The Prime Minister (Rishi Sunak) The whole House will join me in
remembering the victims of the horrific Manchester Arena bombing
six years ago today. Our thoughts are with them and their families.
Our thoughts are also with the family of Lee Rigby on the 10th
anniversary of his murder, and I pay tribute to his son Jack, who
is honouring his father’s memory by raising money for other
bereaved military children. As Jack’s mum says, Lee would be very
proud. I have just...Request free trial
The Prime Minister ()
The whole House will join me in remembering the victims of the
horrific Manchester Arena bombing six years ago today. Our
thoughts are with them and their families. Our thoughts are also
with the family of Lee Rigby on the 10th anniversary of his
murder, and I pay tribute to his son Jack, who is honouring his
father’s memory by raising money for other bereaved military
children. As Jack’s mum says, Lee would be very proud.
I have just returned from the G7 summit in Japan, where I was
humbled to be the first Prime Minister of the United Kingdom to
visit Hiroshima. On behalf of this House and the British people,
I recorded our great sorrow at the destruction and human
suffering that occurred there, and our fervent resolve that it
should never again be necessary to use nuclear weapons.
As I report to the House on the G7 Summit, I want to address
head-on a mistaken view that is heard too often: the idea that
Britain is somehow in retreat from the world stage, or that our
influence is in decline. I reject that utterly. What we have seen
in recent months is this Conservative Government delivering the
priorities of the British people, and bringing our global
influence to bear on some of the world’s biggest challenges.
Nowhere is that clearer than on Ukraine.
It was a pleasure and a privilege to welcome my friend President
Zelensky back to the UK last week. His attendance at the G7
summit was a historic moment. When Putin launched his war, he
gambled that our resolve would falter, but he was wrong then, and
he is wrong now. Russia’s military is failing on the battlefield;
its economy is failing at home, as we tighten the stranglehold of
sanctions; and the image of the G7 leaders standing shoulder to
shoulder with President Zelensky in Hiroshima sent a powerful
message to the world: we will stand with Ukraine for as long as
it takes.
Of course, we have seen a huge collective effort across our
allies, and not least from the United States, but I am incredibly
proud of our role at the forefront of international support for
Ukraine. We were the first country in the world to train
Ukrainian troops; the first in Europe to provide lethal weapons;
the first to commit tanks; and, just this month, the first to
provide long-range weapons. Now we are at the forefront of a
coalition to train and equip the Ukrainian air force. We gave
£2.3 billion in miliary aid last year—that is second only to the
United States—and will match or exceed that this year. Putin
should know that we are not going anywhere. We know that Ukraine
will not only win the war, but can and will win a just and
lasting peace, based on respect for international law, the
principles of the UN charter, and territorial integrity and
sovereignty.
We bring the same resolve to the biggest challenge to the
long-term security and prosperity of our age: China. As the G7
showed, the UK’s response is completely aligned with that of our
allies. We are working with others to strengthen our defence ties
across the Indo-Pacific; diversify our supply chains in areas
such as critical minerals and semiconductors; and prevent China
from using economic coercion to interfere with the sovereignty of
others—concrete actions, not rhetoric.
Our economic security is not just about managing the risks of
China. We are taking advantage of our post-Brexit freedoms with a
hugely ambitious trade policy. We have concluded negotiations on
the comprehensive and progressive agreement for trans-Pacific
partnership—a trade deal with the world’s fastest growing region.
We have signed critical minerals partnerships with Canada and
Australia, and a semiconductor partnership with Japan. The
Windsor framework secures the free flow of trade within our UK
internal market, and on Friday, we announced almost £18 billion
of new investment into the UK from Japanese businesses. That is a
huge vote of confidence in the United Kingdom, creating
significant numbers of good, well-paid jobs, and helping to grow
the economy.
And we are acting globally to tackle illegal migration. It is the
British Government who will determine who comes to Britain. We
must stop the boats and break the business model of the criminal
gangs. To do that, we are deepening international co-operation to
tackle illegal migration, through new deals with Albania, France
and, starting just at last week’s Council of Europe, with the EU
border force, too. At this weekend’s summit, we have secured
agreement that we will increase G7 co-operation. So our foreign
policy is clearly delivering for the British people. By
strengthening our relationships with old friends and new, from
the Indo-Pacific to Washington to Europe, we are delivering a
diplomatic dividend for the UK.
That is not all. We have announced billions more for our
defence—the largest contributor in Europe to NATO. We have signed
an historic agreement to design and build the AUKUS submarine,
giving the UK, Australia and the US interoperable submarine
fleets in the Atlantic and the Pacific. We have launched a new
programme to build the fighter jets of the future with Italy and
Japan. We have announced that in 2025, the carrier strike group
will return to the Indo-Pacific once more, and in Sudan, the
British military completed the largest evacuation of any country.
If anyone thinks the UK is no longer able to wield hard power in
defence of our values, just ask the Ukrainian soldiers driving
British tanks or firing our long-range missiles.
All that is how we will prosper at home and defend our values
abroad. That is how our foreign policy is delivering for the
British people, and that is why, on the world stage, Britain is
forging ahead—confident, proud and free. I commend this statement
to the House.
Mr Speaker
I call the Leader of the Opposition.
3.41pm
(Holborn and St Pancras)
(Lab)
I thank the Prime Minister for advance sight of his statement,
and I join him in his comments in remembering the victims of the
Manchester Arena bombing and in marking the awful murder of Lee
Rigby.
The war in Ukraine is entering a critical stage. Freedom must win
out over tyranny, and Putin’s aggression must fail. As the
Ukrainians continue to defend themselves and prepare for an
offensive to push Putin’s forces out, it is crucial that they
know the nations of the G7 continue to support their fight
without waver. We will stand with them for as long as it takes.
