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Text of speech given by Harriet Harman to Welsh Labour Conference, 25 April 2009
I’m delighted to be here in Wales with so many friends and wonderful Labour Party people.
And to join you on this important day of debate and discussion and motivation at an important time
We will face these big challenges with unity and with determination because of our values and because of our principles.
And every part of Labour’s team has a major part to play in facing these big challenges
Our whole team – like the whole Wales Labour team that is here today
It is the whole party – supported by Chris Roberts and our hard-working party staff - that will not only keep us strong in these difficult times but shape our future.
Charting the way forward should never and never could be the preserve of government.
The party is the engine of progress. And the party in Wales before Neil Kinnock and since have played a major part.
I know that as Labour in Wales, you are proud of our achievements in government, your achievements in Wales in the Assembly and in local government. But I hope you will be bold and demanding and insistent for the future.
I know that you will support the party but that you will challenge it too.
When I first joined the party in my twenties I joined because I knew and supported what it stood for – particularly on equality and social justice. But I didn’t think it walked the talk. It needed to change fundamentally – particularly to listen to, and include women alongside men. And working with other young people, young women in the party and in the Trade Union movement, we worked together and changed the party for good.
We must be sure that the next generation is the generation who will be the agents of change for the future and that is what is important about today and about all your work.
This conference comes at a time of unprecedented change. The global banking system is in crisis and its ripples reach all around the world and to Wales.
The Tories would do the opposite
All this is the polar opposite to the Tories.
Their approach would have been both disastrous and heartless.
And I feel that we can all be proud of Gordon’s leadership on the economy and his championing of fairness and equality. In such contrast the inconsistency and tactical manouevering of Cameron’s Tories.
And as for Cameron’s recent visit to Wales - what he calls “the Principality” – I understand that he left pledging to cut the number of Welsh MPs by 10 and boasted that the Tories now had a Tory councillor in the Rhondda. Chris Bryant – my brilliant deputy as leader of the House of Commons - tells me that the people of the Rhondda have much more sense than that and that Rhondda is a Tory-free zone.
Working together, Labour in Wales, in government, in the European parliament, we have made progress.
But there are people saying – now is the time to draw back on our quest for fairness, opportunity and equality. At least “put it on the back burner”.
But I think that when times are hard, fairness is even more important.
And I think when we look for hope for the future – it is a fair society with opportunities for all, that people want.
So we did go ahead – earlier this month – with rights for all parents of children up to 16 to request flexible work to help them balance their work with their very important family responsibilities.
And on Monday we will introduce our new Equality Bill.
The Bill will
This Bill is the work of all those who’ve struggled for equality - women like Julie Morgan and like my committed parliamentary aide, Nia Griffith.
Our argument is that fairness and equality is important not just for the individual but also for the economy and society.
Equality and fairness is necessary for a meritocracy. It is backward looking societies which are characterised by rigid hierarchies, women knowing their place and oppression of gays and lesbians.
When we see unfairness and inequality – we take action.
So this is not turning the clock back – it is looking to the future.
Our Labour team faces a big test on June 4th when everyone will have a vote in the elections for the European parliament. We need every vote out. Every vote will count. This is about electing a key part of Labour’s team – our Euro MPs.
This is about the importance of European funds helping the Welsh Economy. Its about the Welsh jobs that depend on our trade in Europe. It’s about the environment and about cross-border security.
And it is only by working together in Government, in local government, in the Assembly and in Europe that we can deliver for people.
Of course we need to be on the doorstep, on the phone. That’s the way to show that we are on people’s side
Thank you all for your work
I hope that you will continue to be energetic, idealistic and ambitious and confident.
I, for my part, promise that I will
And I look forward to us working together in the demanding and important time ahead.