The Liberal pre-Manifesto 3 September 2014
...says some of what I want, but also the opposite of what I want. It is 78 pages long and I have just used control+F to try to find the relevant bits.
"We will ... secure local agreement on and pooling of budgets between the NHS and social care"
It wants pooling of NHS and Council care budgets
- with council consent, which is to say it's just something that liberal councils might do, and
- a long time from now after more deliberation central government should give the idea a push
I think they know they want it but are too scared to offend councils.
They don't want Westminster politicians setting a minimum budget for social care. So they risk budgets being cut and cut again because on the national budget they just show as "local government". It's hard for anyone to stand up in the house of commons and say "I vote against the budget because it cuts money to local government". If the crunch was about NHS spending, or care spending, there might be some kind of debate. If an MP rebelled about the need for more council spending, they'd just get a funny look and maybe be asked if the wanted to fight the seat at the next election.
Afterthought: full manifesto 2015 - this goes down to about 32 sides of Libre 11pt type in two columns with minimal margins,
Liberal
Democrat Manifesto 2015
1.
Responsible finances:
balancing the budget in a fair way
1.1
Balancing the budget
We
will complete the job of balancing the budget – on time, in full,
and fairly. The Liberal Democrat objective is to eradicate the
structural current budget deficit by 2017/18 and have debt falling as
a percentage of national income, so it is back to sustainable levels
by the middle of the next decade.
In
2010, Liberal Democrats insisted the Coalition adopt a fairer
approach to dealing with the deficit, using both spending cuts and
tax rises, than the Conservatives had planned. This mixed approach
was much more in line with proposals set out in the Liberal Democrat
manifesto. The Conservatives now want to scrap this approach entirely
and use only spending cuts to finish the job. We reject this
proposal, which would do significant damage to Britain’s public
services and require punitive cuts to benefits on which some of the
most vulnerable people depend.
We
are determined to stick with the approach we set out in 2010 – a
fair way of restoring the nation’s finances. So as we finish the
job of balancing the books, we will use taxes on the wealthiest, on
banks and big business and on polluters, and we will bear down on tax
avoidance and evasion, to limit the impact of deficit reduction on
public services. We do not think low and middle income earners should
bear the burden of tax rises: our plans do not require any increase
in the headline rates of Income Tax, National Insurance, VAT or
Corporation Tax. In fact, our plans enable us to continue to cut
taxes for people on low and middle incomes by raising the tax-free
Personal Allowance.
Having
a balanced approach on tax and spending enables us to:
♦ Protect
the least well off in society and users of public services from the
impact of measures taken to tackle the deficit.
♦ Invest,
over the Parliament, the money NHS chiefs say is essential to protect
our health service.
♦ Extend
the protection of schools’ budgets to include early years and 16–19
education.
♦ Limit
reductions in departmental spending to less than half the rate agreed
for 2015/16.
♦ Limit
welfare reductions so we do not destroy the essential safety net that
protects us all in times of crisis.
♦ Continue
to spend 0.7% of Gross National Income on international development
aid, helping the poorest in the world.
We
will carry out a full Spending Review after the General Election.
Building on the successes of this Parliament, we will focus on
delivering efficiency, funding proven spend-to-save initiatives,
pursuing local and community integration to drive efficiency, and
investing in technology to get public services and frontline staff
online. The aim of everything that government does will be to help
people improve their quality of life and wellbeing, especially the
most vulnerable and least well off.
1.2
Looking to the future
Once we have balanced the books, we
will ensure that overall public spending grows again in line with the
economy. This will ensure we can improve key public services and
enable public sector workers to receive fair and affordable increases
in their pay. We understand that public services depend upon
high-quality and dedicated staff.
We
will follow two new fiscal rules.
Our
first fiscal rule is that, from 2017/18, debt must fall as a
proportion of our national income every year – except during a
recession – so it reaches sustainable levels around the middle of
the next decade.
Our
second fiscal rule is that over the economic cycle we will balance
the overall budget, no longer borrowing to pay for everyday
expenditure. We will make one significant exception to enable us to
invest in the things that will help our economy grow. Provided the
debt rule is met, the government will be able to borrow for capital
spending that enhances economic growth or financial stability,
enabling us to increase this productive investment.
In
our Spending Review we will set out long-term plans for capital
expenditure, and ensure that investment in infrastructure, including
in housing and energy efficiency, continues to rise both in absolute
terms and as a share of the economy.
Our
plan to finish the job and balance the books:
♦ Aim
to balance the structural current budget by 2017/18.
♦ Set
a course to reduce debt as a share of national income.
♦ Make
deficit reduction fair by ensuring the richest pay their fair share
and corporations cannot avoid their tax responsibilities.
♦ Set
new fiscal rules to balance the budget while allowing borrowing for
productive investment.
♦ Increase
public spending again in line with the economy once the budget is
balanced.
2.
Prosperity for all: building a sustainable economy
Britain
needs a strong economy not just to help fund public services but
because growth and enterprise create jobs and opportunities for all.
Liberal Democrats want an economy that is strong, green, open and
fair. As Britain recovers, we must make sure we don’t return to
growth based on personal debt and speculation, but build prosperity
and wellbeing that last, for everyone.
We
will grow a high-skill, low-carbon economy by supporting education,
training, infrastructure, innovation and technology. With a stable,
competitive business environment and investment in green industries
and infrastructure, we will ensure growth is embedded in every part
of the UK.
We
have made a big start in government: reforming the banking system;
creating the world’s first Green Investment Bank; enabling
unprecedented investment in low-carbon energy; introducing a Regional
Growth Fund and a bold new Industrial Strategy to support growth and
high-skilled jobs; delivering more than two million new
apprenticeships; ensuring transparency of company ownership and
promoting more diversity in business leadership.
Now
is the time to push forward and reject any temptation to go back to
the old economy. Whether it’s fighting for proper investment in
renewable energy, or working to build a high-skill, flexible labour
market: Liberal Democrats will ensure Britain doesn’t return to the
mistakes of the past.
A
Record of Delivery ♦ Billions invested in growing modern British
businesses with our Industrial Strategy, Business Bank and Regional
Growth Fund ♦ A Promise of More
Double
innovation spend in our economy, making the UK a world leader in
advanced manufacturing, clean technology and digital industries
Reformed
the banking system to separate retail and investment banking and help
rebuild our economy
Grow
a competitive banking sector, support alternative finance providers
and improve access to finance for business and consumers
The
world’s first Green Investment Bank and low-carbon energy market,
helping almost treble renewable electricity generation
Expand
the Green Investment Bank and set a legally binding decarbonisation
target to green our electricity
Biggest
rail investment since Victorian times, driving record numbers of
train journeys
Enable
more people to travel with rail upgrades across the country and HS2
2.1
Economic and industrial growth
To
deliver a balanced economy with strengths in every part of the UK,
Britain needs a highly skilled workforce and flexible business
support and finance. We must continue to invest to grow sectors like
advanced manufacturing that can provide high-skilled, sustainable
jobs, open up the supply chain to more small and medium-sized
businesses and support firms bringing activity back to Britain.
We will:
♦ Continue
to develop our Industrial Strategy, working with sectors which are
critical to Britain’s ability to trade internationally – motor
vehicles, aerospace, low-carbon energy, chemicals, creative
industries, offshore and subsea technology and more.
♦ Develop
the skilled workforce needed to support this growth with a major
expansion of high-quality and advanced apprenticeships, offering
vocational education on a par with academic qualifications, backed up
with new sector-led National Colleges. We will develop a national
skills strategy for key sectors, including low-carbon technologies,
to help match skills and people.
♦ Aim
to double innovation and research spending across the economy,
supported by greater public funding on a longer timescale, more
‘Catapult’ innovation and technology centres and support for
green innovation from the Green Investment Bank. We will continue to
ringfence the science budget and ensure that, by 2020, both capital
and revenue spending have increased at least in line with inflation.
♦ Build
on the success of the Regional Growth Fund, which has already created
more than 100,000 jobs and secured £1.8 billion of private
investment. We will continue the Fund throughout the next Parliament.
♦ Devolve
more economic decision-making to local areas, building on the success
of City Deals and Growth Deals, prioritising the transfer of
transport, housing and infrastructure funding, skills training and
back-to-work support.
♦ Provide
further support to medium-sized businesses through a one-stop-shop
for accessing government support, a dedicated unit in HMRC and the
development of management skills.
♦ Aim
to stimulate local economies, working with Local Enterprise
Partnerships to improve their effectiveness and coordination. We
will:
♦ Use
central government public procurement policy as a tool of local
growth and community development, for example by purchasing from
diverse sources and using local labour, goods and services, and
encourage local government to do the same.
♦ Continue
our work to open up public procurement to small and medium sized
companies and to the voluntary sector.
