Sir Robert Neill (Bromley and Chislehurst) (Con) I beg to move,
That this House has considered the funding decisions of Arts
Council England. It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship,
Mr Bone, and I am very grateful for the opportunity to return to
this topic. It is also good to see the Minister in his place in
Westminster Hall. As he will know, this topic has been ventilated
before, but I think this debate broadens the issues. As time has
gone on,...Request free trial
(Bromley and Chislehurst)
(Con)
I beg to move,
That this House has considered the funding decisions of Arts
Council England.
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Bone, and I
am very grateful for the opportunity to return to this topic. It
is also good to see the Minister in his place in Westminster
Hall. As he will know, this topic has been ventilated before, but
I think this debate broadens the issues.
As time has gone on, those of us who follow this issue have had
more and more grounds for concern, not just about individual
funding decisions by the Arts Council but about the process by
which it makes them. That process lacks transparency and, I
believe, accountability, and there is a lack of engagement with
the sector at a time when funding reductions are being made.
Those may be necessary in the overall economic climate, but they
have been made in a distributional way that has taken no account
of economic, social or other impacts—or, above all, of the
overall responsibility of the Arts Council.
When the Arts Council was formed, it was set up
“to give more people opportunities to enjoy and benefit from
great art and culture”—
I think it still has that phrase on the banner on its social
media. It did not regard itself as an organisation about changing
the nature of art or culture; it was about making excellence
available to the greatest number of people. That was the vision
of Keynes when he set it up and of people such as Jennie Lee when
she was Arts Minister. In fact, I think Jennie Lee rightly said
that it was important that everyone, wherever they were and
whatever their circumstances, should have the opportunity of
accessing the best in the arts rather than something cut-price or
dumbed down. I rather fear that of late the Arts Council has lost
its way in relation to that mission. Some of the specific funding
decisions in the latest round highlight how it has gone
wrong.
The Minister and others will know that I have raised in
particular the issue of the removal of English National Opera
from the national portfolio. That would have had the effect of
creating 600 redundancies, and—for all the mealy words used by
the Arts Council to begin with—it would have effectively meant
the closure of the company. The idea that it would have been
possible to relocate a 100-year-old company to a base in
Manchester—more on that in a moment—at about 12 months’ notice
was so risible that one wonders what experience and real
understanding of the sector the bureaucrats in the Arts Council
who drew up that decision ever had.
I am glad to say that discussions, hard work by English National
Opera’s team and engagement with the Arts Council has led to some
movement. I welcome the fact that there has been a willingness to
listen and that funding has been secured, albeit with a
reduction—a reduction perhaps on much the same level as those for
other arts institutions. That will enable the 2023-24 season to
continue next year. I hope that there will be better transition
funding for the future. However, that is as yet uncertain. We
have had a step forward, but at the moment English National
Opera—a major international company that does co-productions with
the Metropolitan Opera in New York and is a major draw for
audiences—has had only a reprieve, rather than being saved in a
form that is recognisably that of a high-class, top-rate opera
company. That is not good enough.
(Westminster North) (Lab)
I am grateful to the hon. Member for giving way, and I
congratulate him both on securing this debate and on his speech.
I also welcome the concession made in respect of English National
Opera. However, does he agree that the latest Arts Council
declaration still leaves more than £50 million worth of cuts to
London’s arts budget over three years? That not only has a
devastating cultural impact but, as he suggests, an economic
impact; I am thinking of employment and the vital revenue that
pours into London from tourists and others who seek to attend
these marvellous cultural institutions.
That is certainly true; as a London MP, I am conscious of it too.
Of course there is more than one issue at play. One is the
distribution—where the money goes. Secondly, there is the
question of which institutions and sectors are worst affected by
what happens. It does seem that the performing arts have been
particularly hard hit. When I look at the trustees of the Arts
Council, there seems to be a lack of experience in the performing
arts as opposed to the visual arts. We should perhaps return to
the composition of the board and management and whether relevant
experience of those sectors is there.
(Worthing West) (Con)
rose—
I give way to the Father of the House.
I am grateful to my hon. Friend. Whether one’s experience is in
the performing arts or the visual arts, everybody knows that it
takes three to four years to put on a good opera of international
standard or to put on an exhibition of paintings of international
standard, with the co-operation of everybody involved. It seems
peculiar that Ministers did not say to Arts Council England, “We
understand that and, if you need to make changes, you need to
make them over a six-year period, not a six-month period.”
My right hon. Friend makes a fair and valid point. When this
matter has been debated in the past, Ministers have argued that
this is an arm’s length body over which they have little control.
With respect to the Minister, I am not sure that that entirely
holds water. The Arts Council has said that a former Secretary of
State, in its phrase, “instructed” it in relation to the
distribution of some of the moneys.
That is a legitimate policy decision and stance for any Secretary
of State to take, but it proves there is a power to instruct and
intervene. That should not apply to the day-to-day running of an
arm’s length body, but Ministers have an ability and right to set
strategic direction and to ensure that there is proper governance
and oversight and, at the end of the day, basic equity in how its
operations and funding decisions, involving large sums of public
money, are taken.
(Gillingham and Rainham)
(Con)
I pay tribute to my hon. Friend for securing this debate. On the
proper functioning of the Arts Council, there is a specific
consultation at the moment on music provision across the country.
A concern is that the timeline of the consultation was announced
in December 2022, and the first real engagement with stakeholders
begins and concludes in January 2023. Ministers and the
Government have a duty to ensure that the consultation is proper
and thorough. Centres such as mine, Dynamics CIC in Medway, that
offer outstanding music provision will be severely affected if it
is not done properly and thoroughly, in a way that respects
outstanding provision, rather than pulling things together
geographically for financial reasons.
I am grateful to my hon. Friend for making that point. It
highlights the interesting fact that this is not just a London
issue. There are institutions outside London that have lost
funding for no apparent reason. That is the difficulty: the lack
of any apparent evidence base or transparent and proper process
for these decisions. There is a lack of any proper consultation
or impact assessment.
I have seen freedom of information responses rather perfunctorily
provided to individuals by the Arts Council, in a process that
appears to be like drawing teeth. Mr Bone, you and I have had
experience of such things from public bodies in the past. It
appears that no full impact assessments were made on individual
changes, even though some of them will close institutions.
Equalities impact assessments were made, but not the full impact
assessment expected when dealing with many millions of pounds of
public money, and the possibility of an institution ceasing to
operate, with redundancies caused thereafter.
(Hammersmith) (Lab)
The hon. Gentleman is absolutely right, and I congratulate him on
this debate. This is at best half thought-out, and at worst an
act of Luddism. I suspect that what we have seen with the revised
proposals for the ENO, which do not save it in the long term, is
just an admission that the Arts Council has got this wrong. Let
me give him this quote:
“Sacrificing this particular golden goose for a bit of glib
London-bashing will do little to improve cultural provision in
the regions and would be an act of sabotage for one of our
country’s greatest assets.”
That was the right hon. Member for Uxbridge and South Ruislip
() almost 10 years ago, the
last time this was done, and it has not changed.
I am sorry to say that is true. I do not object, in truth, to the
idea that we should spend more arts funding across the rest of
the country. I am not an opponent of levelling up as such, but I
have always taken the view that that should not be at the expense
of London. Decimating London is counter-productive, because much
of the talent that performs in the rest of the country is
London-based and London-trained, because that is where the
critical mass of the arts world is. It is where the
conservatoires and colleges are.
(Halesowen and Rowley Regis)
(Con)
One of the critical issues is defining what we mean by “levelling
up the arts”. In relation to opera, this is not just about
physical location. As a west midlands MP, I want more of my
constituents to enjoy opera, but does that not mean that we need
to define more clearly what levelling up opera might mean? That
is what we lack in relation to the funding decisions: there is no
overarching strategic view.
That neatly brings me to the next point, which is perhaps the
most important. We have mentioned that the funding cut to the ENO
would have been a woeful and destructive action. It still might
happen: had Dr Harry Brünjes and Stuart Murphy, the chair and
chief executive, all their team at the ENO and all the great
artists—people such as Bryn Terfel and others, who started the
petitions—rolled over to Arts Council England’s decisions, there
would be redundancy notices at the London Coliseum this week, and
600 professional people would have been out of a job thanks to
Arts Council England’s incompetence. That is no way to run an
organisation, and Arts Council England should be ashamed of the
way it went about it all.