We will stand with them because their decisive victory is the
route to a comprehensive, just and lasting peace.
Therefore, Labour welcomes the strong show of support for
President Zelensky. We welcome the decision by our partners on
F-16 fighter jets. We also welcome restrictions on exports that
aid the Russian war machine, and we welcome the tightening of the
vice on the mineral trade that is funding Putin’s aggression. I
urge the Prime Minister to proscribe the Wagner Group as
terrorists and to ensure Britain’s sanctions are not just in
place, but enforced. No one has been fined for breaching
sanctions since the war began.
As I told President Zelensky when I met him in Kyiv, whichever
party is in power in the UK, there will be no let-up in Britain’s
resolve. We will continue to support Ukraine’s military and its
people in their quest for freedom, peace and justice. When their
moment of victory comes, we will be there to help them rebuild
from the rubble of war. Does the Prime Minister agree with me
that, when it comes to Ukraine, it is important that we continue
to show that we are united across this House?
I also welcome the commitment to de-risk our economic
relationship with China. It is in our national interest to engage
with China. It will be a crucial global partner in the effort to
reach net zero, and we have a trading relationship worth £100
billion. But that pursuit should never come at the cost of
economic security, and we should never leave ourselves vulnerable
to economic coercion. We must be clear-eyed about the facts.
China is increasingly aggressive in the Pacific. It shows disdain
for democratic values and human rights, and it is seeking to
exploit economic leverage. A decade of ignoring these facts and
Tory Governments cosying up to Beijing has gifted the Chinese
Communist party a stake in Britain’s key infrastructure. We need
to change tack and Labour is willing to work with the Government
on this. It is time for a full audit of UK-China relations, and
to work more consistently with our allies to develop a long-term
plan for western engagement and a long-term plan for economic
security because—as this winter has shown us—in the modern world,
economic security is national security.
As the world races to invest in new technologies and to make its
supply chains more robust, we must make sure that British
businesses can take advantage. The Prime Minister has rightly
pointed out the importance of the semiconductor industry:
semiconductors are the brains of our electronic devices,
indispensable components of cutting-edge manufacturing. The US
and the EU have big plans to grow and nurture their sectors, to
remove any vulnerabilities from their supply chains. We have
waited a long time for the UK to present its strategy—it finally
arrived last week—and an industry leader described it as “frankly
flaccid”. Does that worry the Prime Minister as much as it
worries me?
While others build resilience and seize opportunities, this
Government seem content with managed decline, and this is not the
only area where I fear we are being left behind. The US and the
EU used the G7 to continue important talks that would allow
European companies to share in billions of dollars of US tax
incentives for electric vehicles and green technologies, and vice
versa. Last week, we saw warnings about the future of the UK car
industry. People who work in the sector are very worried. They
want leadership, so can the Prime Minister confirm that his
Government will secure the same or better access for British
manufacturers, and when can we expect to hear progress on
this?
When the Inflation Reduction Act was passed, the Government’s
response was not to outline what opportunities it offered to
Britain; it was to say that it was “dangerous”, and to suggest
that an active industrial strategy is not the British way. Wake
up—it is not the 1980s anymore. A race is on. We need to be in it
and we need to win our share of the jobs of the future. We cannot
afford to be stuck in the changing rooms complaining about how
unfair life is.
As the war in Europe continues to rage, Hiroshima was a fitting
stage for the G7 summit. A city that has seen unimaginable
horrors has risen from its past. It can serve as an inspiration
for those in Ukraine who fight daily for their freedom. Their
future can be bright. From Ukraine to China to climate change,
today’s challenges are big, but if we stay united with our allies
and partners—if we work together—they are not insurmountable and,
if we are focused, if we have a plan, the economic opportunities
of the future are bigger still. Britain must seize them with both
hands. Our future can be bright too.
The Prime Minister
I thank the right hon. and learned Gentleman for his comments at
the beginning with regard to Ukraine. Just with regard to the
Wagner Group, we have already sanctioned the Wagner Group in its
entirety and we do not as a routine matter comment on
proscriptions, as he well knows.
With regard to sanctions, in April, we announced new sanctions
targeting those who were aiding and abetting the evasion of
sanctions on Russian oligarchs and, in the integrated review
refresh, we announced £50 million over the next few years for a
new economic deterrence initiative that will work on sanctions
enforcement and compliance in co-operation with our allies.
The right hon. and learned Gentleman asked about clarifying our
approach to China. That was done in the integrated review
refresh—he may have missed it. It was spelt out clearly, and
indeed was warmly welcomed, not just by foreign policy
commentators in the UK but around the world. It has been
mentioned to me specifically by leaders and statesmen from many
different countries as a template that they have followed in
their own national security strategies.
With regard to co-operation with our allies, again, that is
something that is already happening and we are leading the way.
The right hon. and learned Gentleman may have missed that the G7
communiqué launched a co-operation platform on economic coercion,
something that we spoke about in our integrated review refresh
and has now been brought to fruition. That will not just be
co-operation of G7 allies: over time, it will be broadened to
ensure that we are working together to combat countries when they
attempt to coerce other countries economically.
The right hon. and learned Gentleman made various points on
climate change and the G7’s record. What he failed to mention is
that, out of all the G7 countries, the country that has the best
record on reducing climate emissions is the United Kingdom. It is
very welcome that other countries are catching up with our record
on climate change. We applaud them, and it is something we have
fought hard for them to do, so it is great that they are now
doing it.
I will not mention the right hon. and learned Gentleman’s other
points, other than to say that we have a different point of view.
