Prime Minister's speech at Manchester Science and Industry Museum
Good morning everyone and thank you for joining me here in
Manchester – in the heart of the world’s first industrial city.
A city whose confidence and whose extraordinary future we
can see in the changing fabric of the urban landscape, the mighty
towers of Deansgate Square, last week’s extraordinary International
Festival in Manchester. We can see it in the Christie,
the hospital where the future of cancer treatment will be written
at the...Request free trial
Good morning everyone and thank you for joining me here in
Manchester – in the heart of the world’s first industrial city.
A city whose confidence and whose extraordinary future we can see
in the changing fabric of the urban landscape, the mighty towers
of Deansgate Square, last week’s extraordinary International
Festival in Manchester.
We can see it in the Christie, the hospital where the future of
cancer treatment will be written at the vast new Paterson
building, with new therapies saving the lives of people around
the world for generations to come.
This is not and has never been a city for negativity or
navel-gazing.
Indeed when the University of Manchester’s Andre Geim and
Konstantin Novoselov said they were planning to extract a
single-atom-thick crystallites from bulk graphite - I hope I’ve
got that right - to give us the super-light super-strong
wonder that is Graphene…
I imagine that there were people who had no idea what difference
it could make to their lives - and frankly people in this
audience who have no idea,
Yet today, we stand on the cusp of the Graphene age, with
applications in everything from de-icing of aircraft wings to
life-saving medicine.
Their story of those pioneers is told here at the Science and
Industry Museum, and it is one of the countless tales of
Mancunian pioneers.
Because time and again, when the cynics say something cannot be
done - Mancunians find a way to get on and do it.
And the centre of Manchester – like the centre of London – is a
wonder of the world.
But just a few miles away from here the story is very different.
Towns with famous names, proud histories, fine civic buildings
where unfortunately the stereotypical story of the last few
decades has been long term decline.
Endemic health problems. Generational unemployment. Down-at-heel
high streets.
The story has been, for young people growing up there of
hopelessness, or the hope that one day they’ll get out and never
come back.
And in so far as that story is true and sometimes it
is, the crucial point is
it isn’t really the fault of the places and it certainly isn't
the fault of the people growing up there - they haven’t
failed.
No, it is we, us the politicians, the politics, that has
failed.
Time and again they have voted for change, but for too long
politicians have failed to deliver on what is needed.
Our plan now, this new Government I am leading, is to unite our
country and level up.
And I want to explain now what I mean by that.
Now I am absolutely not here to tell you, Mr Mayor, that London
has all the answers.
Or that everywhere should be like London, or indeed like
Manchester.
Each place in our country has a unique heritage, a unique
character, and a unique future.
And indeed I recognise that when the British people voted to
leave the European Union, they were not just voting against
Brussels – they were
voting against London too, and against all concentrations of
power in remote centres.
So I’m not here to say that Manchester or London are the template
for other places.
But I do believe there are lessons to be learnt from the success
of cities like these.
I remember London in the 1970s - how it was stuck in post-war
gloom and doom.
Between 1951 and 1981 the population actually declined - it went
down 20 per cent it was so miserable.
Yet, over the last twenty years, the capital of our country has
been utterly transformed.
London is today one of the world’s leading global cities (second
only to Manchester!) - with the largest concentration of tech
companies, artists, financial services, top class restaurants and
all the rest of it.
We can see the same thing happening now in this incredible city.
So today I want to set out what I think are the basic ingredients
of success for the UK, and for the places we call home: our
cities or our towns, our coastal communities and rural areas.
There are four things I think we need to get right.
First is basic liveability. The streets need to be safe. There
need to be enough affordable homes. There need to be jobs that
pay good wages. There need to be great public services supporting
families and helping the most vulnerable.
Second thing - connections. That means great broadband
everywhere, and it means transport. Inspiration and innovation,
cross fertilisation between people, literally and figuratively,
cannot take place unless people can bump into each other, compete
collaborate invent and innovate.
We need to literally and spiritually unite Britain, and that
means boosting growth and bringing our regions together.
