Tag: Yvette Cooper

  • Yvette Cooper – 2010 Speech to Labour Party Conference

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    Below is the text of the speech made by Yvette Cooper, the then Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, to the Labour Party conference on 27th September 2010.

    Conference,

    Last week I talked to a mother in my constituency.

    Her daughter Ellis is 16.

    She got her GCSEs this summer. Her mum said she worked really hard.

    She was due to start an apprenticeship this September at a local nursery school.

    In August they told her the coalition Government has cut the funding.

    Her mum was told Ellis can still do her training.

    But only if she forks out £1,200. That’s £1,200 she and her family haven’t got.

    Conference this is the Britain David Cameron and Nick Clegg want to build.

    Hopes betrayed.

    Ambitions abandoned.

    Young people left to sink or swim.

    Unless you can afford to pay yourself.

    This is what the Big Society really means.

    And this is why, for Ellis and thousands like her, we have to fight to get the Labour Party back into Government as soon as we possibly can.

    And that is why we need to come together now, behind our new leader, Ed Miliband, who will lead us in:

    – exposing the madness of the Tories’ attack on jobs,

    – challenging the deep unfairness of their plans,

    – and fighting the biggest assault on families in any of our lifetimes.

    Conference, throughout our history the Labour Party has fought for jobs.

    Remember as recession started, economists said unemployment would reach 3 million.

    That is what happened in the Tory recessions of the 80s and 90s.

    But this party vowed we would not let that happen again.

    Government, businesses, unions , councils, voluntary groups all pulled together.

    Backing jobs building new schools and homes.

    Guaranteed work or training for young people.

    Working together to keep Britain working.

    Look at the results.

    The dole queue started coming down last autumn.

    Far earlier than in any other recession.

    Far below the 3 million predicted.

    One and a half million fewer people on the dole than in the 80s and 90s recession.

    One and a half million more people in work supporting their families. That is Labour’s achievement and this party should be proud of it.

    And Conference I saw the pressures Labour’s Chancellor faced, the decisions Alistair and Gordon took, that:

    – stopped banks crashing,

    – stopped millions of people losing their savings,

    – saved jobs.

    Conference we should pay tribute now to Gordon and Alistair for the work they did for this country.

    Over the summer, the world economy ha s slipped back into more dangerous waters.

    In Ireland the sharp austerity drive has triggered a double dip recession.

    Here at home private sector job growth is still too weak.

    Vacancies have dropped in the last three months.

    And the number of people on the dole has gone up for the first time since January.

    So what is David Cameron’s answer?

    To cut jobs just when we need them most.

    George Osborne’s own Budget said 100,000 more people on the dole each and every year, just as a result of the decisions they made.

    Over the next few years, Treasury’s own papers show:

    – Half a million jobs lost in the public sector,

    – Over half a million jobs lost in the private sector,

    – Half a million fewer jobs and opportunities for the unemployed.

    So what do ministers have to say to the 90,000 young people now being denied a job on the Future Jobs Fund.

    David Cameron said the Future Jobs Fund was “a g ood scheme” and “good schemes we will keep”.

    But he didn’t keep it. He abolished it.

    Nick Clegg was asked whether these job cuts were fair. He said “of course it isn’t…. It’s a decision taken by the local council.”

    But Nick, it wasn’t a council decision, it was a decision announced by a Liberal Democrat Government Minister.

    Doesn’t this tell you everything you need to know about this coalition.

    David Cameron tells people whatever they want to hear.

    Nick Clegg tells them it’s someone else’s fault.

    And we in the Labour Party must make sure every conceit and every deceit is exposed for what it is – a betrayal of young people across Britain.

    And what reason do they give for cutting so many jobs?

    They say they need to do this to get the deficit down.

    Conference, of course the deficit does need to come back down. And that will mean some tough and unpopular decisions.

    But cutting jobs to get the deficit down?

    More people on the dole to bring the deficit down?

    What planet are they on?

    We’ve heard the Tories say this before.

    In the 90s they told us that “unemployment is a price worth paying to bring inflation down”.

    20 years later they are telling us again unemployment is a price worth paying to bring the deficit down.

