto pledge to recruit 50,000 more nurses by 2024. That will sit alongside the design and delivery of our forthcoming workforce plan.

    C is for social care. At the moment, one of the key challenges is discharging patients from hospital into more appropriate care settings to free up beds and help improve ambulance response times. To tackle that, I can announce today that we are launching a £500 million adult social care discharge fund for this winter. The local NHS will be working with councils with targeted plans on specific care packages to support people being either in their own home or in the wider community. That £500 million acts as the down-payment in the rebalancing of funding across health and social care as we develop our longer-term plans.

    I know that there is a shortage of carers across the country. We will continue to work with the Department for Work and Pensions on a national recruitment campaign. In addition, since last winter, we have opened up international recruitment routes for carers. We will support the sector with £15 million this year to help to employ more care workers from abroad. We are also accelerating the roll-out of technologies such as digitised social care records, which can save care workers about 20 minutes a shift, freeing up time for carers to care.

    Finally, D is for doctors and dentists. I am determined to address one of the most frustrating problems faced by many patients: getting an appointment to see their doctor, or getting to see a dentist at all.

    Starting with doctors, we are taking five steps to help make that happen: first, setting the expectation that everyone who needs a GP appointment can get one within two weeks; secondly, opening up time for more than 1 million extra appointments, so that patients with urgent needs can be seen on the same day; thirdly, making it easier to book an appointment; fourthly, publishing performance by practice to help to inform patients; and fifthly, requiring the local NHS to hold practices to account, providing support to those practices with the most acute access challenges to improve performance.

    Clearly, clinicians are best placed to prioritise according to the clinical need of their patients. In July, 44% of appointments were same-day appointments, but too few practices were consistently offering appointments within a fortnight.

    To help free up appointments, we will ease pressures on GP practices by expanding the role of community pharmacies. I am pleased to announce that we have agreed a deal for an expanded offer over the next 18 months. Pharmacists will be able to prescribe certain medications rather than requiring a GP prescription. As well as other measures involving community pharmacists, we estimate that that will free up 2 million appointments. We are also changing funding rules to give freedoms to GPs to boost the number of staff to support their practice. We estimate that that measure could free up 1 million GP appointments.

    For patients, we will make it easier for them to contact their practice, both on the phone—we are making an extra 31,000 phone lines available this winter, followed by further deployment of cloud-based telephony—and online, particularly through the NHS app. As I set out, we will also correct pension rules so that our most experienced GPs can stay in practice. By extending the emergency register, we are creating opportunities for people other than GPs to undertake tasks such as vaccinations.

    On dentists, there are too many dental deserts. That is why we are setting out an ambition that everyone seeking NHS dental care can receive it when they need it. We have already started changing the dental contract to incentivise dentists to do more NHS work and take on more difficult cases. I pay tribute to my predecessors in this role for their success in beginning to tackle this long-standing issue.

    We will also streamline routes into NHS dentistry for those trained overseas so that they can start treating patients more quickly. We will make it a contractual requirement for dentists to publish online whether they are taking on new NHS patients.

    These measures, across a number of important areas, are the start, not the end, of our ambitions for health and care. They will help us to manage the pressure that health and care will face this winter and next, and they will improve these vital services for the long term. My priorities are patients’ priorities, and I will endeavour, through a powerful partnership with the NHS and local authorities, to level up care and match the expectations that the public rightly have. Whether you live in a city or a town, in the countryside or on the coast, this Government will be on your side when you need care the most. I commend this statement to the House.

  • Therese Coffey – 2022 Tribute to HM Queen Elizabeth II

    Therese Coffey – 2022 Tribute to HM Queen Elizabeth II

    The tribute made by Therese Coffey, the Deputy Prime Minister, in the House of Commons on 10 September 2022.

    Thank you, Mr Speaker, for allowing Ministers to participate in this debate. I really appreciate it, and I know that my constituents from Suffolk Coastal will, too.

    Her late Majesty the Queen was a constant across the decades. As a child, I remember the silver jubilee; there were also celebrations for the golden, diamond and platinum jubilees, and commemorations of VE Day. The Queen brought the nation together at sad times, including for events at the Cenotaph, but there was also celebration of what makes our country great. The very first time my mother watched television was the coronation. Somebody nearby in her town of Wrexham bought a TV, and people came from the surrounding streets to watch the Queen being crowned.

    The Queen’s impact was felt right around the world. I saw that when I was Minister of State at the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs. In Kenya, in Uganda, and wherever I went, the Queen was held in the highest regard, and there were always representations made to her. Her impact was felt in world war two as well; I think of the broadcasts by the princesses. As a youth, in 1995—a long time ago—I went as a representative of the United Kingdom to the Anne Frank house, where there were pictures of the princesses. In her diary, on 21 April 1944, Anne Frank wished a happy 18th birthday to Her Royal Highness Princess Elizabeth of York, and wondered to which prince they would marry off this beauty. I am confident that our new King will also have that constancy, and that impact around the world, not only because of his work on the environment, but because he will sincerely continue the traditions of his mother.