We do not believe that the way to drive economic success and
prosperity is to subsidise the most. That is not the route that
will lead to the best outcomes and that was something that the G7
itself acknowledged. I again point him to the language in the
communiqué that particularly warned against subsidy races,
pointing out that they were a zero-sum game when they come at the
expense of others. Actually, we should be working co-operatively,
as we are. Lastly, for all his negative talk, the proof is in the
simple fact that on Friday we announced £18 billion of new
investment in the UK economy from a range of leading Japanese
businesses. They have enormous faith and confidence in the United
Kingdom—why doesn’t he?
Mr Speaker
I call the Chair of the Select Committee.
(Rutland and Melton)
(Con)
I applaud the Prime Minister’s recognition that the Chinese
Communist party is the greatest threat we face and that we must
de-risk to keep our people safe. We will engage when in the
global interest, but we cannot allow the Chinese Communist party
to cast defence as escalation. Can I urge my right hon. Friend to
consider three tests when it comes to de-risking? The first is
transnational oppression. We must be strong at home if we wish to
deter abroad. The second is techno-authoritarianism. We must
prevent reliance on CCP technology that is stealing our data and
will undermine us. Finally, we must uphold the international
rules-based system, because the CCP is trying to undermine and
capture it. Can I also urge the creation of an economic Ramstein
on Ukraine that mirrors that of the military, because we have
failed to suffocate the financial war machine that is allowing
Putin to continue with this war? The Prime Minister can lead that
with my right hon. Friend the Chancellor. It would make a
meaningful difference and end this war sooner.
The Prime Minister
I thank my hon. Friend for her questions and for her the work on
these issues in particular. With regard to her latter question,
at the G7, we announced more sanctions particularly targeting the
military-industrial complex of Russia’s war machine. I think that
will go some way to addressing her concerns and her point, but
there is of course more to do and we look forward to engaging
with her on that. With regard to China, her points are all well
made. I look forward to discussing with her how we can strengthen
the new anti-coercion platform that we have established—I know
she has talked about that in the past—where we, working with
other countries, can make an enormous difference to more
vulnerable nations’ ability to stand up to economic coercion,
whether from China or other hostile states.
Mr Speaker
I call the leader of the Scottish National party.
(Aberdeen South) (SNP)
I begin by echoing the sentiments of the Prime Minister and the
Leader of the Opposition in relation to the Manchester bombing
and the appalling death of Lee Rigby so many years ago.
The symbolic importance of the G7 summit taking place in
Hiroshima goes without question, as does the importance of the
presence of President Zelensky in Japan. It also goes without
saying that Ukraine’s war and its fight for democracy is our
fight, too, and all of us on these Benches and across the House
are fully united in our support for the President and the people
of Ukraine. In order for Ukraine to be successful, we need unity
among all those nations that believe in peace. In that regard,
can I ask the Prime Minister whether he had any conversations
with those nations that still at this moment in time are
importing crude oil from Russia, and whether he expressed any
concern about other nations that may be benefiting from products
that have been derived from that crude oil?
We did hear strong words from the G7 on the situation with China.
However, I am intrigued by the Instagram intervention of the
former Prime Minister, the right hon. Member for South West
Norfolk (). I would be grateful for
the current Prime Minister’s view in respect to whether that was
helpful, whether he agrees with her that China poses a strategic
threat to the UK and whether he would echo those sentiments.
On the economy, it would be remiss of me not to reflect on the
fact that the UK has the lowest growth in the entire G7. Our
economy is still below pre-pandemic levels. In contrast, the
United States has seen its economy grow by around 5.3% in the
intervening time. Did the Prime Minister take any lessons from
those allies in Japan about how to secure proper economic
growth?
The Prime Minister
On China, our approach is laid out in detail in the integrated
review refresh. I reiterated it yesterday and will not go over it
again, but China, as I said, represents a systemic challenge. It
is the greatest challenge we face. In fact, I said it is an
“epoch-defining challenge”, given its ability and intent to
reshape the world order. Its behaviour is increasingly
authoritarian at home and assertive abroad, which is why we
should be robust in defending and protecting ourselves against
that.
On sanctions, we are working in tandem with the European Union
and the US to intensify diplomatic engagement with third-country
partners to highlight potential circumvention risks on sanctions
and we will continue to do so.
More generally on the question of peace and discussion with
partner countries, it was excellent to have a discussion on
Ukraine and peace with partner countries outside the G7—I think
it was perhaps one of the most meaningful sessions of the
summit—where countries agreed to the principles of a just and
lasting peace being based on the UN charter and, indeed, on the
principles of territorial integrity and sovereignty. That is very
welcome because, while many people may have ideas for what peace
in Ukraine looks like, a ceasefire is not a just and durable
peace and we will keep ensuring that the peace Ukraine has is one
that it deserves and is truly just and lasting.
(Bournemouth East) (Con)
Could I welcome this statement and the work of the Prime Minister
at the G7? We are rightly rekindling those international
statecraft skills, as we see in Ukraine, going from
NLAWs—next-generation light anti-tank weapons—to main battle
tanks, training on Salisbury plain, the Storm Shadows and, of
course, helping secure those F-16s; and on China, with more
robust language as we deal with China’s aggression. But of
course, as we rightly step forward, that will place an ever
greater burden on our armed forces. I think he knows where I am
going with this: could I ask him when we are likely to see an
increase in the defence budget to 2.5% of GDP?
The Prime Minister
I know my right hon. Friend has long championed this, and rightly
so, which is why I was pleased, as Chancellor, to increase our
defence budget by £24 billion—the largest sustained increase
since the end of the cold war. Just recently, the Chancellor
added an initial £5 billion of spending over the next two years
both to strengthen our nuclear enterprise and to rebuild
stockpiles, which is something I know he has been interested in,
and we outlined an ambition to increase defence spending to 2.5%.