The third thing that places need is culture. People love
Manchester because of the fantastic arts and entertainment here,
the football and music, the heritage and the creative industries
that make it such a lively, wonderful place to live and
work.
We need to help places everywhere to strengthen their cultural
and creative infrastructure, the gathering places that give a
community its life.
And finally, the fourth thing - places need power and a sense of
responsibility, accountability.
Taking back control doesn’t just apply to Westminster regaining
sovereignty from the EU. It means our cities and counties and
towns becoming more self-governing.
It means people taking more responsibility for their own
communities. London and Manchester have boomed partly because
they have had Mayors – some better than others, I would say, but
all with the power to speak for their cities, to bang heads
together, to get things done.
These are the lessons from London and Manchester. Liveability.
Connectivity. Culture. And power.
And the first condition of liveability is of course making our
streets safer.
Because recorded crime here in the North West is up 42 per cent.
I think it’s time we got that down, and we will.
Yesterday I met twenty new officers in Birmingham who are
graduating after 15 weeks training. They will now join our
brave and formidable police men and women who will be putting
their lives on the line for our safety.
But you want more of these policemen and women on our streets –
and so do I.
That is why I have committed to an extra 20,000 police officers
over the next three years.
Their recruitment will begin in earnest within weeks.
And a new national policing board chaired by our dynamic new Home
Secretary will hold the police to account for meeting this
target.
We will also give the police greater ability to use stop and
search in order to drive a reduction in the violent crime that
plagues our communities.
But there is no point in arresting, charging and convicting
criminals if we do not then give them the sentences they deserve.
In fact the number of offenders with more than 50 previous
convictions who were convicted but spared jail rose from 1,299 in
2007 to 3,196 in 2018.
So we need to restore the public’s faith in our criminal justice
system, by ensuring that people who repeatedly commit crimes are
punished properly,
and that means those that are guilty of the most serious violent
and sexual offences are required to serve a custodial sentence
that reflects the severity of their offence.
And it is only by making the streets safer than you can create
the neighbourhoods that people want to live.
One of the biggest divides in our country is between those who
can afford their own home and those who cannot.
This is a long-term problem which all governments have failed to
fix.
So we will review everything - including planning regulations,
stamp duty, housing zones, as well as the efficacy of existing
Government initiatives.
And, we will also emphasise the need, the duty, to build
beautiful homes that people actually want to live in, and being
sensitive to local concerns.
And then of course to get great, great neighbourhoods, safe
streets, allow people to own their own homes - we need great
public services to make that possible.
Which is why I have committed to delivering the funding promised
to the NHS by the previous government in June 2018 and to ensure
this vital money goes to frontline services as soon as possible.
This will include urgent funding for 20 hospital upgrades and
winter readiness.
And proposals drastically to reduce waiting times for GP
appointments.
The NHS represents a sacred promise between the state and its
citizens. A promise that says
we will protect and support one another when we are at our most
vulnerable and weakest.
And the same should go for the other great service of wellbeing;
particularly social care.
Yet many people who have worked hard all their lives have had to
struggle with the financial burden of care in their final years
and been forced to sell their homes.
The British people cannot understand why the health service is
able to provide the same care for everyone, regardless of income,
And yet the social care system cripples those with savings.
For too long, I think politicians have simply kicked this can
down the road. I want
you to know, that can-kicking stops now.
So I have promised to find a long term solution to social care
once and for all.
And that is what we will do - with a clear plan that will give
every older person the dignity and security they deserve.
At the same time, we will give every child the world class
education they deserve.
Which is why we will increase the minimum level of per pupil
funding in primary and secondary schools and return education
funding to previous levels by the end of this parliament.
And we cannot afford any longer the chronic under-funding of our
brilliant FE colleges, which do so much to support young people’s
skills and our economy.
We have a world class university sector; in fact it is one of the
biggest concentrations of higher education anywhere in Europe
right here in this city - why should we not aspire to the same
status for our further education institutions, to allow people to
express their talents?
If you’re going to allow people to express their talents
properly, then you need proper connectivity. It is absolutely
crucial.