    Turning to Suffolk Coastal, I pay tribute to Rendlesham’s savvy parish council, which always puts on its parish fête on the same day as the trooping of the colour so we get the line-up of all the flypasts, whereas many other places pay for it. The Queen seemed to have a particular affection for Benjamin Britten and opera; she opened the 20th Snape Maltings festival in 1967, and when it burned down a couple of years later she came back to, in effect, reopen it. That affection carried on. Her love of music may not always have been evident, but people in this Chamber and elsewhere will know the special arrangement of the national anthem written by Benjamin Britten. Her love of music was further attested to by the fact that she authorised the name of only one other person on the coinage of the realm: Benjamin Britten.

    I want to say on behalf of the people of Suffolk Coastal how much they will miss Queen Elizabeth II, and to pledge their loyalty and support to King Charles III.

  • Therese Coffey – 2022 Comments on the Cost of Living Payment

    Therese Coffey – 2022 Comments on the Cost of Living Payment

    The comments made by Therese Coffey, the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, on 22 June 2022.

    With millions of the lowest-income households soon seeing the first of two cash instalments land into their bank accounts, we are taking action to directly help families with the cost of living.

    This one-off payment totalling £650 is part of our £37 billion cost of living support package that will put an extra £1,200 into the pockets of those most in need.

  • Therese Coffey – 2022 Comments on Falling Unemployment

    Therese Coffey – 2022 Comments on Falling Unemployment

    The comments made by Therese Coffey, the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, on 27 May 2022.

    Unemployment is at its lowest since the 1970s with full time workers across the UK £6000 better off than if they were on benefits. And there are still vacancies to fill. That’s why our jobcentres are helping employers short circuit the recruitment process so they can get talent in fast. So, if you’re hiring, make the most of the help on offer from us.

  • Therese Coffey – 2022 Comments at G7 Employment Ministers Meeting

    Therese Coffey – 2022 Comments at G7 Employment Ministers Meeting

    The comments made by Therese Coffey, the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, on 24 May 2022.

    Moving away from high carbon jobs to green jobs is a crucial part of achieving our net zero goals. The creation of high-quality jobs in sustainable sectors, ensures the opportunities are well paid.

    I very much support the sharing of knowledge and expertise with counterparts across the globe and welcome the opportunity to build on the UK’s G7 Presidency of 2021. It’s essential we work together to grow the economy to address the cost of living.

  • Therese Coffey – 2022 Speech on the Cost of Living Crisis

    Therese Coffey – 2022 Speech on the Cost of Living Crisis

    The speech made by Therese Coffey, the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, in the House of Commons on 17 May 2022.

    It is an honour to conclude this debate on the Gracious Speech. Understandably, a lot of people have contributed today. I want to take this opportunity to join right hon. and hon. Members in paying tribute to Her Majesty in her platinum jubilee year. This is a Queen’s Speech that will deliver for the British people: safer streets, stronger schools, a secure supply of energy, speedier access to social security for those people near the end of their lives, streamlined financial services unlocking investment, stripping out unwanted EU regulation, and legislation to help level up across the United Kingdom. All these measures will help to grow the economy, which will help to address the cost of living challenge that families are facing.

    We should remember that this is a global challenge. Countries around the world are having to deal with inflation, and the covid aftershocks are still ripping through the world’s supply chains. On top of that, Putin’s brutal invasion of Ukraine has exacerbated spiking energy prices. On this side of the House, we are the champions of freedom and democracy around the world and it is right that we do all we can to end Putin’s onslaught, but sanctions are not cost-free for us here at home. They come on top of the impact from covid. These are global inflationary forces, and it would be wrong to pretend that we can protect everyone from their impact.

    Thanks to our strong recovery from the pandemic and having got the big calls right over the last two years—such as our plan for jobs—we have helped families across the country. We can see that in the labour market statistics published today. Our unemployment rate today is below the low level we saw before the pandemic. Not only that, it is the lowest since 1974. The number of people on payrolls is at a record high, and over half a million more people are now benefiting from a regular pay packet than in February 2020.

    I am also delighted to say that we have met our 2017 commitment to get 1 million more disabled people into employment in 10 years. In fact, we announced today that we have hit 1.3 million more people. That is good news for people with disabilities and it is good news for the economy too. The level of youth unemployment is now at a record low. This means greater security, more financial resilience and better prospects for people.

    David Linden

    The Secretary of State talks about employment, but when I go to my local food banks, one of the things that people tell me on a regular basis is that the number of people using the food banks as a result of in-work poverty is up. What does her local food bank tell her?

    Dr Coffey

    The hon. Gentleman is right to say that food banks are present and providing support in many communities, especially where people are trying to work out the best way to spend their resources. He mentions in-work poverty, and it is why we have a plan for in-work progression, why we have been investing in skills, why we are investing in our jobcentres and why, through the plan for jobs, we are doing more to help people not only to get back into work but to get on in work too. That is what we are doing.