It is significant that the former Secretary of State, my right
hon. Friend the Member for Mid Bedfordshire (Ms Dorries), went
public on social media, saying that the way Arts Council England
has carried out her intended policy of levelling up arts funding
was not as she intended, and has the effect of undermining it.
That is the view of the former Secretary of State, who ought to
know because it was her policy. The ineptitude of Arts Council
England has undermined and discredited the Government’s policy
intention, which the Minister and I could probably quite happily
sign up to in principle. That is another reason why the Minister
ought not to simply say, “I can stand back from this,” because
the Government’s own policy is being failed by an arm’s length
body. That is really important, which is why we need a proper
strategy.
We need a proper strategy for opera. Opera is a major part of the
British music scene. Some people think it is a bit of a foreign
thing, rather like John Gay’s “The Beggar’s Opera” in the 18th
century and Handel. It is not. It is fundamental.
(Cardiff West) (Lab)
On the point about having a strategy and some sort of strategic
thinking, one of Arts Council England’s decisions was to cut
funding to the touring side of the Welsh National Opera, which
tours extensively in England, including to places such as
Liverpool, Birmingham, Southampton, Oxford and so on. On the
Digital, Culture, Media and Sport Committee, we found out that
Arts Council England had not even talked to the Arts Council of
Wales about that decision before making the cut, which obviously
puts that opera company under threat. The net result, along with
the Glyndebourne cut, is that there is no opera in Liverpool at
all. What has that got to do with levelling up?
The hon. Gentleman’s point encapsulates why I think the former
Secretary of State was right to say what she said: the decision
absolutely negates the Government’s own policy. As the hon.
Gentleman said, the result of the way Arts Council England has
handled this issue is that there is now no opera in Liverpool,
because the WNO cancelled its tour. Glyndebourne has cancelled
its touring as well—that was touring in the regions of the UK.
The WNO toured across the north-west, parts of the west of
England, Bristol, Southampton and so on. All those places will
now have no opera—not thanks to the policy decisions, but thanks
to the way they have been handled and implemented by Arts Council
England.
Ministers should not allow the situation to stand, and the same
applies to other elements of the arts sector. There is no
strategy that informs the approach to prose theatre, to concerts
or to museums and galleries. Nowhere is there a fully-fledged
strategy, and we certainly ought to have one for opera. In that
case, we are talking about £50 million of public money simply
going to the opera companies. Think how much more is going to
other sectors as well—but no strategy!
When one tries to find the audit trail for this decision, the
board minutes that are published are perfunctory in the extreme.
None of the board papers is published, and there are considerable
redactions to what is published. That is not a level of
accountability or transparency that would be accepted in any
local authority in this country, and it should not be accepted in
a public body such as Arts Council England. It is letting the
public down, and it is letting the Government, as the overseeing
body, down as well. That is why there is another cause for
intervention.
Finally, because I know others want to speak, we need to look at
the lack of an economic analysis.
(Vauxhall)
(Lab/Co-op)
The hon. Member is making a vital point about the economic
impact. These cuts will impact organisations not in receipt of
Arts Council funding that rely on smaller grants. However,
organisations that have now come out of the NPO portfolio will
also be drawing on that funding, such as the Omnibus theatre in
my constituency and the White Deer theatre in Kennington. Should
the Government not recognise the importance that these smaller
independent organisations, working with the big national
organisations, bring to our local economies in terms of jobs,
employment, training and getting our young people involved in the
arts sector?
It is certainly right that the arts offer real economic
opportunity for many young people, and some of those smaller
organisations are the breeding ground from which people come.
That is true of ENO itself. Many international stars started at
the English National Opera, and that is also true of smaller
organisations. That reinforces the point I was making: there is
not a strategy for any of that. The Arts Council does not appear
to have a strategy for anything.
It seems that the funding decisions in this round were to meet a
financial envelope. Fine—let us have a proper discussion then
with the Department about how we produce a strategy to meet that
financial envelope. But none of that was done. That is why we
need a much more strategic approach; this is a serious
matter.
Looking at the overall potential economic risk, the 2020 report
from the Centre for Economics and Business Research found that in
a single year—2018; that is the latest we have—the arts and
culture industry directly generated £28.3 billion in turnover,
£13.5 billion in gross value added, 190,000 full-time equivalent
jobs and £7.3 billion in employee compensation in wages and fees:
in other words, into the economy. This is big business; for the
UK, this is big business that we excel in and which drags in
people to visit us. Also, it enables people throughout the UK to
have their lives enriched.
What I do not want to see as part of a levelling-up strategy is a
cut-down English National Opera or equivalent doing a reduced
orchestration, reduced cast and no-proper-chorus version of one
of the great operas, be it “Carmen”, “La Traviata” or “Tosca”, in
a shed somewhere outside one of our major cities. That is
short-changing the people in regional England. They are entitled
to see a proper performance like those we get from WNO and the
Glyndebourne tour and which ENO would happily do.
ENO has always made it clear that it is more than willing to do
more work outside London. Funnily enough, it was planning to do a
performance in Liverpool, of all places, before the covid panic,
and none of that seems to have been taken into account by Arts
Council England. It is short-changing people in the regional
parts of England to suggest that they should get a second-rate
version of that which is available in London. No wonder the
former Secretary of State, my right hon. Friend the Member for
Mid Bedfordshire, was so angry at the way her policy had been
misinterpreted—all the more reason for Ministers to
intervene.
Let us look at ENO as an example of the economic benefit that one
company can bring. It produces £1.75 for every £1 of spend—it
actually brings money into the economy with all the knock-on
expenditure that comes from people going to the theatre, and that
is true across most of the theatrical world. To put all that at
risk without a proper strategic basis seems ridiculous. The loss
of touring by Glyndebourne and WNO means that some 23,000 fewer
people will have the chance to see high-quality opera in this
country than before. That is a funny type of levelling up.
In addition to the performances, does my hon. Friend agree that
it is a betrayal of all those who helped Vernon and Hazel Ellis
restore the Coliseum from 2000 to 2004, having bought the
freehold and made it into the largest and best theatre in London
again? What did Arts Council England think would happen to that
building, which has been funded by the National Lottery Heritage
Fund, the National Lottery, English Heritage and the like?
It may demonstrate the lack of thought in the Arts Council
England process. It apparently wanted English National Opera,
although no longer based in London, to still run the Coliseum as
a commercial venue—a taxpayer subsidised version competing
against west end theatre. That does not seem either competent or
terribly Conservative, for that matter; it certainly is not a
good use of public money.
At the same time, Arts Council England wanted English National
Opera to relocate to The Factory in Manchester, a venue that was
not built to take unamplified singing—no one had bothered to
check. Singing there has to be on a mike. Basic due diligence
might have found that one out. The Factory, which, I am told, has
been a pet project of some of the senior management of Arts
Council England in the past, is a venue that does not have a set
of users. It is £100 million over budget. I do not think that
forcing a company that has been well established for 100 years or
so in London to fill what has become an Arts Council England
white elephant was necessarily a very good idea—particularly
because Opera North, which performs in Manchester, was not even
told. If it had been, it could have said what the audience
figures were and probably told Arts Council England that opera
cannot be done in The Factory anyway. It is the lack of basic
competence, strategic thought and good management that is
terrifying in all this. That is why there is a compelling ground
for intervention.
rose—
I will take one more intervention and then let others speak.
My hon. Friend mentions the forced collaboration between one
organisation and another. That is a quick fix. He talks about
opera, but before we get to staging opera we need to ensure that
our young people have the right music skills. The Arts Council at
the moment is carrying out a consultation on the national plan
for music education. It has said that all hubs will cover
multiple local authority areas. It has subsequently said that
this will be achieved
“via prescribing geographic delivery areas for Music Hubs”.
In Medway we have outstanding music provision in schools. Our
neighbours in Kent do not have quite the same standards, but
under those proposals one area will be forced in with the other.
Surely forcing a merger of an outstanding provision area with
another cannot be the right way forward—it will weaken the
provision in small organisations such as those in Medway.
It sounds as if Arts Council England has fallen into bureaucratic
speak. What would that mean to any normal person or sensible
institution? It defeats me. There is a complete lack of
understanding of what happens on the ground, and a complete lack
of engagement with the institutions and their audiences—that is
the great error in all this.