    Both times they were badly wrong.

    Unemployment is never a price worth paying.

    Rising unemployment pushes the deficit up not down.

    Every 100,000 people on the dole costs us £700 million in lower tax and higher benefits.

    Unemployment isn’t the price of bringing the deficit down.

    Higher unemployment means we all will pay a higher price.

    Nick Clegg claims the public finances are like a household budget, and we have to cut back quick.

    But think about it. Because this is a family with a choice to make.

    It’s a family with a mortgage who cut the rep ayments when dad lost his job in the recession – to make sure they could get by til he found work, and to make sure the family didn’t lose their home.

    And now they have a choice.

    Make good those repayments steadily, bit by bit. Go for some extra overtime or promotion, tighten their belts a little. But spread the payments sensibly.

    Or follow the George Osborne plan. Pay it off all at once. Sell the furniture, the car that gets mum to work, sell the dog, even the house itself – whatever it takes to get the debt down.

    The truth is that every family knows cutting back too far too fast causes deep damage and ends up costing you far, far more.

    Unemployment won’t get the deficit down, more people in jobs will get the deficit down.

    Conference, our task is getting more people into work

    That means supporting jobs and yes it also means going further on welfare reform too.

    We brought in extra help and stronger rules. We cut the numb er of people stuck on out of work benefits. But we need to go further.

    We know from the doorstep, we talked to parents worried about whether their children could find work, neighbours worried that other people weren’t playing by the rules.

    We should have started sooner on reforms to help people off long term sickness benefits and into work.

    And we should go further to guarantee more jobs, but to require more people to take them up.

    Opportunities alongside obligations.

    But that’s not what this coalition is doing.

    Iain Duncan Smith says he wants more people in work.

    But George Osborne is cutting jobs for them to go to.

    Iain Duncan Smith says he wants people to be better off in work.

    But George Osborne cut working tax credit.

     

    Iain Duncan Smith says he wants more conditions on claimants.

    But the Government is ending the requirement for young people to take work.

     

    Iain Duncan Smith says a lot. But no one else in Government seems to be listening.

     

    He said himself, he was the quiet man.

     

    So quiet no one else can hear.

     

    They’re not setting out welfare reforms to help people into work. They’re just setting out old fashioned cuts that hit the poorest hardest.

    George Osborne is swaggering round like the playground bully – working out who won’t fight back, picking on the weakest – and that’s just Iain Duncan Smith.

    Hitting the poorest harder than the rich.

    Women harder than men.

    Hitting the sick and disabled.

    Pensioners and children are being hit hardest of all.

    The nasty party is back, and this time they’ve brought along their mates.

    From this April, over 50,000 of our poorest pensioners will lose an average £11 a wee k from their housing benefit.

    Thousands of pensioners who will struggle to pay the rent.

    Conference this party believes people who worked all their lives have a right to a secure home in their retirement.

    And we should be proud of action we took to lift 600,000 children out of poverty. But the government is trying to turn back the clock.

    Cutting maternity allowance, ending the child trust fund, the baby tax credit.

    Taking £1200 from working families with new born babies in that important first year of life.

    At least Margaret Thatcher had the grace to wait til the babes were weaned before she snatched their milk.

    That money is what lets a new mum stay home with her little one a bit longer before she goes back to work to pay the bills.

    It lets new dads cut back on the overtime so they can spend more time at home.

    For thousands of new parents across the country, that money means precious, precious time at the start of a family’s life.

    David Cameron said this would be the most family friendly Government ever.

    In fact they have launched the biggest assault on the family in the entire history of the welfare state. And this party must fight it all the way.

    This is a Government which just doesn’t understand women’s lives.

    They’ve halved the number of women in the government – and let’s be honest we needed more women before.

    George Osborne’s Budget hit women three times as hard as men.

    £8 billion raised, £6 billion of it from women.

    Even though women earn less and own less than men.

    Nick Clegg says things like working tax credits, child benefit, carers allowance make people dependent and should be cut back.

    For millions of women across Britain the opposite is true.

    The tax credits help mums pay for child care so they can go out to work.