♦ Develop
platforms on which government can provide feedback on its suppliers
to help quality providers to grow.
2.2
Banking and financial reform
The
financial crisis of 2008 caused real damage to our economy including
one of the largest budget deficits in the world and banks unable to
support the real economy. Liberal Democrats have ensured radical
reform of the banking industry to make banks safe and no longer
requiring a taxpayer safety net.
Building
on this progress, We will:
♦ Complete
implementation of the new rules to separate retail banking from
investment banking, working with the financial services industry to
promote integrity, accountability and value across the sector.
♦ Expand
the British Business Bank to perform a more central role in the
economy, tackling the shortage of equity capital for growing firms
and providing long-term capital for medium-sized businesses.
♦ Develop
the UK banking sector to promote competition and innovation by:
-
Facilitating new entrants, including through public procurement
policy.
-
Encouraging the growth of crowdfunding and alternative finance
models, encouraging Local Authorities to use these platforms to
improve credit access in their areas.
-
Promoting a new community banking sector to support small and
medium-sized Enterprises and social enterprises.
-
Taking forward the recently commissioned study by the British
Business Bank into the sustainability of Community Development
Finance Institutions.
♦ Ensure
access to finance for all, tackling discrimination in the provision
of financial services and supporting products that increase financial
inclusion.
♦ Continue
the Banking Levy and introduce a time-limited supplementary
Corporation Tax charge on the banking sector to ensure it continues
to make a fair contribution to fiscal consolidation.
2.3
Creating a stable competitive environment for growth
Britain
needs a stable and competitive environment for growth; this is
essential to attract and sustain new businesses and new jobs. Britain
is not just a part of the European economy – we have to compete
with the developing economies of Asia and Latin America, which are
increasingly powering ahead.
We
need to lock in macroeconomic stability, including low inflation, and
reduce the risks of a return to the economics of boom and bust. and
we need a tax system that is simple, fair and competitive – which
attracts and retains jobs in our country, while ensuring business
makes a fair contribution.
We will:
♦ Continue
to support an independent Bank of England, with a mandate to keep
inflation low and stable to support sustainable growth. We will
protect the new regulatory framework, which ensures the Bank of
England has the necessary tools to help avoid a return to boom and
bust.
♦ Continue
to reform business tax to ensure it stays competitive, making small
and medium-sized enterprises the priority for any business tax cuts.
We will work to adjust the tax system away from subsidy of high
leverage debt and tackle the bias against equity investment.
♦ Reform
and improve the Regulatory Policy Committee to reduce regulatory
uncertainty and remove unnecessary business regulation. We understand
that well-designed regulation, focused on outcomes rather than
processes, has a vital role in creating markets and driving
investment and will use it, in particular, to promote low-carbon and
resource-efficient innovation.
In
England we will complete the ongoing review of Business Rates,
prioritising reforms that lessen the burden on smaller businesses,
ensure high streets remain competitive and promote more efficient use
of land. Liberal Democrats remain committed to introducing Land Value
Tax (LVT), which would replace Business Rates in the longer term and
could enable the reduction or abolition of other taxes. We will
extend the Business Rates review to ensure it considers the
implementation of LVT, as well as interim reforms like Site Value
Rating that could be completed within five years. We will charge the
Land Registry with completing registration of all substantial land
and property holdings in England and Wales by 2020.
2.4
Green jobs and industry
New
world markets are developing in low-carbon and resource-efficient
technologies. Britain’s real strengths in sectors like offshore
wind power and low-carbon vehicles, and in green finance, make us
well placed to compete.
We
must make sure green industries can reach their full potential and
build on successes in increasing recycling to shift towards a
so-called ‘circular economy’ in which we use natural resources
efficiently and minimise waste. (See also Section 6.2)
We will:
♦ Pass
a Zero Carbon Britain Act to set a new legally binding target
to bring net greenhouse gas emissions to zero by 2050.
♦ Realise
the full potential of the Green Investment Bank by increasing its
capitalisation, expanding its remit, allowing it to raise funds
independently and enabling it to issue green bonds.
♦ Place
the Natural Capital Committee (NCC) on the same statutory footing as
the Committee on Climate Change through our Nature Act. We
will task the NCC with identifying the key natural resources being
used unsustainably and recommending legally binding targets for
reducing their net consumption; and introduce incentives for
businesses to improve resource efficiency.
♦ Help
incentivise sustainable behaviour by increasing the proportion of tax
revenue accounted for by green taxes.
♦ Grow
the market for green products and services with steadily higher green
criteria in public procurement policy, extending procurement
requirements more widely through the public sector including to the
NHS and Academy schools. In particular we will deliver ambitious
reductions in energy use.
♦ Increase
research and development and commercialisation support in four key
low-carbon technologies where Britain could lead the world: tidal
power, carbon capture and storage, energy storage and ultra-low
emission vehicles.
♦ Ensure
UK Trade and Investment and UK Export Finance can prioritise support
for key sectors identified in our Industrial Strategy, including
exports of green products and technologies, and press for higher
environmental standards for export credit agencies throughout the
OECD.
♦ Encourage
the creation of green financial products to bring consumer capital
into green industries.
We
will improve the way government handles the cross-cutting challenges
of delivering green growth and fighting climate change, establishing
a senior Cabinet Committee to coordinate action and bringing together
officials in inter-departmental units on issues like air quality and
resource management. We will replicate the success of the Office for
Budget Responsibility with an Office for Environmental Responsibility
scrutinising the government’s efforts to meets its environmental
targets.
2.5
Making the connection: transport infrastructure
Liberal
Democrats are leading the renewal of Britain's ageing infrastructure
but we still have decades of under-investment to catch up on. We need
better transport infrastructure, a modern railway system, and less
congestion on our roads.
We
have established our second fiscal rule precisely so we can invest in
productive infrastructure to help the economy grow.
We will:
♦ Set
out 10-year rolling capital investment plans.
♦ Develop
a comprehensive plan to electrify the overwhelming majority of the UK
rail network, reopen smaller stations, restore twin-track lines to
major routes and proceed with HS2, as the first stage of a high-speed
rail network to Scotland.
♦ Invest
in major transport improvements and infrastructure. We
will:
-
Deliver the Transport for the North strategy to promote growth,
innovation and prosperity across northern England.
-
Develop more modern, resilient links to and within the South West
peninsula to help develop and diversify the regional economy
-
Complete East-West rail, connecting up Oxford and Cambridge and
catalysing major new housing development.
-
Ensure London’s transport infrastructure is improved to withstand
the pressure of population and economic growth.
♦ Work
to encourage further private sector investment in rail freight
terminals and rail-connected distribution parks. We will set a clear
objective to shift more freight from road to rail and change planning
law to ensure new developments provide good freight access to retail,
manufacturing and warehouse facilities.
♦ Ensure
our airport infrastructure meets the needs of a modern and open
economy, without allowing emissions from aviation to undermine our
goal of a zero-carbon Britain by 2050. We will carefully consider the
conclusions of the Davies Review into runway capacity and develop a
strategic airports policy for the whole of the UK in the light of
those recommendations and advice from the Committee on Climate
Change. We remain opposed to any expansion of Heathrow, Stansted or
Gatwick and any new airport in the Thames Estuary, because of local
issues of air and noise pollution. We will ensure no net increase in
runways across the UK.
♦ Ensure
new rail franchises include a stronger focus on customers, including
requirements to integrate more effectively with other modes of
transport and a programme of investment in new stations, lines and
station facilities. We will continue the Access for All programme,
improving disabled access to public transport.
Modern
light rail systems, like Croydon Tramlink and Manchester Metrolink,
have brought significant benefits to passengers. We will encourage
Local Authorities to consider trams alongside other options, and
support a new generation of light rail and ultra-light rail schemes
in towns and cities where local people want them.
2.6
Low-carbon energy
Our
reforms of the electricity market have already created the world’s
first low-carbon electricity market and will stimulate up to 250,000
green jobs across the UK by 2020. Since 2010, energy demand has
fallen by 2.5% a year and renewable electricity generation has almost
trebled.
But
we need to go further and faster to meet our goal of reducing energy
demand by 50% by 2030. If we do not speed up energy efficiency
investment, our buildings will continue to leak energy and waste
money and our businesses will fail to compete internationally. We
will ensure we create a low-carbon economy at the lowest cost for
consumers.
We will:
♦ Make
saving energy a top infrastructure priority, stimulating private
sector demand with our new Electricity Demand Reduction market, new
market-shaping energy efficiency standards, support for industry,
particularly SMEs, and a programme of tax incentives and public
investment. Our plans for insulating homes are set out in more detail
in Section 7.5, below.
♦ Stimulate
a minimum of £100 billion more private investment in low-carbon
energy infrastructure by 2020.