I do not have time to quote it all, but the playwright Dennis
Kelly wrote a very powerful letter to me; it can be googled and
found on social media. It was about the impacts on prose
theatre—in particular, the Hampstead Theatre and others. There is
a lack of appreciation of the impacts on audiences, and an
unwillingness to engage with them. The fact is that people travel
to many of those London venues from all around the home counties;
it is not purely a London thing in any event.
Lest I be tempted to go on indefinitely, I should say that I have
set out the case as to why the whole approach to this funding
round has been seriously flawed. Egregious individual decisions
have been made. Some of those have been rowed back on to some
extent, and I welcome that—I am always happy if Arts Council
England or others are prepared to listen and to look at evidence.
But it needs to be much more comprehensive and to do it in a much
more transparent and strategic fashion.
I will quote the former Secretary of State again. She said that
when she arrived at DCMS, she was not a great fan of opera—I had
a conversation with her about that —but she went. I urge all
Ministers who come into the Department to go to opera, ballet,
theatre, concerts and to look at some of the galleries and
museums that they are responsible for. They should see that as an
experience in itself. My right hon. Friend became a total
convert; she said, in relation to ENO and the Royal Opera
House:
“They have been the front runners in levelling up for a very long
time. They leave many in other sectors of the performing arts in
the shade in terms of how much they give back and how they try
desperately via a number of measures to make opera accessible to
all.”
That is exactly what ENO has been doing.
Then there are the insulting comments of the director of music at
Arts Council England, who said, “We don’t believe there is any
growing audience for grand opera”—a rather bizarre term to use.
Anyone who knows anything about opera will know that is a
five-act French production by Meyerbeer from about 1860; we do
not talk in terms of grand opera any more. I think what she meant
was full-scale opera, with a proper orchestra and chorus. How
anyone can say that when theatres have been locked down because
of covid for many years defeats me. Freedom of information
requests have not evidenced any robust statistical basis for that
assumption, which is another reason to go back and have a proper
strategy.
I hope all that tells the Minister that something has gone badly
wrong in this funding round. We cannot just say that Arts Council
England is an arm’s length body; we need to do something before
serious and lasting harm is done to critical parts of our
cultural and artistic heritage.
2.55pm
(Camberwell and Peckham)
(Lab)
I congratulate the hon. Member for Bromley and Chislehurst
( ) on securing this debate. I
back absolutely every word he said, and I join him in urging Arts
Council England to rethink this funding round, which has no
strategy, has had no consultation, is thoroughly destructive, and
importantly makes the crucial art form of opera more elitist,
rather than less.
As a result of losing a third of its funding, Welsh National
Opera has cancelled its 2023 tour to Liverpool. That is more
elitist, not less. ENO’s core mission is to make opera
accessible, bringing the art form to younger and more diverse
audiences. The threat to ENO makes it harder to do that work.
Because the Britten Sinfonia has lost its annual grant of
£500,000, it will not be able to do its education and outreach
work in the east of England. Because Glyndebourne has had its
grant cut by 50%, it has announced that it will not be able to
tour in 2023. When funding is reduced for opera, it is made more
exclusive, not less. Public funding is the key way to open up
opera to all. The funding cuts make opera more for the elites,
not less.
One further consequence of Arts Council England’s decision, which
I am sure is unintentional, is the effect on regional theatres,
which I know my hon. Friends will mention. , who ran the Norwich Theatre
Royal, wrote a letter to Nicholas Serota and Darren Henley at
Arts Council England, which said that there are
“people who stay loyal to their local theatres, providing the
bedrock of serious support because of the regular appearance of
challenging first class productions provided by Glyndebourne and
WNO…Without them, NTR could not have flourished…And without their
support theatres’ Friends lists, their ability to raise
refurbishment and restoration funds, and their reputations will
diminish. Theatres need high quality mixed programming; first
class opera is a crucial part of the mix...Once started, a
downward spiral in audiences is inevitable. You cannot possibly
want that.”
What he is saying is that the decisions about these opera
companies will make unviable and change vital regional
theatres.
continues:
“Glyndebourne, WNO and ENO have high cultural ambitions that
deserve to be shared as widely as possible. To emasculate them—to
destroy existing ‘skills, knowledge and networks’ so
wantonly…will not just make those ambitions unavailable in the
near future; it will probably ensure that they will never again
be part of the national cultural fabric of which I have been so
proud for 50 years.”
Does the Minister know whether Arts Council England considered
the effect on regional theatres of what they are doing to these
opera companies? Did it even consult regional theatres, which are
dealing with the consequences of all this?
This is a very well attended debate, with people from different
regions and parties. None of us is whipped to be here. None of us
has not got other things to do. All the Members sitting here are
those who are committed to the arts. If I was Arts Council
England looking at this, I would recognise that I had gone
seriously wrong. If the Members who are the backbone of
championing public policy on the arts are in Westminster Hall
complaining about the Arts Council, it should recognise that it
has got things wrong and think again. To say from behind its
hands, “Well, we’ve been told by wicked Secretaries of State and
DCMS that we have to do this”, is something that I do not accept
for one moment. The Arts Council is an independent body, for
goodness’ sake—the key is in the name, “independent”—and if
people take on responsibility for an independent body, they have
a duty to that body to act independently. If they are told what
to do by somebody whose business it is not, they should tell them
to shove off, or threaten to resign. That is the way it is
supposed to be.
The Arts Council has to recognise the scale of the problem.
However, we are a forgiving group of people, because we love the
arts, and therefore if the Arts Council sees sense, we will not
complain about it; we will congratulate it. Really, it should
read the writing on the wall. As writes to Nick Serota and
Darren Henley,
“I’ve bumped into you both over 25 years…It’s plain that your
lives and careers have been dedicated to making the best art
available as widely as possible throughout the UK.”
I say to both of them, “Keep faith with that. Change your mind.
We all believe in redemption; it is not too late.”
Several hon. Members rose—
(in the Chair)
Order. Seven Members want to speak. I have to start the wind-ups
in 37 minutes’ time—very roughly, that is about five minutes
each. I will not impose a time limit, but I trust people will
bear that in mind.
3.01pm
Dame (Gosport) (Con)
It is a great pleasure to serve under your stewardship, Mr Bone,
and I congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for Bromley and
Chislehurst ( ) on securing this important
debate. I will start by talking about the very difficult period
during which I was culture Minister in the Department for
Digital, Culture, Media and Sport. It was throughout the whole
covid period, and I did not get out much; I did not get to go to
many operas, ballets or performances, but I did get to work very
closely with the Arts Council.
I have to start by paying tribute to the Arts Council and to the
leadership of Darren Henley and Nick Serota, who worked
incredibly hard with the brilliant team at DCMS, led by Emma
Squire, throughout the covid period. They were responsible for
allocating a significant share of the £2 billion culture recovery
fund. The recovery fund board was appointed swiftly, and ensured
that vast sums of money were allocated very fairly and
effectively at enormous pace and scale, which meant the
difference between survival and closure for some of our most
vital cultural institutions. Thanks to their remarkable diligence
and deep understanding of the arts and culture ecosystem across
the country, we avoided many of the issues that some other parts
of Government faced when they were trying to dish out vast sums
of cash.
As the responsible Minister, I can tell Members that once the
money starts rolling out, we really do gird our loins about the
potential negative media stories that might come down the track,
but they did not come. There were some great attempts from some
quarters of the media to excite people about some of our funding
decisions—the wonderful drag queen Le Gateau Chocolat was
exceptionally grateful for her slice of the cake—but on the
whole, there was very little error in a massive piece of work
that was done at pace and scale. The work of the Arts Council was
a bright light during an otherwise very dark period, and I have
lost count of the number of institutions up and down the country
that have told me they felt they were saved by the culture
recovery fund.
I do not envy the Arts Council its job. Trying to allocate
limited funds is always a challenge, now more than ever, in
desperate economic times and against the backdrop of a Government
who are passionate about the potential of arts and culture to
drive economic prosperity and levelling up to all corners of the
country. Over the next few years, Arts Council England will
invest £446 million per year in 990 organisations—the largest
national portfolio ever, reaching more organisations than ever
before. It was the most over-subscribed round ever, with 1,723
applications; if all of those applications had been successful,
the investment would have been over £2 billion.
Among the 990 successful applications were 276 new organisations.
One of those is the Hampshire Cultural Trust, which will now
receive £500,000 a year. It is the first time that it has been a
national portfolio organisation, and I see what a tangible impact
it has on my Gosport constituency, which is an area with deep
pockets of deprivation and has been long underfunded by
successive Governments.
