Speech to Labour Conference 2012

Wednesday 3 October 2012

Below is the text of my speech to conference on Youth Employment.   I didn't get called in the main economy debate, but got most of the points into some of the smaller policy forum discussions and seminars.

 
Colleagues.

Amongst all the talk of deficits and bad bankers, the real scandal of the coalition’s cuts is the impact on the lives and hopes of a generation of young people.

1 in 4 of 16- to 24-year-olds are out of work.

In Scotland, 7,400 young people have been claiming unemployment benefit for more than a year.

And in the Highlands 5 unemployed people are chasing every job vacancy.

These aren’t just statistics. 

They mean that the hopes and aspirations of a generation of young people are being destroyed by worklessness in their teens and twenties.

People need to know that Labour is on their side when it comes to jobs and young people.

Because the other parties aren’t.

The LibDems promise with one hand then cut with the other.

Scrapping EMAs and replacing them with a pupil premium that is anything but.

The SNP talk the language of growth and investment, but their actions are all about avoiding the difficult decisions.

The SNP say no to tuition fees in Scotland.

But they won’t tell you that the resulting cuts to college budgets mean 10,000 youngsters on waiting lists for places. 

Places where they could learn the skills needed for real jobs.

We must be the party with the vision and commitment to ensure every teenager who wants to work has a job or apprenticeship when they leave school or college.

Jobs come from economic growth and we need a business strategy that is joined up where it matters.

In the highlands, that means making sure investment in wind and wave renewables creates jobs and not just profit for the energy companies.

But we need to give our kids the confidence to look at other options as well.

There is a key role for the third sector, supporting young people into work in different ways.

In Scotland, the Social Enterprise Academy is winning awards for its programmes in schools.

I met one of the tutors from these courses in Inverness last week.

She told me about the transformation in the kids she worked with. 

You can imagine the scene.   10 sulky sixteen year olds.

Heads down, arms crossed, “not bovvered”

Beaten by the system before they’ve started …..

After three days turned into engaged young people, full of enthusiasm, self esteem and confidence to achieve.

Thinking about setting up their own social enterprises, creating jobs in their own communities

So all sorts of programmes can have a big impact.

But we need to fund them properly and with long term certainty.

Above all, we need to be bold and see the big picture.                                         

The public sector in Scotland spends £9bn buying in goods and services.  We need to start using that power. 

We need to get smart about buying.

Using community benefit clauses to keep jobs local and create apprenticeships and training opportunities for our young people.

And sending out a clear message to contractors.

If you want to provide goods and services to our councils, then you’ll support local jobs and pay your workers a Living Wage!

Labour must be the party that makes creating jobs and getting our kids back to work a priority.

A labour government in Holyrood and a Labour Government in Westminster, working together to get our kids into work.

That’s why with Labour we will always be better together.

Thank you, conference.

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Conference Diary 2012: Wednesday

NHS Debate

This took up most of the morning , with series of passionate contributions from delegates as well as few famous faces, including Lord Winston and a brilliant speech from Carrie Grant.  Best moment was the elderly delegate from Morecambe who spoke so well -  with some hilarious comparisons of Cameron to various useless medical treatments - used up all her time then pretended she couldn’t hear Angela Eagle (the Chair) when she asked her to wind up and ended up  with the whole conference cheering for her to be allowed to continue.  She got a standing ovation!   
Andy Burnham closed the debate with a barnstorming performance attacking Cameron, Lansley and the “invisible man” new NHS secretary Hunt.  Absolute commitment to reverse the Lansley reforms and take competition out of the NHS.  Standing ovation as he walked onto the stage and when he finished.  I think the opening ovation was for his role in setting up the Hillsborough enquiry as much as his NHS role.  But the comparison between his obvious commitment to the NHS and Jeremy Hunt’s was stark.