♦ Set
a legally binding decarbonisation target range for 2030 for the power
sector of 50– 100g of CO2 per kWh, which can largely be achieved by
expansion of renewables, with an indicative target of 60% of
electricity from renewable sources by 2030. We will support
investment in energy storage and smart grid technology to enable this
higher reliance on renewables.
♦ Work
with the independent regulator Ofgem to ensure the costs of
electricity distribution and transmission infrastructure are
allocated efficiently and fairly between consumers and generators
across the country, and develop more European electricity
interconnection capacity.
♦ Regulate
to end the use of unabated coal in electricity generation by 2025
because of its high carbon emissions and impact on local air quality,
and require any new gas stations built after 2030 to be fitted with
Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) technology. We will implement a
second phase of CCS projects by 2020.
♦ Expand
community energy, building on Britain’s first ever community energy
strategy with additional financial and regulatory support. We will
encourage Councils to be proactive in delivering energy saving and
electricity generation.
♦ Encourage
onshore wind in appropriate locations, helping meet our climate
targets at least cost. We will end ideologically motivated
interference in local planning decisions for wind farms by Government
Ministers.
♦ Accept
that new nuclear power stations can play a role in low-carbon
electricity supply provided concerns about safety, disposal of waste
and cost are adequately addressed and without public subsidy for new
build.
♦ Use
biomass primarily for heating and small-scale power generation, act
to encourage the wider use of biogas and argue for the reform of EU
policies on biofuels and biomass which help drive deforestation,
including ending all support for food-crop-based biofuels after 2020.
♦ Continue
to back new entrants to the energy market, smart meters and faster
switching to promote proper competition, aiming for at least 30% of
the household market to be supplied by competitors to the ‘Big 6’
by 2020.
The
UK has significant stores of unconventional gas, which could be
accessed through the process known as fracking. It is vital that
efforts to access this gas be properly regulated to protect our
natural environment. Liberal Democrats in government have introduced
the world’s most robust regulatory regime for unconventional gas,
including banning drilling in National Parks, and will take two
further steps to ensure any shale gas contributes to a faster
transition to a low-carbon economy.
We will:
♦ Establish
a Low-carbon Transition Fund using 50% of any tax revenues from shale
gas to fund energy efficiency, community energy, low-carbon
innovation and renewable heat.
♦ Require
that once a shale gas well is finished, it must be offered at no cost
to geothermal heat developers, to enable faster expansion of this
renewable technology.
2.7
An open, trading nation
As
a major global economy, we must promote open markets and free trade,
both within the European Union and beyond. Only as a full member of a
reformed European Union can we be certain Britain’s businesses will
have access to markets in Europe and beyond.
Liberal
Democrats believe we should welcome talented people from abroad,
encourage visitors and tourists who contribute enormously to our
economic growth, and give sanctuary to refugees fleeing persecution.
Immigration procedures must be robust and fair, and the UK must
remain open to visitors who boost our economy, and migrant workers
who play a vital role in business and public services.
We will:
♦ Remain
a committed member of the EU so we can complete the Single Market in
areas including online industries, the energy market and services,
and help negotiate EU international trade agreements, opening
opportunities for British businesses.
♦ Support
Single Market disciplines in relation to competition and state aid
rules while creating a stronger public interest test for takeovers in
research-intensive activities.
♦ Continue
to allow high-skill immigration to support key sectors of the
economy, and ensure work, tourist and family visit visas are
processed quickly and efficiently.
♦ Ensure
the UK is an attractive destination for overseas students, not least
those who wish to study STEM subjects (Science, Technology,
Engineering and Maths). We will reinstate post-study work visas for
STEM graduates who can find graduate-level employment within six
months of completing their degree.
Tourism
and heritage collectively make up as much as 9% of our economy, and
yet these industries do not have the status they deserve in
government or in wider society. We will work to make sure the British
tourism industry is able to compete with other major world
destinations and be a key generator of growth in the UK economy.
We will:
♦ Strengthen
the Hospitality and Tourism Council, with the Business and Culture
Secretaries as co-chairs.
♦ Give
higher status to tourism within the Department for Culture, Media and
Sport.
♦ Build
on our successful Tourism North and Tourism South West initiatives to
devolve more power, resources and decision-making to local areas to
promote their unique tourism propositions in the UK and globally.
2.8
Securing global leadership in technology
The
UK has a competitive advantage in key sectors of the modern economy
that have the capacity to transform our lives. The UK’s digital
sector is growing at a rate of over 10% a year, employing nearly 1.5m
people. 15% of all new companies last year were digital companies. We
need to support this important sector of our economy. We
will:
♦ Complete
the rollout of high-speed broadband, to reach almost every household
(99.9%) in the UK as well as small businesses in both rural and urban
areas.
♦ Build
on the success of Tech City, Tech North and the Cambridge tech
cluster with a network across the UK acting as incubators for
technology companies.
♦ Support
fast-growing businesses that could create a million jobs over 20
years, following the Sherry Coutu report into these ‘Scale-Ups’.
♦ Promote
the take-up of STEM subjects in schools, retain coding on the
National Curriculum and encourage entrepreneurship at all levels.
♦ Maintain
and develop the award-winning Government Digital Service, and the
principle of Digital by Default in public services, pressing ahead
with plans to extend this to local government.
♦ Continue
to release government data sets that can facilitate economic growth
in an open and accessible format, including on standards in public
services.
♦ Ensure
the technology implications of government activity are properly
considered by introducing Technology Impact Assessments into the
policy design process.
♦ Develop
cutting edge digital skills courses for young people and the
unemployed working with private sector employers and education and
training providers.
2.9
Pride in creativity
Liberal
Democrats understand that arts, creative industries and culture are
crucial to Britain’s success and essential for personal fulfilment
and quality of life. The UK’s creative sector has been one of the
great success stories of the past five years, and a critical driver
of our recovery. We are proud of the arts in Britain and will support
them properly, working to deliver access for all, regardless of
income, ethnicity, gender, age, belief, sexuality or disability. We
believe the arts have an essential role in our education system and
will work to encourage creativity in our schools and universities.
We will:
♦ Maintain
free access to national museums and galleries, while giving these
institutions greater autonomy.
♦ Protect
the independence of the BBC while ensuring the Licence Fee does not
rise faster than inflation, maintain Channel 4 in public ownership
and protect the funding and editorial independence of Welsh language
broadcasters.
♦ Support
growth in the creative industries, including video gaming, by
continuing to support the Creative Industries Council, promoting
creative skills, supporting modern and flexible patent, copyright and
licensing rules, and addressing the barriers to finance faced by
small creative businesses.
3.
Real help for family finances: tax, welfare, pensions and consumer
rights
A
fair society is one in which everyone has the means to get by and the
chance to get on. Liberal Democrats believe Britain should be more
equal, and have worked in government to cut taxes for people on low
and middle incomes, putting money back in the pockets of millions of
people. We have improved childcare support, reformed benefits to make
sure work pays and improved back-to-work support. and we have freed
up pension savings to give older people more choice about how to
manage their money in retirement.
We
will continue to rebalance the tax system away from hard work and
towards unearned wealth, while stamping out abusive tax avoidance. We
will increase availability of childcare to help parents who want to
work. We will continue to reform welfare and get people the right
support in Jobcentres. We will build on our world-leading reforms to
the pensions system. and we will fight tirelessly for a better deal
for consumers, in the private and public sectors.
Record
of Delivery ♦ An £800 tax cut for low and middle income earners,
delivered by letting you earn £10,600 tax free ♦ Promise of More
Raise
the Personal Allowance to at least £12,500, cutting your taxes by
around £400 more
Secured
the biggest ever cash rise in the state pension with our ‘triple
lock’ policy on uprating
Legislate
to make the ‘triple lock’ permanent, guaranteeing decent pensions
rises each year
Cut
the cost of childcare with more free hours for 3 and 4 year olds, and
help for disadvantaged 2 year olds too.
Extend
free childcare to all two year olds, and to the children of working
families from the end of paid parental leave
Helped
people balance work and family life with Shared Parental Leave and
the Right to Request flexible working for all
Expand
Shared Parental Leave with a ‘use it or lose it’ month for
fathers, and introduce a right to paid leave for carers
Kept
welfare spending under control, while blocking plans to cut off young
people’s benefits
Make
sure it pays to work by rolling out Universal Credit, and invest in
back-to-work and healthcare support for those who need it
3.1
Fair taxes
During
this Parliament we have gone even further than our manifesto pledge
to raise the personal Income Tax threshold to £10,000 a year. This
April’s increase to £10,600 has lifted more than three million
people out of Income Tax altogether and delivered a tax cut of more
than £800 for millions of low and middle-income taxpayers.
We
will continue to make taxes fairer and simpler, help those on low and
middle incomes, and ensure those on the highest incomes make a fair
contribution.