We are on track to get to 2.25% in the next couple of years, at
which point we will take stock and see where we are economically
and fiscally but, as I have said, the threats our country faces
are increasing and it is right that we invest appropriately to
protect ourselves.
(Kingston and Surbiton) (LD)
Can I join the Prime Minister in paying tribute to the victims of
the Manchester Arena bombing and the family of Fusilier Lee
Rigby?
I welcome the Prime Minister’s update. He is right that the UK
and our allies must be steadfast in our support for Ukraine. He
was also right to announce new sanctions on Friday to further
restrict Russian businesses from selling their products into the
UK. Now we must take further action to support Ukraine. That
includes encouraging individuals in this country who have
directly invested in companies still active in Russia to sell
their personal shares now. Does the Prime Minister agree that
these people should end their investment, so they stop supporting
the Russian economy and thereby Putin’s war efforts?
The Prime Minister
We were one of the first countries to put in place an incredibly
comprehensive sanctions regime against Russia. We have
sanctioned, at this point, over 1,500 people—tens of billions of
dollars of assets. Indeed, because of our actions, something like
over $200 billion-worth of Russian state assets are currently now
frozen. All that is contributing to a significant squeezing of
the Russian economy, as we are seeing, and its ability to
replenish its war machine, and we will keep looking for other
opportunities to tighten the vice, as we did this weekend.
Sir (New Forest East) (Con)
If, against all original expectations, Ukraine succeeds in
expelling Russia from her territory, will the time then have come
for us seriously to consider admitting Ukraine to NATO, so that
no future psychopathic Russian leader will ever be tempted to
invade her again?
The Prime Minister
As the NATO Secretary-General has already said, Ukraine will
become a member of NATO. The most immediate task that faces us
is, as my right hon. Friend knows, to provide the support that
Ukraine needs to be successful on the battlefield, and to provide
the longer term security agreements and arrangements that Ukraine
deserves, and to do that in a way that is multilateral—that is
something I discussed with leaders across the G7. In doing so we
will send a strong signal to Russia that we are not going
anywhere, increase the long term deterrent effect, and strengthen
the incentive for it to withdraw its troops now, and not attempt
to wait anybody out.
(Newport West) (Lab)
Many people in Newport West have been eagerly waiting for the
Government’s semiconductor strategy, including 600 hardworking
employees at Newport Wafer Fab. After three years of waiting,
rather than coming to this House, the Prime Minister made the
announcement in Japan on Friday last week, avoiding parliamentary
scrutiny yet again. That is unacceptable in my view. How can we
expect effective research and development to be carried out
within the semiconductor industry, as trumpeted by the strategy,
without well-funded domestic manufacturing capacity?
The Prime Minister
The hon. Lady may have missed the £1 billion of investment in the
UK semiconductor industry contained in the strategy, and the fact
that it was welcomed by leading companies from the sector. It has
taken the right amount of time to get the strategy together,
because it is the right strategy for Britain. Every country has
different strengths, and every country plays a different role in
the supply chain. We are focused on what we do best, which is in
compound semiconductors, as the hon. Lady will know well from
south Wales, but also semiconductor design and intellectual
property. Those are the strengths we are investing in, which give
us leverage in a large global supply chain. That is why the
strategy was warmly welcomed, and is the right strategy to
strengthen our security.
(Chelmsford) (Con)
Among many other achievements this weekend, may I thank the Prime
Minister for ensuring that education did not drop off the global
agenda, and that the communiqué reaffirms the G7’s commitment to
global education? It is an issue that we in the UK have led on
for many years. More than 200 million children in the world right
now are in need of urgent educational support, and that has been
made worse by conflict and climate change. May I urge my right
hon. Friend to continue to encourage our friends, particularly
France and Japan, to contribute to Education Cannot Wait?
The Prime Minister
I thank my hon. Friend for all her work in this area previously.
She will be proud, as I am, that the Foreign Secretary launched
the women and girls strategy in March, and one particular thing
in that was to continue putting women and girls at the heart of
everything to do with education. UK aid has supported 8 million
girls to gain a decent education, which is part of our pledge to
enable all girls to have access to 12 years of high quality
education. That is something we will continue to champion in all
international fora.
(Birmingham, Hodge Hill)
(Lab)
I declare an interest as chair of the international Parliamentary
Network on the World Bank & International Monetary Fund. I
also welcome the commitment in paragraph 10 of the G7 communiqué
to enhance development finance, tackle the imminent debt crisis,
tackle climate change, and advance progress towards the
sustainable development goals. Would that be an awful lot easier
if the UK stepped up and met the African Development Bank’s calls
for hybrid capital, matched Japan’s commitment to share 40% of
the new special drawing rights, and used the €3.5 billion that we
get back from the European Investment Bank to help build a bigger
World Bank? At a stroke, that would help to restore the global
leadership and development that we have so needlessly and
dangerously squandered.
The Prime Minister
The right hon. Gentleman failed to mention that we are currently
the third largest spender in the G7 on development aid as a
percentage of GDP, and one of the largest contributors to funds
such as the Global Fund and the multilateral institutions that he
names. We have everything to be proud of. When it comes to
reform, as we discussed at the G7—I began this work as
Chancellor—we are pushing for reform of the multilateral
development banks, so that we can stretch their balance sheets.
We are also pioneering the work of using climate resilient debt
clauses in our bilateral lending—that was a specific ask from the
development finance community that we are taking forward. Indeed,
as Chancellor I put in place the common framework for debt
relief—something the right hon. Gentleman will be familiar
with—and we are now working hard to deliver the benefits of that
to countries. I think when I announced it we were the first
country to announce that we would recycle our SDRs, and that is
making an enormous difference. Every country contributes in
different ways, but we should be very proud of our record.