Because if you are someone with a bright idea, or you are running
a fantastic business, but you can’t get the connectivity you need
and instead spend an eternity staring at that pizza wheel circle
of doom on your computer screen – then you won’t be able to get
your idea off the ground, you won’t be able to grow your
business, and you won’t be able to find customers.
And you can have all the talent in the world
but if you are a young kid in a deprived town, with intermittent
transport, and you can’t get to the places where the jobs are
then you won’t have the opportunities you deserve.
But people are able to meet each other, and compete with each
other, challenge each other, spark off each other - around
the water cooler or elsewhere -
That’s when we get the explosion, or flash of creativity and
innovation.
That is what we are going to make that happen - not just here but
across the country.
First we’re going to invest in fibre roll-out and indeed we have just completed
the build of a large fibre cable between Manchester and York
alongside the Trans-Pennine railway route.
This interconnects the Manchester and Leeds Internet Exchanges
and strengthens the internet infrastructure for the Northern
Powerhouse.
I am delighted to see Jake Berry, sitting in the Cabinet,
expressing this Government’s commitment to the Northern
Powerhouse.
And just now, before coming here, I met Barry White - at the
Pomona site - part of a huge stretch of new tramline that will
link up to Northern Powerhouse Rail.
I want to be the Prime Minister who does with Northern Powerhouse
Rail what we did for Crossrail in London.
And today I am going to deliver on my commitment to that vision
with a pledge to fund the Leeds to Manchester route.
I want to stress it will be up to local people to decide what
comes next, as far as I’m concerned that’s just the beginning of
our commitment and our investment. We want to see this whole
thing run.
I have tasked officials to accelerate their work on these plans
so that we are ready to do a deal in the autumn.
It is the right thing to do, it’s time we put some substance into
the idea of the Northern Powerhouse Rail, and that’s why we are
here this morning.
We want to inject some pace into this so that we can unlock jobs
and boost growth.
But I know people can’t wait and they want to see change
faster. They want change now. It takes a while to build a
railway, believe me.
They want reliable, everyday services – so that the 18-year-old
in Rochdale just starting out as an apprentice knows that they
can get into Manchester for 8 o’clock each morning.
So that people can get out and about in the evening, for a drink
and a meal – boosting local businesses and growth.
Services within cities, not just between cities. Services that mean people don’t
have to drive. Services
that don’t just give up at the end of the working day.
So I am going to improve - with your help - the local services
which people use every day. And I want that to start now with
improvements that can happen in the short term.
That means buses. I know a lot about buses, believe me. I love
buses. I helped to invent a new type of bus, very beautiful that
it is.
I will begin as a matter of urgency the transformation of local
bus services – starting here today in Manchester.
I will work with the Mayor of Greater Manchester on his plans to
deliver a London style bus system in the area under powers we
gave to him - you Andy - in the Bus Services Act.
I want higher frequency, low-emission or zero-emission buses,
more bus priority corridors, a network that's easier to
understand and use.
I want local partnerships between the private sector, which
operates the buses, and a public body, which coordinates them.
In London – where they have all these things – bus passenger
journeys have risen by 97 per cent in 25 years.
In other metropolitan areas – where they do not – it has fallen
by 34 per cent over the same period.
I think we can see the first results, here in Greater Manchester,
within a few months.
And I want the same for any other part of the country where local
leaders want to do it.
Good bus connections, good transport connectivity, is also vital
to so many of the towns that feel left behind.
We are also going to start answering the pleas of some of our
left behind towns,
And this might come as a surprise to some, but not everyone wants
to live in one of our country’s great cities.
Too many places - towns and coastal communities - that don’t feel
they are getting benefits from the grown we are seeing elsewhere
in the UK economy.
Now I reject the ridiculous idea that everybody's ambition is to
get on their bikes and move to the city.
Our post-industrial towns have a proud, great heritage - but an
even greater future. Their best years lie ahead of them.
So we are going to put proper money into the places that need it.
We will start by ensuring there is investment from central
government – by bringing forward plans on the UK Shared
Prosperity Fund - and we have growth deals as well for Scotland,
Wales and Northern Ireland.