We will:
♦ Raise
the tax-free Personal Allowance to at least £12,500 by the end of
the next Parliament, putting around £400 back in the pockets of
millions of working people and pensioners. We will bring forward the
planned increase to an £11,000 allowance to April 2016.
♦ Consider,
as a next step, and once the Personal Allowance rise is delivered,
raising the employee National Insurance threshold to the Income Tax
threshold, as resources allow, while protecting low earners’
ability to accrue pension and benefit entitlements.
♦ Ensure
those with the highest incomes and wealth are making a fair
contribution. We have identified a series of distortions, loopholes
and excess reliefs that should be removed, raising money to
contribute to deficit reduction. These include reforms to Capital
Gains Tax and Dividend Tax relief, refocusing Entrepreneurs’ Relief
and a supplementary Corporation Tax for the banking sector. In
addition, we will introduce a UK-wide High Value Property Levy on
residential properties worth over £2 million. It will have a banded
structure, like Council Tax.
♦ Take
tough action against corporate tax evasion and avoidance, including
by:
♦ Setting
a target for HM Revenue and Customs to reduce the tax gap and
continuing to invest in staff to enable them to meet it.
♦ Introducing
a general anti-avoidance rule which would outlaw contrived structures
designed purely or largely to avoid tax.
♦ Implementing
the planned new offence of corporate failure to prevent economic
crime, including tax evasion, with penalties for directors up to and
including custodial sentences.
♦ Levying
penalties on firms proven to facilitate tax evasion, equivalent to
the amount of tax evaded by their clients.
♦ Asking
the Bank of England’s Financial Policy Committee to consider the
approach to paying tax taken by banks for themselves, their employees
and for their customers, as part of their assessment of the risks
posed by the sector, supported by an annual report by HMRC.
♦ Restrict
access to non-domiciled status, increasing the charges paid to adopt
this status and ending the ability to inherit it.
3.2
Help with childcare costs
Many
parents want to take significant time out from work to care for young
children but in many families both parents want or have to work, and
the costs of childcare are prohibitive.
We
have made dramatic improvements over the current Parliament – with
Tax-Free Childcare, increases in childcare support through the
benefit system and more free childcare hours for two, three and four
year olds. But we need to do more so that all who want to work can do
so.
We will:
♦ Commit
to an ambitious goal of 20 hours’ free childcare a week for all
parents with children aged from two to four years, and all working
parents from the end of paid parental leave (nine months) to two
years. This will not only help parents afford to work, it will help
all children start school confident, happy and ready to learn.
♦ Start
by providing 15 hours a week of free childcare to the parents of all
two year olds. We will then prioritise 15 hours free childcare for
all working parents with children aged between nine months and two
years.
♦ Complete
the introduction of Tax-Free Childcare, which will provide up to
£2,000 of childcare support for each child and include childcare
support in Universal Credit, refunding 85% of childcare costs so work
pays for low earners.
3.3
Creating jobs and helping people find work
More
people are working in the UK today than ever before. Our economic
plans have created more jobs than anyone forecast. But that does not
make it easy for everyone to find work. Liberal Democrats inherited a
benefit system that trapped millions on out-of-work benefits, because
it simply did not pay to be in work. Our reforms are starting to
change that but we need to go further.
We will:
♦ Complete
the introduction of Universal Credit (UC), so people are always
better off in work. We will review UC to address any issues regarding
‘cliff edges’, and ensure increased working hours are properly
incentivised for all claimants. We will retain the overall cap on a
household’s benefits and believe this should continue to be set at
around the average family income.
♦ Deliver
a reformed and improved Work Programme in partnership with English
local government, and the national governments of Wales, Scotland and
Northern Ireland. By devolving this support we can ensure help and
training are more tailored to local employment markets and better
integrated with other services. We will improve incentives for
Jobcentre staff and Work Programme providers to ensure there is real
help for those furthest from the labour market.
♦ Establish
a review of effective ways to promote ‘rainy day’ saving to
improve people’s financial resilience, and reform hardship
payments, making it easier for people to bring forward part of their
benefit payments to deal with emergencies.
♦ Develop
a package of specialist support for carers seeking part-time work or
a return to full-time employment.
♦ Review
sanctions procedures in Jobcentres. While sanctions can be a
necessary last resort to ensure jobseekers are looking for work, they
should not be used to cut benefit expenditure deliberately.
Reductions in benefits may not always be the best way to improve
claimants’ compliance: those with chaotic lives might be more
successful in finding a job if they were directed to targeted support
with their problems. We will ensure there are no league tables or
targets for sanctions issued by Jobcentres and introduce a ‘yellow
card’ warning so people are only sanctioned if they deliberately
and repeatedly break the rules.
Liberal
Democrats will protect young people’s entitlements to the welfare
safety net, while getting them the help they need to get their first
job. That means doubling the number of businesses that hire
apprentices. It also means providing support that has been proven to
work, like work experience placements that help them get a first foot
on the career ladder. These placements should be tailored for those
with disabilities or mental health problems and those with parental
responsibilities and we will work to expand the availability of
placements into new sectors including manufacturing, science and
technology.
3.4
Making welfare work
Working-age
benefits make up a significant proportion of public spending, and
have long been in need of reform, which we have started in this
Parliament. Through tough choices, we have found savings in the
welfare budget and we must continue to do so as we balance the books.
However, we do not support proposals for a lengthy freeze to
working-age benefits, and we will not protect benefits for the
wealthiest pensioners at the expense of people working on low wages.
Our
priority is to tackle the causes of rising benefit bills – high
rents, low pay, sickness and unemployment.
We will:
♦ Introduce
a 1% cap on the uprating of working-age benefits until the budget is
balanced in 2017/18, after which they will rise with inflation once
again. Disability and parental leave benefits will be exempt from
this temporary cap.
♦ Encourage
landlords to lower their rent by paying them Housing Benefit
directly, with tenants’ consent, in return for a fixed reduction.
Our plans for a major expansion of house building and new ‘family
friendly’ tenancies, which limit annual rent increases, will also
help reduce upward pressure on rents. We will review the way the
Shared Accommodation Rate in Local Housing Allowance is set, and
review the Broad Rental Market Areas to ensure they fit with
realistic travel patterns.
♦ Improve
links between Jobcentres and Work Programme providers and the local
NHS to ensure all those in receipt of health-related benefits are
getting the care and support to which they are entitled. In
particular, as we expand access to talking therapies we expect many
more people to recover and be able to seek work again.
♦ Work
with Local Authorities to tackle fraud and error in a more
coordinated way, in particular on Housing Benefit.
♦ Help
everyone in work on a low wage step up the career ladder and increase
their hours, reducing their need for benefits, with tailored in-work
careers and job search advice.
♦ Withdraw
eligibility for the Winter Fuel Payment and free TV Licence from
pensioners who pay tax at the higher rate (40%). We will retain the
free bus pass for all pensioners.
3.5
Flexibility at work and fair pay
Britain’s
employment laws are among the best in the world, balancing the needs
of business for flexibility with the rights of staff to fair
treatment. Nonetheless there are still too many examples of low pay,
exploitation, and bad practice, which contribute to unacceptable
levels of inequality in our society. This has to change: the more
people earn a decent wage, the fewer will be dependent on benefits or
stuck in poverty.
We will:
♦ Encourage
employers to provide more flexible working, expanding Shared Parental
Leave with an additional ‘use it or lose it’ month to encourage
fathers to take time off with young children. While changes to
parental leave should be introduced slowly to give business time to
adjust, our ambition is to see Paternity and Shared Parental Leave
become a ‘day one’ right.
♦ Ensure
swift implementation of the new rules requiring companies with more
than 250 employees to publish details of the different pay levels of
men and women in their organisation. We will build on this platform
and, by 2020, extend transparency requirements to include publishing
the number of people paid less than the Living Wage and the ratio
between top and median pay. We will also consult on requirements for
companies to conduct and publish a full equality pay review, and to
consult staff on executive pay.
♦ Ask
the Low Pay Commission to look at ways of raising the National
Minimum Wage, without damaging employment opportunities. We will
improve enforcement action and clamp down on abuses by employers
seeking to avoid paying the minimum wage by reviewing practices such
as unpaid internships.
♦ Establish
an independent review to consult on how to set a fair Living Wage
across all sectors. We will pay this Living Wage in all central
government departments and their agencies from April 2016, and
encourage other public sector employers to do likewise.
♦ Improve
the enforcement of employment rights, reviewing Employment Tribunal
fees to ensure they are not a barrier. We will ensure employers
cannot avoid giving their staff rights or paying the minimum wage by
wrongly classifying them as workers or self-employed.
Liberal
Democrats understand that flexible employment contracts – including
Zero Hours contracts – can work well for employees and businesses.
But that is not always the case and we will continue to stamp out
abuse. We will create a formal right to request a fixed contract and
consult on introducing a right to make regular patterns of work
contractual after a period of time.