(Harwich and North Essex)
(Con)
I congratulate my right hon. Friend on putting Ukraine front and
centre at the G7 summit. Will he make it clear that that is not
just because we believe it is morally right to support Ukraine in
her own self-defence, but is because the successful outcome of
the war in Ukraine is intrinsically tied up with our own
strategic and national interest, and that of the whole western
world, upon which our own security and prosperity depend?
The Prime Minister
My hon. Friend put it well; I agree with every word he said. I
would go slightly further. Ultimately, what are we fighting for?
We are fighting for the values that we believe in of democracy,
freedom and the rule of law. The only thing that I disagree with
him on is that while he said the western world, actually what has
been striking and welcome in the conflict has been the support of
countries such as Japan. I paid enormous tribute to Prime
Minister Kishida in Hiroshima for that leadership, because it has
rightly recognised, as have other countries and allies such as
Australia, that our security is indivisible. Whether in the
Pacific or the Atlantic, the values that we all hold dear are
universal, and we should all work together and fight hard to
defend them.
(Arfon) (PC)
The semiconductor partnership with Japan is very welcome indeed,
but although the Prime Minister mentioned domestic investments to
the hon. Member for Newport West () a moment ago, I understand that
that £1 billion is focused entirely on research. Is he similarly
committed to manufacturing—at Newport, for example —or is he
happy to leave that to Taiwan, the United States and, of course,
the European Union?
The Prime Minister
What we are focused on is growing our semiconductor industry and
making sure that we are resilient against future shocks. There
are lots of different ways to do that. Indeed, we just signed a
new semiconductor deal with Japan, as the hon. Member
acknowledged, and we will continue to find opportunities to do
that with others, but the idea that we can insource a global
manufacturing supply chain in the UK is simply not right. We
should focus on our strengths. We will support manufacturing
where it makes sense. In compound manufacturing in particular,
the capital intensity is far less than in more basic fabs and
chips, so we have a strategy that works for the UK’s strength,
and particularly works for south Wales, and I am confident that
it will be successful.
(Gainsborough) (Con)
The Prime Minister rightly mentioned illegal migration—it would
be good to hear what the G7 is proposing to deal with it,
particularly in terms of co-operation by our French allies—but
the truth is that legal migration dwarfs anything from illegal
migration. In the last 20 years, the population of the UK has
increased by 8 million, of which 7 million is legal migrants.
What will he do to back up the Home Office in making serious
efforts to stop legal migration, which is changing the country
forever, which is totally unsustainable and which we have
promised to deal with again and again?
The Prime Minister
As my right hon. Friend can probably imagine, that was not a
topic of conversation around the table in Hiroshima, but I and
the Government are committed to bringing down the levels of legal
migration. With regard to illegal migration, co-operation with
allies is yielding tangible benefits for the UK. He talked about
France; the new deal with France strengthens physical
co-operation with French forces on the ground. It also
strengthens co-operation and intelligence sharing. At the Council
of Europe last week, we opened up conversations to work more
closely with Frontex, the EU’s border agency. Italy will ensure
that illegal migration is a specific topic that is mentioned,
discussed and worked on at next year’s G7 summit under its
presidency, and I will continue to raise it at all the
international fora where I am present.
(Worsley and Eccles South)
(Lab)
As the Prime Minister mentioned, President Zelensky attended the
G7 summit. One thing that I understand is important to him is
that Ukrainian culture has an audience across the world, yet
there are concerns that musicians from the Ukrainian Freedom
Orchestra and the National Symphony Orchestra of Ukraine will not
be able to tour the UK later this year because of the heavy
financial and administrative burden of obtaining UK visas. The
Prime Minister will understand that funding visa fees and
travelling to obtain visas is so much more difficult for
musicians in war-torn Ukraine. Last year, the Home Office agreed
to waive visa fees and expedite the visa process to allow
Ukrainian musicians to perform here. Does he agree that Ukrainian
musicians still deserve that support? Will he ask the Home
Secretary to ensure that we offer that support as we stand with
Ukraine?
The Prime Minister
With regard to Ukrainian culture in particular, it was a great
pleasure for us to host Eurovision on Ukraine’s behalf, which was
a fantastic success and was warmly welcomed by the Ukrainian
Government and President Zelensky. I am happy to look into the
matter that the hon. Member raises, but as she will understand,
our overwhelming priority right now is to support Ukraine to
ensure that its counter-offensive is successful. That will occupy
the bulk of our attention.
(Epsom and Ewell) (Con)
Clearly, the move towards onshoring or nearshoring key strategic
products is sensible—we saw why that is so necessary during the
pandemic and with other issues—yet there seems to be a tendency
across the developed world for the natural, logical, strategic
need to nearshore key products to turn into protectionism. What
discussions took place about that at the G7, and what can my
right hon. Friend do to ensure that we do not revert to a
protectionist world and abandon the benefits of free trade?
The Prime Minister
My right hon. Friend makes an excellent point, and he can rest
assured that I raised exactly that point with my colleagues in
Hiroshima. He will be pleased, as I was, that there is language
in the G7 communiqué that commits all G7 countries not to act at
each other’s expense, and not to do so in a way that amounts to
zero-sum competition, but he is absolutely right to identify the
risk. Other countries acknowledge it, which is why the G7
communiqué is strong on this point. Going forward, we will see
much greater co-operation between allies, so that we do not
engage in protectionism, which is not something that will drive
prosperity and growth in any of our countries.