    The carers allowance helps daughters look after their elderly parents.

    That support doesn’t make them dependent. It gives them greater independence, greater choice about how to cope with the different pressures of work and family life.

    Conference, all my life I have assumed that each generation of women would do better than the last.

    I know I’ve had more choices, more opportunities than my mum and my grandma, not least because of the battles they won.

    With each generation, I assumed, we would break more glass ceilings, change more of the world.

    But now for the first time I worry about my daughters, about all our daughters. For the first time I worry that our daughters will have fewer chances in life than we did.

    Conference, for women across Britain, backed by the Labour Party, the fight back starts here.

    Throughout our history the Labour Party has fought for equality.

    Fought for working families.

    Fought for dignity in old age.

    And throughout our history – from the Jarrow marches to the New Deal – we have fought for jobs.

    Fighting for jobs, backing our economy, standing up for fairness, united behind our new leader; this must again be Labour’s crusade.

  • Yvette Cooper – 2009 Speech to Labour Party Conference

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    Below is the text of the speech made by Yvette Cooper, the then Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, to the 2009 Labour Party conference.

    Conference.

    12 months ago we gathered in Manchester with the world economy on the brink of disaster

    Think back for just a moment

    Banks bigger than nations teetering on the edge of collapse.

    Fearful families moving their savings from bank to bank.

    The madness of markets in crisis.

    The terrifying realisation that things people had taken for granted might all come crashing down

    And yet in the midst of that crisis we learnt something else:

    The strength of peoples, governments and nations standing together, arms stretched from country to country;

    First to calm the wildness of the storm

    And then to stop recession turning into slump;

    And we learnt too how much we owe to the strong leadership of our Chancellor and our Prime Minister. And we should start our debate by thanking them now: Alistair Darling and Gordon Brown.

    Never forget how close we came to catastrophe last year.

    And never forget how easy it would have been for governments to stand back, to turn their backs, to retrench.

    That was what governments across the world did in the thirties. And for years working people paid the price.

    That was what the Tory government did here in the 80s. And for generations entire communities paid the price.

    And that is what David Cameron and George Osborne wanted us to do again.

    Conference we know unemployment is never a price worth paying. We will never leave people to stand alone.

    Our Labour government will never turn its back on those hit by recession or global crisis.

    We know unemployment hurts. Unemployment scars.

    That’s why we are putting an extra £5bn into jobs and training.

    And conference that support and our welfare reforms have made a difference. In just three months this summer more half a million people who were out of work found jobs.

    But it’s still hard. Now is the time to increase – not cut back – on the programmes that help people get jobs.

    Programmes like the Local Employment Partnerships between Job Centre plus and businesses that are getting people off benefit and into jobs in every one of our constituencies.

    Helping people like Anthony in Castleford, who got a job after 14 months on the dole and told me its transformed his life — he’s got his own place, started management training, and been on his first ever holiday abroad.

    I spoke to Rebecca Robertson, at Job Centre Plus in Castleford who helped Anthony get work about how she does it. She said; “I like to get under the employers skin – know what they really need. Then I can make sure I get people ready for the job.” She gets people training, boosts their confidence, and even goes to the interview with them if they need it – and she takes a spare tie and a spare pair of tights along just in case.

    Conference, its people like Rebecca, going the extra mile to help people not just get a job but build a future. That’s public service.

    But we need still to be much more ambitious. There are thousands more people like Anthony.

    So we will do more. I can announce today that we will expand those successful local partnerships to help far more people. Already they’ve helped over 250,000 people into jobs. Now we will treble our original plans to help a total of over 750,000 people into jobs by the end of next year.

    Because no one should be denied the dignity of work.

    Across the country, major employers have been signing up to the Backing Young Britain campaign.

    From Bradford to Brighton, Coatbridge to Cardiff, councils, housing associations, football clubs and countless community organisations are signing up to our £1bn fund to deliver over 100,000 youth jobs, as we guarantee no young person is stuck on the dole more than 12 months.

    Even Tory Councils are signing up. Praising the programme and claiming the credit in their local papers.