3.6
Improving support for the hardest to help
For
too long, sickness benefits were used as a way of parking people away
from the unemployment statistics. Our aim is to get everyone the
support and help they need, both financially and in terms of advice
and support. That does require a formal assessment: but these tests
have to be fair and should not be an extra burden for vulnerable
people. That is why we have made many improvements to the assessments
introduced by the last government.
We
want to aim even higher, ensuring assessments are truly fair, with
quick access to financial help for those who cannot work, and support
for those who can.
We will:
♦ Conduct
a review of the Work Capability Assessment and Personal Independence
Payment assessments to ensure they are fair, accurate and timely and
evaluate the merits of a public sector provider.
♦ Invest
to clear any backlog in assessments for Disability Living Allowance
and Personal Independence Payment.
♦ Simplify
and streamline back-to-work support for people with disabilities,
mental or physical health problems. We will aim for the goal of one
assessment and one budget for disabled and sick people to give them
more choice and control.
♦ Raise
awareness of, and seek to expand, Access to Work, which supports
people with disabilities in work.
♦ Reform
the policy to remove the spare room subsidy. Existing social tenants
will not be subject to any housing benefit reduction until they have
been offered reasonable alternative accommodation. We will ensure
tenants who need an extra bedroom for genuine medical reasons are
entitled to one in any assessment of their Housing Benefit needs, and
those whose homes are substantially adapted do not have their Housing
Benefit reduced.
3.7
Help to save for and enjoy your retirement
Life
expectancy is increasing. This is obviously good news, but it brings
challenges; older people may need a pension income that will last for
20, 30 or even 40 years.
We
want to build on the world-leading reforms Liberal Democrats in
government have introduced since 2010. We have abolished the default
retirement ages so older people cannot be forced out of work on
grounds of age. We have reversed decades of decline in pensioner
incomes by uprating the state pension in line with our ‘triple
lock’ guarantee. We have introduced a new single tier pension to
make saving simple. We have auto-enrolled 5 million people into a
pension for the first time. and we have scrapped the rules that
dictated how you receive your pension, so now you can spend your
savings as you see fit.
We
want Britain to be the best place in the world to save for, and
enjoy, your retirement.
We will:
♦ Continue
the introduction of our simpler single tier pension so people can
plan ahead securely, and feel the benefit of every pound they save.
♦ Legislate
for the Liberal Democrat ‘triple lock’ of increasing the State
Pension each year by the highest of earnings growth, prices growth or
2.5%.
♦ Ensure
pensioners are eligible to gain from the increased Personal Allowance
of £12,500.
♦ Improve
workplace pensions and continue to auto-enrol workers, completing the
rollout of this scheme in full and on time. We will crack down on
charges and encourage people to save more into their pension pot
through this scheme.
♦ Press
ahead with plans to allow people more freedom in the use of their
pension pots and to allow existing pensioners to sell their annuity.
♦ Establish
a review to consider the case for, and practical implications of,
introducing a single rate of tax relief for pensions, which would be
designed to be simpler and fairer and which would be set more
generously than the current 20% basic rate relief.
3.8
Protecting consumers and keeping bills low
Confident
consumers encourage innovation and competition, which strengthen our
economy. We have radically overhauled consumer rights law, making it
simpler and clearer and for the first time protecting consumers
buying digital content. We have driven competition in the energy
sector, speeded up switching, and simplified tariffs so customers can
always get the best deal. We have ended the era of above-inflation
rail fare increases. We have clamped down on unscrupulous payday
lenders and strengthened protections for vulnerable consumers against
rogue traders. In the next Parliament we want to go further.
We will:
♦ Force
energy companies to allow customers to change to any cheaper supplier
in just 24 hours, and extend the principle of ‘gainer led’
switching, where your new provider organises your switch for you,
into new sectors, including telecoms.
♦ Give
people easier to understand information about their own energy use,
with appropriate privacy protections, with a national rollout of
smart electricity and gas meters. We will guarantee that anyone on a
prepayment meter can choose a smart meter instead by 2017.
♦ Help
people form new energy cooperatives so they can benefit from group
discounts and cut their bills.
♦ Protect
high streets and consumers by granting new powers to Local
Authorities to reduce the proliferation of betting shops and
substantially reducing the maximum stakes for Fixed Odds Betting
Terminals.
♦ Ensure
rail fares rise no faster than inflation over the Parliament as a
whole.
♦ Require
the Sports Ground Safety Authority to prepare guidance under which
domestic football clubs, working with their supporters, may introduce
safe standing areas.
♦ Continue
and expand the midata project into new sectors, giving consumers the
right to access data businesses hold on them in an open and reusable
format.
3.9
Driving up standards in public services
Citizens
expect a good service from their public services, and rightly so.
While many schools, hospitals, libraries and other public
institutions offer world-class standards, we could do so much better:
integrating services and making them more accessible, as well as
improving the response when things go wrong.
Liberal
Democrats value the important role the voluntary, independent and
community sectors play in the life of our communities and in
delivering public services. To ensure all providers of public
services are accountable to their users and the public, a public
authority (if possible a democratically accountable one) should
always take the decision about whether a service should be provided
or commissioned.
We will:
♦ Improve
consumer protections in public services, with a review of complaints
handling processes, exploring the options of mirroring the private
sector ‘super-complaint’ system in the public sector and reforms
to the current system of ombudsmen.
♦ Introduce
a ‘community trigger’ mechanism to enable the public to require a
review of the provision of a particular service being delivered
consistently poorly.
♦ Extend
Freedom of Information laws to cover private companies delivering
public services.
♦ Work
with Local Authorities to bring services together at a local level to
provide a better service to citizens, and support users in pooling
their personal budgets into mutual support arrangements.
♦ Continue
and expand the What Works Network to promote evidence-based policy
making, establish an incubator for social enterprises developing
innovative solutions to policy problems and expand the use of public
competitions to encourage innovation in public services.
♦ Require
the highest standards of data protection by public service providers,
including requiring that where data is used for research purposes it
must be anonymised wherever possible, and impose a moratorium on the
creation of new government databases without Parliamentary authority.
4.
An opportunity society: world-class education for all
Liberal
Democrats have put education at the heart of our agenda for a
generation. We believe every child deserves a great start in life,
and are determined to make sure that the education system finds and
nurtures the best in everyone. This is essential in order to break
down the unfair divisions in our society, and to ensure a productive,
competitive economy.
Too
many people have their chances in life determined by who their
parents are, rather than by their own efforts and abilities. With our
Pupil Premium, investing in children who might otherwise fall behind,
we are finally tackling the scandalous gap in exam results between
rich and poor, but we must do even more.
Children
start learning from the moment they are born, so parents need to be
supported right from the start. Our plan stretches from cradle to
college: high-quality early years education; qualified teachers and
successful schools in every community; more money helping the
children who need it most; flexible choices for teenagers and young
people; and world-class training at college and university to set
every young adult on the path to a fulfilled working life.
A
Record of Delivery ♦ Protection for school budgets and new Pupil
Premium cash for your local school to help children who might
otherwise fall behind ♦ A Promise of More
Protect
early years, school, sixth form and college budgets – investment
from nursery to 19 to raise standards for all
A
million more children now taught in good or outstanding schools
Parents’
Guarantee: core curriculum in every school and every child taught by
qualified teachers
Driven
up standards and narrowed the attainment gap between rich and poor
children
End
illiteracy and innumeracy by 2025, with action in nurseries to get
all four year olds ready for school by 2020
Free
school meals for the youngest children in primary school
Extend
free school meals to all primary pupils
Two
million apprenticeships, training our young people for 21st century
jobs, and record numbers going to university
Double
the numbers of businesses hiring apprentices, and give young people
aged 16-21 a discount bus pass to cut the cost of travel
4.1
High-quality early years education
If
we want a more equal society, we must get help to all those who might
fall behind, and their parents, right from the start. That means
improving early education and protecting the wide range of family
support services offered in Children’s Centres. We must improve the
quality of early years teaching, and raise the status of those who
work in early years.
We will:
♦ Raise
the quality of early years provision and ensure that by 2020 every
formal early years setting employs at least one person who holds an
Early Years Teacher qualification. Working with organisations like
Teach First, we will recruit more staff with Early Years Qualified
status, and extend full Qualified Teacher status, terms and
conditions to all those who are properly trained.
♦ Increase
our Early Years Pupil Premium – which gives early years settings
extra money to help children from disadvantaged backgrounds – to
£1,000 per pupil per year.
♦ Continue
to support Local Authorities in providing Children’s Centres,
especially in areas of high need, encouraging integration with other
community services like health visitors, and in particular reviewing
the support and advice available for parents on early child nutrition
and breastfeeding.
♦ Improve
the identification of Special Educational Needs and disability at the
earliest possible stage, so targeted support can be provided and
primary schools are better prepared for their intake of pupils.