(Dundee East) (SNP)
May I welcome what the Prime Minister said about China,
particularly his intention to diversify our supply chains in
areas such as critical minerals? The Prime Minister knows that
China probably mines around 70% of all rare earth minerals and
produces around 90% of all processed rare earth minerals
globally. What investments is he planning to support to ensure
capacity anywhere in the world to stop companies in the UK and
elsewhere being required to buy from China?
The Prime Minister
We are strengthening investment here at home and increasingly
playing our part in the critical minerals recycling chain.
Recycling in particular, which is a key part of how we can ensure
long-term sustainability, is an area where there is an enormous
growth opportunity in the UK, and we are investing directly in
that. As the right hon. Member will know, we have just signed
critical minerals agreements with Japan and Australia, with more
to come, as I continue conversations with other leaders. In
particular, our new economic coercion unit, which is being
established, will work to ensure that China cannot exert undue
influence on countries that possess critical minerals, to ensure
that they can trade those minerals freely and fairly.
(Tunbridge Wells) (Con)
I should declare that I have the honour to be the Prime
Minister’s trade envoy to Japan. Next week marks the 30th
anniversary of the opening, by the then Prince Charles, of
Toyota’s manufacturing plant in Derbyshire. It has been a
tremendous asset for both our countries. Does the Prime Minister
agree that in a turbulent world—one in which, as my right hon.
Friend the Member for Epsom and Ewell () says, protectionism is on
the rise—our two countries, Japan and the UK, are more
like-minded than ever, and even more than at that time? Will the
Prime Minister commit to work closely with Japan to manufacture
the next generation of cars, as well as new technologies, from
offshore wind to satellites and AI?
The Prime Minister
I congratulate my right hon. Friend on his appointment; I know he
will do a superb job, and I agree with him. As the recent
Hiroshima accords say, the relationship between the UK and Japan
is the strongest that it has ever been across all areas. Whether
on scientific collaboration, trade and economic growth, or indeed
security, the partnership is strong, and the recent accords that
we have signed will take it to even greater depth and levels of
co-operation.
On the issue of auto manufacturing, I was pleased to meet the
president of Nissan while I was in Tokyo, who had also recently
met the Chancellor. As my right hon. Friend can see from the
announcements, there is confidence in the UK economy, and we will
continue to work closely with Japanese automakers to ensure that
there is investment in the UK and that we can make the next
generation of electric vehicles here.
(Brighton, Pavilion)
(Green)
The Prime Minister did finally mention climate change in his
response to the Leader of the Opposition, but this G7 summit was
a disaster for the climate, flying in the face of expert warnings
that if we are serious about staying below 1.5 degrees, there can
be no new exploration of oil and gas. While the communiqué
acknowledged the new fund for loss and damage, it failed to
deliver any new funding for it. Oxfam has estimated that the G7
countries owe the global south a staggering $8.7 trillion for the
harm already caused by their excessive carbon emissions. Will the
Prime Minister now lead the way on that fund, and commit to new
and additional funding specifically for loss and damage in
advance of the COP28 summit?
The Prime Minister
The hon. Lady obviously missed the fact that this was the first
G7 commitment to stop building new coal plants. It was the first
G7 collective renewable energy target, and it confirmed that the
developed countries would meet their commitment to provide $100
billion in climate finance per annum—something that has been
warmly welcomed. Again, I point her to what I said to the Leader
of the Opposition. She failed to point out that of all the G7
countries, we have the best record on reducing climate
emissions
(Lichfield) (Con)
As the Prime Minister knows, it is Putin’s wish and Ukraine’s
fear that the conflict goes long and battle fatigue sets in. My
right hon. Friend has been clear—as has the Leader of the
Opposition—that we will give that long-term support, but what was
his assessment of his colleagues whom he met at the G7,
particularly from countries such as India, which have not always
shown full commitment to the struggle in Ukraine?
The Prime Minister
As I pointed out earlier, the session with partner countries that
were invited, including India, Brazil, Australia and others, was
very good in confirming support for a just and durable peace in
Ukraine. On my hon. Friend’s first point, he makes an excellent
observation. That is why we have been working hard with other
countries to put in place bilateral and multilateral long-term
security arrangements.
I have long discussed that with President Zelensky and have
spoken to other leaders, because my belief is that if we can put
some long-term multilateral security arrangement in place as soon
as possible, that will show President Putin that we are not going
away and that there is no point trying to wait us out, because
Ukraine will get long-term support to defend itself—not just last
year, this year and next year but for years to come. That is
important for us to do, and my hon. Friend can rest assured that
I will continue having those conversations and pushing that point
with our allies, all the way in the run up to the Vilnius
summit.
(Aberavon) (Lab)
The Government’s No. 1 priority should be to strengthen the
resilience of our economy so that we can stand more firmly on our
own two feet in this dangerous and turbulent world. It was
disappointing, therefore, that in the Prime Minister’s statement
he failed to make any reference to the central role that steel
plays—a key industry that builds our economic and national
security and resilience. Given China, the US and the EU
Governments are investing hundreds of billions of pounds in their
steel industries, can he set out what steps his Government are
taking to ensure that we build this vital building block of our
manufacturing base?
The Prime Minister
The Government are committed to supporting the UK steel industry.
The hon. Gentleman knows full well that I cannot comment on
discussions of a commercially sensitive nature with particular
companies, but he will know our track record. As Chancellor,
during the pandemic I provided financial support to a steel
company in south Wales because I believed it was the right thing
to do. If he needs any evidence of our commitment to the steel
industry, particularly in Wales, he does not need to look too
far.
(South Dorset) (Con)
I commend my right hon. Friend on his stance on Ukraine and on a
successful G7. He rightly mentioned the problem of mass
immigration, particularly illegal immigration. Without doubt, one
of the aggravating factors is the EU’s open border policy. Was
there any discussion to re-look at that?