And we’re now going to have a £3.6 billion Towns Fund supporting
an initial 100 towns. So that they will get the improved
transport and improved broadband connectivity that they
need.
They’ll also get help with that vital social and cultural
infrastructure, from libraries and art centres to parks and youth
services: the institutions that bring communities together, and
give places new energy and new life.
Finally, of course, there is an even more radical shift that we
need to make now to deliver this and I have seen myself the
changes that you can bring about in towns and cities and regions,
when local people have more of a say over their own destinies. A
say over their own destinies.
And I do not believe that, when the people of the United Kingdom
voted to take back control, they did so in order for that control
to be hoarded in Westminster.
So we are going to give greater powers to council leaders and to
communities.
We are going to level up the powers offered to mayors so that
more people can benefit from the kind of local government
structures seen in London and here in Manchester.
We are going to give more communities a greater say over changes
to transport, housing, public services and infrastructure that
will benefit their areas and drive local growth.
And in doing so, we will see to it that every part of this
country sees the benefits of the potentially massive opportunity
that will come from Brexit.
Over the last three years, we have tended to treat Brexit like
some impending adverse weather event.
I campaigned to leave the EU because I believed it was a chance
to change the direction of the UK and make us the best country in
the world to live.
Leaving the EU is a massive economic opportunity - to do the
things we’ve not been allowed to do for decades, to rid ourselves
of bureaucratic red tape, create jobs, untangle the creativity
and innovation for which Britain is famous.
And we do not need to wait to start preparing to seize the
benefits of that project.
So we will begin right away to create the free ports that will
generate thousands of high-skilled jobs - and revitalise some of
the poorest parts of our country.
We will begin right away on working to change the tax rules to
provide extra incentives to invest in capital and research
We will double down on our investment in R&D, we will accelerate the talks on
those free trade deals
And prepare an economic package to boost British business and
lengthen this country’s lead as the number one destination in
Europe for overseas investment.
At the same time we will unite and level up across our country -
as I say, with infrastructure, better education and with
technology.
And in so doing, making our whole nation not just an alright kind
of place to live, or a better-than-average place to live but the
greatest place on earth. The greatest place to live, to raise a
family, to send your kids to school, a great place to start a
business, to invest and to have a life -
And where better than Manchester, where better than the Science
and Industry Museum, to set out our ambition for doing so.
Here today we can look back at centuries of progress, the
inventions, ideas and breakthroughs that came out of Manchester,
came out of the North, came out of the United Kingdom and shaped
the world we know today.
I just want you to imagine, if we were to reconvene here 30, 40,
50 or more years hence, what treasures this museum might hold
then.
I’m absolutely certain there will be displays celebrating the
dawn of a new age of electric vehicles, not just cars or buses,
but electric planes, made possible with battery technology being
developed now in the UK.
You will see tributes and dioramas commemorating the men and
women who use new gene therapies to cure the incurable and
achieve the impossible.
Here in Manchester, home of the world's first passenger railway,
with Stephenson’s rocket behind me, we should remember that there
were people back then who thought that the whole project should
be abandoned as a danger to public health, because the speeds
that were being proposed would be intolerable for the human
body.
So I can imagine in the future of this wonderful museum there
will exhibits recording not only the breakthroughs in bioscience,
here in Manchester and elsewhere that allow the UK to lead the
world in producing genetically modified crops - blight-resistance
potatoes will feed the world.
But also a memorial to the sceptics and doubters, complete with
bioengineered edible paper, with which they were forced to eat
their words.
I don’t blame the doubters and the sceptics, but all I will say,
is that the evidence is behind us, there’s Stephenson’s rocket
behind us, we’re sending rockets into space - we will expand our
space programme as well.
I don’t blame the doubters and the sceptics, it’s a natural human
instinct, but time and again, they have been proved wrong.
I think they will be proved wrong again.
If we unite our country, with better education, better
infrastructure, with an emphasis on new technology, then this
really can be a new golden age for the UK.
Time and again Manchester has shown the UK that anything is
possible. Time and again this extraordinary country has delivered
the same message to the world. That’s what we are going to do
once more.
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