Tag: William Hague

  • William Hague – 2008 Conservative Party Conference Speech

    williamhague

    I begin by thanking the Prime Minister of Georgia, a democracy which only two months ago came under direct military attack. It is not easy for many western Europeans, separated as we all are by many years from the threat of imminent invasion, to recall how that must feel. But it should not be difficult for all the nations of democratic Europe to say this to the people of Georgia: that your right to live in peace and freedom was long-awaited and hard-won, that your democracy has every right ultimately to join the alliances of the world’s democracies, and that the bullying of you or your neighbours must never be allowed to pay.

    In Britain we do not seek quarrels with Russia, but in dealing with any nation that turns its back on the peaceful resolution of disputes, history has taught us that weakness can never be the way. Russia has already paid a price for its flouting of international law in Georgia, in loss of business confidence and diplomatic support. The best chance of avoiding such conflicts in the future is for western nations to show what we have advocated: the strength of united resolve.

    We have heard too from Nana Addo, whom I thank not only for speaking to us so well but for demonstrating, with our sister party in Ghana, that there is no reason why the people of African nations cannot enjoy freedom, democracy and prosperity.

    The difference between the people of Zimbabwe, who have endured so many years of despotism and dictatorship, and the free people of Ghana comes down to the quality and wisdom of their leaders. It is a lasting reminder to all of us that politics has a purpose and that leaders make a difference, and we all hope that Nana Addo will go on to lead a country that’s an inspiration to its neighbours, shining out across Africa as a beacon of hope and freedom.

    We have heard at this conference of the many challenges a Conservative Government will face. In foreign affairs we have the exceptionally strong team of David Lidington, Mark Francois, Keith Simpson and Lord Howell. I say to you very bluntly, that all their talents will be needed, for in foreign policy the challenges may be the most serious for any incoming government since the end of the Second World War.

    Last month, David Cameron and I visited our troops in Afghanistan. And make no mistake about this: our soldiers, in their patience in winning over the local population, their stamina in fighting for weeks at a time in extreme conditions of dust and heat, and in doing their job despite equipment shortages which should have been remedied long ago, are still the best of our country and the best military professionals on earth.

    We regard progress in Afghanistan, and in the closely-related problems of Pakistan, as the single most urgent focus in foreign affairs for our work as a new government. Failure there would leave the world, ourselves included, much more open to terrorist attack. We will call upon the new President of the United States to intensify the efforts to turn tactical successes into strategic victory, requiring as that does a functioning, non-corrupt government in Kabul, the better co-ordination of international aid and a unified military command. It requires too, allied nations to make, alongside our magnificent soldiers, the military effort necessary for the peace and security of all.

    Terrorism, as Pauline Neville-Jones so ably reminded us, remains the greatest single threat to the security of our citizens. That is why, at our meeting with the new President of Pakistan in Islamabad last month, we said that Britain and Pakistan must co-operate closely at all levels to turn people away from terror.

    It is vital to conduct an unrelenting global pursuit of terrorist networks and their finances, and to be tougher at home in banning organisations which breed terrorism. But it is also vital, at all times, to uphold our own values of respect for the rule of law, which, after all, is what we are fighting for in the first place. Prisoner abuse scandals in Iraq, however isolated, have done as much damage to the western world as any battlefield defeat. The society we live in, which seeks dignity for all, freedom from arbitrary power, and the promotion of political freedom and human rights, must always be our inspiration, and we betray that inspiration if even for a day we turn into our enemy.

    Our liberal conservative beliefs mean we will approach foreign affairs with the strength and purpose to keep our people safe today but also with the humility and patience to make them safer tomorrow. That means learning from mistakes that have indeed been made, for instance in Iraq. We supported the decision to remove Saddam Hussein, but we all know that an occupation of Iraq that was better conceived and implemented could have spared so many the agony and bloodshed of the last five years. I call again on ministers to establish a full privy council inquiry into the origins and conduct of the war so that all can learn from its mistakes and apply the lessons as soon as possible, and I make it clear today that if they do not establish such an inquiry, one of the first acts of a Conservative Government will be to do so.

    Our combination of strength with patience means too the freshening and deepening of our alliances. Alongside our partnership with the people of Pakistan, we have called for an intensified special relationship between Britain and India, by far the world’s largest democracy. We have established constructive working relationships with China, a country with which we have many differences but whose partnership will be essential in tackling climate change and nuclear proliferation. And we have argued for an elevation of our political, financial and cultural links with the many friendly Muslim nations of the Middle East, among them the fastest-growing centres of economic activity and wealth on the globe.

    And we will refresh too our most important alliance of all, with the United States of America. David Cameron has struck up an excellent relationship with both John McCain and Barack Obama. Indeed, it his ability to impart a frank message within a warm relationship which has added to my conviction that he is the man to lead our country. We have said our relations with America will be solid but not slavish, and every bit of that solidity, and that frankness, will be necessary to push forward a peace in the Middle East which gives real statehood for Palestinians alongside real security for the people of Israel, and above all to face up to the danger which may well within a decade take over from terrorism as the prime threat to free people: the proliferation of nuclear weapons.

    Iran’s defiance of the UN Security Council and evident intention to develop nuclear capability could ignite a nuclear arms race in the Middle East and leave the non-proliferation treaty, the cornerstone of world security for 40 years, in ruins. Unless Iran responds positively in the coming weeks to the latest proposals, we call for EU nations to adopt progressively tougher measures against Iran, including a denial of access to Europe’s financial system and a ban on new investment in Iranian oil and gas fields.

    And at the same time we call on our Government, ahead of the crucial review conference of the non-proliferation treaty in 2010, to build now the international consensus to make far harder the illicit production of nuclear weapons and the trading of their components. This, looking ahead, is one of the great global challenges, a challenge to which the next Conservative Government will rise.

    Yet as we face this and other challenges, we will find on coming to office that many of the world’s key institutions are struggling or out of date. That is why we advocate reform of NATO, to share more equitably the costs and risks of mutual defence, and reform of the UN Security Council to reflect the 21st century instead of the middle of the 20th. And it is also why we call on the European Union to lead the way in responding to global competition, global warming and global poverty, the agenda of today, rather than building more centralised power in Brussels, which is the agenda of the past.

    We believe in a Europe where nations can work together to achieve goals they cannot attain on their own. We are proud of the progress the EU has made in widening the freedom to do business, to travel and to find work. We applaud the agreement on climate change which EU nations must now implement. We are firm in our view that it is EU membership or its prospect that has helped to entrench democracy in many nations of central and eastern Europe, and that prospect must be there for people across the Balkans, the Ukraine, Turkey, and indeed Georgia if they wish to attain it.

    But we are equally clear that while all this work requires will and determination, none of it requires more centralised power. We are clear too that all three political parties said at the last election that the treaty aimed at creating more centralised power, once called a constitution and now the treaty of Lisbon, would be subject to a referendum of the people of Britain.

    Few events in recent years have been more revealing about the duplicitous nature of the Labour Government, or more corrosive of public trust in the entire political process, than the spectacle of Labour MPs trooping through the lobbies to deny the referendum they promised to the people, while Liberal Democrat MPs summoned up the courage to turn up and abstain.

    Only the Conservative Party has remained true to the commitment to a referendum. We congratulate the people of the Irish Republic on having the courage to vote no to a treaty they did not want. In doing so they spoke for many millions across Europe who were denied any vote of their own. That result should be respected and we deplore the fact that Gordon Brown and David Miliband went ahead with British ratification despite the Irish vote, conniving in the attempt to bully the Irish into voting again. How undemocratic it would be if the people of Ireland were made to vote twice when the people of Britain have been denied the chance even to vote once.

    Our position rests on the basic truth that in a democracy, lasting political institutions cannot be built without popular consent. If in the end this treaty is ratified, by all 27 nations of the EU, then clearly it would lack democratic legitimacy here in Britain, political integration would have gone too far, and we would set out at that point the consequences of that and how we would intend to proceed.

    But we say to the Irish people – you are not alone, and if a Conservative Government takes office while the Lisbon Treaty remains unratified by Ireland or any other nation, we will hold the referendum the British people want and deserve and we will recommend as their government that they vote no.

    And in next year’s European elections, we will campaign for that referendum and for the open, free enterprise Europe we believe in, and we will form in the next European Parliament a new group of like-minded parties to campaign for that for many years to come.

    This then, is the Conservative approach, learning from the past but always preparing for the future; extending our alliances and standing by our friends; making the most of the world’s opportunities and seeking to pre-empt its great dangers; showing the patience to understand others but placing Britain, with our special links to America, Europe and Commonwealth, at the forefront of world affairs. It is an essential part of our preparation for government; a task, which now, we are ready, to take on once again.

  • William Hague – 2001 Conservative Councillors Association

    williamhague

    Below is the text of the speech made by the then Leader of the Opposition, William Hague, at the Conservative Councillors Association conference on 24th March 2001 during the General Election campaign.

    It is always a great pleasure for me to be with so many friends and colleagues at the annual conference of the Conservative Councillors Association. Whenever I speak at your conference, I am reminded of the great tradition of public service and duty that exists throughout all sections of our party – locally and nationally. It is not borne of personal ambition or self-fulfilment, but of a desire to serve our districts, our communities and our nation. And looking around the hall today, I see that great Tory tradition of service on full display once again.

    The Conservative Councillors Association represents all that is best about the Conservative Party in local government, and in your Chairman Paul Hanningfield you could have no better representative for your views on the Board of the Party.

    At this conference, though, we begin again by thinking of those colleagues who are unable to be with us today because of the foot and mouth crisis that has engulfed the British countryside.

    As the record increases in the number of cases this week has shown, for farmers and for huge numbers of rural businesses and tourist attractions facing financial ruin, the end is far from in sight. In the last 10 days, I’ve met farmers in Devon desperate because the spread of the disease has not been halted. I’ve met hotel owners and tourist operators in the Lake District facing bankruptcy because emergency help has not arrived. Anyone who has spent any time in the countryside knows that this crisis is clearly not under control. In fact it is getting worse.

    We’ve supported the Government’s measures to halt the spread of the disease. But we have watched with increasing exasperation and anger as the Government has continually underestimated the scale of the crisis, has failed to act with anything like the necessary speed or vigour and has consistently shown itself to be behind the game.

    There is much more they could be doing and yet for some reason they refuse to do it.

    It’s time to get the army properly involved. They’ve got the manpower, they’ve got the machinery. They should be used to help clear the backlog of rotting carcasses. They army are used to moving things. They are used to acting quickly. It’s time to move them in. It’s common sense, so let’s get on with it.

    We should speed up the slaughter programme. The backlog is growing by thousands every day. We should be sending in the valuers with the slaughtermen so there’s no more delays.

    There are 80,000 dead animals lying in fields. Everyone acknowledges that burial is the most effective way of disposing of them. We should be putting pressure on the Environment Agency to find the right sites so we can get on with it.

    Rural businesses need immediate help. They’re faced with thousands of pound of expenses but with no income. What they need is a Government backed loan scheme, like the one we put forward four days ago. They can’t wait any longer so let’s get on with it.

    If all these things are going to happen we need the full weight and authority of government to drive them. When there is a war, there is a War Cabinet. Well this is a national crisis, and we need a Crisis Cabinet.

    The Prime Minister should set it up now. It’s not enough to involve just the agriculture, environment and tourism ministers. The Chancellor, the Home Secretary, the Defence Secretary, the Trade Secretary, the territorial ministers should all sit on it too. The Prime Minister should chair this Crisis Cabinet himself. And it should meet every day until they’re on top of this crisis.

    My message to the Government is: Get it together. Get a grip.

    And there’s another thing. In parts of the country severely affected by Foot and Mouth, fighting the disease must have priority over fighting elections.

    So Tony Blair should bring forward legislation now to take on the power to postpone some county elections should it become clear later that people cannot participat e fully and freely in them. The time to do that is fast running out.

    The foot and mouth crisis comes on top of all the other crippling blows that have hit the countryside like the worst agricultural depression for sixty years, the plunging farm incomes and the closure of rural services. While Labour can’t be blamed for the outbreak of foot and mouth they can be blamed for policies that threaten to destroy the liberty and livelihood of thousands of people.

    And it’s time it came to an end.

    So I’ll give you, and millions of people in rural Britain desperate for a change of Government, this assurance. The next Conservative Government will stand up for the interests of the British countryside, we will fight for the hard-pressed British farmers and we will do everything we can to defend a rural way of life that Labour have so brutally and systematically undermined.

    We will do these things because Conservatives believes in the countryside, because unlike Labour that has pitted town against country we are the party of One Nation. We will do it because we will govern for all the people. And we’ll do it by winning the next Election.

    Whatever happens, in a few weeks time many of you will be facing the electorate locally, while our party could once again be asking the British people to entrust us to form the government of our country.

    Let nobody be in any doubt. We are determined to win in the county council elections on 3 May, just as we are determined to win in any other elections that might take place on that day. And we can win together.

    I have no hesitation in saying we can win. We can win because we have in the Conservative Shadow Cabinet a team brimming with the talent, the policies and the drive to take on the governance of our country.

    We can win because of the reforms that together we have made to make our party the most open and democratic in British politics.

    We can win because of the hard work, the tireless dedication and the commitment of the people in this hall.

    We can win because of the efforts of people like you who through some of the most difficult times in our long history have been the backbone that has kept this party strong.

    We can win because of the way you have championed the Conservative cause on the doorsteps and in the council chambers, fighting for Conservative principles when those principles were under attack as never before.

    And we can win because week in, week out, you have been winning elections when all the pundits said that those elections couldn’t be won.

    It’s thanks to you that the Conservative Party now has nearly 2,500 more councillors than we did four years ago. It’s thanks to you that we control four times as many councils than we did four years ago. It’s thanks to you that we are the largest party of local government in district councils and county councils and after 3 May we’ll be larger still.

    It’s thanks to you that under Michael Ancram’s Chairmanship we are ready to fight the most disciplined, professional and effective campaign we have ever fought.

    Because it doesn’t matter when it comes. The Conservative Party can win the General Election, and make no mistake the Conservative Party is fighting tooth and nail to win the General Election.

    And I’ll give two more reasons why we can win. Tony Blair and New Labour.

    We could give no greater service to our country than to get rid of this sleaze ridden, crony stuffed, promise breaking, miserable excuse for a Government, led by a Prime Minister so consumed with his own self importance that he commissions memos entitled ‘Getting the Right Place in History’ and doesn’t even hide the fact that his only guiding purpose in politics is to be re-elected for a second term.

