Ed Miliband’s speech to the TUC rally in Hyde Park

October 20, 2012 3:28 pm

Thank you.

I am here to join with people from all walks of life.

From all parts of our country.

Think about the faces in this crowd.

Young people looking for work.

Like Ashley Parsons from Wolverhampton who you saw on the film.

Let us say we stand with all the young people who want to work in Britain today.

We have nurses determined to fight for the future of our National Health Service.

Let us say we stand with them and all the men and women who serve in our NHS.

Construction workers, like Colin Roach from Greater Manchester, recently laid off.

Let us say we stand with him and people across the whole of British business who want an economy that works for them.

And all the off-duty police officers here today.

Let us say we stand with them as they seek to protect front-line policing and improve communities across Britain.

None of these people think Britain owes them a living.

They are not asking for the earth.

They just have a simple request.

They want a future that works for them.

They believe we do better as One Nation.

Private and public sectors working together.

North and South

Trade unions and British business.

But they do not see that future under this government.

Instead, they see a government dividing our country.

Andrew Mitchell may finally have resigned.

But the culture of two nations runs right across this government.

They cut taxes for millionaires.

And raise taxes for ordinary families.

They leave young people out of work while the bonuses at the banks carry on.

They even have a Chancellor of the Exchequer who tries to travel first class on a standard class ticket.

It’s one rule for those at the top and another rule for everybody else: everybody like you who plays their part and does the right thing.

The trouble with this government is that while they are think they are born to rule, it turns out they are not very good at it.

A few weeks ago, I asked:

Have you ever seen a more incompetent, hopeless, u-turning, pledge-breaking, make it up as you go along, back of the envelope, miserable shower than this government and this Prime Minister?

What have they done since?

They’ve tried to prove me right.

Just this week:

David Cameron tried to keep his Chief Whip, even though the rest of us could see he had to go.

He made up an Energy policy on Wednesday, without any idea of how he could achieve it.

And he clings to an economic plan that is just not working.

David Cameron: a weak, clueless Prime Minister, who cannot stand up for the interests of this country.

And they are not just incompetent.

Their old answers just don’t work any more.

Trickle-down economics.

Cutting rights at work.

David Cameron calls it the “sink or swim” society.

But you don’t build a successful country with sink or swim.

You do it by building One Nation.

And that is what the next Labour government will do.

Of course, there will still be hard choices.

With borrowing rising not falling this year, I do not promise easy times.

I have said whoever was in government now there would still need to be some cuts.

But this government has shown us cutting too far and too fast, self-defeating austerity, is not the answer.

We would make different but fairer choices including on pay and jobs.

So here is what we would do.

Day one, with me as Prime Minister, we start to give all of our young people a stake in the future.

We will tax the bankers’ bonuses and start putting young people back to work again.

We would build 100,000 homes.

And get our construction workers working again.

We will end the privatisation experiment in the NHS.

And repeal the Tories’ NHS bill.

And to all the small businesses across Britain, I pledge instead of a country that serves its banks, we would have banks that serve our country.

I tell you one cut I would never make:

I would never cut taxes for millionaires while raising taxes for everybody else.

One Nation is a country where those with the broadest shoulders always bear the greatest burden.

One Nation is a country where we give hope to our young people again.

And One Nation is a country where we defend and improve our great institutions, like the National
Health Service.

One Nation.

A country united not divided.

A future that works.

A future that Britain builds together.

  • AlanGiles

    “We will end the privatisation experiment in the NHS.”

    Yet Andy Burnham does not seem adverse to private enterprise in the NHS – indeed he devised NHS Global and even when savaging the Lansley proposals (the only sane thing to do) on Radio 4′s “Any Questions” he was at pains to mention that he was in  favour of private involvement.

    Is Miliband’s remark a promise – or an aspiration?

    You notice nothing said about the disgraceful welfare policies continued by the coalition, or the approaching train crash of Duncan-Smith’s “universal credit” which will hit the poorest hardest.

    Don’t tell me he is frightend of upsetting Liam Byrne!

    All in all this speech is just a series of bland one-liners, all of which have been intoned countless times before, and as predictable and banal as the adverts for the never-ending “half price sale” of DFS>

    • aracataca

      At least he turned up to the march- unlike you.

      • AlanGiles

        Do stop making such a fool of yourself Bill you have made the point God knows how many times now, and I have told you why I was engaged elsewhere  – not that it is any concern of yours. You are like some busybodying old woman with too much time on her hands twitching the lace curtains, looking for more mischief to gawp at.

        You are not much of an advert for the Labour party with your childish repetitive baiting.

        • aracataca

          Just saying that he attended the rally which is more than you did.

          • AlanGiles

             Well, we only have your word for it that you did, if it comes to it, and how much is your word worth?

            Think about it

  • http://twitter.com/waterwards dave stone

    “I have said whoever was in government now there would still need to be some cuts.”

    I have no problem with this. Why shouldn’t the outrageous salaries of local authority chiefs be cut*, and the role of highly paid  ’consultants’ and agency workers** be cut?

    *http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/politics/council-spending/8714687/Council-chief-executive-salaries-201011-interactive-table-and-draft-accounts.html

    **http://www.guardian.co.uk/local-government-network/2012/jun/27/low-pay-local-government-unison

  • Pingback: UnionHome | Views from across the union movement

  • http://twitter.com/Nico22a022 Nico

    Education, education, education.

  • http://twitter.com/Nico22a022 Nico

    Education, education, education.

  • http://twitter.com/Nico22a022 Nico

    Education, education, education.

  • http://twitter.com/Nico22a022 Nico

    Education, education, education.

  • http://twitter.com/Nico22a022 Nico

    Education, education, education.

  • http://twitter.com/Nico22a022 Nico

    Education, education, education.

  • 2stcenturytruth

    Sounded like a leftish Tory. Can’t there be some original NEW thinking? If boy Milliband goes the country mouthing this Cameron speak he will not win. Period. The country is crying out for a new agenda. More of the same but a little slower is not a vote winning message that will excite the electorate. All those books. All that reading. All that debating with giants of the left when young. and what do we have. Pigmy ideas.

  • robertcp

    I was at the rally.  Ed Miliband was right to speak at the rally and his speech got the balance right.  He showed support to the TUC, while making clear that the next Labour government will need to make some difficult decisions.

  • robertcp

    I was at the rally.  Ed Miliband was right to speak at the rally and his speech got the balance right.  He showed support to the TUC, while making clear that the next Labour government will need to make some difficult decisions.

  • robertcp

    I was at the rally.  Ed Miliband was right to speak at the rally and his speech got the balance right.  He showed support to the TUC, while making clear that the next Labour government will need to make some difficult decisions.

  • robertcp

    I was at the rally.  Ed Miliband was right to speak at the rally and his speech got the balance right.  He showed support to the TUC, while making clear that the next Labour government will need to make some difficult decisions.

  • robertcp

    I was at the rally.  Ed Miliband was right to speak at the rally and his speech got the balance right.  He showed support to the TUC, while making clear that the next Labour government will need to make some difficult decisions.

  • robertcp

    I was at the rally.  Ed Miliband was right to speak at the rally and his speech got the balance right.  He showed support to the TUC, while making clear that the next Labour government will need to make some difficult decisions.

  • robertcp

    I was at the rally.  Ed Miliband was right to speak at the rally and his speech got the balance right.  He showed support to the TUC, while making clear that the next Labour government will need to make some difficult decisions.

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