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Miliband’s speech to Labour conference – summary of key points
Ed Miliband’s speech had a policy announcement (see 11.14am), but it contained a lot more too and got a very good reception. His comments about Elon Musk are at 11.48am. Here are some of his other lines.
And friends, friends, we’ve got to call out Farage and his cronies for who they are.
They are the Investment crushing, ob destroying, bill raising, poverty driving, science denying, Putin appeasing, young people betraying bunch of ideological extremists.
That is who they are.
And we know where they want to go next because they have told us.
And he said Labour would campaign against them because of their support for fracking too. (See 11.14am.)
We know what Reform’s approach is:
Scapegoat anyone or anything they can pretend is the cause of all our problems:
They want to blame diversity, net zero, anything they can find to stir up division.
Friends I’ll tell you this. They’re wrong, they’re dead wrong about the causes of our country’s problems.
Here’s the thing, It’s two dominant right wing, Tory ideas that have devastated Britain over the last few decades.
The first idea, from the 1980s, trickle down economics, remember that, enrich those at the top, everyone else would feel the benefits.
But we all know how that worked out.
All it did was bring the deep inequality that still scars us to this day.
It didn’t work.
It can never work.
The second idea, from the 2010s
Austerity: that if government got out of the way and cut, cut and cut again, it would sort out our economic problems.
And we all know, and you all know from your communities, that was a disaster too.
Our Clean Industry bonus rewards the offshore wind industry for investing in Britain and that’s the right thing to do – but under a Labour government, public money must serve the public interest.
That’s why I can announce that we will introduce a new Fair Work Charter as a condition of that bonus. And let me spell it out, fair wages, the very best rights at work, and yes access to unions.
You know what I discovered when I walked into this department for energy.
Current rules mean that if you work offshore in renewables, more than 12 miles out at sea, you are literally in no man’s land when it comes to employment protection.
You’re not even guaranteed the minimum wage.
It is a scandal, It is a Tory scandal.
And I say we will end it.
Our principle which we will put in law – offshore, onshore, land or sea: you will be guaranteed fair pay and decent rights at work.
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He recalled a speech given by his father, the leftwing political philosopher Ralph Miliband, to a Labour conference in 1955
You know my dad spoke at conference only once as a delegate, the party conference was in Margate, it was 1955, 70 years ago.
Recently I looked back at his speech: in 2 minutes, he attacked the national executive committee, he complained about the composite he was being asked to support, and he called for the nationalisation of the commanding heights of the economy.
It’s good some things don’t change in the Labour party.
But he said something in that speech that has always had special meaning for me: he said being part of this party was a great adventure: and we had a vision the Tories will never have.
A great adventure
For me, for us, for our party, that’s the point of being in politics.
Key events
Phillipson suggests Powell victory would mean ‘division and disunity’, putting Labour ‘on road to opposition’
They are now on closing speeches.
Phillipson says Labour has a golden opportunity to change Britain and they cannot waste it.
I want us to turn this government around, not to turn on each other.
Change is on the ballot at this election. The choice is what kind of change.
You can choose to push our government to be bolder, to go further, to do more, with me as your voice at the cabinet table.
Or you can choose division and disunity that fills the pages of the rightwing papers and puts us back on the road to opposition.
Q: What is your biggest achievement in government?
Powell says it is delivering a legislative programme for the first year.
Phillipson says it has been getting a Best Start family hubs (the new version of Sure Start).
Future of democracy ‘at a precipice’, Powell claims
Q: How can the government unite the country?
Phillipson says Labour must take on the “plastic patriots” of Reform. But it must also show people what change it is implementing.
Powell says:
The future of our democracy is at a precipice, and it falls on our shoulders as the Labour party, we’ve always stood up against Division and hate, but also as the party of government to get this right and to really reunite the country. And the challenge couldn’t be greater, and the stakes couldn’t be higher.
Q: What was the biggest thing you learned moving from opposition to government?
Powell says the transition was hard. But she was not running a government department.