Our heritage is one of our secret weapons, but, up until now, we
have not been able to harness its potential to drive investment,
build communities, create opportunities and promote excellence.
The newly reopened museum and gallery has been reimagined as a
cultural hub, breathing new life into our high streets. The money
will allow them to animate already outstanding heritage spaces
and organise community-based festivals and events. It is making a
difference on the ground and it will continue to do so.
The UK’s cultural sector is among the best in the world: I would
say that it is the best. It represents 12% of our service
exports, and its potential for our soft power is so often
undervalued and underestimated. We have a huge responsibility.
The Arts Council has a huge responsibility to ensure that we
continue to nurture and grow it.
Culture has the power to drive forward regional economies, build
communities and improve health and wellbeing. Arts Council
funding has historically been focused on London and we need to
ensure that culture is thriving in every pocket of England, but
we will not level up the rest of the country by levelling down
London. We need to harness the potential of the great cultural
powerhouses of London. We must spread their tentacles and
sprinkle a bit of their magic across the country in the same way
as some of our museums and galleries have driven footfall.
Recently, Dippy the dinosaur went on a tour. It went to the Tank
Museum in Bovington. It popped up in the nave of Norwich
Cathedral, reaching a whole new audience and inspiring a new
generation. The ENO has done exactly the same thing with ENO
Breathe, which is its wonderful, game-changing response to covid.
It is operating in 85 trusts across the country, including my
own. There were some bizarre and ill-judged decisions in this
funding round and I think we can all agree that the decision to
both relocate the ENO and cut its funding was an ill-judged one.
I am pleased that there has now been some movement on that, but
there is more to do to secure its future.
I entirely agree with what the hon. Lady has said about the ENO,
but it is a one-year reprieve. After that, what it pointedly said
is that it wants to
“continue to make incredible opera available for everyone, in
English, with hugely subsidised tickets, completely free for
Under 21s and with 10% of all seats available for £10”.
It is working in schools and hospitals as well. That will be gone
in a year’s time and, over the next three years, it will lose
over 400,000 people seeing opera in that way. Surely that cannot
be right.
Dame
That is absolutely the point. The ENO not only plays a huge role
in the cultural status of London around the world, but the work
that it has done to attract a whole new audience and to make
opera accessible to all is nothing short of remarkable. I was
lucky enough to attend what they call a “relaxed performance” of
“It’s a Wonderful Life” just before Christmas. The place was
packed with children, people with disabilities and neurodiverse
people. It was just incredible to see opera being accessible to
so many and building the audiences of the future.
I agree with the idea of devolving money outside of the capital,
but we cannot do it by destroying some of the great cultural
institutions that do so much and put us on the map. We must avoid
these token gestures. We must also be aware of the regional
ecosystems that are already well developed outside London before
we start transplanting existing organisations out of London.
The Arts Council was born out of world war two. Here we are
again, with the global aftermath of covid and a war, once again,
on the edge of Europe. The Arts Council has, once again, a unique
opportunity to support the innovation, creativity and resilience
that make our cultural industries our British superpower. I hope
that we can all work together with them to enable them to harness
that opportunity.
3.09pm
(Luton South) (Lab)
It is a pleasure to speak under your chairship, Mr Bone. I
congratulate the hon. Member for Bromley and Chislehurst ( ) on securing this important
debate. I absolutely echo his comments about access for all to
the best of the arts. I am a passionate champion of arts in Luton
and across the country. Participation in cultural activity
develops social capital, and enables local people to lead happy,
healthy and prosperous lives.
Financial security has rarely been more important for our arts
and cultural organisations, having weathered the challenges of
the covid pandemic and a decade of funding cuts to the arts.
Cultural industries in the UK are a success story: in 2021, the
gross value added by the creative industries was £104
billion.
The role of the Arts Council is very important and its funding
decisions are critical to encouraging creativity across the
country and in all our communities. In Luton, we have a rich and
thriving arts and culture sector. It enriches our town’s cultural
diversity, encourages investment and supports social mobility and
inclusion. Arts culture and creativity are central to the Luton
2020-2040 vision for a place where everyone can thrive across all
our communities, and the Arts Council plays a critical role in
that.
Last year, brilliant Luton organisations, Wardown House Museum
and Gallery, Luton Carnival Arts Development Trust, Tangled Feet
theatre and Music24 community music group, each received funding
as national portfolio organisations. Revoluton Arts is an
excellent example of the impact of the Arts Council creative
people and places funding in Luton. It is a people-powered
project that cultivates grassroots creativity in Luton and puts
on high-quality creative events, particularly focused on
increasing the participation of diverse communities.
We do not have a large professional theatre or venue in Luton to
attract symphony orchestras, large scale theatrical work or
indeed opera, but we have an excellent music service team and a
music hub, and brilliant schools that want their children to
experience the best cultural, artistic and musical activities
available. That is the reason I was disturbed by the original
Arts Council decision.
Arts Council funding of English National Opera helped to bring
opportunities to our young people and led to a strong partnership
between ENO and Luton music hub. The partnership created
excellent opportunities for Luton’s young people. English
National Opera brought its opera squad to Lea Manor High School,
albeit in in Luton North, and there have been trips from Luton to
the London Coliseum, both back-stage and to the opera. The
partnership had expanded post-pandemic with the Finish This…
programme in which more than 500 Luton children from key stage 2
became English National Opera composers for a term, and created
their own musical colour worlds in response to ENO’s specially
commissioned piece, “Blue, Red, Yellow…”, by Omar Shahryar.
The list of excellent work goes on and on, but the fact is that
the music hub’s partnership with English National Opera brought
opportunities to young people in Luton that simply would not have
been achieved otherwise. It is proof that the impact of English
National Opera is beyond the borders of London. It is showing
diverse, working class, young people in Luton that opera singers
look like them and the sky is the limit on their aspiration, but
the Arts Council’s decision cuts off that aspiration.
I welcome the announcement yesterday that Arts Council England
agreed that it will invest £11 million in ENO in 2023-24, but
because opera plans significantly further ahead, a 12-month
commitment is very short term. Last November, the Arts Council
said it would ringfence £17 million for three years of
transitional funding. If we take the funding for year one, can we
assume that leaves about £2.7 million a year for the following
two years, compared to the Arts Council’s previous annual funding
of £12.8 million?
A funding cut of that size is shocking because English National
Opera has exceeded many of the success criteria set by the Arts
Council in terms of young audience growth, increased diversity
and representation, the ability to reshape opera and maintenance
of financial stability. The cut is accompanied by the
recommendation that the organisation relocates from London to
Manchester by 2026. I agree with others that does not make
strategic sense, given that Opera North already has a presence in
Manchester. The Arts Council needs to provide an opera strategy
so we can see its intent. Further discussions with the Arts
Council and English National Opera must lead to a fair funding
settlement and ensure that ENO can continue to deliver the very
best that it has to offer.
3.14pm
(Folkestone and Hythe)
(Con)
I congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for Bromley and
Chislehurst ( ) on securing this important
debate. He was right to remind us that when the Arts Council was
established, its principal role was to promote art for art’s sake
and to promote excellence, and through doing so to give people
the opportunity to experience excellence in the whole range of
arts, from figurative and decorative to performing arts, and
provide people with the opportunity to develop their talents.
That should be something that is accessible to the whole country,
and that is why the Arts Council was created. It is also
perfectly legitimate that the Arts Council, which is in receipt
of a large amount of public money, should be challenged and
scrutinised over how it allocates those funds and the strategies
that it deploys.
(Blackpool South) (Con)
My hon. Friend may be aware that two leading arts commentators
have published a pamphlet calling for the Arts Council to be
abolished. Their reason was that it has been taken over by
“highly-politicised staff” whose left-wing “woke agenda” is
generally failing to support the arts. That came on the back of a
case last year in which £3 million of taxpayers’ money was
provided to a company that published posters stating that
“straight white men” should “pass the power”. Does my hon. Friend
agree that decisions such as this will raise legitimate questions
among the general public about the level of oversight of some of
these Arts Council decisions?
My hon. Friend makes an important point. There should be a clear
strategy for allocated funds. It is right that the Arts Council
is an arm’s length body and free to make decisions based on
artistic merit that some people will agree with and others will
not.
