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Speech by the Rt Hon David Blunkett MP, Home
Secretary
I thought for a moment
that Tony was going to walk straight forward, down the steps, out
of the Conference, and say "You’ve got the most difficult
job, good luck!".
I want to thank colleagues across the country, nationally and locally,
for the support they have given to the members of the Policy Commission
and, of course, to the front bench team for what they have been doing.
This has been a joint task, working together, committed together.
Some of you will know that I am deeply committed to what is called
‘intelligence-based policing’. I am particularly keen on
this due to an incident that occurred 30 years ago. It’s alright,
I wasn’t actually arrested at the time!
A Superintendent came to my house on a Sunday evening. He knocked
on the door and I said "Come in". I was a young councillor
and he said to me "Do you drive a mini?" (I only got a Superintendent
because I was a councillor).
I said "You know I own a guide dog?" He said "Yes,
that’s the reason for my visit. You have been reported driving
through the Ecclesfield district of Sheffield in a mini".
I said "And I suppose the dog barked every time we got to traffic
lights?" And gospel as I stand here he said "I don’t
think that is very funny."
I said "You know what day it is today don’t you?"
and he said "No". I said "It’s the 1st of April".
He said "What is the significance of that?"
Anyway I have restored relations with the police since and we are
all working closely together.
Conference, there is no equivalent for crime of the Socialist Health
Association or the Socialist Education Association. There is no equivalent
in any political party. But our Party is returning to its roots in
taking seriously the impact of crime. The importance of good policing
for those most vulnerable, for those in the least affluent areas,
no longer the silly nonsense of seeing crime and justice as an issue
for the political right; no longer the delusion that stability and
order are secondary to equality and justice – because they go
hand in hand with equality and justice. It is a simple, historical
fact that for progressive politics to flourish, for liberal ideas
to be listened to, we have to have stability and order.
From the Spanish Republic to the Weimar Republic, to less obvious
incidents in our own history where the more insecure and unstable
people feel the more frightened they are, the more likely they are
to turn to right wing solutions. That is why I am pursuing the line
I am on stability and order. On tackling anti-social behaviour. On
ensuring that our Party is seen to be on the side of those who are
most threatened by the anti-social behaviour in our neighbourhoods,
the actions that put people at most risk. Those who Tony talked about
yesterday, who turn to us for solutions.
Our values, this Party, our Government, will meet that challenge.
Not by Government alone, but in partnership with all those who have
a role to play.
We accept our own responsibilities. We will invest the resources
necessary. Resources gained by the economic success led by Gordon
Brown. Resources made available because of the stability in the economy
that we seek to replicate in our social policy.
We will work with those on the ground to take on those who destroy
the lives and the livelihoods of others. Equality, opportunity, and
justice mean nothing if people cannot live in peace and free from
fear in their own home or down their own street.
We are aiming at nothing short of a change in culture. Self-respect
and respect for others. The engagement of family and parents, of the
wider community. And a new ‘can do’ attitude by the police,
the Crown Prosecution Service, and the courts.
You are one and a half times as likely to experience crime in the
top 80% of disadvantaged areas in our country, as the country as a
whole. Five times as likely in those areas than in leafy suburbs.
Over four fifths of street crime is perpetrated in just 10 police
force areas.
So opportunity and security go hand in hand. Urban or rural. Rich
or poor. We are all in this together. Subject on the streets and in
our homes to the same attacks and the same challenges. Strong communities,
working with a strong and determined Government, can make a difference.
So what are we doing?
Our policy was set in the White Paper published last December. We
set out an end to end reform of policing and crime reduction. We then
negotiated and achieved an unprecedented change in modernising and
reforming the police service. We have passed the Police Reform Act.
Slimming down the bureaucracy around Anti-Social Behaviour Orders.
Ensuring that vehicles can be seized on or off the street when they
are being used to terrorise others.
Record recruitment of police officers. 129,600 officers now available
to us; 4,000 more than a year ago. That is something for all of us
to be proud of.
And 4,500 extra civilian staff – twice the annual number ever
recruited before.
The first 1,000 Community Support Officers coming onto the streets.
1,200 Street Wardens recruited through Neighbourhood Renewal and the
work of John Prescott and his team.
Record investment coming in from a multitude of directions to begin
to tackle the scourge of crime in those most deprived areas.
The upward trend in street crime is now just gradually being reversed.
The commitment that Tony and I gave on robbery and mugging is coming
round whatever the newspapers tell you. A 14% reduction already since
the target was set back in the Spring.
And yes of course we know that unless people feel differently, unless
they experience improvement for themselves, they will not believe
the statistics. So the task is to change what is happening in their
lives, making them feel different about the streets they walk on.
Tony mentioned yesterday the need to avoid scepticism turning into
cynicism, the most corrosive way of undermining not simply the achievements
of those working to bring about change, but democracy itself. The
feeling that nothing can make a difference. That whatever we do, whoever
we vote for, it doesn’t change a thing. That is what we need
to take head on in developing not simply announcements as I am making
today about more police, or civilians, or CSOs, but actually about
the engagement of people in their own lives to make a difference.