    Remember that day four years ago when Tony Blair walked into Downing Street. He told the country that things could only get better. He pledged that his would be a government that would only promise what it c ould deliver. He said he was offering the country a new kind of politics and a government that would be purer than pure.

    Yet four years on the hopes and aspirations of millions of people have been destroyed, and their trust has been betrayed.

    Four years on we know that for millions of people still waiting for their hospital operation, for better education, for more police, for improved transport and for lower taxes the only certainty under Labour is that things have got worse.

    Four years on, we know that all the promises, the pledges and Tony Blair’s vows have been broken by a Government that lives by cynicism, deception, distortion, manipulation and half-truth – a Government that is all spin and no delivery.

    Four years on we know that Tony Blair’s new kind of politics meant Formula One, favours for lobbyists, the home loans scandal, the Lord Chancellor’s dinners, the two resignations of Peter Mandelson, and everything to do with Geoffrey Robinson.

    Four years on we know that being purer than pure really meant allowing Robin Cook wilfully to mislead the House of Commons and get away with it and the scandal of allowing Keith Vaz to cling on to office when everyone knows that Tony Blair should have sacked him weeks ago.

    And after four years of failure, cushioned only by the strength of the economy that we Conservatives bequeathed him, Tony Blair now asks for four more years. You’ve got to hand it to him. He’s certainly got some nerve. He’s the first Prime Minister in history to ask for a second term of office so that he can begin to get round to delivering on all the promises he has broken in his first term.

    Well I’ve got news for Tony Blair. We are not going to sit back and let him inflict four more years of damage on the country we love. We are going to fight him every inch of the way and with every ounce of energy we’ve got.

    We all know what four more years of Labour would mean for Britain. And we are not afraid to spell it out.

    Four more years of stealth taxes, of fewer police, of more criminals released early to commit even more crimes, of more cancelled operations, of more crises in our schools, of more chaos on our roads and of even more expensive petrol.

    And yes, after four more years Britain railroaded into a European single currency, with the British pound gone forever and ever more of our precious rights to govern ourselves handed over to Brussels. The steady and certain march into a European superstate – on course.

    I make no apology for warning of the dangers of a second term of Labour. Just as I’m not going to be deterred by a self appointed, self opinionated liberal elite from speaking up for the common sense instincts of the British people.

    In New Labour’s Britain, there are certain subjects that we are not supposed to talk about. Talk about tax and they call you greedy. Talk about crime and they call you extreme. Talk about asylum and they call you racist. Talk about your country and they call you a xenophobe.

    Well I don’t believe that the British people are any of those things. They recognise that a decent society needs properly funded public services. But they don’t see why they should pay higher and higher taxes when they can’t see any improvement in those services.

    They are not reactionary. But they understand that, in order to tackle crime, we should be increasing police numbers not cutting them. And they can see that letting violent criminals out of prison early is likely to cause more crime.

    Our people are not intolerant. They recognise, as Conservatives have always recognised, that Britain must offer sanctuary to those fleeing from persecution. But they believe that Britain should be a safe haven and not a soft touch.

    Above all, our people are not xenophobes. They understand that the United Kingdom works internally as a partnership of nations, and externally as a partner in the international community. They know that we are a maritime, trading country, connected by our history and geography to other continents.

    And they also believe in democracy. They can see that if our interest rates, our exchange rates and even our tax rates were set in Frankfurt, then yet more of our rights would have been signed away.

    So Tony Blair and his ministers can sneer all they like. But the reality is they are not sneering at me. They are sneering at the British people, whose opinions they hold in contempt.

    That’s one of the differences between Tony Blair and me.

    I am not ashamed to speak for the people of our country who don’t feel they have a voice, the people who despair at the way in which common sense is brushed aside by the politically correct, the people who look on with anger as they see their country increasingly being taken from them by an arrogant and out of touch liberal elite.

    I am proud to speak up for the common sense instincts of the British people and that is what I will continue to do.

    But I know I don’t have anything to teach you about the nature of the Labour Party or their Liberal allies in government. After all you see how they behave at first hand every day in town halls the length and breadth of Britain.

    You see at first hand Labour and the Liberals who control seventeen out of the top twenty highest charging councils in England and Wales.

    You see how the Council Tax has been turned into the ultimate in stealth taxes, engineered by central government, but with councils rather than Gordon Brown having to face the anger of local residents as their bills soar.

    You see how the other stealth taxes imposed by Gordon Brown – like the higher fuel tax, landfill tax and the raid on pension funds – have helped make the Council Tax for a Band D property rise by an average of £212 since Labour came to power.

    You see the waste and mismanagement that causes Labour county and district councils charge £100 a year more on Band D properties than in areas where Conservatives are in control.

    You have seen at first hand the profligacy of Labour in establishing their costly and totally unnecessary extra tier of bureaucracy, Regional Development Agencies that they then pack with their own supporters.

    You have seen at first hand the high handed and arrogant Labour Government that is forcing councils to adopt Cabinets or directly elected Mayors whether they are wanted or not.

    You have seen at first hand Labour’s war against drivers as they press ahead with their crazy schemes for workplace parking taxes and road charges that will pile extra costs onto business and threaten to force businesses them to abandon the city centres.

    You see at first hand the extra red tape created by the introduction of Labour’s flawed schemes like Best Value.

    You see at first hand the lunatic political correctness in Labour controlled authorities like Birmingham that puts forward plans to abolish Christmas because it’s ‘offensive’ to minorities and replace it with a ‘Winterval’ or in Liberal controlled authorities like Colchester that tried to ban Punch and Judy because it ‘promotes domestic violence’.

    But why should any of this surprise us? Because the reality is Labour and the Liberals in the Council chamber are no different to their colleagues in the House of Commons. Wherever they are given the opportunity to govern – in Whitehall or your town hall – the song remains the same. Higher taxes and poorer services. All spin and no delivery.

    On indicator after indicator, Labour or Liberal councils provide a worse standard of service than do those that are Conservative run. They have dirtier streets, poorer street lighting, pay less of their bills on time, have more empty council housing, collect less of their rent and council tax and have worse schools exam results. They are the Labour and Liberal rotten boroughs, and they are a national disgrace.

    People don’t want to see more of their hard-earned money taken away in ta x, for it then to be frittered away on Labour’s pet projects and crazy schemes. They pay their tax in order to get a well run, efficient council that concentrates on delivering the services it is supposed to deliver and delivers them well. That is what they get when they vote for Conservative councils. Lower taxes and better quality services.

    Since becoming leader of the Party it has been one of my key objectives to re-assert the Conservative commitment to local government. That’s why, as one of the reforms to our Party, I established the Conservative Councillors Association and ensured that the Chairman should have a place on the Party’s Board.

    I did this because I believe in local government. I value local government. And I want to see local government thrive.

    I want to see open, transparent and accountable local democracy with the power of the central state rolled back. I want to decentralise power away from Whitehall and back to local communities and neighbourhoods. I want to end the nanny state culture of interference and meddling that has run amok under this Government and put decision making back into the hands of people who best understand local concerns. I want to do this because it makes common sense. And I want to do it because unlike Labour, whose idea of local government seems to be a never ending series of circulars and diktats, I trust the people.

    It’s because I trust the people that the next Conservative Government will make every school a free schools with the power to set their own admissions policies, and impose their own discipline. It’s common sense that when teachers and parents are put in charge, standards will rise. And Conservatives will deliver common sense in education.

    It’s because I trust the people that the next Conservative Government will create free councils with responsible and efficient councils being subject to less Government interference and given more financial freedom. It’s common sense that well run councils shouldn’t be held back because of a minority of them that are badly run. And Conservatives will deliver common sense in local government.

    The next Conservative Government will deliver common sense by giving councils discretion over local development by abolishing Labour’s regional and national housebuilding targets.

    We will deliver common sense by giving councils new powers to promote economic development and regeneration and by abolishing Labour’s Regional Development Agencies and their Brussels offices too.

    We will deliver common sense by stopping the introduction of directly-elected regional assemblies and by ending Labour’s plans to abolish England’s county councils.

    We will deliver common sense by giving councils the powers to choose whether they keep the committee system and ending Labour’s policy of forcing councils to adopt a Cabinet or directly elected mayor.

    We will deliver common sense by freeing councils from mountains of red tape and by abolishing in its current form the unpopular and bureaucratic Best Value regime.

    We will deliver common sense by ensuring that councils are more accountable to the electorate for the money they spend and by ending Council Tax capping.

    And we will deliver common sense by ending the constant upheavals and reforms that have taken place in local government and by providing a period of stability for councils to get on with the job they’re supposed to be doing.

    So you have my assurance. Under the next Conservative Government, there will be no more costly and disruptive reorganisations of local government.

    That is our approach. Common sense Conservatism, based on trusting the people. It’s an approach that can take us to victory in the local elections in May. And it’s the approach that can take us to victory at the General Election too.

    That is what I will be offering as we set out our programme for the General Election campaign. It will be a programme that will go further than any that has gone before to give people greater freedom and responsibility for their lives.

    It will be nothing less than the most radical, exciting and imaginative Conservative programme for a generation, giving back to people greater freedom and responsibility for their everyday lives. It will reflect the common sense instincts of the mainstream majority of the British people. And it will offer a decisive shift away from the politics of the past four years.

    It will reflect the common sense instincts of the mainstream majority on tax. People know that Governments cannot simply go on spending more than the nation can afford. They understand it because that’s how they run their own budgets. But while that seems like common sense to you and me, it clearly isn’t to Gordon Brown.

    Not content with piling on his stealth taxes, the Chancellor has set a course for public spending that will eventually have to be paid for by even higher taxes. Gordon Brown claims that his policies are prudent. I say they are simply irresponsible.

    The people of this country have been overtaxed for far too long and the time has come to give them back more of their own money. That is what the next Conservative Government will do. Unlike Labour, who tax more and deliver less, we will spend only what the nation can afford, and tax no more than we need.

    All of this is common sense, and Conservatives will deliver common sense.

    We will reflect the common sense instincts of the people on crime too by going to war against the criminal like never before. The British people aren’t stupid. They see the connection between falling police numbers, morale at record lows and rises in violent crime. They know that there’s something fundamentally wrong when thousands of serious criminals are let out of prison under Labour’s special early release scheme, only to offend again. They know that crime will never be defeated when our criminal justice system often has more to say about the rights of the criminal rather than the rights of the victim.

    So the next Conservative Government will end Labour’s special early release scheme for serious criminals.

    We will restore the cuts in police numbers to at least the levels they were at when we left office, and we will sweep aside the bureaucracy and political correctness that has so damaged police morale.

    We will review the criminal justice system to ensure that the law is on the side of the victim, and not the criminal.

    And we will make sure that when a sentence is handed down in court, then that is the actual sentence that is served in prison.

    All of these things are common sense. And Conservatives will deliver common sense on crime.

    It will reflect the common sense instincts of the British people on public services who sick and tired of listening to Labour’s spin while the health service deteriorates, teachers shortages get worse and Britain grinds to a standstill.

    The next Conservative Government will set our public servants free. We will establish free schools. We will end Labour’s clinically distorting waiting list initiative, and let doctors and nurses get on with the job of treating patients according to their clinical needs. And we will stop Labour’s policy of taxing drivers off the road without providing an alternative. We will deliver common sense on public services.

    But we won’t be able to do any of these things unless we maintain our ability to govern ourselves. That is why, at the coming election, we will reflect the common sense instincts of the British who want to be in Europe, not run by Europe and who want to keep the pound.

    A few weeks ago Tony Blair was finally forced to admit that if Labour win he will set about scrapping the Pound within two years.

    So be in no doubt. The next General Election will be the final battle for the pound. A vote for Labour or the Liberals is a vote to get rid of the pound. A vote for the Conservatives is a vote to keep the pound. And a vote for the Conservatives is a vote to stop more of our rights to govern our own affairs through the Supremacy of the Crown in Parliament being handed away. It will be a vote to maintain the independence and integrity of the United Kingdom.

    All of this is common sense, and Conservatives will deliver common sense on Europe.

    We will deliver common sense for the British people. And we will trust the people.

    We will trust the instincts of the British people who want to see want a Government that doesn’t spend more than the country can afford and doesn’t tax more than it needs.

    Who want a Government that will wage war on crime and deliver more PCs and less PC.

    Who want to doctors to treat patients and who want to let teachers teach.

    Who when it comes to asylum seekers want their country to be a safe haven not a soft touch.

    Who believe in Britain and want to maintain the union of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.

    Who want to be in Europe and not run by Europe.

    Who want to keep the pound.

    Who want their country back.

    We say come with the Conservatives, and we will give you back your country.

  • William Hague – 2000 Speech to the Police Federation

    williamhague

    Below is the text of the speech made by the then Leader of the Opposition, William Hague, to the Police Federation Conference on 18th May 2000.

    Mr Chairman, policemen and policewomen, thank you for inviting me to address you. One message comes out loud and clear from your Conference this week. You desperately want to be able to get on and do your job. You want to be free of red tape and political interference. You want to be free to fight crime and catch criminals.

    That is not the case now. As you, Mr Chairman, put it yesterday, the police service are ‘facing a crisis of no confidence, a crisis of no cash and a crisis of no colleagues’. You said that there is ‘a sense of disorder and anarchy’ in some urban areas and that many rural communities are ‘unable to rely on the police’.

    You know, and I know, that this crisis is not your fault. Each day you go out on to the streets and do your job to the very best of your professional ability. And what a job it is. When I was preparing this speech, I looked at the list of officers who had won Police Bravery Awards. In many cases, what is striking is how a routine incident like stopping a car or responding to a 999 call turned suddenly and without warning into an occasion where the officer has to put his or her life on the line.

    It is not just the acts of outstanding bravery that deserve our thanks. Day in, day out, you are the people who are first on the scene at a road accident, who deal with missing children and distraught mothers, who have to tell families that their loved ones are dead or seriously injured.

    That is why you command an 80 per cent public approval rating. With an approval rating like that you could be elected to run the Home Office. Come to think of it, that might not be a bad idea.

    Politicians of all parties have not always taken the right decisions about the police, and I am the first to acknowledge that your problems did not begin on 1st May 1997. But they have got quite a lot worse since then.

    Police numbers are falling, down by over 2,300 in three years. Police stations are being closed at the rate of 90 a year, leaving too many communities exposed and vulnerable. And the police service has become fair game to every pressure group competing to produce the latest sensational charge of corruption, abuse or discrimination.

    It is time we politicians remembered that your job is to fight crime and that our job is to help you.