The Prime Minister
There was no discussion at the G7, as he might expect, but
illegal migration was discussed when I was at the Council of
Europe last week. As my hon. Friend can see, we have started
conversations with the EU about closer co-operation with the EU’s
border agency Frontex. We can work together upstream to share
intelligence and make sure that we break the cycle of the
criminal gangs. He can expect further conversation and
co-operation in that vein because, ultimately, this is a shared
challenge. Illegal migration was up 50% to 60% in the European
continent last year, so we are not alone in facing this
challenge. We will work with others to constructively solve
it.
(Inverness, Nairn, Badenoch
and Strathspey) (SNP)
The Wagner Group has already admitted to murdering 40 children
and hundreds of adults sheltering in a basement in Bakhmut. Mere
sanctions are not a strong enough message. What does that
terrorist organisation have to do before the Prime Minister will
take action to proscribe it?
The Prime Minister
We are ensuring that those who commit war crimes in Ukraine will
be held accountable and brought to justice. That is why we took a
leading role in supporting evidence gathering and providing both
financial and technical legal support—we have recently provided
more than £1 million for those efforts. We very much welcome the
recent announcement by the International Criminal Court to bring
to justice those who have committed war crimes, particularly
those against children, and we will continue to play a leading
part in the coalition, ensuring that those who commit those
crimes are brought to justice.
(Halesowen and Rowley Regis)
(Con)
The global environment faces more challenges than it has for many
years, not least an existential threat to the rules-based
international order and threats to the essence of our democratic
values. Does the Prime Minster agree that the UK is uniquely
placed to build the networks and relationships that are needed to
stop those threats from becoming a reality?
The Prime Minister
My hon. Friend is absolutely right. We are uniquely placed: our
international engagement and diplomacy in the last few months has
shown that we have strong relationships, not just in the United
States but across Europe and increasingly in the Indo-Pacific as
well. All those relationships are strengthening our security at
home and abroad, and delivering real benefits for the British
people.
(Islington North) (Ind)
The Prime Minister mentioned the United Nations in the context of
his remarks about Ukraine, and he will be aware that the United
Nations has quite rightly condemned the Russian invasion of
Ukraine. Will he comment on the calls made by Secretary-General
Guterres to attempt to negotiate a ceasefire, supported by
President Ramaphosa and the Pope? What comment will he make about
the statement made this morning by President Lula of Brazil? He
is right that a ceasefire is not peace, but any peace process has
to be started by a ceasefire, otherwise this war will go, and get
worse and worse.
The Prime Minister
I could not disagree with the right hon. Gentleman more. A
ceasefire is not a just and lasting peace for Ukraine. Russia has
conducted an illegal and unprovoked invasion of another country.
It has committed heinous war crimes. The right, and only,
response to that is for Russia to withdraw its forces from
Ukraine. All plans, masquerading as peace plans, that are in fact
attempts just to freeze the conflict where it is, are absolutely
wrong and they should be called out for exactly what they
are.
(Reigate) (Con)
May I congratulate my right hon. Friend on the substantive and
central role he played at the G7 summit and the important
progress made in advancing the G7 agenda, which is of growing
importance to our security and our economy? What is his
assessment of how far India is now moving to share this agenda,
not least in its relations with Russia?
The Prime Minister
As I said, the session with partner countries, including India
and others, was positive in its conversation on Ukraine and on
the principles of what a just and lasting peace would look like.
Such a peace should be based on the principles of the UN charter
and respect for the territorial integrity and sovereignty of
countries. Those are principles that we believe in, and on which
the United Nations was founded and peace in Ukraine should be
brought about.
(St Helens South and Whiston)
(Lab)
Did the Prime Minister have any success in convincing countries,
such as India and Brazil, to take a stronger stance against
Russia’s invasion and partial occupation of Ukraine?
The Prime Minister
One benefit of President Zelensky attending the G7 summit was the
ability for him to talk directly to those leaders, and he did so,
particularly in that session but also in other conversations. It
was a very powerful message that he could deliver in person. I
hope that message will go around the world and people saw the
symbolism that it represented. As we have seen, at the United
Nations over 140 countries have condemned Russia, which remains
largely isolated on the global stage, and we continue to bring
others to the cause.
(Gloucester) (Con)
The UK’s key role in G7 Tokyo decisions highlights the fact that
this Government are doing more on the world stage, not retreating
from it, especially in the Indo-Pacific region and south-east
Asia, where I have the honour to serve the Prime Minister as
trade envoy. Does he agree that this is a good time, in the last
year of the term of office of President Jokowi of Indonesia—the
largest member state in the Association of Southeast Asian
Nations and the current ASEAN chair—for both our countries to
scope out the will and capacity for a wide-ranging bilateral free
trade agreement?
The Prime Minister
I thank my hon. Friend for all the work he does to promote our
trade in the region and strengthen our relationship with
countries such as Indonesia. I discussed his missives in person
with President Jokowi and we had a good conversation about how we
can strengthen our trading relationship, not least through the
JETCO, the Joint Economic and Trade Committee, which we already
have and which we are looking forward to building on in
future.
(Glasgow North) (SNP)
If it is the Prime Minister’s firm resolve that it should never
again be necessary to use nuclear weapons, why is he spending
billions of pounds on renewing Trident?
The Prime Minister
Look, of course on this issue we will disagree with the Scottish
nationalist party, but we remain committed to the nuclear
non-proliferation treaty, to which we are a signatory along with
190 other countries. That offers us the best tool available to
bring about eventual global disarmament, but it will have to be
step by step and it will have to be a negotiated approach,
because we have to recognise the escalating security threats that
we face and the role that our nuclear deterrent plays in keeping
us safe.