Today I can announce a new target for policing. We will reach, by
next Spring, 130,000. By the year after we will reach 132,500 police
men and women and we will ensure that they are on the beat, doing
the job, out there, visible, available, for everyone to see the results
of a Labour Government investing in a police service that is reformed
and is working.
And with 4,000 Community Support Officers by 2005, working with the
police alongside them in the community. With up to 3,000 forensic
scientists working with us using the new DNA testing. And with the
Crime Reduction Partnerships, the Community Safety Partnerships at
local level, investing in CCTV and in target hardening of people’s
homes, we can tackle crime together. It is down by over a fifth. Under
the Tories it doubled.
And yes of course there will be reform across the piece. An end to
end reform of the Criminal Justice System. Balancing the rights of
the victim, of the community, with those accused.
Wrongful conviction of the innocent is an affront to justice. But
so is the criminal, the perpetrator of misery, walking free from the
dock to commit their crimes again and terrorise the community.
The rights of the accused and the rights of the community must be
balanced together. This is not a zero sum total as many writers and
speakers talk about. You do not erode the rights of the honest, of
the innocent, by increasing the rights of victims and the protection
of witnesses. You do not diminish one by improving the other. This
is not a see-saw. The debate needs to be about how we join together.
Everyone working in and committed to a better system ensures that
victims and witnesses are properly protected. That delays and adjournments
are cut out. That faster justice means fairer justice for all.
And it can be done. Thanks to the street crime initiative we have
already seen the changes that can be brought about by partnership
working across the Crown Prosecution Service, the courts, probation,
prisons, and many others.
And thanks to Jack Straw and his team, we have seen already the work
of the Youth Justice Board and the Home Office coming to fruition.
The youth justice pledge that we would halve the time from arrest
to conviction of young offenders has been more than met by this Government,
but you never hear a word about it.
For this is reform and modernisation hand in hand in practice. Prevention,
policing, and prosecution. But prevention surely has to be the most
valuable of all. The Police Act will help with that. A new role for
local commanders at divisional level. Priority payments for police
who are at the front line, seeing the action on the ground. A reduction
in bureaucracy.
The introduction of the Proceeds of Crime Act to tackle head on the
internationally organised criminals who devour the benefits that people
have accrued for themselves through the most sophisticated methods
imaginable.
A drive against hard drug dealing. The establishment of the National
Treatment Agency was only 18 months ago. With the Agency we need to
develop treatment and support, and rehabilitation. We need an education
programme that actually seeks both to prevent and to develop as part
of our harm minimisation drive a system that works in the interests
of everyone.
It was for that reason that I’ve recommended the reclassification
of cannabis. To make sense of education, of policing priorities, and
of the drive to tackle the scourge of our era which is crack, cocaine,
heroin and ecstasy. The drugs that kill, that put communities at risk,
that undermine families and destroy the very fabric of our society.
So, testing and treatment of prisoners, new regimes in our prison
and probation service. No – not seeking a target for how many
people we will have in jail – but a drive to ensure that we minimise
the number of people that we have to send to jail in the first place.
That is the task we are setting ourselves.
To prevent re-offending, to make sense of sentencing, to use prison
and community sentencing hand in hand. To develop the new intensive
supervision and tagging system. But to ensure that dangerous and sex
offenders are locked away as long as is necessary.
Our hearts went out to the parents of Holly and Jessica, and now
to the parents and family of Milly. At this Conference Sarah Payne’s
Mum, Sara, is present. We know we have a task to ensure that our children
are safe. We have already promised to legislate this Winter for sex
offenders and sex offences to be dealt with by a new common-sense
approach.
Parliament must be able to act on behalf of the people. Democracy
and legitimacy of politics itself depends not on protecting people
from the will of Parliament, but protecting people from the actions
of dangerous criminals on our streets.
Compassion is only really possible when people believe that common-sense
prevails. That is why we will toughen still further the law on dangerous
sex offenders. We have already taken measures, we have already committed
ourselves in the Bill to tackling the scourge of chat-room abuse of
the Internet, of toughening up in relation to the sentences that are
handed out. But it is why also we need to clamp down on the evil around
us of those who should be, or are not registered.
That is why today I am going to announce a new programme. Sex offenders
will have to register annually. Using biometrics in the future may
ensure that we do not only confirm who they are, but we also use technology
to know where they are. We will ensure that those coming in from abroad
have to register. We will work with countries abroad to ensure that
they do, and anyone who breaks this provision will leave our country
immediately.
Adequate sentencing, proper supervision, a register that has a check
by the community – we have put on the multi-agency panels for
the first time a representative of the community – will and should
do the job. But I do want to say quietly to those who are campaigning:
we cannot open the register to the vigilantes who do not understand
the difference between "paediatrician" and "paedophile"..
We will do everything we can, but we must maintain the stability
I talked about, the order imposed by us.
That is why the end to end review of the criminal justice system
is so important; why the reform and modernisation must take place.
Allowing our Parliament to protect the public, making sure that we
do debate and understand that there is a public interest that needs
to be balanced with individual rights, both of them upheld, isn’t
in any way to undermine civil liberties. It is simply to secure common-sense
and the confidence of the public, who at the moment by 74% do not
believe that the criminal justice system works in their interest.