    So let me start by utterly rejecting the defeatist nonsense that says crime is just a function of economic and social trends. For that is the constant excuse of a complacent establishment. They talk of crime as an abstract, dismiss victims as mere statistics on a page of a sociology thesis, and are always looking for someone other than criminals to blame for crime.

    This liberal thinking on crime, which has pervaded our criminal justice system for forty years, has comprehensively failed Britain. Over that period the murder rate has doubled, violent crime has risen from 24,000 cases a year to 664,000, and burglaries have gone up from 75,000 to nearly one million. The only period when crime fell consistently was at the end of the last Government when Michael Howard was Home Secretary.

    I’m not claiming that everything was perfect in some long-forgotten age. We now know that sexual crimes against women and children used to be scandalously under-reported. We also know that rising crime figures are also a measure of increased detection and better policing methods.

    But we shall only turn the tide of rising disorder and lawlessness if we stop treating crime as an abstract problem and criminals as the victims of society. As every police officer who has ever had to confront an armed robber, or help a weeping victim of a mugging, knows – crime isn’t an abstract problem. Crime is something people choose to do to other people.

    And criminals are not victims. It is the innocent people who they steal from and they beat up who are the real victims. Of course, there are incentives and influences, and the fight against crime is also a war on drugs, poverty and ignorance, on family breakdown and social dislocation. But criminals are not moral zombies sliding down a trend line on a graph. They make their choices and we should make them pay for those choices.

    Those English and Turkish Thugs who caused the shameful display of violence in Copenhagen last night were not poor victims of society, they travelled to Denmark and booked hotel rooms with the specific purpose of committing crime. It is too soon for snap judgments but we need to see if the law is adequate and if it isn`t we should look to see how it might be changed.

    I want criminals to be fearful of getting caught, and fearful of punishment, so they will choose not to commit crimes. I want to make convicted criminals unwilling to commit more crimes, or at least keep them under lock and key so they can’t. I want the victims of crime to feel that they have had justice. I want the law-abiding millions in our country to feel free from fear in their homes and on the streets. I want a police force that gets the backing and resources from politicians it deserves. I also want a police force that is trusted across our society.

    You know that long before the Macpherson Report ever existed, the police and the Federation have been reaching out to Britain’s ethnic minority communities, building bridges of trust and working with local community leaders.

    I, like you, want to see many more black or asian police officers, just as I want to see more black and asian Members of Parliament – particularly Conservative Members of Parliament! I hope and expect that within my lifetime we will see a British black or British asian Chief Constable or Chairman of the Police Federation or, indeed, Home Secretary.

    And because I know that so many of you share that hope and expectation too, I well understand your resentment at the charge of ‘institutional racism’. No one, and I suspect least of all you, would deny that there are many things we need to improve in our police service, and many things we need to improve in society at large – but the slogan of ‘institutional racism’ has been lifted out of context from the Macpherson Report and used by some to brand tens of thousands of decent, unprejudiced police officers as racists.

    That is a travesty of the truth. It is also wrong to allow a genuine concern about the treatment of ethnic minorities to lead to yet more unnecessary bureaucracy and regulation.

    You are already hamstrung from doing your job properly by form filling, and target setting, and endless paperwork. If all the officials in Whitehall had sat down and thought of the best way to tie our police in knots, then they couldn’t have come up with a better system than the one inadvertently created in recent years.

    We need to set the police free to do your job. We need to give you the political support by defeating the liberal nonsense that says the war against crime can’t be won. We need more police officers and less political correctness. In other words, we need more PCs and less PC.

    We know the war against crime can be won because of what’s happened in parts of America. Anyone who says permanently rising crime is inevitable should visit New York. It used to be the Murder Capital of the United States; now it’s among the safest large cities in the world. I admire what Mayor Guiliani, with the help of his police chief, has achieved in New York. I believe we have a lot to learn from them. In Britain we’ve heard endless talk of zero tolerance, but no one has really begun to try it – not yet.

    In this country, we have to set out with the confidence and ambition to win the war against crime; and we need to give you the tools and the manpower to go out and win it.

    We have to begin by increasing the number of police officers.

    You must be heartily sick of politicians coming here and calling for more bobbies on the beat, or more action against drugs, without promising you the extra police officers these things require.

    We don’t make that mistake. We promise now that when we return to office we shall, as a minimum, restore the police cuts of the last three years.

    Of course, both numbers and quality depend critically on recruitment and retention. I understand your deep-felt concerns. What I can promise is that whatever was done before by the previous Government, we will come to the difficult issues of pay, allowances and conditions with a fresh and open mind.

    However, I must be candid with you. I simply cannot write you a blank cheque now in opposition. And if I did, you probably wouldn’t believe me. But nor will I mislead you with promises which, when you look at the small print, turn out to deliver far less than you thought.

    We also need to get policemen and policewomen out from behind their desks and onto the streets fighting crime. I’ve seen some reports which suggest many police forces spend three-quarters of their time on administration and bureaucracy, and only a quarter on catching criminals.

    That is a crazy waste of talent and resources. We are going to have a bonfire of police red tape and regulation, setting you free to do the job you were trained to do.

    We are also going to make street patrols a priority. For the uniformed PC is still the building block of an effective police force. Street patrols may not be suitable for all areas, but they can dramatically reduce public fear of crime and trust in the local police by providing a very visible police presence in the community.

    Good policing is no good without an effective criminal justice system. For what is the point of devoting a huge amount of time and effort to catching a criminal one day, only for them to be released by the court with a flimsy penalty the next day?

    I regret to say that public confidence in our courts system is on the verge of collapse, and no wonder. Look at the examples we’ve had just in the last few days.

    There was the sixteen year old boy finally put behind bars after terrorising his local community for more than four years. In that time he attacked women, old people, he assaulted police officers, stole cars, damaged property, committed burglary and blackmail yet was repeatedly given both bail and a conditional discharge.

    Then there was the ruling by the European Court of Human Rights that the taxpayer should shell out £11,500 to compensate a convicted drug trafficker who argued that a police listening device had infringed his right to privacy.

    And, of course, there was Tony Martin. The details of the particular case are best left to the courts, but politicians and the police have a duty to understand why it generated such an explosive public reaction.

    The fact is that the law-abiding majority are fed up with a system that allowed the three burglars who broke into Mr Martin’s home to collect 114 convictions between them without any of them serving more than a few months in prison and a couple of dozen hours community service.

    We believe its time to overhaul the law in this area so that we are on the side of the person defending their home and their family against the criminal, and not the other way around.

    Nothing dismays victims more or brings the entire criminal justice system into greater disrepute than the fact that criminals almost never serve the actual sentence handed down in court. It affects your job too. As the Chief Constable of the West Midlands said recently, ‘until we see the full tariff of penalties being used by the courts on professional criminals, my officers will have to run faster than ever to stand still’.

    So the next Conservative Government will introduce honesty in sentencing. We will abolish automatic early release on licence. We will make criminals serve the full term ordered by the judge in open court. Discounts from a sentence will only be earned by good behaviour in prison.

    I’m all for sensible efforts to rehabilitate offenders, but sometimes we deal with criminals who have spat in the face of the law, who have rejected every chance to go straight. A career in crime shouldn’t be an option for these parasites on society. A lifetime in prison should.

    When we were last in office, my Party introduced mandatory minimum sentences for serious sexual and violent offenders and for persistent burglars. We now propose tough minimum sentences for those who peddle hard drugs to children and for people convicted more than once of sexual offences against children.

    We will also stop the early release of serious criminals from prison. Last November the Home Secretary made an explicit pledge. He said that they had ‘no plans or intention whatsoever to provide for … the early release of serious or sexual offenders. Let me make that clear, with a full stop – none whatever’.

    Yet he is releasing 2,600 convicted drug dealers, 2,300 thugs convicted of wounding, 1,700 burglars, 19 sex offenders, 22 people convicted of cruelty to children and 5 serving sentences for attempted murder.

    Of even greater concern is the fact that over 600 criminals released early have broken their curfew and 200 have committed crimes, including 31 assaults, 67 burglaries and 2 rapes.

    Either Jack Straw is the only person in Britain who regards none of these convictions as of a serious or sexual nature, or his promise not to release them early full stop was, like his promise of 5,000 extra police, worth nothing.

    Now the Home Secretary is planning to keep criminals in prison during the day and release them at night. Great thinking. This means they can’t work, but they can burgle homes and mug people at night. I say instead of prison from 9 to 5, criminals should be locked up from 12 to 12, day and night.

    Some of the fiercest public criticism of the criminal justice system arises from the manifest failure to enforce probation orders and other non-custodial punishments effectively. When a criminal learns that he can defy the courts and that nothing much will happen to him, he is more likely to commit crime again.

    So if we are to start winning the war against crime then we have to enforce the sentence of the court. Here’s what we are going to do:

    First, if someone on probation breaches their probation order just once then the court will be informed and it will have to take action.

    Second, the same principle applies to the Conditional Discharge. What’s the point of a Conditional Discharge if the conditions aren’t enforced? We will make sure that a breach of Conditional Discharge leads automatically to sentencing for the original offence.

    Third, we will take persistent young offenders off the streets. That means more Secure Training Centres. And we will make young criminals sent to these Centres subject to a new Flexible Detention Order that links their release date to specific achievements tailored to each inmate. It might be a recognised qualification or even the basics like learning to read and write. Inmates would serve at least six months and the exact time of release would depend on the progress they had made.

    This proposal will punish, deter and rehabilitate younger offenders and protect the public from their crimes.

    And there is one further change to sentencing which I want to propose today. Back in 1988, we introduced for the first time in English legal history the right to appeal against an over-lenient sentence. At the time, many denounced this as a dangerous innovation. That is liberal establishment speak for straight-forward common sense.

    But the right of appeal applies only to a limited list of the most serious offences. Many crimes which spark real anger and fear amongst the public- GBH, ABH, burglary, racially aggravated offences – carry no such right to appeal. So we will extend the right to appeal against an over-lenient sentence to all so-called ‘either-way’ offences tried at the Crown Court.

    And we should apply the same, common sense approach to the out-moded rule that no-one may be tried twice for the same offence.

    By allowing a retrial in cases of jury or witness nobbling, we have already accepted that the double jeopardy rule is not sacrosanct. We should now go further.

    We believe that where new and compelling evidence of guilt comes to light – evidence which could not reasonably have been uncovered during the original investigation – the prosecution should be able to ask the Court of Appeal to order a second trial. It is just as much a miscarriage of justice when a guilty man escapes justice as when an innocent man goes to jail.

    Honest Sentences. Enforcing probation orders and conditional discharges. Ending early release for serious crimes. Extending Secure Training Centres and the right of appeal against lenient sentences. Reforming the double jeopardy rule. Putting victims first.

    These are Conservative policies which will go a long way to restoring public confidence in our criminal justice system. They go hand in hand with our commitment to a larger, better supported, more motivated police force that is free to do its job.

    For we can’t win that war without your help. I commit the Conservative Party here today to ensuring that you have all the political backing you need to be the strongest, most professional and best respected police force in the world. And I want you to know that you will be backed up with a criminal justice system that scares the hell out of criminals, and deserves the trust of the people it protects.

    We can cut crime. We can make people feel safer in their homes and on the streets. Provided you are allowed to do your job and we give you the unequivocal, unapologetic, unstinting support you so richly deserve.

  • William Hague – 2000 Speech on the NHS

    williamhague

    Below is the text of the speech made by the then Leader of the Opposition, William Hague, on 25th July 2000.

    Today, I set out how the Conservative Party will transform a National Health Service that is now in a permanent state of crisis into a health service that is the envy of the world. And I am delighted to do so under the auspices of the Centre for Policy Studies, which has thrived with the determined leadership of Tessa Keswick and her team.

    The health service is in the news again. On Thursday, the Prime Minister will set out the latest in a stream of Government plans. It is called the Four Year NHS National Plan. It comes after the Ten Year Transport Plan and the Three Year Spending Plan announced by the Chancellor last week. It won’t be long before we have the Five Year Economic Plan and the annual tractor production figures.

    Like the Plans produced by the Soviets, I suspect the NHS National Plan will be more about fantasy than fact. For when the Prime Minister announced back in March that he was drawing up the Plan he spoke of an NHS where there had been ‘substantial improvement in recent years’, where waiting lists are falling, where ‘nurses are returning’ and where patients are receiving ‘better care’.

    This picture of the National Health Service today is not one recognised by the hundreds of thousands of health service professionals who work incredibly hard in it, or the ten of millions of patients who rely upon it. What they see is an NHS that is now in permanent crisis and which is badly letting patients down.

    Among the seven largest advanced industrial countries in the world, Britain has the highest mortality rates for respiratory system diseases, cancer and heart disease and the second highest mortality rate for circulatory diseases.

    In France, there are 36 heart disease deaths for every 100,000 population. In the UK, the equivalent number is 70. In other words, British people are twice as likely to die from heart disease as our neighbours across the Channel.

    If you live in England or Scotland, the chance of surviving lung cancer after diagnosis for more than five years is only six and a half per cent – in Germany it is 13 percent, double our rate.

    Then there are what one might call quality of patient life issues. Thousands of male and female patients still endure the indignity of mixed sex wards, and the lack of privacy that comes from shared accommodation, bathrooms and lavatories. In too many cases, food for hospital patients is still of an unacceptable standard.

    I am not going to pretend that the problems of high mortality rates or mixed sex wards or long waiting lists began on 1st May 1997. As I have said many times before, some of these problems have been endemic in the health service for years.

    But nor can the Prime Minister pretend that there has been a substantial improvement since 1st May 1997. For everyone can see that the problems in the NHS have got worse under this Labour Government.

    Thanks to recent newspaper reports, we know that even the Prime Minister’s own chief adviser is aware that ‘TB has not delivered. He said that he would improve the NHS and public services, he said he would change Britain, but instead things have got worse.’

    He is right. The waiting list to see a hospital consultant has risen by 154,000. Last week, 79 out of the 99 Health Authorities in England and Wales reported that they have more patients waiting over a year for treatment than at the time of the last election.

    Instead of tackling this problem, the Government’s Waiting List Initiative has created a web of bureaucratic devices and perverse incentives that mean clinical need has taken a back seat to political priorities. We all remember from earlier this year the tragic case of Mavis Skeet, the grandmother with throat cancer whose operation was cancelled four times until it became inoperable and she died. The real scandal is that while the operations of Mrs Skeet and others were being cancelled, hospitals were continuing to carry out other minor operations.