4.2
Driving up school standards
There
is much to be proud of in our schools today, and much that has been
improved in the last few years. But far too many children are still
failing to get the qualifications they need. The gaps between rich
and poor are still too wide. We cannot fail our children –
especially when we know it is the children who need the most help who
are the most likely to be let down.
We will:
♦ Protect
the education budget in real terms from the early years to age 19. We
will at least protect the schools’ Pupil Premium in real terms,
consider carefully the merits of extending the Premium, and introduce
a fair National Funding Formula.
♦ Set
a clear ambition for all children to achieve a good grasp of Maths
and English, aiming to eradicate child illiteracy and innumeracy by
2025. We will set an interim goal that all children should start
school with good language skills by 2020.
♦ Strengthen
school leadership and governance. We will provide rapid support and
intervention to help ensure that all schools become good or
outstanding. Our Talented Head Teachers programme will expand,
helping move top leaders to where they are most needed.
♦ Increase
the number of Teaching Schools – centres of teaching excellence
that provide support to other schools.
♦ Ensure
there is an effective, democratically accountable, ‘middle tier’
to support and intervene in schools where problems are identified. We
will encourage local head teachers with a strong record to play a key
role in school improvement through a local Head Teacher Board,
working with schools and Local Authorities. We will abolish unelected
Regional Schools Commissioners.
♦ Allow
Ofsted to inspect both Local Authorities and academy chains. Local
authorities and academy chains which are failed by Ofsted for
intervention work will be required to work with stronger
organisations or be replaced.
♦ Rule
out state-funded profit-making schools.
♦ Give
democratically accountable Local Authorities clear responsibility for
local school places planning. We will only fund new mainstream
schools in areas where school places are needed, and repeal the rule
that all new state funded schools must be free schools or academies.
We will allow Local Authorities to select the school sponsor, where
this is not the Local Authority itself.
♦ Ensure
a fair local schools admissions process.
♦ Implement
the Children’s Commissioner’s report They Go The Extra Mile into
the prevention of and positive alternatives to exclusion, and
strengthen appeals panels.
♦ Extend
free school meals to all children in primary education as resources
allow and following a full evaluation of free meals for infants.
♦ Continue
to promote the local integration of health, care and educational
support for children with Special Educational Needs and health
problems.
We
will allow parents to continue to choose faith-based schools within
the state funded sector and allow the establishment of new faith
schools. We will ensure all faith schools develop an inclusive
admissions policy and end unfair discrimination on grounds of faith
when recruiting staff, except for those principally responsible for
optional religious instruction.
4.3
World-class teaching
Great
teachers are at the heart of a successful education system. We will
continue our work to attract the best into the profession and support
teachers throughout their careers.
We
want to build the status of the teaching profession, support and
nurture teachers in their work, and so drive up standards in every
school.
We will:
♦ Guarantee
all teachers in state-funded schools will be fully qualified or
working towards Qualified Teacher Status (QTS) from September 2016.
♦ Introduce
a clear and properly funded entitlement to professional development
for all teachers. We will raise the bar for entry to the profession,
requiring a B grade minimum in GCSE Maths and English, allowing us to
abolish the separate Maths and English tests.
♦ Help
establish a new profession-led Royal College of Teachers, eventually
to oversee Qualified Teacher Status and professional development. We
do not believe Ministers should dictate teaching practice and will
not issue instructions about how to structure the school day or what
kind of lessons to conduct.
♦ Continue
to support the Teach First programme to attract high calibre
graduates into teaching, in particular in STEM subjects.
♦ Tackle
unnecessary teacher workload, including by:
♦ Avoiding
policy changes while children are within a key stage.
♦ Establishing
the right accountability framework for schools.
♦ Ensuring
Ofsted inspections are high-quality, fair to all schools and focus on
outcomes and not processes.
♦ Establish
a new National Leadership Institute to promote high-quality
leadership and help the best leaders into the most challenging
schools.
♦ Continue
to work with the Education Endowment Foundation to establish a
comprehensive evidence base on what works in teaching, including
assessing play-based learning in early education, and tackling the
attainment gap.
We
need to encourage and inspire more children to study STEM subjects.
At primary level we will encourage schools to have at least one
science specialist among the staff, and at secondary level work to
maximise the number of teachers who have degree qualifications in the
subjects they teach.
4.4
Curriculum and qualifications
We
want schools to have flexibility and freedom, but we also believe
that both parents and children need to know that the school
curriculum will cover the essentials, and that teachers will be
skilled educators who know how to inspire a love of learning.
That
is why we have developed our Parents’ Guarantee: every child will
be taught by qualified teachers, and the core curriculum will be
taught at every state-funded school. We want the highest standards in
our schools, and will ensure that every child has a thorough grasp of
the basics. But we also understand that a great education is about
more than just learning facts: creativity should be nurtured,
children should be helped to develop the life skills they will need
as adults, and every pupil should be given advice and guidance about
their future.
We will:
♦ Establish
an independent Educational Standards Authority (ESA) entirely removed
from Ministerial interference. The ESA will have responsibility for
curriculum content and examination standards.
♦ Introduce
a minimum curriculum entitlement – a slimmed down core national
curriculum, which will be taught in all state-funded schools. This
will include Personal, Social and Health Education: a ‘curriculum
for life’ including financial literacy, first aid and emergency
lifesaving skills, citizenship, and age-appropriate sex and
relationship education. To ensure all children learn about a wide
range of religious and nonreligious world views, religious education
will be included in the core curriculum; however we will give schools
the freedom to set policy on whether to hold acts of collective
worship, while ensuring any such acts are strictly optional.
♦ Complete
the introduction of reformed GCSEs, while continuing to oppose
Conservative plans for a return to the old O-level/CSE divide.
♦ Improve
the quality of vocational education, including skills for
entrepreneurship and self-employment, and improve careers advice in
schools and colleges.
4.5
Improving care for looked after children
Liberal
Democrats have long championed early intervention to prevent problems
before they arise, but we also need to make sure we equip social
workers with the skills to address these complex issues and ensure
children’s safety. Where children do have to be taken into care we
must make sure they find a loving home with as little disruption and
instability as possible. We have done much in Government to be proud
of in helping children in care and to improve social work, but we can
still go further.
We will:
♦ Continue
to invest in early intervention, further expanding the Troubled
Families Programme and building on the work of the Early Intervention
Foundation to spread evidence of what works.
♦ Expect
Local Authorities to set out a clear purpose for the care system: to
promote emotional wellbeing and resilience, provide a secure base on
which children can be supported in their development and provide
individually tailored help with recovery.
♦ Raise
the quality and profile of children’s social work, continuing and
expanding the Frontline programme – which is fast-tracking the
brightest and best into the profession – to at least 300 graduate
recruits each year.
♦ Tackle
delay and instability in foster care, with better support and
training for foster carers, including on mental health issues.
♦ Continue
to make it easier for children in care to find a loving home, through
the national Adoption Register and the new national gateway for
adoption, a first point of contact for potential adopters.
♦ Prevent
looked after children and young people being drawn into the criminal
justice system unnecessarily by promoting restorative justice.
4.6
Improving support for young adults
We
want young people to face the future with optimism and confidence.
The education leaving age has now risen to 18, but as children grow,
their independence grows too, and the support that education and
youth services provide to them and their families needs to adapt.
Whether it is supporting people with the costs of travel to college
or apprenticeships, or promoting positive images of young people by
celebrating their successes: Liberal Democrats are on the side of the
next generation.
We will:
♦ Work
to introduce a new Young Person’s Discount Card, for young people
aged 16–21, giving a 2/3rds discount on bus travel, as resources
allow. This will assist all bus users by helping maintain the
viability of existing bus routes and making it easier to open new
ones.
♦ Enable
government departments, local Councils and private businesses to add
discount offers to the Young Person’s Discount Card.
♦ Review
access to transport for students and apprentices in rural areas where
no scheduled services may be available.
♦ Develop
an NHS ‘student guarantee’, making it easier for students to get
care and support while at university, particularly those with
long-term health conditions or caring responsibilities.
♦ Promote
social action and volunteering at school, college and university and
work to raise the status of youth work and youth workers.
♦ Improve
links between employers and schools, encouraging all schools to
participate in mentoring schemes and programmes that seek to raise
aspiration like Speakers for Schools and Inspiring The Future. In
particular, we will seek to inspire more children and young people to
follow technical and scientific careers through partnership with
relevant businesses.
4.7
A world class university sector, open to all
Liberal
Democrats have ensured that no undergraduate student in England has
to pay a penny up front of their tuition fees. Students in England do
not have to pay anything until they are earning over £21,000 per
year – a figure which will increase in line with earnings – and
over that income, monthly repayments are linked to earnings. This
means only high-earning graduates pay their tuition fees in full. We
now have the highest university application rates ever, including
from disadvantaged students.