It is true of our task of building a civil society. Tony talked yesterday
of an enabling Government; of working with and alongside people, not
just for them; creating a sense of belonging, of shared responsibility,
of citizenship that engages people in being part of the solution and
not just passing it to someone else.
It is true of our task of balancing managed immigration and nationality
and our asylum policy. Policies need to work, they need to build trust
and confidence in the population as a whole. On 7 February in our
policy paper, Secure Borders, Safe Haven, I spelt out how we intended
to ensure that new routes for economic migration, for new channels
of coming into our country, would be developed. We have already started
to do it. As Gordon said on Monday, I have put in place that we will
have a doubling of the number of visas for work permits given in the
year ahead to 175,000 - the largest number in Europe, six times the
number of work permits granted in Germany this year.
I promised to listen last year at Conference to calls to abolish
vouchers. On 8 April I abolished the voucher system and I invite you
to join with me in listening, but also in contributing, to find solutions
to much more difficult problems than the one that seemed insuperable
just 12 months ago.
So let me explain briefly why I have sought to secure our borders.
Television programmes night after night last year showing people coming
through the Channel Tunnel, far from encouraging people to provide
a warm welcome, frightened people into believing that we were being
overwhelmed. We were not. I have argued, as part of the economic migration
programme, that we needed to ensure that people felt secure that we
had got a grip of the problem. Eight hundred people from Coquelles
depot alone came through a year ago. Last month it was one.
I went to Calais and Frethun and to Belgium last week. I secured
in three months with Nicholas Sarkosy, the Minister for the Interior
in France, agreement which means that at each French port there will
be equipment that will ensure that we have properly organised immigration
controls. We secured the fencing and security at the depots. Not because
this is anti-asylum, but because it is anti the organised traffickers
who are exploiting the exploitable across the world; getting their
families to pay for children as well as adults to be trafficked across
Europe, to be dumped in Sangatte, and then to try and make their way
in containers or under trains across to Britain. It is a scandal that
needs to be stopped and we should be the first to say so.
It is about demonstrating competence. It is fairness balanced by
common-sense. Building trust and confidence, and building it in order
to reject racism wherever it occurs. The Race Relations Amendment
Act came in in April. We have set in train new recruitment from outside
our Department for the Race Equality Unit. We have established a new
social cohesion programme. We are actually putting in place the practical
measures, and we are building trust so that we can welcome inward
migration to our country.
The real task for all of us – and I say it to those who criticise
me – is to take on those who are building up a campaign now (read
the papers to see it) against any inward migration to our country
whatsoever. They are arguing that we cannot take more citizens from
across the world. I argue that we cannot afford not to take them from
across the world to build our economy, to contribute to our wellbeing.
In the Bill we will toughen up on those who are clandestinely in
our country, working illegally, and those who seek to exploit the
most generous provisions for asylum seekers in the world. We will
do so because undermining the Minimum Wage, destroying what the trade
union movement has fought for in terms of conditions of work, isn’t
all that clever, allowing people to work clandestinely at £2.00
an hour in our community.
I am interested in a fair, open Britain, and I am interested in breaking
down the barriers of fear that stop those who are true supporters
of our Party believing that we have got it right. That is the task
ahead of us. For when I wrote a detailed essay in a book of essays,
just a few weeks ago, and argued that as well as the mother tongue,
English mattered in the home of Asian families, when I argue for an
understanding of citizenship and our democracy, I do so not to dictate,
but because through speaking English, through an understanding of
citizenship, the opportunity for education and employment is opened
up. It is an equality agenda. The mother or grandmother trapped in
the home, the child acting as the interpreter, the host community
unsure of how to break down those barriers on which racists feed.
And of course language is one of those key barriers. That isn’t
linguistic colonialism, it is just good common-sense.
Conference, by building trust we can put right historic wrongs. In
the 1968 Immigration Act and again in 1981, those British overseas
citizens, those protected persons, those British subjects who were
given British passports, had no rights of residence in our country.
They had no right to settle, to become citizens of our country. This
week I have laid an amendment to the Nationality and Immigration Act
to put right that wrong, to give them the right to sit, to stand,
to work equally alongside us in this country, and we should be proud
of it.
Conference, yesterday Tony said that I had a challenging job. Well
he put it slightly stronger than that, but one or two Cabinet colleagues
have taken offence. It comes and it goes. There aren’t many laughs,
there aren’t many cheers, but there is a lot of satisfaction.
For what we are doing from the Home Office team really does matter.
It can transform our communities. That is why we work together, that
is why you deliver the leaflets and argue the case.
Next year I will have been in the Party for 40 years - it ages me!
I believe in our values. I fight for a better life for the people
we represent, that you and I seek to speak for day in and day out.
I say to those who criticise us, please do so, with solidarity as
part of our mutuality. But please read what is said. Please listen
to the words. Please let’s have a dialogue of friends. And let’s
answer the questions together, because only together can we hold on
to this majority in our Parliament, win back seats in local government;
and above all to win people to the belief that this, our Party, is
on their side.
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