However, there is a clear strategy for how that benefits the
whole nation, not parts of it. London receives a large amount of
money because we have larger national institutions here. They
demonstrate the benefit that they bring to the whole country, be
that through touring exhibitions and performances or through the
other cultural institutions around the country operated by the
Tate, the V&A and so on.
It is important that there is a clear strategy and the Arts
Council is held to account for it, because anyone who is in
receipt of public money should be held to account. It is right
that the funding strategy works for the national portfolio
organisations on a three-year settlement, because organisations
need to be able to plan for the future. While we welcome the
additional year’s money that has been granted to the ENO for the
coming year—it means, as my hon. Friend the Member for Bromley
and Chislehurst has said, that the 2023-24 season can go ahead—it
gives no certainty beyond that and does not enable the ENO to
make any further investment decisions. Even if the Arts Council
had said, “We want the ENO to try to increase revenue from other
sources,” that is not a compelling bid to take forward when the
public money that the ENO relies on is no longer guaranteed. Who
would match fund against public money that might not be there in
just over a year’s time?
There needs to be a degree of certainty. There will always be
more demands on the Arts Council than it can fulfil, and there
will always be people it has to let down, but that is why having
a clear strategy, plan and understanding with the organisations
that it funds is so important. It cannot be right to take a major
national institution such as the ENO that has been funded in a
certain way for many years and pull the rug out from under it
with very little notice; I understand that the ENO had 24 hours’
notice of the decision.
It would be perfectly legitimate for the Arts Council to say, “We
must review the way opera is funded, and we want a strategy for
that. We might want to look at how other revenue can support the
opera, but we are going to do that during a transition period.
What we are not going to do is create a cliff edge whereby the
required funding is not there.” As hon. Members have said, not
only has the decision had a direct impact on the ENO as an
organisation, but the cuts have had a knock-on impact on arts and
opera in the regions, which the Arts Council is there to support.
That is the best evidence of the lack of a clear strategy. The
Father of the House, my hon. Friend the Member for Worthing West
( ), raised that in his
intervention.
The Coliseum is subsidised by the ENO to the tune of about £2
million a year. If the ENO cannot support the Coliseum as a
building, who else will go into it? Who will pay those costs?
Will we be left in the invidious position of using public money
that should go into supporting performance arts to subsidise a
building that nobody can use? That, again, demonstrates the lack
of clear strategy. My constituency has organisations that benefit
from national portfolio funding, not least Creative Folkestone.
Less than 20% of its funding comes from the Arts Council; it has
a diverse form of income, and that is right, but the extra money
that it gets from the Arts Council enables it to do more, to do
better things and plan for the future.
At the end of this sorry saga, we need to get to a position where
the ENO can plan for the future and invest in the future. If that
is against a strategy to do more in the regions and more to reach
diverse audiences, it needs a fair funding settlement to enable
it to develop that strategy. We must recognise, too, that with
major cultural institutions such as the ENO, what we see on the
stage is, in some ways, the icing on the cake. There is a long
tail of people who rely on that institution being there—the
people who will develop their talents and may go on to work in
other companies, the regional companies and tours that will be
supported by that, and the people who are involved in costume
design and set design—and a great variety of projects that are
there to support people. My hon. Friend the Member for Gosport
(Dame ) mentioned the fantastic
Breathe project that the ENO ran. All those things are lost if
the ENO has no secure future. While yesterday’s announcement is
welcome, there has to be a longer-term plan, otherwise we will
simply be back in this position in a few months’ time.
3.20pm
(Cardiff West) (Lab)
I echo many of the comments that have been made. I thank the
right hon. Member for Bromley and Chislehurst ( )—
Just honourable.
I thank the noble Gentleman, or whatever he is, for securing the
debate. I also thank the former arts Minister, the hon. Member
for Gosport (Dame ). She appeared many times
before the Digital, Culture, Media and Sport Committee, and she
was a very refreshing Minister to have in front of us. I thank
her for the candid and supportive way in which she carried out
her duties as a Minister and for the work she did during covid to
keep many cultural institutions going. I also thank my hon.
Friends, including my right hon. and learned Friend the Member
for Camberwell and Peckham (Ms Harman), who has campaigned
assiduously on this issue.
I mentioned the Welsh National Opera earlier, because when this
debate about Arts Council England started, it
focused—understandably, perhaps—on the decisions around the
English National Opera, but in some ways, what was done around
the Welsh National Opera was even more invidious, or at least as
invidious, because it signalled that this was not a rational,
strategic decision-making process by Arts Council England. Like
the hon. Member for Gosport, I would normally express support and
admiration for the way that Arts Council England goes about
things. However, rather than being a strategic,
well-thought-through plan for the arts, it resembled more an
emotional spasm of some sort, as a result of wanting to do
something very quickly to meet the perceived needs of the
Secretary of State at the time, the right hon. Member for Mid
Bedfordshire (Ms Dorries). We are now told by the former
Secretary of State, Ministers and Government Members that that
was not what the Secretary of State wanted all along, which makes
the whole affair all the more strange.
One thing that is perhaps good about this whole incident is that
it gives us an opportunity to highlight the fact that the Welsh
National Opera is an opera company for Wales and England, despite
its name. It is value for money because we have a proper national
opera company with an international reputation that can serve
both England and Wales, including, when it goes on tour, the
parts of England that are not often well served by other cultural
institutions. That is an integrated system for opera across
England and Wales.
Arts Council England decided to cut a third of the funding that
it provides to the Welsh National Opera for its touring work in
England. That includes many different parts of England, such as
Liverpool; the west midlands, which is the part of Arts Council
England that looks after the Welsh National Opera in terms of its
administration; the west of England, in places such as Bristol;
and Southampton, Oxford and elsewhere. It is right that these
touring opera companies form an essential part of our regional
theatres right across the country.
When Arts Council England appeared before the Digital, Culture,
Media and Sport Committee, I was interested to know what its
decision-making process was, so I asked Darren Henley whether he
had consulted the Arts Council of Wales prior to the decision
being taken to cut the funding to the Welsh National Opera. He
waffled for a bit, and I had to interrupt him to get him to
answer the question, at which point he said:
“They were aware just before the announcement was made, but we
didn’t consult them in the announcement”.
I put it to him and to Members here today that it is a
dereliction of duty for a decision that has profound
implications—as we know, it has resulted in Liverpool being
denied any opera whatsoever—to be taken in that haphazard
way.
There are no SNP Members here, so I think we are all Unionists in
this room. The hon. Member for Blackpool South () was born in Newport, and he
understands the importance of the Union. Arts Council England did
not consult the Arts Council of Wales on a decision that has a
profound implication for the future of that opera company and the
whole system of opera around the country, and that undermines the
whole so-called levelling-up agenda that we were told this
decision making was about.
I profoundly believe that creativity is a good thing in and of
itself. I profoundly believe that this country’s greatest
strength, or certainly one of its greatest, is its creative
industries, and that we are one of the few countries in the world
that is a net exporter. Our creative industries are a huge earner
for our country and culturally enrich us all. Quite frankly, as a
white, heterosexual male from a working-class background, I am
sick of people speaking on my behalf, and talking about wokeism
and all the rest of it. The arts and culture are profoundly
important to enriching our lives, and we should all stand up for
them, whatever our backgrounds.
Let us hope that this was just an emotional spasm. I say to Arts
Council England: please, get your act together and start thinking
about these things. The arm’s length principle is important, but
it does not mean being so arm’s length as to not even consult the
Arts Council of Wales. That is not what the arm’s length
principle is about, so Arts Council England should get its act
back together, and let us return to some sense around this
issue.
(in the Chair)
Before I call , let me say that although
this is such an important debate, I cannot extend the time, so we
are now on something more like four minutes for each Back
Bencher.
3.26pm
(Stoke-on-Trent North)
(Con)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Bone.
I congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for Bromley and
Chislehurst ( ) on securing this important
debate. Culture is so important. I was delighted to spend time
before the Christmas break at Springhead Primary School in Talke
Pits, which worked closely with the Royal Shakespeare Company and
the New Vic Theatre to stage a First Encounters production of
Shakespeare’s “Twelfth Night”. Seeing kids as young as reception
sat engrossed throughout that play, having learned about it in
advance, was very special indeed. Mr Anderson, the headteacher,
is doing a fine job.