But
we need to ensure higher education is accessible to all those who can
benefit, including at postgraduate level. Liberal Democrats in
government secured the first ever income-contingent loans scheme for
graduate degrees, which we will protect and seek to extend.
We will:
♦ Ensure
that all universities work to widen participation across the sector,
prioritising early intervention in schools and colleges. This will
include running summer schools and setting up mentoring programmes
between students or alumni and school pupils.
♦ Require
universities to be transparent about their selection criteria.
♦ Work
with university ‘mission groups’ to develop a comprehensive
credit accumulation and transfer framework to help students transfer
between and within institutions, enable more part-time learning, and
help more people to complete qualifications.
♦ Improve
the Key Information Set and explore the option of a standardised
student contract. We will legislate to reform regulation of the
higher education sector, improving student protection.
♦ Establish
a review of higher education finance within the next Parliament to
consider any necessary reforms, in the light of the latest evidence
of the impact of the existing financing system on access,
participation (including of low-income groups) and quality. The
review will cover undergraduate and postgraduate courses, with an
emphasis on support for living costs for students, especially from
disadvantaged backgrounds.
4.8
Expanding & improving apprenticeships & further education
More
people have started an apprenticeship in this Parliament than ever
before. As we grow our economy, we must protect and enhance adult
skills training and our further education colleges. We need to grow
our skill base, especially in the technologies and industries that
are most important to our economic future. We want it to become the
norm for businesses to take on and train up young people as
apprentices in every sector of our economy, and for higher level
apprenticeships to be understood as a respected alternative to
university education.
We will:
♦ Increase
the number of apprenticeships and improve their quality, extending
the Apprenticeship Grant for Employers for the remainder of the next
Parliament, delivering 200,000 grants to employers and expanding the
number of degree-equivalent Higher Apprenticeships.
♦ Aim
to double the number of businesses which hire apprentices, including
by extending them to new sectors of our economy, like creative and
digital industries.
♦ Develop
National Colleges as national centres of expertise for key sectors,
like renewable energy, to deliver the high-level vocational skills
that businesses need.
♦ Establish
a cross-party commission to secure a long-term settlement for the
public funding of reskilling and lifelong learning.
♦ Set
up a review into the VAT treatment of Sixth Form Colleges and FE
Colleges to ensure fair treatment in relation to the schools sector.
♦ Work
with the Apprenticeship Advisory Group to increase the number of
apprentices from BAME backgrounds, ensure gender balance across
industry sectors, and encourage underrepresented groups to apply.
♦ Identify
and seek to solve skills gaps like the lack of advanced technicians
by expanding higher vocational training like foundation degrees,
Higher National Diplomas, Higher National Certificates and Higher
Apprenticeships.
5.
Building a healthier society: protecting the NHS and improving health
Good
health is one of the most important assets we can have in life, and
we must do all we can to help people stay healthy, as well as provide
high-quality care when they are ill.
Our
NHS is the envy of the world, and we will fund it properly, ending
the discrimination against mental health which has existed for too
long, and delivering equal care.
As
a nation, we are living longer but that means we have more people
living with conditions like cancer, diabetes and dementia who need
care and support to live with dignity and the maximum degree of
independence. We must set the highest standards in care, with a
well-trained and motivated workforce, and get health and care
services to work together without artificial boundaries.
Health
and wellbeing are affected by far more than just the quality of
health and care services. Liberal Democrats will act to ensure that
everything government does supports people to improve their
wellbeing: we will work to improve the wider factors that affect our
health like warm homes, good air quality and access to healthy food
so everyone can have the best opportunity to lead a healthy life.
A
Record of Delivery ♦ Increased the NHS budget every year in real
terms, helping fund nearly 10,000 more doctors and 7,000 more nurses
♦ A Promise of More
Deliver
the £8 billion England’s NHS leaders say is needed to keep it
strong, with money for Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland too
Improved
access to talking therapies: 2.6 million patients have been treated
since 2010
Invest
£500m to transform mental health care with waiting time standards to
match those in physical health care
£400m
invested to give carers a break with our respite fund
Introduce
a package of support for carers including a £250 Carer’s Bonus
every year
Capped
the cost of care, so older people can afford to get the help they
need
Crack
down on bad care, with better pay and conditions for care staff and
higher standards for all
5.1
Investing in our NHS
The
NHS is our most treasured public service. Liberal Democrats are
committed to the founding principles of the NHS as a taxpayer-funded
system, free at the point of use. To ensure this principle is
maintained even as demand for health care grows, we will give the NHS
the investment it needs. We are the only party with a credible plan
to deliver the extra £8 billion NHS leaders know our health service
in England needs by 2020, with the appropriate boost to funding for
Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland too.
We will:
♦ Always
ensure access to health care is based on need not ability to pay and
that the NHS remains free at the point of delivery.
♦ Deliver
the money needed for England’s NHS by:
o
Continuing real-terms protection of the NHS budget until we have
balanced the books in 2017/18 – with a £1 billion boost on top of
this protection. We made a start towards this £1 billion increase in
the Budget by securing a £250m a year investment in mental health.
o
Increasing NHS spending in line with economic growth from then on.
These
commitments mean NHS funding in England will be at least £8 billion
higher a year in real terms by 2020. This will lead to higher funding
for the Scottish, Welsh and Northern Irish governments, too, which
Liberal Democrats believe should be spent on their health services.
♦ Invest
half the initial £1 billion in providing care in people’s own
homes and communities, preventing emergency admissions and making it
easier to discharge people after a hospital stay – and so relieving
pressures on all hospital services.
♦ Make
sure the NHS is funded and organised to carry out diagnostic tests
and necessary treatments in a timely and effective manner, so that
waiting times meet public expectations without distorting clinical
priorities.
♦ Join
up health and care at national level, shifting full responsibility
for care policy and funding to the Department of Health.
To
ensure the NHS is safeguarded for the long term we will commission a
non-partisan Fundamental Review of NHS and social care funding this
year. We will involve as many people as possible in this nationwide
consultation.
5.2
Equal care for mental health
One
in four of us will experience mental health problems, but for decades
mental health has been the last in the queue for funding and
attention. Mental health problems cost the country as much as £100
billion each year yet less than a quarter of people with depression
get the treatment they need.
In
2012, we called a halt to this and wrote equality for mental health
into law. We are now making real progress, introducing the first ever
waiting time standards in mental health. We have invested £400m in
increasing access to talking therapies and £150m in help for people
with eating disorders, but there is still a long way to go. That is
why we will increase mental health spending in England’s NHS by
£500m a year by 2016/17 – half of which we delivered in this
year’s Budget – and provide the cash for similar investments in
Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.
To
deliver genuine equality between mental and physical health in the
NHS We will:
♦ Continue
to roll out access and waiting time standards for children, young
people and adults. This will include a waiting time standard from
referral of no more than six weeks for therapy for depression or
anxiety and a two-week wait standard for all young people
experiencing a first episode of psychosis.
♦ Increase
access to clinically and cost-effective talking therapies so hundreds
of thousands more people can get this support. Our long-term goal is
to see everyone who can benefit being treated, but we will set an
interim target of getting 25% of those suffering into treatment.
♦ Transform
care for pregnant women, new mothers and those who have experienced
miscarriage or stillbirth, and help them get the early care they
need.
♦ Revolutionise
children’s mental health services. With the £250m a year announced
in this year’s Budget we will implement the proposals outlined in
the report of the Government’s Children’s Mental Health
Taskforce. This means building better links with schools, ensuring
all children develop mental resilience, and getting support and care
quickly to those who are struggling. Our investment will help ensure
children can access high-quality care closer to home.
♦ Ensure
no one in crisis is turned away, with new waiting time standards and
better crisis care in Accident and Emergency (AandE), in the
community and via phone lines. This will enable us to end the use of
police cells for people facing a mental health crisis.
♦ Radically
transform mental health services, extending the use of personal
budgets, integrating care more fully with the rest of the NHS,
introducing rigorous inspection and high-quality standards,
comprehensive collection of data to monitor outcomes and waiting
times and changing the way services are funded so they do not lose
out in funding decisions in future.
♦ Introduce
care navigators so people get help finding their way around the
system, and set stretching standards to improve the physical health
of people with mental health problems.
To
improve wellbeing and make the UK more mental health-friendly, We
will:
♦ Publish
a national wellbeing strategy, which puts better health and wellbeing
for all at the heart of government policy. This will cover all
aspects of government policy, including transport, access to nature,
and housing, at national and local level.
♦ Develop
a clear approach on preventing mental illness, with a public health
campaign promoting the steps people can take to improve their own
mental resilience – the wellbeing equivalent of the ‘Five a Day’
campaign.