    But hang on. Where do they think the money is coming from for those jobs? I’ll tell you where. Its coming from £5bn extra this government has provided to boost the economy.

    £5bn that George Osborne believes should never be spent.

    £5bn the Tory party is determined to cut.

    Conference we need to challenge every Tory MP, every Tory councillor and candidate to tell young people why their party wants to destroy their jobs.

    Conference the Tory party want to turn their backs on young people again. And we must not let them get away with it.

    So what would David Cameron put in place of training places and support he would cut?

    Just one policy. As he told Tory party members in July: “50 of our candidates, MPs and councillors are setting up job clubs.” Instead of 100,000 youth jobs, 50 Tory job clubs.

    Imagine it. Job clubs run by Tory MPs.

    David Cameron might have some useful advice on interview techniques.

    William Hague would certainly be able to help on getting second jobs or making extra cash on the side.

    But what about the rest?

    John Redwood on how to look interviewers in the eye.

    Ken Clarke on how to dress for success.

    You know what Norman Tebbit’s advice would be: take a cycling proficiency course.

    Conference, may be there’s a reason why David Cameron doesn’t get the importance of training and employment support.

    For his first job he got a royal equerry to ring up on his behalf. For his second job he got his mother in law Lady Astor to put in a good word.

    Conference, that’s not how people like Anthony in Castleford get jobs.

    Back in the real world thousands of people rely on the help from training colleges and Job Centres the Tories want to cut.

    Conference, the Tories say we can’t afford to invest in the unemployed. I say  we can’t afford not to.

    Look at the facts. For every 100,000 people we get off unemployment we save £700m.

    There is no better way to cut the deficit once the economy is growing than to get people off benefit and back into work.

    That is why we will make sure no one is written off.

    Keeping up the employment support and the welfare reform that is getting people back off long term benefits and into jobs.

    Helping disabled people overcome discrimination to work.

    Helping parents get the child care they need.

    More support and also making sure everyone does their bit.

    Working with businesses, the voluntary sector in the Flexible New Deal.

    Not a passive welfare state, but active support for work.

    David Cameron doesn’t believe in active government to help the unemployed because he doesn’t believe in active government.

    Their campaigns for Broken Britain, for an age of Austerity, all designed to break people’s faith in a brighter future.

    He wants us to despair of purpose of politics or the role of government so they can roll back the bounds of government – a counsel of despair that would have run Britain into ground if we had followed it last year.

    We know things are tougher in recession. But we know if we stand together we can come through it stronger.

    And we know there will be tough choices on the public finances. But we will make those tough choices guided by our vision of a fairer Britain, for our parents, children, neighbours.

    That is why we will increase the top rate of tax and we won’t cut inheritance tax for millionaires.

    It is why we will keep helping families.

    Backing Sure Start and child benefit.

    Making sure mums and dads can balance work and family life.

    Helping carers.

    Putting into law our commitment to end child poverty for ever.

    That is why we will keep doing more to help pensioners.

    Tackling decades of unfairness so millions of women can get full basic state pensions that should be their right.

    Requiring employers to make pension contributions for the first time for millions of low paid workers.

    And conference, because fuel bills are still high, as well as paying the Winter Fuel Allowance at the higher rate again, I can announce we will also pay Cold Weather Payments at the higher rate again cold

    But conference you can’t do any of those things if you don’t believe in the role of government.

    You can’t do any of those things if you don’t believe in standing together to help build a fairer country.

    You can’t do any of those things if you have a Tory government

    In the thirties one of the first ever women Labour MPs, Ellen Wilkinson, marched with our fore fathers from Jarrow to fight for jobs.

    In the eighties I marched with my father and with many of you under the Union Banners to fight for Jobs.

    But Conference. We marched then in vain. Because we didn’t win the arguments. We didn’t win power. And there was nothing more we could do.

    That’s why we have to fight now. That is why there is so much at stake. That’s why the Labour Party today has more to fight for than ever.

    We owe it to the young people today, but also to the Jarrow marchers we couldn’t help, to the 80s unemployed we couldn’t support.

    We owe it to them to fight for every vote, to fight together to win the next election and to build a fairer Britain.