    Let me read to you from a letter which our Shadow Health Secretary received earlier this year from a senior orthopaedic surgeon at Guy’s Hospital, Dr David Nunn:

    ‘Dear Dr Fox, I heard on the radio this morning that the Government is about to yet again announce vast amounts of money to attempt to hit their own political targets of reducing waiting lists. Setting targets of numbers is totally contrary to the practice of medicine based on clinical need. I am now in a situation where I have so many patients on my waiting list who have been waiting so long, that I have to admit patients for albeit painful conditions on the basis of how long they had been waiting not on the basis of clinical severity’

    The use of taxpayers’ money in this way is both contrary to clinical priority and a blatant waste of money. The money will be much better spent on better resources within the National Health Service in terms of beds and nursing staff, which are the two main reasons which reduce our capacity to service waiting times.’

    Dr Nunn indicates that the current crisis in the health service is not down to the Waiting List Initiative alone. Hospital bed shortage, once a feature of the winter, is now an all year round occurrence. The nursing profession is facing its worse recruitment problems for 25 years, with 14,000 fewer nurses now than there were three years ago.

    The truth the Prime Minister cannot escape from is that it is his chronic mismanagement, his waste of resources, his distortion of clinical priorities, his political interference, his crony appointments, his gimmicks and targets and taskforces and plans that have created the permanent crisis in the National Health Service.

    The NHS National Plan is a blunt and shocking acknowledgement by Labour, three years after the election, that it has failed on health. But how can we rely on a Government that has so far got so much wrong, to get it right in the future?

    We will wait to see all the details of the Government’s National Plan before we deliver a final verdict on it. However, there is one part of it which we unambiguously welcome, and that is the new money for the NHS.

    There should be nothing surprising in that. Conservative Governments always delivered year on year real increases in spending. Now the Chancellor of the Exchequer is doing the same by increasing the NHS budget from £54 billion now to £68 billion by 2004.

    We have pledged to match Labour’s spending because we believe that the NHS is badly under-funded. By doing so I hope we can end the sterile party political game of ‘I’ll spend more than you’ and move the debate away from the overall size of the health budget to the equally important issue of how that money is spent.

    Judging by what the Government has already leaked to the newspapers, it looks like Labour has not learnt its lesson.

    We are told that the Plan will have four themes – information, intervention, inspection and incentives – what are being called the four ‘i’s. We are told that ‘Patient Power’ is going to be the new buzzword, although there is precious little evidence to suggest that the Plan will deliver anything other than a cosmetic improvement in the ability of patients to make choices about their health care. In other words, like everything else this Government does, their NHS National Plan will be more about presentation than substance.

    When are Labour going to learn that you cannot solve the crisis in the NHS with new slogans, and that what we need is more doctors not more spindoctors?

    We are also told that the Plan will involve the Secretary of State for Health using a host of targets, initiatives, incentives and Whitehall-set bureaucratic controls in the doomed belief, in the face of all experience to the contrary, that more and not less central control can solve the problem of unequal performance by different health authorities and trusts across Britain.

    Of course we should be concerned that breast cancer survival rates are twenty percent higher in Surrey than in Staffordshire, or that 30 per cent more patients in North Derbyshire see a consultant within 13 weeks than in Portsmouth. These are serious disparities and show what substantial room for improvement there is within the system itself.

    But when are Labour going to learn that what the health service needs is not more interference from Whitehall, not more political initiatives and abstract targets, but less interference and fewer eye-catching political gimmicks?

    Dr Hamish Meldrum, the Deputy Chairman of the General Practitioners Committee who negotiates directly with the Government on behalf of GPs, spoke for many health professionals this week when he said: ‘all we seem to be getting is lots of daily leaks about a little scheme here or a little scheme there which is not actually going to make a fundamental difference to the overall NHS. It seems again that we are falling into the trap of what I thought this exercise was meant to avoid.’ ( Pulse, 22 July 2000)

    My fear is that Labour has learnt no lessons from their absolute failure on health of the last three years, and that this National Plan is just another gimmick that will condemn the NHS to more years of bureaucracy, failure and crisis, and condemn the British people to more years of second class health care.

    We need to get more money in the NHS; but we also need to spend that money far better if we are to create the first class health service that Britain deserves. So let me set out what we Conservatives believe should be in the NHS National Plan this week.

    First, the National Plan should provide for a wholly new approach to the treatment of patients that puts clinical priorities before political priorities. In other words, treating people with the most serious illnesses first.

    That means scrapping the Waiting List Initiative introduced by Labour Ministers who, in the words of the Chairman of the BMA Consultative Committee, have tested ‘the tolerance of patients who are waiting even longer for treatment, and the goodwill of health service staff by persisting with an initiative that distorts clinical priorities and denies care to people in more acute medical need’.

    It also means introducing a Patient’s Guarantee that gives NHS patients, starting in defined clinical areas, a maximum waiting time based exclusively on their medical need. To guarantee the waiting time given to a patient, the health authority should be required either to treat the patient itself within that waiting time, or to arrange for the patient to be treated in another health authority, or to pay for treatment in the private sector.

    The patient’s waiting time will be determined by their consultant on the basis of their own medical needs, rather than on the arbitrary judgment of politicians. Good medicine is about seeing patients as individuals not as averages.

    As I made clear to the Royal College of Nursing’s Congress in April, we will begin by applying the Patients Guarantee to patients with the most serious conditions. The clinical areas which we have already identified are cardiology and cancer care, areas where the record of this Government has been particularly poor.

    The Society of Cardio-Thoracic Surgeons recently announced that the number of cardiac by-pass operations fell by 500 last year, the first such fall in 25 years. The result was graphically spelt out by the Bristol heart consultant Peter Wilde when he confronted Tony Blair on television with the fact that in his hospital ‘twenty five people have died waiting for cardiac surgery in the past six months’. He said that ‘we are doing our utmost to treat people as quickly as possible but we have to acknowledge that they are waiting much longer than we would like’.

    The situation with cancer treatment is equally shocking. One fifth of people diagnosed with curable lung cancer are inoperable by the time the treatment begins.

    How can it be that we have the World’s fourth largest economy and an outstanding record in medical research, but that we are unable to take proper care of those suffering from cancer or cardiac problems?

    Conservative policy would revolutionise treatment for cancer and cardiac patients. Our Patients Guarantee would ensure that the NHS treats these very sick people first, instead of being preoccupied with the Government’s election slogans on waiting lists. It would give desperately anxious patients the reassurance of a certain date for treatment.

    When we set out our Patient’s Guarantee, the then Health Secretary called it: ‘a guarantee of private profiteering at the NHS`s expense’. Now, surprise surprise, we read in our newspaper that the National Plan will include a ‘guarantee’ for patients. When an operation is cancelled on the day, hospitals will either have to offer another date within 28 days or – wait for it – pay for the operation to take place in a private hospital.

    I have always said the Conservative Party would support the Government when it does the right thing. So if the newspaper reports are correct that the Government will work with the private sector to carry out cancelled NHS operations, I welcome this little outbreak of common sense.

    But now they have conceded the principle, why not go the whole hog and embrace our Patient’s Guarantee in its entirety? Why not give NHS patients a guarantee that not only protects them against administrative failures and surgery cancellations, but also gives those with the most serious illnesses the commitment that they will be treated first on the basis of clinical need – and that their waiting time will be backed up by the guarantee that if the NHS cannot treat them, then it will pay the private sector?

    The Patient’s Guarantee should be the first part of any National Plan for the NHS, and if this Labour Government refuses to introduce it then the next Conservative Government will.

    The Second part of any National Plan should be to give NHS patients real choice.

    We live in a country in which people expect to choose what car they buy, what holiday they go on, and what food they eat. They do not expect to go into a travel agent and be told that there is only one place they can go on holiday, and that there is an eighteen-month queue for next available flight.

    Yet that is exactly the equivalent of what happens in today’s NHS, and it is unacceptable. Tony Blair and Alan Milburn now talk of Patient Power, but it was this Government’s abolition last year of extra-contractual referrals, that means that you and your GP can no longer choose which hospital to send you to. The choice is made for you by the local health bureaucracy. So you cannot choose to go to a hospital with a shorter waiting time than the one that the health bureaucrats have selected. You cannot choose a hospital with a better success rate in performing the treatment you need, or even a hospital that is more convenient for your family to visit. As the Director of the College of Health said: ‘patients have less choice than ever in the NHS’s history’ (Health Service Journal, February 1999).

    The consequences for patients of this lack of choice can be devastating. Take the case of a brave young woman called Helen Smith, who wrote to Peter Lilley explaining why ‘choice is absolutely necessary’ when he was preparing his recent and very impressive Demos pamphlet on this subject.

    As a result of a terrible illness called meningococcal septicaemia, Helen needed four artificial limbs. The limbs provided by her local hospital led to horrible blistering, damage and infection. She found an orthopaedic unit in Dorset that could fit her with the better artificial limbs that would stop this, but the East Anglia health authority refused to transfer the funds to Dorset.

    Such a tale is a scandalous indictment of the way the NHS is now run. It must change; there must be real choice for patients. For, in the words of Helen herself, ‘the only way to improve the health service is to allow patients to choose where they want to be treated’.

    I absolutely agree. Patient’s choice should be at the heart of the National Plan. The right of GPs to refer patients to the hospital of their choice should be restored in practice and not just in theory. This was in effect abolished by the Labour Government last year, a decision which the President of the Royal College of Surgeons described as ‘not right for the highest standards of patient care’. To ensure GPs and patients can make an informed choice, they should have free access to information on things like waiting times and treatment success rates in different hospitals. And, crucially, hospitals would then be paid for the operations they carry out. For that is the way that patients choice will drive up standards across the National Health Service. Good hospitals will then attract more patients and more funding, while bad hospitals will have a real incentive to improve their services. Extending choice will be good for patients and good for the NHS, and that is why, alongside the Patient’s Guarantee, it should be the second part of the Government’s National Plan.

    The Third part of the Plan should be the creation of special dedicated surgical units to treat patients with more routine conditions.

    Patients who need relatively routine operations such as a hip replacement or a cataract removal may not be in danger of losing their life – but they are often in pain and their quality of life can be greatly diminished. They must not be ignored. As part of the National Plan, we should set up special stand alone surgical units that would only deal with routine operations like hip replacements. There is no reason why these stand-alone surgeries should not be operated by the private sector, within the umbrella of the NHS. For us, what matters is not where patients are treated, but when they are treated and the quality of treatment they receive. We should also look at whether routine procedures currently carried out by surgeons might not be performed by trained GPs.

    We cannot promise that this would lead to dramatically shorter waiting times, as the Patient’s Guarantee means that resources would still be focused where they were needed most – on the sickest patients. But special surgical units would give patients requiring operations like hip replacements much greater certainty about waiting times. And they would go some way to tackling the distress which is caused to patients and their families when operations are endlessly cancelled, many of them on the day itself – as 57,000 operations were last year alone.

    Special surgical units are a classic example of how the next Conservative Government would spend the same money currently going into the NHS better. Scrapping the Government’s ludicrous National Handover Plan to prepare the NHS for joining the euro is another. The Government refuse to say how much this is costing the NHS. But one average sized health trust told us recently that they were spending £200,000 a year preparing to join the euro. “Given there are 375 trusts and 99 health authorities, it is reasonable to assume that Labour is forcing the NHS to spend £200 million on the euro preparations. That would pay for 20,000 hip operations, and that is how we would spend the money – at the frontline, on operations like hips and heart bypasses, not on pet political projects that no one supports.

    The Fourth part of any National Plan should be an Exceptional Medicines Fund so that we end the scandal of post code rationing. It cannot be right in a truly national health service that the treatment a patient receives for certain life-threatening conditions is determined by where they happen to live rather than whether it might actually help cure them. But it happens all the time now in the NHS.

    For example, there was the case I read about of a woman in Avon who was refused the Docetaxol she needed to treat her breast cancer but was told that if she lived two miles down the road in Somerset, she would receive it.

    Wiltshire refuses to fund the paclitaxel drug for ovarian cancer, even though there are on average 55 cases of ovarian cancer in Wiltshire every year.

    Beta interferon is not available to multiple sclerosis sufferers who happen to live in Cambridgeshire, Nottinghamshire, Buckinghamshire and Oxfordshire.

    Our proposed Exceptional Medicines Fund would end this post code lottery.

    Health Authorities would no longer need to provide the money to fund these exceptional treatments. Instead, they will be financed directly from the central Health budget, through the ExceptionalMedicinesFund.

    The Secretary of State would determine the size of the Fund’s budget each year.

    The Fund’s Committee, made up of independent senior clinicians and academics, would then be responsible for deciding on which medicines the fund will be spent and on what clinical criteria would have to be met before a doctor could prescribe them.

    The job of the Government’s National Institute for Clinical Excellence (NICE) would be to assess the cost-effectiveness and clinical effectiveness of medicines and procedures, and inform the Committee of its findings. Its job would not be to provide a shield for politicians by trying to make judgments about the affordability of treatments, as the Government now requires it to do. Because we do not believe NICE should be making judgments about affordability, the next Conservative Government will review its decisions.

    If the NHS can no longer afford to give beta interferon to anybody, as may now be proposed, then that should be a decision taken by politicians whose job it is to manage overall budget levels and who are answerable to the electorate for their decisions, instead of forcing NICE to do Ministers’ dirty work for them.

    The Fifth part of any National Plan should involve taking the party politics out of management of NHS trusts and health authorities.

    Earlier this year, the Commissioner for Public Appointments, Dame Rennie Fritchie, uncovered systematic politicisation by this Government of appointments to trusts and health authorities.

    Her Report revealed that since 1997, 343 people with connections to political parties have been appointed to help run the NHS. 83 per cent of them were connected to the Labour Party. Prior to 1997, the Report says, there were fewer political appointments, and those that were made were far more equally balanced between the two major parties.

    According to Commissioner Fritchie, in the present management of the NHS ‘candidates who declare political activity on behalf of the Labour Party have a better chance of being appointed than other candidates. Less successful candidates have been brought forward to replace those identified on merit’.

    That is worth repeating: ‘less successful candidates have been brought forward to replace those identified on merit’. No wonder New Labour have so mismanaged the NHS; they have put their cronies in charge.

    It is time we took the politics out of NHS management. The National Plan should propose an urgent and independent review of all aspects of the appointments process to NHS boards, in line with the Commissioner’s recommendations. And we should enshrine in that appointments process the principle that people are selected on the basis of merit and merit alone, and because of the skills and expertise they will bring to the NHS, and not on the basis of who they happen to know in their local Constituency Labour Party.

