Prime Minister Keir Starmer speech to TUC Congress 2024
Thank you Matt. And thank you Congress for that reception. It's
such a pleasure to be back here with you again in Brighton A City
of sanctuary, solidarity, and a city that once again this summer
showed there's no place for hatred, division or violence on our
streets. A city that I'm delighted to say now has a Labour Council
once again. And a city that's now joined by a string of Labour MPs
across Sussex, from Worthing to Hastings. And Congress, Brighton
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Thank you Matt. And thank you Congress for that reception. It's
such a pleasure to be back here with you again in Brighton It's why we've launched a new National Wealth Fund to invest in the critical infrastructure our industries need and drive growth into every community.
It's why we've unlocked solar and onshore wind. Started bringing
rail back into public ownership. Committed to a proper industrial
strategy. Switched on Great British Energy And let's be very clear why we need this bill. It's because this government is committed to driving up living standards, improving productivity and working in partnership with workers.
And congress – as part of that bill, let me again be crystal
clear, we will repeal the 2016 Trade Union Act, get rid of
Minimum Service Level legislation, end - the cheap and vindictive
attacks on this movement, and turn the page on politics as noisy
performance once and for all. It was hard won and hard fought for. I want to thank the General Secretary for his role in that.
Paul has always been a campaigning force of nature. And across
the movement – there are people without whom we could not have
done this. Too many to thank here. But they know who they
are. This election would not have been won, if we had not changed. We have the chance now to repair our public services, because we changed the Labour Party. We have the chance to make work pay, because we changed the Labour party. We have the chance to deliver for working people, young people, vulnerable people, the poorest in our society, because we changed the Labour party. So when I say ‘country first, party second' – that isn't a slogan. It's the guiding principle of everything this Government will do, we ran as a changed Labour Party and we will govern as a changed Labour Party.
So I make no apologies for any of the decisions we've taken to
begin the work of change. And no apologies to those, still stuck
in the 1980s who believe that unions and business can only stand
at odds, leaving working people stuck in the middle. Who cannot
see that this country needs a new path on growth.
Let me tell you what is anti-growth. An economy where real wages
stagnated for fifteen years – that's anti-growth. An economy where the state of our public services prevents people going to work because they are ill – that's anti-growth. So no – I will not take lectures from the Tories or others who complain every time the Government tries to undo the damage they've done, clinging desperately to the failed model of the past. And nor will I take seriously the complaints of people who had their time were faced with the same difficult problems and chose to turn away from the responsibility of fixing them. A party that allowed the politics of easy answers and distraction to become their comfort zone rather than face the responsibility and reality of government. That has changed. Let me tell you – I see the nurses, the teaching assistants, the carers – who can't afford to get their boiler fixed, or buy their kids a new school uniform. We see the public sector demoralised, burnt out in some places – gripped - by a recruitment and retention crisis that holds back your ability to do what we all believe in. The service of working people. We see all that – and so I can guarantee – this is not and never will be a Government that will sit round the table with you and tell you black is white. But I do have to make clear, from a place of respect that this government will not risk its mandate for economic stability, under any circumstances. And with tough decisions on the horizon – pay will inevitably be shaped by that.
I owe you that candour. And I'll tell you why. It's because – as
was so painfully exposed by the last government – when you lose
control of the economy it's working people who pay the price. And most importantly of all, with working people. Now, that sounds very straightforward and attractive. But I'll tell you this. It's much more difficult. Alongside collaboration, it also requires compromise. It demands we work through disagreement. And with those who have a different perspective. Partnership is a more difficult way of doing politics – I don't deny it. I know there's clarity in the old ways, the zero-sum ways. Business versus worker. Management versus union. Public versus private. Pick your side, to the victor – the spoils. Nonetheless, I say to everyone now, and I know so many of you already get this, that kind of politics is not what the British people want. When I say to them – our policies will be “pro-business AND pro-worker”. They don't look at me as if I'm deluded. No – they see it as the most ordinary, sensible thing in the world. And I know there will always be disputes. Of course there will. But in all seriousness – there is a mood of change in the business world. A growing understanding of the importance of good work. And the shared self-interest that comes from treating the workforce with respect and dignity. The productivity gain of fairness. And congress – that is an opportunity to be grasped. Trust me – business leaders are not knocking on my door saying they want to rip up employee rights. They don't tell me the problems they face will be solved by coming for trade unions. They want fair taxes, high skills and the long-term stability to invest. And that chimes precisely with what trade unions up and down the country tell me they also want. Working people want good companies to make profits, attract investment and create good jobs. And congress, in a way, this is why the Tory argument on trade unions no longer finds the same audience. The British people are not interested in those tired old tropes. This isn't the 1980s. The mood is for partnership. And not just on pay, on everything. To turn around our NHS, give our children the start in life they deserve, make our public services fit for the future, unlock the potential of clean energy. A new era of investment and reform. The common cause of national renewal. And so - as we rewrite those rules of our economy. As we drag this country back to the service of working people. This is a chance that must be taken. Because rules written in the ink of partnership will be more durable and long-lasting – whoever is in power. So, it is time to turn the page. Business and unions, the private and public sector, united by a common cause to rebuild our public services and grow our economy in a new way. Higher growth, higher wages, higher productivity, the shared purpose of partnership. The path through the mess the Tories made. And onwards to national renewal. That is the road we are on, congress, and we won't turn away from it. we will keep to the course of change, reject the snake oil of easy answers. Fix the foundations of our economy.
And build a new Britain. Thank you. |