My mother always told me that I should learn to read the room,
but perhaps I am about to go against that—although I am sure that
will not shock many Members here. I want to congratulate Arts
Council England on its investment in the great city of
Stoke-on-Trent. This £6.8 million investment, from 2023 to 2026,
has taken us from having one national portfolio organisation—the
New Vic, which is actually in neighbouring
Newcastle-under-Lyme—to now having eight such organisations. They
include the fantastic Portland Inn Project, based in
Stoke-on-Trent North, which will have a profoundly positive
impact.
Because of that investment, Stoke-on-Trent City Council, under
its leader Councillor Abi Brown and Councillor Lorraine
Beardmore, the relevant cabinet member, has been working
tirelessly to look at how we can improve that partnership working
further. Arts Council England has made Stoke-on-Trent a priority
place and become a key member of the Stoke-on-Trent creative city
partnership, which shows how the relationship continues to
evolve. Indeed, it seems to have got the message that levelling
up means making sure that places such as Stoke-on-Trent can
celebrate their culture, history and heritage. We note that the
levelling-up White Paper contained a Government promise that
Stoke-on-Trent and Manchester would receive a special focus, to
make the most of our cities’ industrial heritage.
The city has responded to that with a clear vision and strategy
to establish an international ceramics centre, which will tie
together world-class collections, celebrate the growth of
contemporary craft ceramics and expand on our fantastic advanced
ceramics sector. At the heart of that vision is a plan for our
main museum, the Potteries Museum and Art Gallery, based in
Hanley, working with Staffordshire and Keele Universities, as
well as Stoke Creates, to secure a £5 million investment from the
Arts Council’s cultural development fund to create new spaces
through a new research centre and to redesign the layout of the
fantastic ceramics that we have to display. That work will build
on the city council’s £4.7 million Spitfire Gallery development,
which houses the city’s Mk XVI Spitfire. Obviously, the Spitfire
was designed in Butt Lane—where I am proud to live as a
resident—by Reginald J. Mitchell, a great local hero, without
whose efforts we would not have won the battle of Britain. The
plan also builds on the £1.5 million relocation of the archive
service from Hanley library.
We know that the decision is due in March. I am sure that Arts
Council England is listening, and I am sure that the Minister
will want to see Stoke-on-Trent get some more, because he has
learned that once we get a taste of funding, we always want more.
I look forward to more coming our way in Stoke-on-Trent. The
clear notice from me is that a promise has been made and must now
be delivered. We need major investment to continue to deliver new
jobs and more high-skilled opportunities for people who want to
study, understand and come to visit our great city, and to enable
Stokies to be at the cultural heart of our great country.
3.29pm
(Newbury) (Con)
I congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for Bromley and
Chislehurst ( ) on securing this debate. I
recognise all the things that he referred to in his opening
remarks—a lack of transparency, accountability and engagement
with the sector—in a decision that was reached on a treasured
regional theatre in my constituency, the Watermill Theatre. It
was truly a bolt from the blue for it to learn that there has
been a 100% cut in its funding for the next three years.
One thing that has been frustrating in the process since then is
the fact that the Arts Council did not really substantiate its
decision with reasons, and it was so reluctant to produce written
reasons when we invited it to do so. I had to remind the council
that it is a public body and susceptible to judicial review. When
the decision came, it was impossible to discern why the Watermill
did not meet the relevant criteria. It had met them all in every
previous round of funding and was not alerted to the fact that
any criteria had changed. The Arts Council was unable to explain
why, if it was a regional decision based on levelling up, the
other theatre in Newbury, which we also love, was successful when
the Watermill was not. Eliciting the final decision was like
getting blood out of a stone, and when it came it simply set out
generalities, such as the assertion that the Watermill lacked
ambition.
The Watermill is an 18th-century watermill that has been
converted into a theatre. I cannot improve on the description
written in The Mail on Sunday, which said:
“What a location! Forget the glitz of the West End: try walking
up a country lane, past waddling ducks, to this lovely little
theatre in a converted mill.”
Its aesthetic beauty as a venue is absolutely treasured by our
community, but we also treasure the quality and diversity of its
productions. It is not just a standard repertory theatre that
takes shows on tour: it produces its own work and pumps it around
the country. It most recent touring production of “Spike” went
from the Watermill to Blackpool, Glasgow, Cardiff and Darlington.
It is also an artery theatre through which West End productions
come and other productions flow on to international destinations,
including Broadway.
The theatre takes its commitment to diversity and improving
access seriously. It is in the heart of a tiny village, so in
2022 it did a rural tour. “Camp Albion” took its productions to
villages, which are often completely neglected in the consumption
of the arts. Overall, the theatre reaches 20,000 people annually
through its various community engagement programmes, including
children with autism, deafness and many other special needs. It
has a deep commitment to the Arts Council’s outcomes, which the
council even acknowledged in its decision letter.
We have been confronted with a deeply disappointing decision. We
have found it incredibly difficult to know what mandate the Arts
Council was working to, or why. I find it difficult to avoid the
conclusion that this was capricious decision making, which
undermines the status of the Arts Council as a guarantor of our
national arts output. If the council is watching, I respectfully
request that it reverse its decision because it has devastating
consequences for the future of the Watermill Theatre in
Newbury.
(in the Chair)
I will call the Father of the House next; I am grateful to him
for being willing to wait until the end.
3.33pm
(Worthing West) (Con)
That is because I am going to go back in time and it might bore
other people, Mr Bone. The first chairman of the Arts Council I
met was Sir Ernest Pooley, who succeeded John Maynard Keynes two
years after I was born. Given that Arts Council England is for
the encouragement of music and the arts, Pooley and Keynes would
have been delighted at the competence with which it took our
cultural institutions through the pandemic. The three rounds of
emergency funding were executed in a way that nobody criticised.
It was quite remarkable, and very effective.
The most recent Arts Council England report available on its
website is from 2020-21. The chairman, Sir Nicholas Serota, talks
about the three outcomes and the four investment principles, none
of which give any indication that the council might have
conceived cutting off the ENO and the Coliseum at the knees.
Tributes to those who have cared for, led and participated in the
ENO and the Coliseum should be put on record. I will say again
that Hazel and Vernon Ellis, together with the major public
funders and private individuals and trusts, deserve to be
recognised. One of those funders was the National Lottery through
Arts Council England. I do not know whether those taking the
decision that was announced recently were aware of the Arts
Council England funding for the Coliseum and its restoration, so
that Sir Oswald Stoll’s Frank Matcham theatre could be restored
on the anniversary of its first opening.
I think mistakes were made. I do not how much of it was to do
with the Government, how much of it was to do with Arts Council
England, and how much of it was to do with time pressures. The
fact is that what was done clearly would not work and was not
right, and it seems to me that the principle, both for Arts
Council England and for the Government, is to say, “Is it
necessary, is it right and will it work?” I will leave it to the
Minister to explain not what has gone wrong but how he will put
things right. I suggest that, afterwards, he writes to the
Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities, saying that
the Worthing Borough Council bid for the connected cultural mile
from the railway station to the lido, going past the museum,
should be approved.
3.35pm
(Worsley and Eccles South)
(Lab)
I declare that I am chair of the all-party parliamentary group on
classical music. It is a pleasure to speak with you in the Chair,
Mr Bone. I thank the hon. Member for Bromley and Chislehurst
( ) for securing the debate and
for the way he opened it, and all right hon. and hon. Members who
have contributed to it.
I start by congratulating colleagues across both Houses and the
wider arts sector on achieving the apparent 12-month reprieve
announced yesterday for the funding of the English National
Opera. It does not settle all the questions raised about the
damage done by the decision, but I am pleased that there can at
least be a longer-term conversation about the ENO’s future, which
is right. The ENO has worked hard to increase access to opera,
bringing it to younger and more diverse audiences. It has
delivered innovative education and health projects throughout the
country, and it is right that this is finally being recognised.
However, the back and forth of the decision has caused acute
anxiety among the ENO’s 300 full-time employees and the 600
freelancers whose job security was put at risk. The screeching
U-turn is further indication of the total lack of strategic
planning involved in the national portfolio organisation funding
decisions that we have been debating.
First, I want to reflect on the arm’s length principle of arts
funding, which we have heard about in the debate. At the core of
the recent dispute about arts funding is the issue of who makes
decisions about arts funding and what the criteria for those
decisions are. When the answers to those questions are unclear,
there will always be discontent and frustration about how the
investment of taxpayers’ money is being made.