    The Sixth part of any National Plan for the National Health Service must be to trust the professionals who work on it, rather than directing their every action and second-guessing their every decision from Whitehall.

    The Prime Minister talks about a partnership with doctors and nurses and NHS managers, but then treats them as little more than clerks following the orders of the Secretary of State. His Statement on Thursday promises more micro-management from the top, more arbitrary targets, more political interference.

    Of course, we must have a system in place that identify and deal quickly with health service personnel who are abusing the trust that is placed in them and mistreating their patients. But proper accountability and culture of openness need not get in the way of devolving real power to frontline NHS staff.

    The National Plan should take Health Ministers out of the day to day management of the NHS.

    The job of the Secretary of State should be to set the overall strategic direction of health care, negotiate the budget settlement with the Treasury and allocate funding to different parts of the health care system, and then set and police minimum standards of care throughout the service.

    The job of the doctor should be to treat their patients and run their practice with the minimum of interference from Whitehall.

    The last thing the NHS needs is another wholesale re-organisation of primary care. With that in mind, we should not look for a one-size-fits-all system. We should work with the primary care groups we inherit from Labour, while giving doctors the choice of moving to Primary Care Trusts – if that is what is right for them and their patients.

    We should also encourage a much greater specialization in general practice, so that we break down artificial barriers between primary and secondary care.

    With the advances of modern medicine, no GP these days can be expected to know about everything. GPs within a Primary Care Trust should be able to specialise, so that patients without serious conditions could be referred to another GP who has the special knowledge required to deal with their complaint. This would help ease the pressure on consultants and out patient waiting lists.

    Any National Plan should also let nurses get on with their job of looking after their patients. That means tackling the chronic shortage of nurses that puts those working in the NHS under enormous pressure.

    We should ensure the maximum number of people are encouraged to enter nursing; vocational skills are at least as important as academic demands to a successful nursing career. We should also ensure that nurses feel sufficiently fulfilled in their work so that we stop 12,000 of them leaving the NHS every year. The NHS should be a much flexible employer, so that women can balance the demands of their career and their family, and we should give nurses much greater control of their working environment – so that they can do something about untidy wards or badly prepared patients’ food. These may seem like small things in the context of a National Plan, but they can make all the difference to the quality of care patients receive in the NHS.

    The Seventh and final part of any National Plan must be to encourage a larger private and independent health sector, not as an alternative to the NHS but as an addition to it.

    There used to be an assumption in politics that no Government could risk talking about a larger independent sector for fear of arousing the wrath of the public and of the health professions. Politicians should think again.

    In an NOP poll conducted this month, 74 per cent of people supported the use of private investment to help pay for the cost of building new hospitals and 69 per cent agreed that the NHS should pay private hospitals to perform operations when there is a long wait in local NHS hospitals.

    It is not only the public whose attitudes have changed. The General Secretary of the Royal College of Nursing told her Congress this year: `any vision for health in this country which denies the contribution of the independent sector is seriously flawed … The NHS and independent sector must find positive ways of working together`.

    The only group of people who remain dogmatically opposed to the independent health sector, the only group of people still waging the class war in our health service, are the Labour Party. The Health Secretary himself has said that ‘he would come down like a ton of bricks’ on anyone who had anything to do with the private sector.

    But there are now signs that, in the face of growing public anger, he has had to change his mind. I have already referred to the newspaper reports that the National Plan will include working with the private sector through a very pale imitation of our Patient’s Guarantee.

    If the reports are true, and the Government are going to take off the ideological blinkers and work with the private sector instead of against it, then we Conservatives unambiguously welcome that.

    Let us make it common ground between the political parties that a proper National Plan for a twenty first century NHS should encourage more personal provision on top of an expanded and comprehensive NHS – as a way of increasing still further the total resources available to health care in Britain.

    Let us make it common ground between the political parties that a proper National Plan for a twenty first century NHS would get the private and public sectors working together to increase the capacity of the National Health Service.

    These things are common sense. I hope that the Labour Government will make them happen. But if what we have read is just more spin, then it will be up to next Conservative Government to make them happen.

    We also need to take a close look at the way the tax system operates in relation to private medical care. The present Chancellor has positively discouraged personal provision when this April he imposed National Insurance Contributions on benefits in kind like private medical cover. This amounts to a £100 million stealth tax on employers who provide health insurance for their employees.

    It is a stupid, short-sighted act of spite that will put yet more pressure on the resources of the NHS. The next Conservative Government will work to end the punishment meted out by our taxation system to those individuals and companies who do seek to make their own health care provision for their families, their employees and themselves.

    In his first Budget, the Chancellor also removed the tax relief on private medical insurance for the over 60s. This was another shortsighted act of spite that hits pensioners who have saved all their lives and try to be independent of the state. We will have to look carefully at what we can do to help these people.

    However, let me clear up one pernicious myth. The Prime Minister says that the Tories will take a billion pounds out of the NHS to provide general tax relief on all private medical insurance. We have not announced our tax proposals for the next election, and we have made no commitment to introduce a general tax relief. Furthermore, even if we were to introduce such a general tax relief, then I can tell you now that it would not come at the expense of the National Health Service budget.

    Working with the private sector and encouraging more personal provision is not part of a secret agenda to privatise the NHS, as the Prime Minister has until now tried to claim.

    Anyone who knows me, who knows my family and my upbringing in South Yorkshire, knows that the idea that I want to privatise the NHS is complete and utter rubbish. The families I grew up with, the people who I went to school with, rely on the NHS; I have relied on the NHS, and I still use the NHS as Leader of the Opposition.

    I believe the NHS is an essential service to the great majority of the British people – and by the NHS I mean a comprehensive national health service providing a full range of treatments to everyone in the country, free at the point of delivery.

    But I also believe that the NHS should be a source of great British pride, once again the envy of the world.

    Sadly it is not so today. We have mortality rates for major diseases that are among the highest in the developed world; we have waiting lists for operations that are among the longest in Europe; we have drug rationing that amounts to a postcode lottery and denies treatment in a way which would be inconceivable to our European neighbours; we have political interference in management appointments that stinks of cronyism; we have doctors and nurses who are not free to do the things they have the talent and ability to do, and a Health Secretary micromanaging and mismanaging the largest employer in Europe; we have a Government that brought the NHS to its knees with gimmicks and spin and political priorities; and we have a Prime Minister who has put on the ideological blinkers and cannot see how the total sum of health care in this country can be improved.

    The crisis in our National Health Service will not be solved by more National Plans, more gimmicks, more spin and more interference. It will be solved by giving patients real choice and guaranteed waiting times; it will be solved by trusting health service professionals and taking the politicians out of the health service; it will be solved by working with the private sector and encouraging greater personal provision, as a supplement to an expanded and comprehensive National Health Service.

    Patient Choice. Trusting the NHS Professionals. Partnership with the Private Sector. Getting rid of political interference. That is what the National Plan should be all about. That is what the next Conservative Government will deliver.

    For we will deliver a standard of health care that people living in the fourth largest economy in the world have a right to expect. We will give our doctors and nurses the professional fulfillment and trust that they deserve. We will increase year after year the total resources available for the good health of our people.

    We will create the first class National Health Service that a twenty first century Britain deserves.

  • William Hague – 2000 Speech to Local Government Conference

    williamhague

    Below is the text of the speech made by the then Leader of the Opposition, William Hague, to the 2000 Local Government Association Conference on 29th July 2000.

    Common Sense Commitments to Local Government

    Thank you for inviting me again to address your Association today.

    Two years ago, I stood before you and I talked of the Conservative Party’s determination to make a fresh start, of our determination to establish ourselves once more as the Party of local democracy and local communities.

    I talked of the way we were going to listen to the British people – and indeed, one of the most important groups of people we spoke to were councillors.

    And I talked of the way we were going to learn from our experience in Government. I said that we accepted that there had been serious tensions between central and local government.

    Many in local Government felt that power had been too centralised. Interest by the electorate in local government had fallen. And many felt that we had spent too much time reorganising local government and valued its contribution too little.

    So I start this speech knowing that my own party didn’t always get things right.

    Two years later we have been listening and learning, and our commitment to local government has been reflected in the support we have achieved in recent local elections.

    Conservatives have long understood the tendency of the state to grow and for political intervention to increase. We have long committed ourselves to contain and then reverse this growth. Now I think we understand that the state is also chronically centralising. We have committed ourselves to contain and reverse this tendency too. Conservatives now understand that getting big government off the back of people requires that trusting local communities must be a central principle of a properly Conservative government.

    Yet despite the progress Conservatives have been making, the last two years have not been kind to local government in general. The last two years have seen one centralising measure after another, taking power away from local communities. It is a trend that has aroused anger and concern from members of all political parties.

    There has, for example, been the Local Government Bill that imposes change on councils. New structures should not be forced on local government. Councils should be able to choose the structures they prefer and if they wish to retain the Committee system, that should be an option. It is arrogant to suggest that Cabinets or Mayors are the only local government structures which work – and it is an insult to councillors who operate efficient and accountable Committee-based councils.

    There have been centralising changes in local government finance. Many centrally-controlled Specific Grants have increased by more than 50 per cent. This means less local discretion for local councils.

    At the same time, while the Government claims to have removed capping, eighty per cent of local authorities’ funding now comes from central government – which as a result, reduces the democratic accountability and relevance of councils in the eyes of local people.

    The right policy is not to use capping powers on local councils. It is to allow councils to set council tax at their discretion. I want to be able to trust local government to take serious decisions affecting local people without the risk of heavy-handed intervention from central government. It should be for local residents to use the ballot box to register their approval or dissent. That will be the policy of the next Conservative Government.

    There have been a host of centralising measures in education too. Over the past three years, the Government has sent out over 500 notices and circulars, introduced over 400 new regulations, issued more than 1,500 press releases and brought out seven new plans for local education authorities. This bureaucracy is taking up valuable teacher time and costs money that could be better spent in the classroom.

    The right policy is to set schools free from bureaucracy by cutting the number of government plans and drastically reducing the number of circulars, missives and diktats. Greater choice for parents and greater freedom for local schools is the way to raise standards. And that too, will be the policy of the next Conservative Government.

    I fear that there is more centralisation to come. The Government intends to press on with establishing regional assemblies. But regionalisation will not mean greater autonomy for local communities. Indeed the Government admits that the introduction of regional assemblies will entail the abolition of county councils and the ending of two-tier local government.

    I do not believe we need yet another local government reorganisation. In many cases, the last reorganisation pitted councillor against councillor. It does not need to be repeated.

    And I do not believe that local residents will identify with regional structures more than they do with their current structures.

    Who will the people of Cornwall relate to more – a talking shop of the region of South West, or their local county?

    Once again this is not a concern confined to Conservatives. As one Liberal Democrat MP remarked recently, ‘a regional chamber has been established, but this is merely a talking shop. Some are getting so carried away with this that they genuinely believe public torpor can be interpreted as enthusiasm to set up directly elected bodies with real decision making powers… Minor empire-builders and anoraks are behind this mindless nonsense.’

    In the South East, why should there be a unwieldy bureaucracy that covers an area as broad as Oxford to Folkestone? And in my own Yorkshire, while there is a sense of shared heritage – as typified by the Yorkshire County Cricket team – areas like Scarborough and Whitby in the north are very different from Sheffield and Rotherham in the south.

    Regional assemblies will come at a price as well. Based on the cost of the Greater London Authority, regional assemblies outside London could cost local taxpayers over £200 million per year in administrative costs alone, on top of the £70 million per year currently spent on Regional Development Agencies. This money would be better spent by local councils on their local communities, not on new red tape.

    For all these reasons Conservatives will scrap these moves towards regional government. We will give power back to local communities, strengthening local authorities, schools, voluntary groups and parish councils.

    For we believe that local government needs to be just that – local. Responsibilities should be devolved to the lowest appropriate level, so that local residents can clearly identify with the people making decisions and understand how those decisions come to be made.

    But greater responsibility works both ways: councils must have the ability, on occasion, to get it wrong – and the local electorate must have the ability to remove those councils who don’t get it right. This is why Conservatives will defend our current electoral system – it is the only system which maximises the ability of voters to kick out a government or ruling party that they do not like. This is democracy in action.

    One of the foundation stones of Conservatism has always been a belief in the importance of the local hospital, the local school, the local club and the local town council. Edmund Burke called them the little platoons and as Conservatives we see them as an essential bulwark against the over-weaning power of the central state.

    A Council’s strength comes from the fact that its power is local, that the people who sit on it and work in its administration are local, that its knowledge is local and that its accountability is to local people.

    Despite this, the last two years has seen one centralising measure after another, deeply disappointing the expectations raised by the Government when it was elected. There were many fine words, but few fine deeds.

    For this reason I don’t just want to offer you more words today. I want to talk of some firm plans to restore power to local communities.

    I would like to announce today new common sense proposals from the Conservatives to reform the planning system.

    In some ways it is the perfect example of the way in which Government is over centralised and how change can bring with it greater accountability and democracy as well as stronger local communities.

    It is frequently an emotive topic, generating a vast amount of correspondence for MPs and councillors alike.

    The current planning process, one built up over many years by governments of both persuasions, is weighted against local communities and residents. The system is centralised and bureaucratic, and often results in the Secretary of State overriding the wishes of local councils, forcing unwanted planning decisions on local communities.

    The process is often inaccessible, complex and unaffordable for local people. The results can be lamentable, leading to uniformity of architecture, the loss of local character and inconsistency between decisions. Indeed, councillors are even forced by council officers sometimes to accept a planning decision under the veiled threat of expensive legal appeals.

    The system is also detrimental to the environment. Since coming to power, the Government have given the green light to the destruction of greenfield sites and the Green Belt in areas such as Cambridge, Sutton Coldfield and Stevenage.

    Indeed, the Government have all but admitted that the Green Belt is worthless in their eyes. Nick Raynsford said last April, ‘where it is desirable in terms of urban extension and sustainability, there may be a case for reconsidering Green Belt boundaries’. This has the effect of encouraging more housebuilding on greenfields and fuelling a continued exodus of families and the highly-skilled away from our cities and from the North to the South.

    Why are we building new towns on the countryside when many of our existing towns and cities are in need of urban renewal? Why should resources be spent on building new schools, roads and infrastructure for these new towns on the Green Belt, rather than using those resources to make our inner-cities places where people want to live and work? A truly ‘joined up’ government would appreciate that protecting our rural heritage and regenerating our urban communities are part of the same challenge.

