Shadow Secretary of State for Northern Ireland addressed
the Labour Party conference
"Thank you, conference. Thank you to everyone who has
participated in today’s debate.
And a special thank you to my fabulous colleague and Shadow
Northern Ireland Minister .
This is a hugely important debate at an incredibly important
time.
Eighteen months ago I was so proud to be asked to serve our
Party, and prouder still to be the first Labour woman in this
post since the incomparable Mo Mowlam. 23 years ago, Conference
got to its feet and applauded Mo. An ovation in recognition of
her tenacious spirit, And her dedication to the cause of peace.
More than that, the thunderous applause was the sound of a party
totally driven to see justice and equality delivered across these
islands. It is what drove the Good Friday Agreement. It is what
united this whole movement behind it.
Together our Party helped to end a conflict that had raged for
generations. And the peace has sustained because it was forged in
the values that our movement holds dear – equality, human rights
and social justice.
Today we need to defend it.
Because as that precious agreement reaches its quarter century,
it is more fragile than we have ever known it.
This reckless Tory Government has not only neglected the peace
process, they have actively undermined it. And I don’t say this
lightly. Northern Ireland should not be a partisan issue. In the
Labour Party we pay tribute to the work done by John Major who
helped lay the ground for the Good Friday Agreement.
But has not, will not and frankly cannot live up to that
standard. This is a Prime Minister who has repeatedly placed his
own political self-interest over the interests of Northern
Ireland. Who promised that he would never place barriers down the
Irish sea, and then did it. Who signed an international treaty
and then broke it. Who negotiated every single word in the NI
Protocol and now blames everyone else for the consequences.
As PM he bears responsibility but not only is he refusing to show
leadership, his addiction to dishonesty is costing communities in
Northern Ireland dear. Self-interest over national interest,
every single time.
Conference, it makes me so angry because as well as the hurt and
the anger I have seen in communities, I have seen something else
too. There is a new generation coming of age in Northern Ireland.
They grew up after peace. They want the promise of a shared
society that the great John Hume imagined.
They want to build the integration that was promised. And they
want the same things as the kids in Sheffield I represent– a good
education, a good job, action on climate change.
For them, peace has changed their outlook, diminished their fear
of difference, built into their world view new hopes for
themselves and their communities. That was the precious prize.
Conference, we must never stand by while this prize, the greatest
political achievement of a generation, is gambled away by a
careless and dangerous Tory Prime Minister. Because while we have
achieved so much there is still so much more to do and it will
take courage to continue the progress that this generation
demands.
I’ve seen that courage in people like Sara Canning, whose partner
Lyra McKee was killed by those who want to drag Northern Ireland
back to the past. That terrible tragedy that would have broken so
many of us did not silence Sara. She has fought a brave campaign
for justice backed by people across Northern Ireland. And sent
the clear message that there is no going back. Not now, not ever.
Imagine looking Sara in the eye, and knowing that politics and
politicians are the barrier to realising the world she and her
generation deserve and are fighting for.
That’s why we must all match the courage Sara shows in her fight
for justice and progress. Because we cannot say the promise of
peace has been realised when too many young people are still
growing up in profound deprivation, when neighbours are separated
behind 100 peace walls in Belfast alone and when a third of
Northern Irish students leave every year, never to return.
And when the Good Friday Agreement is still being used as a
bargaining chip.
A true and lasting peace is about more than an absence of
violence. A true and lasting peace is delivering what the
agreement promised – a Bill of rights, integrated education,
shared housing. A true and lasting peace is the collective hope
of a shared future where reconciliation and social justice walk
hand in hand.
In this party we know our task isn’t just to prevent worse worlds
but to imagine better ones. That’s the journey we started 23
years ago. As Mo said then “it’s the real lives of people that
need changing”.
And today, my mission, Keir’s mission, our collective mission
across this movement is simple: to finish the job and to finally
deliver on the promise of peace."