EU Travel: Performing
Artists
(Paisley and Renfrewshire North) (SNP)
What recent steps his Department has taken towards establishing
cultural visas for (a) performing artists, (b) musicians and (c)
support staff with the EU.
(St Albans) (LD)
What steps he plans to take to review arrangements for touring
artists to travel in the EU.
(Midlothian) (SNP)
What recent steps his Department has taken towards establishing
cultural visas for (a) performing artists, (b) musicians and (c)
support staff with the EU.
(Putney) (Lab)
What steps he is taking to support touring (a) musicians and (b)
crew in Europe.
The Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport
()
The UK’s creative industries are the finest in the world, and
this Government are, of course, determined to support them. I
deeply regret that the EU rejected our proposals, which would
have enabled performers, artists and support staff to work freely
across Europe. In recent weeks, I have discussed our approach
with leading voices from music, including the head of Universal
Music globally and, yesterday, Sir Elton John and his manager,
David Furnish. We are working urgently to develop a plan to make
it easier to tour across all of Europe.
[V]
I thank the Secretary of State for that answer, such as it was.
This Government’s Brexit reality has the live music industry
staring into the abyss and sports such as Formula 1 unable to
operate sufficiently. Mark Davyd, CEO of the Music Venue Trust,
has said that his industry has been dealt a no-deal Brexit due to
the UK Government’s refusal to get a deal on touring visas with
the EU. Will the Secretary of State assure the music industry, F1
and others that he will put their livelihoods before anti-free
movement platitudes and go back to the negotiating table with the
EU?
Of course we continue to engage with the EU. As I say, I deeply
regret that it rejected our offer. It is worth noting that what
we put forward was what the music industry had asked for. We will
continue to engage with the music industry, and there are
opportunities both with individual member states and with the
Commission directly.
[V]
One of my constituents is the orchestral leader of two major
British orchestras. More than 50% of her work with British
orchestras is touring abroad in the EU, but she is a
self-employed musician, so she does not have anybody to wade
through all this new red tape for her. Putting covid to one side,
by what specific date does the Secretary of State hope to fix
this absurd, bureaucratic, self-defeating situation, so that
self-employed musicians can enjoy visa-free travel in the EU?
I agree with the hon. Lady: it is absurd and self-defeating. It
could have been solved, and it could still be solved today by the
EU matching the offer that we have unilaterally made to EU
nationals. She talks about support. I know her constituency well;
it neighbours mine. For example, The Horn music venue in her
constituency, which is a home to emergent artists, has received a
quarter of a million pounds under the culture recovery fund. The
Goblin theatre has received £51,000. Wind and Foster has received
£63,000. We are demonstrating as a Government through our actions
that we are standing behind culture in this country.
The Government are very keen to blame the EU for the barriers
being put in place for touring musicians, but Brexit was born and
bred in the UK. Does the Secretary of State agree that the onus
is on this Government to fix the abject failure in statecraft,
and can he confirm what urgent steps are being taken to ensure
that touring musicians do not become yet another example of the
collateral damage of Brexit?
First, I would like to reassure touring musicians and all those
in the creative industry. I know how important the opportunity to
tour is for them; it is something I discussed just yesterday with
Elton John, and I have discussed it with many others. It is a
vital part of them building their careers. That is why we have
set up the working group with musicians, so that we can find ways
of supporting them to continue to tour not just in Europe but
across the whole world. There are huge opportunities for the
industry.
[V]
I am glad to hear that you are still working with the EU
bureaucrats—
Mr Speaker
Order. I am definitely not doing that. The hon. Lady is accusing
me by saying “you”.
Sorry. I am glad to hear that the Secretary of State is working
with the EU on this. Music is worth £5.8 billion to the UK
economy, and I have been surprised at how many Putney residents
and businesses rely on touring. I am glad to hear that the
Secretary of State is working on a future plan. Will that plan be
across the EU, not requiring red tape for each individual
country, which will be a huge barrier? What is the Government’s
plan to ensure that creative workers do not miss out on vital
earning opportunities and a chance to represent Britain on the
global stage?
I share the hon. Lady’s passion for the creative industries. That
is why we have put the support in, including in her own
constituency. For example, the World Heart Beat Music Academy has
received over £100,000, and the Exodus track and the Deptford
Northern Soul Club have received over £50,000. On what we are
doing to promote touring, there are basically three threads to
it: first, we are working with the industry to help it overcome
barriers. Secondly, we are working across Government to overcome
barriers; and, thirdly, we continue to engage both with the
Commission and member states to see what further support we can
provide.
(Ochil and South Perthshire) (SNP) [V]
I deeply regret that Ministers have rejected the EU’s offer. Like
petulant weans, Ministers have walked away from negotiations on
musicians’ and artists’ visas. The Government did not get what
they wanted, and have given up. Stating that the UK’s door
remains open is simply not good enough for the people who
desperately need visa-free travel in the EU. Without it, there
will be disastrous consequences. British haulage firms go on
tours, but they will go bust. British crews will lose out to
cheaper competitors from the EU, and all but the most successful
bands will struggle to tour in Europe. The result will be bad for
the economy and bad for culture. Surely the Secretary of State
must now realise, as so many Tory MPs do, that renegotiations are
the only option. Going off in a huff is not the answer; this is
all far too important.
To be clear to the hon. Gentleman, the reason why we rejected the
offer from the European Union, which he seems so keen to accept,
was that it was not binding, it did not cover touring, it did not
cover technical support staff and, crucially, it did not cover
work permits. Of course, we continue to engage with it, but I
must say to him that the most devastating consequences for
musicians in Scotland would be to rip our precious shared
cultural heritage apart by pulling Scotland out of our Union—I
would note that £450 million a year is generated in Scotland
through domestic music tourism; 90% of the revenue is through
domestic markets—and that would be terrible for Scottish
musicians.