    To realise our pledges to promote both, under the next Conservative Government, I want to announce today our intention to undertake the biggest change in planning policy for fifty years.

    First, rigid national and regional planning targets for housebuilding should be abolished. We will allow local communities to decide how many houses to build.

    John Prescott is issuing diktats to local authorities to construct new houses in the form of Regional Planning Guidance. Despite the Government’s claims to have moved to a new ‘plan and monitor’ process, the system is highly centralised and politicised. It is based on an old fashioned system of national targets which are in effect cascaded down to local councils.

    Few things can create a greater sense of powerlessness than a community being told from on high how many houses it must build.

    So the decision on how many houses to build should be taken by local communities, not by the Secretary of State. Instead, local authorities will be responsible for building sufficient accommodation to meet local population projections.

    In other words, we will stop the current diktats that mean building houses in the wrong place for the wrong people. The Government’s housing targets will result in new towns being built rather than our existing towns being revived. These housing targets are bad for the countryside and bad for urban regeneration.

    The vast majority of current regional guidance merely replicates strands of national policy. We believe that regional planning guidance is an unnecessary level of interference in the decision-making processes of local communities. Instead, we will encourage planning coordination at a county level; we see little benefit in unwanted regional bureaucracy and interference from bureaucrats in Whitehall.

    Second, local councils will be given new powers to preserve the character of their communities. We will allow councils to specify design controls on new developments. Local communities should be able to maintain the character of their neighbourhoods and villages in the face of new building. Let us have an end to identikit, uniform homes, and let us give discretion to local authorities to ensure architecture and materials are in keeping with our local heritage.

    Third, we will remove unnecessary regulations and cut burdensome red tape. We will remove many excessively bureaucratic, statutory requirements from current development plans, and cut down on the 31 different plans that local councils have to submit. As the Chairman of Lend Lease Ltd has remarked, ‘in my experience, all development plans are either not ready or are out of date.’ For example, I can announce that local transport plans will cease to be compulsory – in Hampshire alone, its transport plan has cost over £100,000 to prepare.

    Finally, we will grant local communities rights of counter appeal. Currently, developers can appeal against refusal of a planning permission even if the proposed development clashes with a development plan, but local residents cannot. We propose that local residents should have a right of appeal when there is a breach of due process or a development disregards a development plan.

    We will also streamline the appeals system, reduce the role of the Secretary of State in planning decisions, and introduce a better system that ensures there is greater continuity, consistency and less politics in the approach adopted.

    I hope this illustrates our commitment to reducing the over-regulation and the plague of directives which is infecting local government. It will be a fairer system, so that councillors are not bullied from taking decisions to protect their local environment from large developers.

    We have other proposals to announce in the forthcoming weeks as part of the process of overhauling local planning – cutting red tape, protecting the environment, promoting urban renewal and giving greater discretion to local authorities.

    We want to work with councillors to find other ways of trimming unnecessary bureaucracy and inspectorates – tackling the huge number of consultations and plans, which waste time and cost money.

    However, the greater independence of councillors made possible by these sorts of measures and others, such as our capping policy, must be accompanied by greater openness and accountability.

    At present there is a danger of going in the opposite direction.

    Those who decide to have directly-elected Mayors and Cabinets need to ensure that they do not devalue the role of ordinary council members. Independent-minded councillors should not find themselves excluded from decision-making or have their role reduced to a mere rubber-stamping.

    And scrutiny should not just be limited to one committee of councillors. Councillors must accept that the press and public have a fundamental right to be informed of what actions their council is taking, and how their elected representatives came to their decisions.

    It is also vital that if councils wish to move towards Cabinet-style government, this does not result in more decision-making occurring in secret.

    This is not a new preoccupation for my Party. Conservatives have a long record in defending openness in local government. In 1960, Margaret Thatcher moved a Private Members Bill in Parliament to give the press and public the right to attend council meetings. And her Government passed an Act which gave the press and public the right to see papers from council meetings.

    We will not stand by and allow councils sidestep these Acts and have more meetings in secret. We are currently seeking to amend the Local Government Bill and we will stand by the rights and freedoms that the press and public have come to expect.

    In addition, we must ensure that councillors are representative of a wide range of backgrounds. Conservatives believe there must be a healthy mix of people who choose to become involved in local government. We recognise the fact that many women are already involved in local government and play a very important role in voluntary work and local issues. With this in mind, we have launched an awareness-raising campaign to provide practical advice and help to encourage more women to become involved in local government and public life.

    We want to ensure that men and women of ability and achievement are attracted to holding public office. It is vital that a good number of our elected representatives have everyday experience of the real world and of business. Whatever shape Councils take in future, and we want them to be of all shapes and sizes, we must not create a cabal of permanent politicians, out of touch with the world of work, amid a culture of secrecy. We want to ensure that councils represent a broad spectrum of public opinion from a variety of backgrounds.

    It may be the case that councils may wish to have more evening meetings and fewer day-time meetings – to encourage more people with outside, everyday interests to become politically active. We should make the most of the opportunities that the internet provides to improve the way we work and communicate with local people. It is up to you today to seize the opportunity in ensuring your eventual successors truly represent your community.

    We want to be sure Councillors are able to do the job for which they were elected and able to afford the huge sacrifices that have to be made to do the job properly. Yet we must look critically at attempts to give frontbench councillors five-figure salaries and pensions. Recently, in one council, the council leader was initially given a salary of almost £60,000 a year. After criticism from the local press, the council withdrew all job advertising from the local newspapers and launched their own council newspaper in an attempt to suppress dissent. By any reasonable standard, this was an unacceptable attempt to ignore and intimidate local newspapers’ genuine criticism.

    In another council, councillors’ allowances were increased by £240,000, and some councillors were running up expenses of up to £15,000 in taxi fares alone, while at the same time, the council was calling for savings of £130,000 by closing down local libraries.

    Such activities bring the reputation of all councillors into disrepute – at a time when politicians are often not held in high regard.

    In conclusion, it is no coincidence that increasing centralisation in local government has accompanied increasing disillusionment with politicians, with many people almost giving up on the political system.

    But restoring faith in politics means moving government closer to the people. Strengthening the role of local councils and local communities – not regional or central government – is the way to achieve this. Councils are not agencies of Whitehall.

    By giving greater fiscal autonomy and discretion to local authorities, the worst councils will no longer be able to treat residents with contempt by blaming rotten services and poor value for money on central government.

    Provided councils operate in an open and transparent environment, voters will be able to reward councillors who work hard and deliver on their manifesto promises, while punishing those via the ballot box who fail to deliver.

    I hope today I have outlined the Conservative Party’s common sense commitments to local government, local institutions and local democracy – restoring faith in local politics.

    We cannot have proper local government without truly local institutions; nor can local councils operate effectively without proper democracy, scrutiny and accountability.

    The last two years have seen the blooming of a new relationship between Conservatives and local government. But this is not a radical departure for the Conservatives – it’s more a coming home.

  • William Hague – 1998 Conservative Party Conference Speech

    williamhague

    Below is the text of the speech by the then Leader of the Opposition, William Hague, to the 1998 Conservative Party Conference in Bournemouth in October 1998.

    They said we’d be disheartened. But they hadn’t reckoned with the heart, spirit and resilience of the people who’ve travelled to Bournemouth this week. They said we’d run out of ideas. But they hadn’t bargained for our lively debates on health, education and the constitution which have shown our readiness to start the new thinking for the future. They said we’d lost our vitality. You tell Ann Widdecombe we’ve lost our vitality. On second thoughts, you’d better not.

    They said there’d be no surprises. Ted and Margaret came on to the platform for our debate on Europe and found instant agreement: they both hated those chairs. I’ll be totally candid with you: it hasn’t all been plain sailing since the election. I never expected it would be after such a heavy defeat. We’ve made real, substantial progress this last year. But I have never once pretended to you that the road ahead for our Party was anything but long and difficult. One of our successful council candidates summed it up the other week when she said to me: ‘the old hostility to us on the doorsteps has gone but we’ve still got to create the enthusiasm in its place.’ And she was right. We’ve changed our Party to make it the most open and democratic in Britain, and I want to pay tribute to the tireless work of Cecil Parkinson in seeing those reforms through. But now the best and most lasting thanks which we can all give to Cecil is to bring thousands more new members into our reformed Party.

    We’ve set out with clarity and certainty enduring values which guide us, but now we must get on with communicating those values to the British people. You know the best thing about my job? Wednesdays, 3 p.m. Prime Minister’s Questions. The most disappointing thing about my job? Prime Minister’s answers. One of our new MPs did a study of Prime Minister’s Questions. In the last year the Prime Minister has been plain wrong 44 times; failed to answer the question another 44 times; and on seven occasions said he’d write a letter because he hadn’t got a clue. 95 times in a year. That’s twice a week he doesn’t answer the question, and he only turns up once a week.

    What a shameful example of the contempt which this Government has for our Parliament and to the millions of voters who elected representatives to hold the Prime Minister to account. We’re winning the battle in Parliament. But now we’ve got to take that battle out to the country. There will be four steps to victory. None of them easy, but all of them within our reach. We’ve already taken the first step. In this May’s elections in London and around the rest of the country we gained 250 seats.

    The next step is next May’s local elections. This time we will win council seats and take control of councils. And we’re going to win them from Labour and Liberal councillors who have betrayed their local communities with high taxes, poor services, and gross mismanagement.

    The third step will be in Scotland and Wales. We are not going to leave the battleground to nationalist parties who want to destroy our country and a Labour Party which has played into their hands. We are going to invest the time and the energy and the resources to make sure the Conservative voice is heard in Edinburgh and Cardiff. We are a Party of the whole United Kingdom.

    The fourth step will be the European Elections. We’re going to elect Conservative MEPs who will stand up for the Europe we believe in and for our country, instead of Liberal and Labour MEPs who would sell our interests short. You have chosen our outstanding candidates for the European Parliament. From their Chairman, Edward McMillan-Scott, to new young candidates like Teresa Villiers and Andrew Reid, who you have heard from this week. We owe it to all our candidates to get behind them next June.

    But before we even come to these elections, there is another battle we must win. Later this month we will have the report from the so-called independent commission on electoral reform, The Jenkins Commission. It’s a rigged commission; it will be a rigged report. It is going to propose a plan to gerrymander our voting system and take away from the British people their basic democratic power to choose their government. And when that report comes out, I expect every member of this Party, every Member of Parliament – and I mean every Member – and every candidate in every election, to fight it with all the energy and determination they can muster. If you want to know what is at stake, just look at New Zealand. They abandoned our system in favour of PR. It took them two months to form a government. And they ended up with two parties who swore they would never work with each other. In other words, the one government that not a single voter had wanted.

    So we are going to make common cause with people in other parties, with businesses, with trade unions and pressure groups, and we are going to fight in favour of a system which has served Britain well against the worst possible concoction of voting methods cobbled together over too many bottles of claret. Mind you, recent rumours suggest that the Prime Minister doesn’t know what he’s going to do on PR. The rumours have upset some people. I spotted this letter in a newspaper last week, ‘Dear Agony Aunt, I’ve been involved with a married man called Tony for 18 months now. He said personal relationships, or PR as I call it, were high on his life’s agenda; although, looking back, he always winked at his friends when he said it. But recently he hasn’t written, he hasn’t called. No flowers. No chocolates. He goes off to the seaside without me and he’s been horrible about me in front of all his friends. Now I’m terribly confused not a new experience for me – and I wonder if I should trust this man? Are we really going to have a relationship, or were my friends right all along? Yours, Heartbroken of Yeovil.’ The Agony Aunt replies, again in complete confidence. ‘Dear Paddy, I’m sorry to have to tell you that you’ve been taken in by this man. But take heart. You’re not alone. Many others have been taken in too. Paddy, it’s time to go away and get a life. You’ll be much happier hanging out with little groups of chums, just like you’ve always done. Yours, Agony Aunt.’

    Now all that means we have a lot of battles to fight. And to win those battles we have to get three things clear. One, we must be clear about what it is to be a Conservative. Two, we need to be clear why we are different from a Labour Government that is using our language but reversing our most successful policies. Three, we have to be clear about the things we are going to stand for in the future. That is what this speech is about. Through the long, proud history of the Conservative Party runs a golden thread. That thread stretches out through the decades, linking each one of us to the great men and women who have led this Party. It is that we are a Party which draws its inspiration from the character of the British people; it is that we cherish the precious traditions and freedoms of our island home; it is that we found our programme on the experiences of the people, not the abstract theories of purists and ideologues.

    When Pitt and Wilberforce pleaded with the House of Commons to abolish slavery, it is because Tories love justice and freedom as the British people love justice and freedom. When Disraeli told the crowds gathered in Manchester’s Free Trade Hall that constitutional stability is the only parent of personal liberty and political right, it is because Conservatives value tradition and continuity as the British people value tradition and continuity. When Salisbury and Joe Chamberlain came together to advance the Empire and defend the Union, it is because Conservatives are unionists as the British people are unionists. When Winston Churchill led this country in war rather than submit to the will of tyrants, it is because Conservatives show resolve and courage as the British people show resolve and courage. And when this country was laid low with a failing economy, held hostage by union barons, and we turned that economy into one of the most dynamic and successful in the world, it is because Conservatives like Margaret Thatcher possess enterprise and determination as the British people possess enterprise and determination. And then there is Northern Ireland. When we welcomed David Trimble to this Conference and wished him well with his daunting responsibilities, it is because Conservatives like John Major are dedicated to peace and democracy as the British people are dedicated to peace and democracy.

    Our character is the character of the people. Our beliefs: the beliefs of the people. Our purpose: the defence, the advancement, the elevation of the people. Our history is that of a Party that trusts the people. It is a strange paradox that this instinctive quality of Conservatives, this belief in the value of experience over theory, this feeling of confidence in being British has been our most potent weapon in the battle of ideas. Look at the battles of the last 20 years. We fought the ideas of state control and intervention with a British belief in enterprise and freedom. And we won. We fought the defeatism over trades union power with a British optimism and refusal to be defeated. And we won. We fought the economics of the madhouse with British common sense. And we won. We fought the pacifists and the unilateral disarmers with a British sense of our world responsibilities. And no thanks to you, Tony Blair or Gordon Brown or Margaret Beckett or Jack Straw or Robin Cook – we won that battle too.