Morning session ended with a series of hand and card votes on motions and rule changes.  All passed.
Ed Milliband Q&A

This was better than I expected, with no evidence of planted questions.  Just Ed on his own, no notes, taking questions in sets of 3 or 4, from people he picked himself in the hall.  Some were difficult and off message (Trident, Remploy, public sector wage freeze) but he answered them all.    Maybe all a bit too wide ranging and technical for the TV, but he endeared himself to delegates with his openness.
He seemed to commit himself to looking at the minimum deterrent required to replace Trident and that re-nationalising the railways (after the West Coast line fiasco) was not off the agenda.

Policy Forum: the Green Economy

Made it to this but energy levels were fading fast, so was there more in presence than participation!  Last event I’ll attend as need a quiet night before a work day tomorrow and heading back home Thursday evening.

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Conference Diary 2012: Tuesday

Living Wage

Rachel Reeves led the discussion about the Labour councils across the UK now paying a Living Wage to their staff.  Not just about better living standards.  Staff committement and service quality has improved as a result or more motivated and committed staff. Such a human touch when a very nervous Fran, talking about how the living wage had transformed her life had a microphone failure.  Rachel had to sit with her arm around her to share a microphone.

Missed the chance to speak in follow up debate as still scribbling changes to speech to make it relevant.  didnt stop others who spoke on all sorts of issues.  We did finally get a couple of scottsh delegates in including Gordon Mathieson who was excellent.
Better Together

Fiery speeches from Margaret Curran and Johann along with a great new video.  Session didn't really come alive though. There was no debate or opportunity for speakers which I thought made the session a bit stale.  One for the cameras probably.
Fringe Event: Connecting Britain

Politics Home, Angela Smith MP, Alstom.
Angela Smith: HS2 is a key part of growing and integrating regional economies.  Big investment needs to be combined with devolution of service planning, franchising etc to local regions.
Tim Bently (Alstom: maintains the pendolino fleet).  Build Manchester to Birmingham first.  Big benefits. Need to join up the local bus and tram infrastructure with the right location of HS station. East Coast line could be upgraded to cut 50mins off journey time to Edinburgh without hs2
Leaders Speech

Just brilliant. Relaxed and confident. Talks about himself.  Some really good jokes (dinosaurs).  Key policy announcements; banks, technology Bach; apprentices.  Really took on the Tories with some blistering rhetoric.  Two standing ovations mid speech.  Sealed the deal with the party.  A new kind of prime minister.  Will the country see the same inspiration?
Policy Seminar; growing the economy

Another big Q&A session with economy team; Ed Balls, Chuka Unuma, Rachel Reeves.  Got question in about how we will incent or instruct telecoms companies to drive high speed broadband into rural areas like the highlands.  Shoud it  be a condition of their franchise?  Long shouts of other areas with the same problems from other delegates; Cumbria, Essex; Norfolk, Cornwall and more. This is a big issue across the country.

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Conference 2012 Diary: Monday

Monday 1 October 2012

Main theme today was the economy and our emerging policies on jobs and living standards.  Great debates and some clear policy commitments from shadow cabinet members to get the economy growing. 

Ed Balls committed to use the money from the 4G spectrum sale to build 100,000 affordable homes.  Read Ed' speech here.  It was a barnstorming speech.  Read it here.

Liam Byrne announced the setting up of a Youth Employment Taskforce.  Read his speech here.

Caroline Flint described the Switch Together initiative she is launching to enable whole communities to act together to get a better deal from power companies. Read her speech here

I had a speech all ready about youth employment so was a bit frustrated that I couldn't get called in any of the three debates today, despite much enthusiastic arm waving to attract the chair's attention.  I wasn't alone.  Dont think a single Scottish Delegate got called.  We needed some Scottish voices in that debate to attack what the SNP are (not) doing and highlight rural issues.

Will publish my speech tomorrow, so comrades can read what I wanted to say.