My hon. Friend makes a very good point: there is a lack of
transparency. I am very lucky that the two main theatres in my
constituency, the Bush and the Lyric, have maintained their
grants—in one case, it has slightly increased—but every
organisation was on tenterhooks waiting for the announcements,
and they will be next time as well, because they have no idea on
what basis Arts Council England makes a decision. Other theatres
in London, such as the Donmar Warehouse, have lost 100% of their
funding. What is the rationale behind this?
Indeed. It is important to focus on that principle. The arm’s
length principle has been in operation since public subsidy for
the arts began in the aftermath of the second world war. At the
inception of the original Arts Council, Keynes wrote that:
“It should be a permanent body, independent in constitution…but
financed by the Treasury”.
However, as we have heard, the former Culture Secretary, the
right hon. Member for Mid Bedfordshire (Ms Dorries), issued a
clear instruction to Arts Council England last year and ordered
it to move money outside the capital through a reduction in the
London budget. Even the places at which the additional investment
would be targeted were decided with input from DCMS, with
removals and changes to the “Let’s Create” priority places, which
had been originally identified in Arts Council England’s 2020
strategy.
As we heard earlier, the former Culture Secretary has now
criticised the decisions made by Arts Council England for their
“undue political bias”, and accused the leadership of pulling a
“stunt” to try to reverse levelling up. We have heard a variety
of ways of describing the very strange decision making, but we
have to see that it was this directive that led Arts Council
England to the decision to make cuts to the English National
Opera, the Welsh National Opera, Glyndebourne’s touring and other
organisations, such as the Britten Sinfonia, the Oldham Coliseum
and the Donmar Warehouse. The comments made show that Ministers
and Arts Council England had not thought through the implications
of the directive, both on art forms such as opera and on the
other arts organisations I mentioned.
(North East Hertfordshire)
(Con)
Will the hon. Lady give way, just for one second, so that I can
put on the record my views about the English National Opera?
No; I will run out of time.
Through the directive, Ministers and Arts Council England
reallocated a shrinking budget for London. I recommend to the
Minister an excellent blog post from Border Crossings that can be
found on Twitter and makes the point that we cannot level up at
the same time as cutting. That is the problem: the aims have
become confused. It is this inconsistency and short-sightedness
that is so frustrating for so many arts organisations.
The second major issue with the NPO decisions—we have heard much
about this in the debate—is the glaring lack of any art
form-specific strategy, planning or consultation. Opera is the
major victim of this approach. Before the reprieve—the reversal
of the ENO decision—overall funding for the sector was down by 11
%. It is reckless and irresponsible to remove £19 million of
funding with no strategy in place. The decisions should be based
on evidence and audience data, not on a whim.
Under such acute constraints, it is the expense of touring that
is often the first activity to be sacrificed, as we are seeing
already. As we have heard, Glyndebourne has had the subsidy for
its touring budget halved, so has been forced to scrap its entire
autumn tour, which would have held performances in Liverpool,
Canterbury, Norwich and Milton Keynes. As my hon. Friend the
Member for Cardiff West () rightly said, Welsh National
Opera has responded to a 35% cut by removing Liverpool from its
touring plans. As we have heard, it is estimated that the cuts to
those two companies alone will deprive 23,000 people from access
to opera throughout the country. In addition to that gap, the
consequences for the arts ecosystem will be severe, given that
there are already pressures on the workforce and on skills
retention.
Jennifer Johnston is a mezzo-soprano who was born in Liverpool.
She told me about the impact that the Arts Council funding
allocations will have on young students at the Liverpool
Philharmonic Youth Choir. These young people in Liverpool come
from backgrounds where there is no money for singing lessons,
with their fees for the choir paid by bursaries. She said:
“Now that live staged opera isn’t going to come to the city,
these young singers won’t have a chance to see any at all. They
don’t have funds to travel, and the educational workshops carried
out by both Welsh National Opera and Glyndebourne now won’t
happen.
It’s a simple equation—inspire a young person by showing them
excellence in an artform and demonstrate what they could achieve
if given the chance, defeating assumptions of elitism and
thoughts of ‘Opera’s for posh people, not for me’.
These young people now won’t have the chance to be exposed to,
and be inspired by, live staged opera, and are unlikely to want
to train as an opera singer in the future. Arts Council England
funding cuts will therefore affect life choices, making a
nonsense of the idea of ‘levelling up’.”
I am interested to hear the Minister’s response to those
comments. How does his Department intend to ensure that there is
support for the next generation of England’s opera singers when
there is no coherence to the decisions being made about the
sector?
There are other arts organisations that have had their income
slashed in this funding round, with little apparent sense in the
decisions. We have heard that Britten Sinfonia was entirely cut
from the NPO programme, despite being the only orchestra based in
the east of England. Many other regional orchestras were funded
only at standstill. Meanwhile, the funding settlement for
producing theatres is short-sighted and risks having a negative
impact on the programming of regional theatres—as we have heard
in the debate—as well as compromising the UK’s cultural
reputation in the longer term. Sam Mendes, the former chief
executive of the Donmar Warehouse, has been predicted that it
will “wreak long-lasting havoc” on the industry.
Speaking of the Donmar Warehouse, it received a 100% cut in its
Arts Council funding. Its representatives told me that the hit to
their budget means they will no longer be able to create work
outside London and will have to reduce or cease altogether their
excellent CATALYST programme, which supports 13 people a year
with paid training to develop the next generation of writers,
artists and administrators. Given the flexibility in exit funding
that has suddenly been found by Arts Council England for ENO,
will the Minister say whether Minister similar flexibility can be
found for the Donmar Warehouse? It is really important that Arts
Council England is transparent and equitable in its funding
processes, as the hon. Member for Bromley and Chislehurst said
earlier.
The combination of a top-down approach from DCMS and poor
planning have given the impression that the Government’s goal is
more about political gimmickry around levelling up than a true
rebalancing of power to the regions. It is a fact that 70% of the
organisations that are being entirely cut from the programme are
based outside London, including the Oldham Coliseum, the Britten
Sinfonia and, as highlighted so effectively by the hon. Member
for Newbury (), the Watermill Theatre. In
addition, the lack of consultation, which has been most clearly
evidenced by all the reaction to the decision about ENO, speaks
of insincerity in making the changes. That risks the very
existence of our essential cultural organisations and makes it
more difficult to achieve regional parity in arts provision.
Before I move on, I want to make the point that it has rarely
been more important to get these decisions right, because having
weathered the challenges of the covid pandemic—the Father of the
House said that situation was well handled by Arts Council
England—and a decade of funding cuts to the arts, organisations
now face a perfect storm of other challenges, including increased
energy and operating costs and a cost of living squeeze on their
audiences.
The U-turn on ENO is an admission that the choices announced in
November were not well considered. This situation could have been
avoided if there had been proper consultation with the sector, as
many contributors to this debate have said. I hope that DCMS will
now undertake an internal assessment of the process behind the
NPO funding round for 2023 to 2026, so that this chaotic approach
is never repeated. It is vital that we now have a transparent and
equitable process.
There are still some important decisions to be made to ensure
that ENO can continue and so that future decisions are made based
on strategy and in consultation with the sector, with a
particular focus on supporting the organisations that we have
heard about today, such as the Donmar Warehouse, Welsh National
Opera, the Glyndebourne tour and the Watermill Theatre. They need
to continue their vital work outside London and I hope to hear
more from the Minister about what can be done to ensure that.
3.46pm
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Digital, Culture,
Media and Sport ()
I thank my hon. Friend the Member for Bromley and Chislehurst
( ) for securing this debate and
other Members for their thoughtful contributions.
I am pleased that a number of debates on these issues have been
held—both in this House and in the other place—over the last
couple of months; that clearly demonstrates the ongoing interest
in our incredible arts and culture. As I have stated on previous
occasions, access to high-quality arts and culture needs to be
more fairly spread. That is why we asked Arts Council England to
ensure that funding is distributed more equally right across the
country. As my ministerial colleagues have said in written
ministerial statements, the Arts Council has fulfilled these
ambitions and we are not apologetic about delivering on our
policy commitments.
I will not go over past ground in respect of the investment
programme or how it works, because I am keen that we think about
the big picture today, but it is important to point out that this
funding round will support a record number of organisations—a
total of 990. That means we will be able to reach more people in
more places than ever before. Every region in England outside
London is seeing an increase in funding. For the avoidance of
doubt, that includes the south-east: this is not just a
north/south matter.