    When I hear Tony Blair talk of these achievements I realise that he respects them, that he fears them, that he would like to take credit for them. But that he doesn’t understand them. He thinks we won just by publishing pamphlets, so he publishes his own. He thinks we won just by holding seminars, so he holds his own. He thinks we were ideologues, so he tries to invent his own ideology, the Third Way. It is true that without the academics and the think tanks, the Conservative Party’s common sense revolution would not have been all that it was. But without an instinctive understanding of the character of the British people, it would not have happened at all.

    Our way is not the first way or the second way or the third way – it is the only way for us. It is the British way.

    There are those commentators and politicians who do not like it when I say that the Conservative Party is going to listen. The message of our history is that unless we listen, we cannot hope to lead. It is my profoundest belief that if the Conservative Party is not in touch with the identity and values of the British people, then it cannot be authentically Conservative. What are the opponents of listening afraid of? We have nothing to be afraid of, for when we listen to Britain, we are listening to the defenders of liberty and freedom. When we listen to Britain, we are listening to the friends of tradition and continuity. When we listen to Britain, we are listening to the upholders of moral and social responsibility. When we listen to Britain, we are listening to those who every day show the strength of their compassion and responsibility to others. When we listen to Britain, we are listening to patriots, to true internationalists, to a vigorous, courageous and independent people. I know that when we listen to the people of Britain, we have nothing to be afraid of.

    The Conservative Party has always been able to rely on the British people. Now we must make sure that the British people can once again rely on the Conservative Party. For Britain needs the Conservative Party today, needs it now, more than ever. For instead of a Government following the British Way, we have a Government searching for the Third Way.

    Tony Blair knows he is in favour of the Third Way, if only he could work out what it is. I hope he doesn’t think it’s a new idea. In the 1930s an ambitious politician abandoned Old Labour and formed what he called the New Party. He used the term ‘the third way’ to describe what he said was his position ‘in the centre of politics.’ His name? Oswald Mosley. Not a happy precedent. In the Cold War, President Nasser and Marshal Tito found a way to avoid taking sides and being everyone’s friend. What did they call their approach? The Third Way. And 800 years ago St Thomas Aquinas came up with an original name for his philosophy: the Third Way. He described it in terms New Labour would have felt quite comfortable with. ‘It is, he said, ‘A thing that need not be, once was not, and if everything need not be, once upon a time there was nothing.’ The thinking of Tony Blair in the language of John Prescott.

    For New Labour, the Third Way means having it every way. You can be in favour of freer markets and more government intervention. You can talk about personal responsibility and pursue nanny state policies that erode personal responsibility. You can say you support the family and then demolish the last recognition of marriage from the tax system. You can call for trade union powers to be curbed and steadily extend the power trade unions have. You can promise to devolve power and run the most centralising, authoritarian government. You can say you love the pound and do everything possible to abolish it at the earliest opportunity.

    Handy thing, this Third Way, isn’t it? Tony Blair answers the charge that he believes in nothing by saying that, on the contrary, he believes in everything. I say that to believe in nothing and to believe in everything is exactly the same thing. That’s why, before the election, it was a good idea to ban tobacco sponsorship, and after the election it was not a good idea to ban it for Formula One. That’s why, before the election, they said they wouldn’t interfere with PEPs and TESSAs, and after the election they interfered with PEPs and TESSAs. That’s why, before the election, they said they wouldn’t introduce tuition fees, and after the election they introduced tuition fees. That’s why, before the election, they said that hospital waiting lists would go down, and after the election hospital waiting lists went up. That’s why, before the election, they said they’d control public spending, and after the election they lost control of public spending. That’s why, before the election, they said they wouldn’t raise taxes, and after the election they raised taxes seventeen times. That’s why, before the election, they said they would deal with young offenders more quickly, and after the election they deal with young offenders more slowly. That’s why, before the election, they said they’d be an open government, and went on about high standards, and, after the election they treat Parliament and the public with arrogance, secrecy, cronyism and contempt. That’s why, before the election, they went on about offshore trusts, and after the election appointed as Minister for off-shore trusts a man with off-shore trusts who influences his off-shore trusts. That’s why, before the election, they said they’d be a People’s Government and talked about the People’s this and the People’s that, as if we were all going to China, when all we’ve seen since the election is overpaid advisers, overseas junkets and over-promoted cronies all paid for by the People’s money.

    That’s what happens when you believe in everything and believe in nothing. It would be funny if we weren’t talking about people’s jobs and people’s prosperity and people’s freedom. At the election Labour boasted that things could only get better. Now they talk about hard choices because they know things can only get worse. It is not their fault if there is a downturn in the world economy; but it is their fault if they pursue policies that mean those problems are going to be hitting Britain harder. One job lost every ten minutes while this Government presides over our economy. And the search is on for somebody else to blame: the managers, the workers, the investors, the Russians, the Malaysians. The only thing Labour Ministers are certain about is that they’re not to blame. Nothing to do with them. Forget the high interest rates, high pound, loose public spending, extra employment laws, new union powers and damaging European regulations. Nothing whatsoever to do with them.

    In July, Gordon Brown announced his spending spree and his forecasts for the economy. We all knew those forecasts were wrong. Most economists knew they were wrong. Francis Maude told the Chancellor they were wrong. I asked Tony Blair at Prime Minister’s Questions whether he accepted that the forecasts were wrong. ‘No,’ he said with supreme complacency. See what I mean about those answers – 96 now and still counting. This week we discover they are completely wrong. Grim, but wholly predictable news for families and businesses throughout the country. So don’t tell me there’s no difference between the two Parties on economic policy. There is every difference.

    What we have seen in the last year-and-a-half amounts to a major reversal of the economic policy of the last Government. We are close to a jobs crisis in this country. Agriculture is already in recession, British farming faces its worst crisis for more than half a century, yet Labour Ministers have closed their ears to the countryside. We shall never forget that the food we eat and the landscape we enjoy depend on a thriving rural economy. We shall speak up, as we always have, for British agriculture and the British farmer. Manufacturing industry is on the brink of recession. Foreign investment is draining out of the country. No amount of scripted sympathy and mock concern from the Government is going to lessen the impact on families around Britain this winter. At a time of great difficulty for businesses and jobs, this Government plans extra burdens, extra regulations and extra costs. This is exactly the wrong policy at exactly the wrong time.

    What we need is action. First, the Government should announce a moratorium on any measures likely to increase business costs. That doesn’t just mean statutory union recognition and the minimum wage, it means getting to grips with their family tax credit plan with all its extra bureaucracy. Second, they should urgently rethink the New Deal. Help should not be concentrated on those people likely to find work anyway but on areas and people worst hit by big job losses. Third, the Chancellor should make an emergency statement as soon as the Commons returns. Since he’s been reckless enough to announce his spending without knowing his revenue, he must immediately come to the Commons to tell us how he is going to reconcile the two. Interest rates have come down today by a quarter of a percent, and that’s welcome. But rates will stay higher and do so longer than necessary because of Labour’s mistakes on tax, spending and regulation. I don’t blame Eddie George, but I do blame Gordon Brown. And without such a Jobs Crisis Package, the Government will be responsible for yet more lost jobs and factory closures.

    It won’t be enough to produce another gimmick. This Government is very good at gimmicks. Take the Millennium Computer Bug, a huge potential problem for every business in the country. The Prime Minister’s answer? A great fanfare. Bright lights. Flash backdrop. Packed press conference. 20,000 specially trained ‘bug busters.’ Super bug busters. Doesn’t it sound good? How’s he getting on? Six months closer to the Millennium and he’s appointed 26 of them. New Labour says it’s preparing Britain for the new Millennium and they’re not even ready for the first day of it.

    What about Welfare Reform? One of the most important issues facing our country. Remember how Harriet Harman was going to sort it out? Remember Harriet Harman? Remember the Welfare Roadshows that were going to travel round the country, persuading everyone of the need to make urgent reforms to the welfare state? What happened to those roadshows? Did one come down your way? Hands up anyone who’s actually seen one. The roadshows never got beyond Lambeth Bridge. You’re more likely to have seen Elvis shopping in a local supermarket than caught sight of one of Labour’s roadshows. And with the roadshows went any serious commitment by this Government to cut welfare bills, reduce dependency and reform our welfare state.

    The short ministerial career of Frank Field is a parable of New Labour. For a whole year, the Prime Minister traded on the reputation of the only man of principle in his Government; and when that man had the courage to resign rather than sell out his principles, the whole House of Commons sat and listened to his resignation speech – everyone, that is, except Tony Blair and Gordon Brown, who went creeping and crawling out of the Chamber. That was when we really needed a bug buster. That is what happens when you believe in everything and you believe in nothing.

    But if you want to believe in everything and to believe in nothing, you need to find some allies with experience. Enter the Liberals. For too long our Party has ignored the Liberals at a local level. We’re not going to ignore them anymore. We’re going to attack Liberal councils which are failing their local communities with high tax bills, poor services and wasted money. We’ve always said voting Liberal is a wasted vote. And as anyone who lives under a Liberal Council will tell you, a vote for the Liberals is never so wasted as when the Liberals win. New Labour and the Liberals: the Third Way and the Third Rate. Our way is the British Way.

    The British Way is about smaller Government and bigger citizens. I was 16 years old when I first addressed a Conservative Party Conference. I sometimes think I’ll be 116 years old before people stop reminding me of it. When I was 16 I had all that hair, but now I’ve lost some of it. I had a rather nice jacket with wide lapels, and I’ve lost that too. Thanks, Ffion. And I also had an abiding belief in freedom, and that’s something I’ll never, ever lose. While I may be as embarrassed as anybody is when looking at an old photo, I can always be proud of what I believed in. If I was Tony Blair and someone had a picture of me as a grown man wearing a CND badge and calling for unilateral nuclear disarmament, I don’t think I’d ever show my face in public again. I spoke of my belief in freedom when I was just 16, because a belief in freedom is in the bones of British people. We bridle against interference, bureaucracy and petty rules. We value our personal freedom and each one of us talks of the sanctity of our home as if it were the finest castle. We demand that power is always limited, law always restrained, authority always checked. It is because of these instincts that Conservatives want, in Chris Patten’s striking phrase, ‘smaller Government and bigger citizens.’

    New Labour is making Government both bigger and bossier. Few decisions have been more ludicrous than banning beef on the bone. Since Labour took office it is now possible to go into a restaurant and be told that the starter has been banned, the main course is under investigation and the cheese has been impounded by Department of Health officials. In this Government we see all the instincts of the nanny state. Don’t eat beef, don’t drink, don’t stay up late, don’t drive, and if you do have to drive don’t park. I thought this was supposed to be a free country.

    All this nonsense provides us with a great opportunity. We have always been seen as the Party of economic liberty. In the face of this Government’s attitudes we must make sure we are seen as the Party of personal liberty too. For the British Way is to keep Government in its proper place – as the servant, not the master. It is to keep taxes as low as possible, keep regulation to a minimum, make sure Government minds its own business so that people can get on with minding their own. That’s why the Conservative way is the British way. The British Way is also about safeguarding the independent institutions which alone nurture freedom and responsibility.

    We are more than a nation of shopkeepers. We are also a nation of volunteers, of hobbyists, of sports fans, of churchgoers, of carers, of hundreds of thousands of charities and associations and societies. We Conservatives draw on a long and rich tradition of voluntary work and public service. Now we are going to be the champions of the local school, champions of the local hospital, champions of the voluntary group and of the charity. We must show that we have listened to Britain and that we are the people who can be trusted best with our public services. We have a lot of work to do – on health. The NHS doesn’t belong to the Labour Party, it belongs to the people of Britain. We are proud of what our Party has done to look after the NHS in fifty years. But let’s be honest. One of the reasons we lost the General Election is that people thought the Conservative Party didn’t care about the NHS. We cannot allow this damaging attack to go unanswered.

    The NHS is part of the British Way. Free at the point of use, it belongs to rich and poor alike. But to say that we are true friends of the NHS is not enough. We have got to help this country engage in a mature debate about the NHS. The Labour Party, with its simplistic rhetoric and dishonest promises and cruelly raised expectations, is already letting people down. And that gives us another great opportunity. Of course there are real challenges. Medical technology advancing at a staggering pace. New treatments and new medicines emerging every month. And we will be straight with the British people. We shall certainly stand for generous public funding. But we will also stand for a future in which the people at the frontline of health care have the freedom to take their own decisions. A future when local GPs and local hospitals are embedded in strong local communities. A future where the Berlin Wall between the public and private sectors is torn down.

    A Conservative future for the NHS. So let’s go and fight for it. We’ve got a lot of work to do on education. I was lucky enough to go to WathupomDeame Comprehensive, where dedicated teachers opened the door to a world of opportunities for me. I want to open the same door to the thousands of young people who are still denied the good teaching and high standards which ought to be their birthright in a civilised society. We made a start in Government.

    But in his excellent speech on Wednesday, David Willetts got it right. In the post-war era, all politicians, including Conservatives, came to believe that we could put everything right by adding more and more regulations into a system planned from Whitehall. It must be clear by now that in education, as in anything else, this simply will not work. New Labour hasn’t understood this. All they offer is more and more central control over what teachers teach, over how they teach, over the way schools are run, over the amount of homework that is set. They even seem to know when every child in the country should go to bed. Here’s another opportunity for us. For we must develop policies which set all our teachers free. Policies which give power back to parents. Policies which give all children the high standards of teaching they deserve. Labour’s going to be the Party of political control. We’re going to be the Party of school freedom.

    Labour’s going to fail on public services. They are going to let down the massive expectations they have aroused. And we are going to grasp the opportunity this gives us. We are going to be the true Party of public services. For the British Way is not uniformity. Not state monopoly. Not central control and direction. No, the British Way is about the creativity that comes from independence, it is about the diversity that comes from freedom, it is about the efficiency that comes from choice.

    That’s why the Conservative way is the British Way. The British Way is to be on the side of people who try to do the right thing. People who save, who work hard, who try to be independent of the state, who obey the law and pay their taxes, people who are good citizens and who find that the system is not on their side. They’re the kind of people I grew up with in Rotherham. They’re hard-working families whose parents go out and try their best to find jobs because they don’t want to accept hand-outs from the benefits office; hard-working families in which children are taught to respect values like self-discipline, honesty, self-reliance, good manners and respect for other people. They don’t want to see the Labour Government abandoning welfare reform, increasing dependency, making it more expensive to work and putting up welfare bills by £40 billion in the next three years alone. They want to see people who do the right thing rewarded and not undermined. And they look to our Party to support them.