    On top of the activity we have been undertaking, there are things we can do and are doing to cushion families from the worst effects of inflation and to ease the squeeze on household budgets. As my right hon. Friend the Chancellor set out, £22 billion has already been committed to support the hardest hit this year. The £150 of support for households in bands A to D is landing in people’s bank accounts, with a further £144 million discretionary fund available to councils. From October, the £200 reduction in energy bills will help families spread this year’s increased costs over the next few years.

    We initiated the household support fund, through which we invested £500 million across the UK to help with the cost of household essentials. We are increasing that to £1 billion every year. For the second phase of the grant we have put a particular focus on people on fixed incomes, which is why a third is ringfenced for pensioners. That is on top of existing targeted support such as the warm home discount, cold weather payments and winter fuel payments. We are stepping in at this challenging time, and we are ready to do more to help.

    We are discussing an Opposition amendment, and I make it clear that we will reject all Opposition amendments to the Queen’s Speech as a matter of precedent. The Queen’s Speech sets out the Government’s legislative programme for the year, and it is for my right hon. Friend the Chancellor to introduce fiscal measures, and he will make all future decisions on tax in the usual way. I reiterate that he told the House today that no option is off the table.

    We know that the best way to raise living standards over the long term is to grow the economy, to invest in skills and to get people moving into and progressing in decent jobs. The latest statistics cut through the Opposition’s charge that poverty has increased since the Conservatives came into power. There are 1.2 million fewer people, including 200,000 fewer children and half a million fewer working-age adults, in absolute poverty, before housing costs, than in 2010. In March we published statistics that, for the first time, combine absolute low income and material deprivation among working-age people. Those statistics show a fall of three percentage points, from 3.1 million when we came into power to 2.2 million in 2019-20.

    Alan Brown

    Will the Secretary of State remind the House of how much money the Treasury puts towards the warm home discount?

    Dr Coffey

    The hon. Gentleman is trying to be clever, as he knows the answer is that it is a redistribution within the energy policy. [Interruption.] Would he rather not have it? Would he rather be with his fellow SNP people who voted against any rise in benefits at all? That is what several of his colleagues did. They did not vote for a lift in benefits.

    After a decade of rising employment, we are building on our track record. We are ensuring that people have stronger incentives to work and can keep more of what they earn. Some 1.7 million working people on universal credit are, on average, £1,000 a year better off following our cut to the taper rate. Last month’s 6.6% rise in the national living wage has provided the lowest paid with an increase of £1,000 a year in their income, and in July the increase in the national insurance threshold will benefit 30 million working people, with a typical employee saving over £330 a year.

    Stephen Timms

    The Secretary of State mentioned today’s labour market statistics. Will she confirm that they show there are now half a million fewer people in employment than before the pandemic?

    Dr Coffey

    In my discussions with the chief statistician, he has said that more people are on the payroll than ever before. That is good news. I am conscious that there are people who are economically inactive, and the Government will set out how to challenge that. As the right hon. Gentleman knows, my main priority is those people to whom we pay benefits to look for work and making sure they get into work, but of course we will be extending our activity to try to get people back into the marketplace who have dropped out since the covid pandemic.

    As I pointed out, 30 million working people will benefit from the rise in the national insurance threshold in July. With a record number of vacancies in the economy, we want more people to have the benefits that work brings. That is why we are focused on getting more people into and progressing in jobs, where they can boost their pay, prospects and prosperity. Building on our plan for jobs, our Way to Work scheme is getting people into jobs even more quickly, with the aim of getting half a million claimants into work by June. We can see a kind of magic in our jobcentres, as people really want to break free from that unemployment poverty trap. By the end of April we were more than halfway to our goal, and we know there is more to do. But our Way to Work scheme is helping people move into any job now, to get a better job tomorrow and to build a longer-term career. To help people lift off at work when they land a job, we are rolling out extra support for claimants to build the skills they need to progress in work.

    All of this is underpinned by our programme to deliver on what Parliament voted for in 2012: to replace all the legacy benefits with universal credit, because people will always be better off working than not working, unless they cannot work. That is the magic of UC, unlike the cliff edges of tax credits, which stop people progressing the amount of time and skills they get in work. So we are getting on with it, having resumed the process to complete the move to UC by 2024. Given that we estimate that two thirds of people on tax credits would receive a higher entitlement on UC, this will be important in helping to increase incomes.

    All of this stands in contrast to what is put forward by those on the Opposition Benches. I believe the Leader of the Opposition would scrap UC—it was certainly in his pledges when seeking to be elected as Leader of the Opposition. They would undo a decade a progress, leave people further from the labour market and penalise the taxpayer by failing to realise the benefits of a modern system.

    My right hon. Friend the Prime Minister summed up our focus in his speech last Tuesday at the start of our debates on the Gracious Speech: “Jobs, jobs, jobs!”. We are talking about high-skill and high-wage jobs. These are clearly challenging times, but we will continue to provide the leadership needed to rise to those times, continuing to drive up the skills our economy needs and employment prospects across the country, and putting more pounds in people’s pockets. This Queen’s Speech will grow the economy, level up our country, spread opportunity, and strengthen security and prosperity for all the British people, through the covid aftershocks and for decades to come. We therefore continue to commend the Loyal Address, unamended, to the House.