Every region in England, including London, is seeing an increase
in the number of organisations that are being funded. Levelling
Up for Culture Places, a list of 109 places that have been
identified as having had historically low cultural investment and
engagement, such as those my hon. Friend the Member for
Stoke-on-Trent North () mentioned, will see
investment almost double, with 192 organisations in those areas
receiving £130 million over the next three years. When compared
with the previous investment programme, that is equivalent to a
95% increase in investment. Many places that were not in the last
portfolio—such as Stoke-on-Trent, Bolsover, Mansfield and
Blackburn with Darwen—will now become home to funded
organisations. I hope this will be transformative for many
communities throughout the country.
There were a record number of applications to the 2023-26
investment programme, which is, as many will know, a competitive
fund. It is usual that organisations will come in and out of the
NPO. To support organisations leaving the portfolio, for the
first time ever the Arts Council made available transition
funding which, subject to application, allows organisations
leaving the portfolio to access 12 months of funding from the
point of announcement.
On the ENO specifically, no doubt Members have learned of the
announcement that was made yesterday, which was mentioned in the
debate. I am very pleased that the Arts Council has agreed to
invest £11.46 million of funding in the ENO for the period from
April 2023 to March 2024. This is to sustain a programme of work
at the ENO’s home, the London Coliseum, and at the same time to
help the ENO with planning work associated with considering a new
base outside of London by 2026 and the development of a new
business model for its future operation.
We will also continue to deliver planned activity in London
during the year, including an appropriate level of education and
community engagement. We are delighted that this has been
negotiated. Both sides have also agreed to work together to reach
an agreement by the end of March this year on a further two years
of funding to support the future of the organisation, subject to
successful application. They are also working together on the
future running of the Coliseum, and a future base. Taking note of
many of the points that have been raised, I hope that is
something that can be arranged as soon as possible.
We all appreciate that there has been progress, and that is
welcome, but I hope the Minister will accept that this is not a
complete answer. I urge him, when he speaks to the Arts Council,
to bear in mind that in opera the programmes need to be planned a
minimum of 18 months, and very frequently three to four years,
beforehand. Even two years will not be enough to mount a serious
programme of work, wherever it is. Flexibility needs to be shown
on the timeframes so that we get decent work available in and
outside London.
My hon. Friend has made that point clearly. I know that those
discussions are ongoing. I hope we will hear something by the end
of March.
ACE’s investment in opera, orchestras and other classical
organisations will represent around 80% of all investment in
music. Through the ’23 to ’26 investment programme, opera will
continue to be well funded, with it remaining at around 40% of
overall investment in music. Excluding the funding for the ENO,
that is more than £30 million per year for opera alone.
Organisations such as English Touring Opera and the Birmingham
Opera Company will receive increased funding, and there are many
new joiners, such as OperaUpClose and Pegasus Opera Company. The
Royal Opera House and Opera North will continue to be funded.
Some Members have set out a view that where an organisation is
headquartered is a blunt instrument when it comes to levelling
up. My noble Friend the Minister for Arts set out a view on this
late last year. He said:
“Touring is important…We do not, in any respect, disparage or
undervalue that vital work, but… There is a difference in having
an organisation based in your community from just being able to
visit it as it passes through your town or city.”—[Official
Report, House of Lords, 15 December 2022; Vol. 826, c. 852.]
That said, the Government will continue to work with the Arts
Council to understand all the impacts of its investment in arts
and culture, including opera.
We remain committed to supporting the capital. We recognise and
appreciate that London is a leading cultural centre, with
organisations that do not just benefit the whole country but
greatly enhance the UK’s international reputation as a home of
world-class arts and culture. That is clearly reflected in the
next investment programme: around a third of the investment will
be spent in London, equivalent to approximately £143 million per
year for the capital. Historically, Arts Council spending per
capita in London has always been significantly higher than in the
rest of the country, at £21 per capita in London but just £6 per
capita in the rest of England.
If I have a spare place, I could invite the Minister to come to
“Carmen” with me in a week-and-a-half’s time at the ENO. Most
people there will not be Londoners; people come to London for the
show, so I think that those figures are not quite right.
I say to the Arts Council and the ENO, through the Minister, that
if they had sat down together they could have worked out a better
future. There are six weeks now for the Minister to encourage
them to do that. If they do not succeed, he should come back here
and there will be a much rougher debate.
My hon. Friend has obviously missed the other debates, because
they were fairly rough, I have to say.
That was the warm-up!
There have been questions about the arm’s length principle. I
want to make clear that were any arm’s length body, including the
Arts Council, to breach the terms set by the Government, or to be
found to be acting unlawfully, we would take the steps necessary
to review the matter and determine the appropriate action.
There has been criticism of the board. I do not think it is fair
to totally criticise the expertise that we have on many of those
boards. They have a great deal of expertise in the performing
arts. The board features musicians, concert hall chief
executives, a Royal Shakespeare Company governor, a theatre chief
executive—I could go on. Those are people who are obviously
interested in the arts.
On the process, applicants receive lots of guidance, all of which
is set out very clearly. Applicants know the criteria they are
applying against and will have received, or be in the process of
receiving, feedback on their applications. The Arts Council also
runs webinars and is available to support organisations as they
make those applications. In addition, there is a complaints
process that is published on its website. If anybody has concerns
about any process that has taken place, they can follow that. I
will happily speak to hon. Members if they want more
information.
I believe the arm’s length principle is right, and successive
Governments have observed that. That said, no organisation should
avoid scrutiny. A number of points have been raised today,
particularly around consultation, and I will raise those with the
Arts Minister, my noble Friend .
My hon. Friend the Member for Gosport (Dame ) was right that we should
point out that there have been no cuts to the Arts Council’s core
cash settlement. In fact, in the spending review, the Government
increased that settlement by more than £43 million over the
period from April 2022 to March 2025. That means that the Arts
Council investment programme will soon be supporting more
organisations in more places than ever before, all off the back
of our unprecedented cultural recovery fund, which supported
around 5,000 organisations and sites during the pandemic, and the
ongoing increased rates of creative tax reliefs.
I am grateful for the opportunity to set out how the
Government—
Will the Minister give way?
No, I am going to finish.
The Government’s extensive programme of support, through the Arts
Council national portfolio organisation programme, is benefiting
areas across England, and more of them. The Government’s support
for the arts and culture across the country does, of course,
stretch beyond national portfolio funding. It also includes our
cultural investment fund, creative industries tax reliefs,
support for business rate payers, support through the
levelling-up fund and the energy bill relief scheme, and that is
not to mention our unprecedented support during the pandemic.
I strongly believe that that investment will ensure that our
world-class arts and culture continue to thrive into the future
and across all parts of the country. I recognise the strong
representations made in today’s debate, which I can assure right
hon. and hon. Members I will bring to the attention of my noble
Friend the Arts Minister.
3.58pm
I thank all Members who have attended the debate: the Father and
Mother of the House and many others. That shows how seriously
this is taken, which I hope is something the Minister will take
back. This is something people care about strongly.
Will my hon. Friend give way?
I will give way to my right hon. and learned Friend because I
know he wants to say something positive about English National
Opera.
I am so sorry that I arrived late. I wanted to support my hon.
Friend in what he had to say about the English National Opera,
which we have discussed. It is so important that we preserve that
institution, which has done so much to bring opera to the
people.
That is a good message for the Minister to take away. The ENO is
in the forefront of making art accessible to people who do not
have a traditional background in opera, which I did not when I
first took an interest as a young lad living in a semi-detached
house in Hornchurch. My journey was not dissimilar to that of the
former Secretary of State, my right hon. Friend the Member for
Mid Bedfordshire (Ms Dorries), in coming to it as an art
form.
Opera has enriched my life, and I declare my interest—which I do
not think is unknown—as chair of the all-party parliamentary
group on opera. That is the message I want the Minister to take
away. This is not a fringe matter; it is central to our arts
offer in this country. Although I accept that much good work is
done by the Arts Council, something has gone badly wrong in this
funding round.
There is a legitimate responsibility on Government to intervene
when governance, process and consultation do not come up to the
standards that we normally expect in a public body. That gives us
the chance to put that right and get back on track with an arm’s
length body. It is not, I respectfully suggest, a reason to stand
back and do nothing. I am sure the Minister will take the
strength of feeling in this debate back to his colleagues in the
Government and ensure that that gets to the Arts Council
itself.
Question put and agreed to.
Resolved,
That this House has considered the funding decisions of Arts
Council England.
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