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Conference 2012 Diary: Sunday

Busy first day at main conference.  Mainly procedural stuff.  Highlight was the Scottish Delagation Reception and Celeidh in the evening.  Brilliant fiery speech from Johann Lamont and we found out that leader of Glasgow City Council Gordon Mathieson can hold a crowd with a Sinatra song just as well as a speech!  You had to be there.

A big theme was how united the party was. 

Made some notes at each session.  Copied them in below verbatim.

Boundary Review Briefing

From Greg Cook, Head of communications and strategy
Well attended

Assumption is that boundary changes will not happen although process continues. Boundary commissions report to parliament by October 2013.  Secretary of state (Clegg) expected to bring legislation to Parliament.  Expected there will be lots of politics around this. 
Would add 1% to swing hurdle for Labour.  Main advantage to Tories.  LibDems stand to lose up to 14 seats as well as danger to incumbency factor.

There will still be a commission after 2015 to review the size of parliament.
Impact on CLPs.

Draft proposals for England due to be published October 2012.
New boundaries would have required new CLPs to be established in advance of selections.  This plan is on hold.

Nick Clegg has said "nothing will change my mind".  And he is a man of his word.
Scottish CLPs will reorganise around Scottish Parliament boundaries.

NEC will probably wait until Boundary Commission proposals for England published (October 2012) and then agree selection plans after that.
NEC retains final authority over all Westminster selections including Scotland.

Fabian Society and ResPublica


Deepening Democracy; can parties reconnect people and politics?
Stella Creasy MP, Peter Kellner, Caroline Macfarland (ResPublica)

A lot of earnest bright young things at this one. 
Peter Kellner: ugov research.  16m people didn't vote at last election.  Not all reachable but 90% is achievable.  People don't like politicians who don't answer questions or who argue for effect rather than from passion.  Big chnage?  Open primaries would be much more inclusive.

Caroline Macfarland; read out a lot of stuff about people's perceptions of politicians but not much about what do do about it.  Academic. Party politics is important but shouldn't be prioritised over other forms of community engagement.
Anthony Rowlands; centre forum and LibDem candidate.  What a waffler. Reputation of parties tarnished by behaviour of parliamentarians.  Candidates must show they are interested and engaged in the lives of ordinary people.  Must be more representative.  Street surgeries work.

Stella Creasy; people need to sense that working together does deliver real change.. We need to engage people between elections not just at them. Relating people's lives to the changes we want to see.  Spoke really well.
The movement for change in Walthamstow.  Its not about process and structure it's about engaging people to change their own lives.

Peter Kellner says the Atticus Finch speech to jury in to Kill a Mockingbird defines what we are about.
Movement for Change

Chaired by David Milliband.  Chief Exec is Kathryn Peraras whol told us her story about engaging her community in Aylesford.  Going door to door to identify support about an issue.
There is no movement in the Highlands. They would like to have one.  Campaigns included the Living Wage, Payday Loans.

Young activists talking about their own campaign.  Mick from Swansea, Finn from Manchester. £7.20 is now the minimum wage at Manchester Uni, for paid and contract staff.  Cleaners now only need one job.
Legal loan sharking (pay day loans) : "don't mourn, get organised".  (Cobden).  Stella Creasy.  17 lenders on Walthamstow High St.  FA should not allow Wonga to advertise on Blackpool or Hearts FC.  Need legislation for a total cost cap.  Increase the roll of local credit unions. #sharkstoppers.  So many families are being held back by debt.  US companies coming here because US states have put a limit on interest rates.

Brilliant example of a "tweet action"; dozens of people in the room exchanging ideas on Twitter using the hash tag.  People committing to do things there and then.
Red Card for Wonga at Tynecastle.
Use Google Adsense to block Wonga and other adverts.

Daveid Milliband:  we may be out of power and frustrated but this movement shows we can still deliver change.
The labour party needs to be a movement not a machine. Movement for Change is about doing not talking.  It means there are no no go areas.  People support back.  It makes the party more like the country's we want to represent.  Politics is about people.

DM very supportive of his brother during his speech.


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