She was proud of what they did getting the king’s speech ready (her job as leader of the Commons). She learned a lot about how government works.
Phillipson says they got some things wrong, like welfare reform. They must learn from that. But being in government is much better than being in opposition.
Q: What is your favourite Labour achievement?
Phillipson says it was the national minimum wage, brought in by the Blair government, something promised by Labour for 100 years.
That happened because John Prescott pushed for it as a deputy leader in cabinet, she says.
Powell agrees. She says the minimum wage was transformative. But this government is following it up with measures like the employment bill, she says.
Powell says Labour has made ‘big mistakes’, with decisions taken by small group not connected to communities
Q: What can Labour do better?
Phillipson says the party must be honest and learn from what it got wrong, like welfare reform and the winter fuel payments.
But in cabinet Angela Rayner said the party used to spend too much time focusing on the 10% of things that went wrong, not the 90% that went right.
She says the party should talk more about its achievements.
Powell says they should not “sugar-coat” things. The party has made “big mistakes”, she says.
She says there have been “fewer and fewer people taking decisions that are not connected to the communities that we represent”.
The party needs a “feedback loop”, so that ministers know what people think of decisions.
And if that means, as I’ve done in the last year or so, if that means having difficult conversations and speaking truth to power, I will do that.
I’ve been the shop steward effectively for the back benchers over the last year, and I can be the party’s shop steward now.
Powell says her 21-year-old son has struggled with her being minister, because Labour has not enthused young people
Q: What are you plans for young members?
Phillipson says Labour should be welcoming to young members. They played an “amazing” role campaigning at the election. But they should also have a role in policy making, she says.
Powell says young people are not attract to the party in the way they were in the past.
She says she has a 21-year-old son.
To be honest with you, him and his friends have really struggled with me actually being in the Labour government this last 15 months, because we’ve not got some of the politics right to enthuse young people, to make them see that a Labour government, the Labour party, is not just working on their behalf, but that we can make the change that they want to see.
Powell says, not having a job in cabinet, she will be able to work full-time on the deputy leader job.
Phillipson says having a job in cabinet will make it easier for her to get things done for members.
Phillipson says Labour should be ‘as ruthless’ in fighting Greens as they are in fighting Reform
Q: How do we win back support from the Greens and the Lib Dems?
Powell says her Manchester Central seat is half red wall, half urban, so she knows the threat those parties pose.
Labour should stick to its values and rebuild a progressive alliance.
Phillipson says they should expose the Greens for who they are.
They say, on the one hand, that climate change is the biggest challenge we face, and climate change is an enormous challenge, but a real opportunity to create some brilliant jobs.
But then what do they do? They oppose infrastructure projects. They oppose the investment that will make a huge difference to our communities and to tackling climate change.
So we’ve got to be as ruthless in taking the fight to them as we are in taking the fight to be to Reform.
Q: How should we take on Reform?
Phillipson says Labour should show what it is doing to improve people’s lives.
Powell says she wants Labour to seize back the microphone from them.
Powell says Labour needs to unite its voter coalition, and avoid policies like winter fuel payment cut
Q: What would you do to help win the elections in Wales next year?
Phillipson says she has a strong record as a campaigner.
Powell says the Senedd elections will be tough. She goes on:
And I think what we’re seeing in Wales is a real example of what we’re seeing elsewhere, which is the fracturing of our voter coalition, the fracturing of the electorate.
Yes, we’re losing some support to Reform, but we’re actually losing much more support to Plaid Cymru in Wales at the moment.
And that’s why we need to reunite our voter coalition with that really strong, compelling story about what we think is really wrong with this country and how we’re going to fix it.
Powell says the government can do better. She cites the winter fuel payment cut as an example of a policy that led to people not being clear “about whose side we are on”. It hit the party particularly hard in traditional Labour area.
We need to be out there telling people what we are doing, but we’ve got to get the politics of this right so that we’re not losing votes to all sides.
This is the first answer contained some criticism of the government.