    We must come forward with real welfare reform – welfare reform that ends the culture of dependency that pervades too many of our inner cities; welfare reform that encourages families to stay together and doesn’t discriminate against marriage; welfare reform that helps people off benefit and into real jobs. Strong and stable family life is the cornerstone of a healthy society, and let me make clear to you today that we shall develop policies on welfare reform, which strengthen family responsibility and support for the institution of marriage.

    And it’s not just the hard-working family who doesn’t get the support they deserve. It’s the honest citizen, like the many I meet in my constituency surgeries who see a crime and do the right thing by reporting it, and who are then treated appallingly by the criminal justice system. They hear nothing for months; then they are summoned to court to give evidence only to find the case is adjourned; finally, they get to court and are told to wait around for hours in the same room as the person they are giving evidence against. And all because they did the right thing. My constituents and honest citizens like them don’t want to see a Labour Government presiding over longer and longer court delays. They look to our Party to support them and to make sure the courts make a distinction between who’s on trial and who isn’t.

    And then there’s the small businessman, like my father before he retired, who works long hours to build up a profitable business and, instead of getting encouragement from Government for doing the right thing, finds he spends his life as an unofficial tax collector, filling in VAT forms and complying with an endless stream of regulation and red tape. He looks to the Conservative Party to set him free, to let him get on with doing the right thing and creating wealth and jobs for our society. These people who do the right thing rarely get the support they deserve from any Government. That makes them angry, and it makes me angry too.

    But what makes them feel not just angry but resentful is when they see people who do the wrong thing put on pedestals and rewarded. What kind of society are we living in when we see terrorist murderers getting thousands of pounds compensation from taxpayers because their cells were searched by prison officers uncovering their plan to escape? It sickens me to read again and again about someone defending their own property who ends up being charged when the criminal gets away scot-free. It offends against a very deep British instinct. The sense of fair play.

    I want the Conservative Party to be the Party of fairness. The Party which understands that when British people speak of fairness, they are speaking of something which is a million miles away from the so-called fairness of envious egalitarians and bureaucratic busybodies. I want the Conservative Party to be the Party that stands up for people who do the right thing. I want the Conservative Party to be the Party which rewards honesty, decency and diligence. I want the Conservative Party to be the Party which can distinguish between right and wrong. That is the British Way. And the Conservative way is the British Way.

    The British way is about understanding that freedom and democracy can only exist if they are protected by a constitution which upholds the rule of law, which holds Government accountable to the people and which maintains the integrity of the United Kingdom. Those are the principles in which the British people believe, which Labour’s policies threaten and which the Conservative Party will fight to defend. It is difficult to overestimate the incoherence and confusion of Labour’s constitutional plans. They have now introduced so many voting systems that if you were born in Scotland, live in Wales, work in London and want to vote in the European elections, you need Peter Lilley’s brain to work out how to do it. But this Party has to understand that it will not be enough for us simply to campaign against change. Let me make it clear. We will not become an English Nationalist Party. We are a Party of the United Kingdom.

    We are not going to be English nationalists, but we are going to see that the voters of England are fairly represented. I do not believe that the people of Bournemouth will long accept that Scottish MPs should vote to decide on health, or schools in Bournemouth, when their MPs have no say over such matters in Banff & Buchan. For the first time we will have to become the advocates of major constitutional change. It may be a change in the voting rights of Scottish MPs, it may be an English Parliament in some form. Labour have undermined the stability of the United Kingdom. We have to restore its balance. And we’re going to stop Labour turning the House of Lords into a giant quango. We’re not opposed to change in principle. But would it really be better to replace a Chamber partly chosen by the Almighty with a Chamber entirely chosen by the Prime Minister? I can still tell the difference. We are happy to consider the merits of changes to the Upper House alongside the merits of the existing system.

    But we’re not going to go along with changes that would leave Parliament weaker, the Government of the day more powerful, the House of Lords neutered and legislation rubber-stamped by Tony’s cronies. The British Way is to take pride in our traditions, to value stability, to resist ill-thought-through and unnecessary change. But it is also the British Way to do what has to be done to preserve democracy and ensure that Government is accountable to the people. That’s why the Conservative way is the British Way. The British Way is to take pride in our nation’s history and in the achievements of the British people through the centuries. But the best traditions of this country look to the world beyond our shores not with suspicion or resentment, but with a buccaneering spirit of enterprise, self-confidence and adventure.

    So our national interests, our security, our trade mean that we can never be indifferent to, or aloof from, what happens in the rest of the world. Britain faces a massive challenge across the globe. We must maintain in good repair our relations with the United States. Our armed forces may soon be involved in action in Kosovo. We face volatile opinions about Britain in our traditional friends in the Middle East and elsewhere. These are important issues and whatever we do, we must not look inwards to Britain; we must look outwards to the wider world. Europe is part of that world. And British people know that our geography and history mean that the interests of the United Kingdom are intertwined with those of the other nations of Europe.

    Twice this century, in the trenches of the Somme, on the beaches of Normandy, our young soldiers sacrificed their lives to defend the freedom of our country and to liberate Europe from tyranny. I pay tribute to that generation of politicians, Ted Heath’s generation, who worked tirelessly to heal a divided continent, who built NATO and the European Union, and who did so in order to spare my generation the destruction and slaughter which they had experienced. But half a century on, Europe has changed. The vision of a closely integrated federal Europe, which inspired good and honourable men in the aftermath of war, does not meet the needs of our continent today.

    We have a great opportunity. Our policy on the single currency is settled. Now that policy must become part of a positive and distinctively Conservative agenda for Europe, an agenda for a new generation. We need to reduce the shamefully high levels of unemployment in the EU by freeing Europe’s businesses from red tape and social costs. We need to create a true common market and work for free trade with the wider world. We need to strengthen the new democracies of Central and Eastern Europe by welcoming them as full members of the European Union. For you do not measure European unity by the height of the barriers raised against the rest of the world. You do not build a sense of common purpose by taking power away from national parliaments. You do not build a Europe for a new generation by giving power to remote and unaccountable institutions in Brussels or Frankfurt.

    The British Way is to be in Europe, but not run by Europe. That’s why the Conservative way is the British Way. In each generation, the left of this country regroups. It leaves behind its old errors and disastrous programmes and adopts new ones. Different each time, but each time an attempt to make Britain something that it isn’t, to make Britain somewhere else. And so in each generation, the Conservative Party faces a new challenge: How to safeguard and advance the basic character, values and institutions of our country in the face of yet another new left. The challenge has rarely been more difficult than it is this time. But I think it has never been so important. For New Labour threatens so much that is important in this country. It threatens our freedom, our democracy, our prosperity, our independence. It has persuaded so many people who love these things to let down their guard and to stand by while this assault on the character of our country goes on.

    Well, we’re not going to stand idly by. We’re going to fight for the British Way. We are going to change our Party. We are going to listen to Britain. We are going to make sure that we are in touch with the basic instincts of the British people. We are going to be in touch with a Britain that values its freedom and is beginning to resent the way that New Labour is becoming bossier by the day. We are going to be in touch with a Britain that wants decent public services and is beginning to realise that New Labour’s way will not work. We are going to be in touch with a Britain that has a deep sense of fair play and will quickly realise that Labour do not understand it. We are going to be in touch with a Britain that values its stability and democracy and will be horrified when it realises how New Labour has undermined them. We are going to be in touch with a Britain that wants to be in Europe but not run by Europe.

    The time has come for us to do what the British people expect us to do, and take on this Government. The time has come for us to take off the gloves and punch our weight. The time has come for us to be all that we know we can be. The Conservative Party has shaped British politics for the whole of the twentieth century and you have given me the privilege of leading us into the twenty first century. Be assured we have no intention of being satisfied with reading that history. We have every intention of continuing to write it. Together that is what we shall do.

  • William Hague – 1989 Maiden Speech in the House of Commons

    williamhague

    Below is the text of the maiden speech made by William Hague in the House of Commons on 20th March 1989.

    I wish to speak briefly on the Budget, as my first and modest contribution to the proceedings of the House. Before I do so, I pay tribute to my predecessor as Member for Richmond, Sir Leon Brittan, and will say a few words about the constituency that he represented so well. I am fortunate to be able to do both with uninhibited pleasure.

    Most new Members elected at by-elections speak of a predecessor who was distinguished but is sadly deceased, but I am delighted that my predecessor, who made such a major contribution to the House and who was so highly regarded by his constituents, is very much alive and well and is by all accounts doing an extremely good job as a European Commissioner. There is no doubt that he will be sorely missed in Richmond—a constituency that he served with extreme thoroughness and attention to detail. Even when he was Home Secretary, he never missed a weekend surgery and never failed to involve himself in as many aspects as possible of life in north Yorkshire. He set the highest standards of service to his constituency, and I will be doing well if I can live up to them.

    All I can say is that, over the coming months, I shall try to be inspired by Sir Leon’s example, rather than being intimidated by it. It would be all too easy for the new Member of Parliament for Richmond to be intimidated by the past. I number among my constituents not only Sir Leon Brittan but his predecessor Sir Timothy Kitson and my noble Friend Lord Tranmire, the former Sir Robin Turton, who sat in this House for 45 years for Thirsk and Malton, part of which is now included in my constituency.

    Those former Members will be very valuable sources of advice. Some might observe that they will also he rather varied sources of advice. However, the fact that they remain deeply rooted in the area says something about the strong attachment of Members of Parliament to Richmond and its surrounding area, because of both the natural appeal of its countryside and the independent character of its people.

    It is almost unnecessary for me to tell the House about my constituency, because many right hon. and hon. Members are already surprisingly familiar with it. I am one of the few Members of Parliament, along with those representing constituencies in the east end of London, who has a regular television series about his constituency. Also, many right hon. and hon. Members have spent more time in my constituency in the past few months than I have spent in the House. Right hon. and hon. Members could be forgiven for believing that the right hon. Members for Plymouth, Devonport (Dr. Owen) and for Yeovil (Mr. Ashdown) had taken up permanent residence in my constituency. They certainly provided a valuable off-season boost to the local tourist trade. They will always be welcomed back, though perhaps they are the only two tourists in the whole nation who I hope will spend less money on their next visits than they did on their last.

    I hope that all those who visited Richmond during the by-election had an opportunity to enjoy the diverse nature of the region. Although always associated with the magnificent hillside town of Richmond itself and with the splendid dales to the west of it, my constituency embraces a rich breadth of physical geography and human activity —from the hill farmers in the dales and on the edges of the moors, to the lowland arable farmers around Northallerton and Thirsk; from the 20 industrial estates that have brought a growing sense of enterprise and availability of employment to the area, to the commuters in the north-east who work on Teesside and to the large number of people who come to the area to retire. Richmond’s variety defies simple description.

    In addition, my constituency has a huge military presence. The area is proud to host one of the country’s largest Army garrisons at Catterick, and now we also have a major air defence base at RAF Leeming. That variety, and the popularity of north Yorkshire as a place to live, means that behind the idyllic image are mounting stresses and strains, both economic and social. Much has been said about the plight of the inner cities in the 1980s, but I fear that much will have to be said in the 1990s about the strains of rural life.

    Although my constituency, like the rest of the country, has grown more prosperous in the past 10 years, and although unemployment has fallen by 40 per cent. over the past three years, one must not overlook the depressed incomes of the farming community, the shortage of housing for local people—ironically coinciding with housing development on a scale that threatens traditional village life—the tendency for younger people to move elsewhere, and the appalling and increasing pollution of some of the nation’s most beautiful rivers. Those are not the subjects of today’s debate. Nevertheless, I hope to help ensure that they will not go unnoticed or unaddressed in the House.

    My constituents are interested in all those matters, but they are interested also in the Budget—despite all the efforts of the media to convince us that it was boring. Like me, my constituents approve of the Budget because of its most obvious characteristic—that my right hon. Friend the Chancellor of the Exchequer used what room for manoeuvre he had to help those people whose efforts were most unfairly penalised by the existing tax structure. I strongly welcome the changes my right hon. Friend made to national insurance contributions and his abolition of the hated pensioners’ earnings rule. I believe that right hon. and hon. Members in all parts of the House believe that the Chancellor did the right thing in the circumstances, and they should have the good grace to say so.

    Much of the debate about the economic situation has been taken up with discussing the direction of and the explanations for inflation, interest rates and the public sector surplus. However, that debate has been concerned mainly with the short term—with this year and next year. When I look at the economic background to the Budget, what I find interesting are some of the other economic indicators whose improvement has been strong and marked over a sufficiently long period to become an established trend.

    Today, companies’ real rate of return is at its highest since the 1960s. Investment has risen twice as fast as consumption for the past seven years. Labour productivity has risen faster in the 1980s even than in the 1960s. That should bring home to us the fact that, whatever the arguments about last year’s or this year’s forecast, the fundamental indicators of the economy’s future performance and output are better than they have been within the political lifetime of most right hon. and hon. Members, and within the entire lifetime of some of them.

    Maintaining that progress requires lower levels of inflation and of short-term interest rates—otherwise, the increased confidence that is at the centre of all those improvements will disappear. However, no one has argued convincingly that there is a better policy for bringing inflation down than that which the Chancellor is pursuing. Most criticism has been of the “We wouldn’t have started from here” variety, but it is incumbent on those who would do the Chancellor’s job for him to say what they would do if they had to start from here.

    Nevertheless, it must be recognised that we face over the next year inflation at a higher level than we would have wished. Some people are less able than others to cope with that inflation, and some are particularly worried about it. Foremost among them are elderly people who are wholly or largely dependent on their basic state pension. The Government have done a great deal to help many pensioners in several ways. The abolition of the earnings rule will help many who are still able to earn, and lower inflation over the lifetime of the Government has helped those with savings.

    Last autumn’s announcement of an additional increase this year for the oldest pensioners will help those in that category. Huge numbers, however, still depend heavily on the basic state pension. In the coming year, they face a pension increase indexed to, but lagging behind, RPI inflation—which may in any case understate the inflation that they experience, as their own expenditure is disproportionately weighted towards some large items such as household rates and basic utilities, the cost of which for most people is rising faster than the retail price index.

    I hope that in the coming year the Government will have the pensioner in the forefront of their collective mind and, as far as the economy permits, will feel able by some means to help still more pensioners by doing somewhat more than simply indexing their basic pensions to the RPI. If they can do that, they will avoid much dissatisfaction and some genuine hardship.

    That is the point that I wanted to make—within the context of strong and whole-hearted support for the economic and budgetary policies of Her Maesty’s Government. I thank the House for its indulgence, and hope that there will be many more occasions, Madam Deputy Speaker, on which I may try to catch your eye.