(Boston and Skegness)
(Con)
Qualcomm, Graphcore and Arm are among the major semiconductor
manufacturers that welcomed the UK’s semiconductor strategy. The
Prime Minister is right to focus on where we are best and where
we can play an outsize role in this industry. At its heart,
however, this is also about lessening our semiconductor
dependence on Taiwan. Will the Prime Minister assure me and the
House that that will not come with greater risk of seeing a
decrease in relations between China and Taiwan?
The Prime Minister
I thank my hon. Friend for his comments about the semiconductor
strategy, which of course is an area on which he speaks with
authority. Our long-standing policy on Taiwan has not changed. We
have a clear interest in peace and stability in the Taiwan strait
and will completely resist any unilateral attempts to change the
status quo. We continue to have deep and growing ties, in a wide
range of areas, with Taiwan, whether that is on economic, trade,
cultural or educational matters.
(Stretford and Urmston)
(Lab)
The Prime Minister spent time at the G7 dealing with reports that
his Home Secretary may have breached the ministerial code. Will
the Prime Minister take the opportunity to update the House on
whether he has yet met his independent adviser and whether there
will now be an investigation into whether the ministerial code
has been broken, and to confirm that if the Home Secretary has
breached the ministerial code she will be sacked?
The Prime Minister
Well, I can confirm that that was not a topic of conversation at
the G7 summit, but in the interests of being generous: I have
always been clear that where such issues are raised, they should
be dealt with properly and professionally. Since I have returned
from the G7, I have been receiving information on the issues
raised, I have met both the independent adviser and the Home
Secretary, I have asked for further information and I will give
an update on the appropriate course of action in due course.
(Stoke-on-Trent South)
(Con)
I very much welcome the £18 billion of new Japanese investment
for the UK. Will my right hon. Friend confirm that he will be
working to ensure that as much as possible of that investment
comes to businesses in Stoke-on-Trent, and that we can grow the
number of skilled, well-paid jobs in Stoke-on-Trent?
The Prime Minister
My hon. Friend is a fantastic champion for Stoke and his
constituents. The great news about this investment is that it is
coming in a range of industries, which means that all parts of
the UK, I am confident, will benefit. Whether it is in auto
manufacturing, clean energy or the industries of the future such
as quantum and semiconductors, there are fantastic opportunities.
Ultimately, that is why our international diplomacy is working;
it is delivering concrete benefits and jobs for people here at
home.
Madam Deputy Speaker ( )
I call .
(Carmarthen East and
Dinefwr) (Ind)
Diolch, Madam Deputy Speaker. The sanctions strategy against
Russia is being undermined by so-called leakage to other
countries. For instance, Russian oil exports to India have
reportedly increased substantially, a point that I suspect
President Zelensky will have made to Prime Minister Modi during
their discussions at the summit. Did the Prime Minister make
similar points during his bilateral talks with Prime Minister
Modi?
The Prime Minister
As I have said, the G7 allies are working in tandem to intensify
diplomatic engagement with third-country partners to highlight
potential sanction circumvention risks. We also, as I have said,
are investing £50 million in a new economic deterrence
initiative, which will back up our own sanctions implementation
and enforcement.
(Crawley) (Con)
I commend my right hon. Friend the Prime Minister for leading
discussions at the G7 in Hiroshima on countering and guarding
against the national security threats that are coming from China.
In that vein, will he consider blocking companies such as BGI
that are harvesting genomic data—as they have done in the United
States and in academia in Canada—from activities in this
country?
The Prime Minister
Our new National Security and Investment Act 2021 gives us the
powers to block hostile investment into sensitive sectors. My
hon. Friend will know that we have used those powers to block
Chinese investment in Newport Wafer Fab, for example. We
obviously look at every transaction on a case-by-case basis, but
we now have one of the most robust frameworks anywhere in the
world for protecting our companies and our intellectual property
from foreign interference and theft.
(Tiverton and Honiton)
(LD)
Liberal Democrats welcome those parts of the Prime Minister’s
statement that relate to Ukraine, but I would like to take that a
little further and ask him about Russian misinformation.
President Biden said of the supply of F-16 fighter aircraft that
he had received assurances that the fighter jets would not be
used to
“go on and move into Russia”.
President Macron said something similar in relation to the supply
of French weapons, but misinformation from the Kremlin abounds
about NATO’s intentions. Is the Prime Minister prepared, like the
Presidents of the United States and France, to talk about how
British long-range missiles will be limited to targets in Ukraine
for the liberation of Ukraine?
The Prime Minister
The Defence Secretary has already made clarifications around our
use of Storm Shadow, but we should all remember that Ukraine is
engaged in self-defence. Indeed, NATO itself is a self-defence
alliance. Ukraine has faced an illegal and unprovoked act of
aggression and invasion from Russia and we should be able to give
it all the means necessary to defend itself against those
attacks.
(Strangford) (DUP)
I thank the Prime Minister very much for his statement and his
support for Ukraine on behalf of the United Kingdom of Great
Britain and Northern Ireland. He has clearly shown that his words
become actions, and for that we thank him very much. I think that
every one of us recognises a good deed there. I declare an
interest as chair of the all-party parliamentary group on
international freedom of religion or belief. I very much welcome
the progress that has been reported by the Prime Minister on an
essential trade deal, but I would also like to know whether he
had an opportunity to raise the issue of freedom of religious
belief with his counterparts, because an essential component of
any trade deal must be the core value of human rights alongside
religious freedom.
The Prime Minister
I know that the Foreign Secretary engages on this topic regularly
with all our allies where it is relevant, and we will continue to
do so, because we will stand up for freedom of expression and
religious belief, not just in this country but in countries
around the world.
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