♦ Support
good practice among employers in promoting wellbeing and ensure
people with mental health problems get the help they need to stay in
or find work.
♦ Establish
a world-leading mental health research fund, investing £50m to
further our understanding of mental illness and develop more
effective treatments.
♦ Continue
to support the Time to Change programme to tackle stigma against
mental health.
♦ Ensure
all frontline public service professionals, including in schools and
universities, get better training in mental health – helping them
to develop their own mental resilience as well as learning to
identify people with mental health problems.
♦ Support
community services and volunteers working to combat loneliness,
particularly in later life.
5.3
Joining up health and social care
We
need services that fit around people’s lives, not ones that force
them to fit their lives around the care they need. This is going to
be increasingly important as our population ages and the number of
people living with long-term conditions continues to grow. It is time
to move away from a fragmented system to an integrated service with
more joined-up care, and more personal budgets so people can design
services for their own individual needs. We believe this should
happen from the bottom up, suiting the needs of local communities.
We will:
♦ Secure
local agreement on full pooling of budgets between the NHS and care
services with a target date of 2018, consulting on a legal duty for
this. The details of how services are commissioned will remain a
matter for local areas. In this way we will build on the radical
proposals to integrate health and care funding in Greater Manchester.
♦ Continue
to develop Health and Wellbeing Boards to take a broad view of how
services can improve wellbeing in their area, ensuring democratic
accountability for local care.
♦ Combine
the public health, adult social care and health outcome frameworks
into a single national wellbeing outcomes framework to ensure the NHS
and local government work together towards common goals.
♦ Support
new joined-up services such as GPs providing services like scans and
blood tests closer to home, or hospitals having GP surgeries within
AandE departments.
♦ Encourage
the development of joined-up health providers, which cover hospital
and community services, including GPs, learning from international
best practice. We will permit NHS commissioners and providers in a
local area to form a single integrated health organisation where
appropriate.
♦ Work
with Monitor to reform NHS funding systems, moving away from payments
for activity to tariffs that encourage joined-up services and
preventive care.
Liberal
Democrats are committed to repealing any parts of the Health and
Social Care Act 2012 which make NHS services vulnerable to forced
privatisation through international agreements on free markets in
goods and services. We will end the role of the Competition and
Markets Authority in health, making it clear that the needs of
patients, fairness and access always come ahead of competition, and
that good local NHS services do not have to be put out to tender.
After determined negotiations, we now have a clear guarantee from the
EU that member states’ rights to provide public services directly
and not open them up to competition are explicitly enshrined in the
Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP), and we will
ensure this remains the case for TTIP and any future trade
agreements.
5.4
Better access to GPs and community care
Most
people’s experience of the NHS is their local GP, or the nurses and
support staff who visit them at home or work in community clinics.
Better access to care in GP surgeries and closer to home is better
for patients and will also help reduce pressure on hospitals, AandE
departments and ambulances.
We will:
♦ Ensure
easier access to GPs, expanding evening and weekend opening,
encouraging phone and Skype appointments, encouraging GPs to work
together in federations, and allowing people more choice.
♦ Encourage
GPs and other community clinicians to work in disadvantaged areas
though our Patient Premium.
♦ Better
utilise the network of community pharmacists across the country so
they become the first point of contact for advice on minor illnesses
and are joined-up with GPs and community health teams.
♦ Encourage
health services to link up with Local Authority social care teams and
voluntary services to join up care.
♦ Review
the rules for exemption from prescription charges to ensure they are
fair to those with long-term conditions and disabilities.
5.5
Aiming higher: following the evidence to improve health and care
We
will set ambitious goals so everything we do in the NHS is focused on
helping people in Britain live longer, healthier, lives. Early
diagnosis is absolutely crucial and can make a life-saving
difference, so we will support screening programmes where these are
proven to be both clinically and cost-effective. It is also vital we
invest in research to develop new treatments and find new ways of
delivering innovative treatments in affordable ways.
We will:
♦ Set
ambitious goals to improve outcomes for the most serious
life-threatening diseases like cancer and long-term conditions like
dementia.
♦ Work
towards a global deal to release significant additional funds for
finding a cure or preventive treatment for dementia, doubling NHS
research spend for this condition by 2020.
♦ Set
clear goals for earlier diagnosis and improved aftercare for
conditions like cancer and heart disease.
♦ Promote
evidence-based ‘social prescribing’ of sport, arts and other
activity to help tackle obesity, mental health problems and other
health conditions, and work to widen the evidence base.
♦ Continue
to introduce evidence-based screening programmes, encouraging
increased participation with informed consent.
♦ Improve
patient safety by updating the laws on regulation of health
professionals and on cosmetic procedures.
♦ Ensure
targets in the NHS are evidence-based and do not distort clinical
priorities.
♦ Improve
support for groups that often face lower standards of care, such as
older people and people with mental health problems or learning
disabilities.
♦ Get
the best for the NHS out of innovative medicines and treatments while
continuing to ensure value for money for the NHS in negotiations on
the cost of medicines, promoting the use of generic medicines where
appropriate.
♦ Support,
including through rules on public funding and research, moves towards
ensuring all clinical trials are registered, with their methods and
summary results reported in public.
We
will develop a just settlement for haemophiliacs who were given
contaminated blood, and their families.
5.6
Helping people keep healthy
It
is better for patients and for the NHS if we keep people healthy in
the first place, rather than just waiting until people develop
illnesses and come for treatment. This means doing more to promote
healthy eating and exercise, making people aware of the dangers of
smoking and excessive consumption of alcohol and other drugs, and
helping to improve mental health and wellbeing.
In
government we have taken significant steps, taking tobacco off
display in shops and introducing standardised packaging, for example.
We have also returned the delivery of public health services to Local
Authorities to ensure a more coordinated and localised approach.
Improving
our environment is a vital step to improving people’s health. By
insulating homes we can reduce the number of people who become unwell
because of the cold; by tackling air pollution we can attack the root
causes of many deaths; by opening up more sports facilities and
building more cycle routes we can cut obesity and reduce heart
problems.
We will:
♦ Support
effective public awareness campaigns like Be Clear on Cancer, working
closely with charities to raise awareness of the signs and symptoms
of killer diseases.
♦ Keep
public health within local government, where it is effectively
joined-up with preventive community services.
♦ Restrict
the marketing of junk food to children, including restricting TV
advertising before the 9pm watershed, and maintain the effective
‘Five a Day’ campaign.
♦ Encourage
the traffic light labelling system for food products and publication
of information on calorie, fat, sugar and salt content in restaurants
and takeaways.
♦ Reduce
smoking rates, including by completing the introduction of
standardised packaging for tobacco products. We will introduce a tax
levy on tobacco companies so they fairly contribute to the costs of
health care and smoking cessation services, subject to consultation
on the detailed design and practicalities.
♦ Carefully
monitor the growing evidence base around electronic cigarettes, which
appear to be a route by which many people are quitting tobacco, and
ensure restrictions on marketing and use are proportionate and
evidence-based. For example, we support restrictions on advertising
which risks promoting tobacco or targets under 18s, such as those
introduced in 2014, but would rule out a statutory ban on ‘vaping’
in public places.
♦ Introduce
Minimum Unit Pricing for alcohol, subject to the outcome of the legal
challenge in Scotland, and support the greater use of Local Authority
powers and criminal behaviour orders to help communities tackle
alcohol-related crime and disorder.
♦ Pass
a Nature Act to increase access to green spaces and a Green Transport
Act to cut air pollution.
5.7
Help for carers
The
number of family carers is rising, including in the ‘sandwich
generation’ who find themselves trying to care for their children
and their parents at the same time. Carers are unsung heroes and we
need to do more to help them. We have already invested £400m in
carers’ breaks, but we can and must go further.
We will:
♦ Introduce
an annual Carer’s Bonus of £250 for carers looking after someone
for 35 hours or more each week.
♦ Work
to raise the amount you can earn before losing Carer’s Allowance
from £110 to £150 a week.
♦ Consult
on introducing five days’ paid additional ‘care leave’ a year
for carers who qualify for the Carer’s Allowance.
♦ Give
the NHS a legal duty to identify carers and develop a Carer’s
Passport scheme to inform carers of their rights in the NHS, like
more flexible visiting hours, assert their role as expert partners in
care and gain access to support.
5.8
Improving social care
Although
we want to support people to remain independent as long as possible,
many people will eventually need to rely on the care system. Liberal
Democrats fought hard to secure the cap on the cost of care that will
be introduced in 2017, but the quality of care is vital too.
We
have introduced rigorous new inspections under the Chief Inspector of
Social Care and new guidance to end the use of fifteen-minute visits.
We will end ‘care cramming’, which turns care workers into
clockwatchers rushing between jobs. We are clamping down on care
workers being paid less than the National Minimum Wage by resourcing
and directing HMRC to pursue and prosecute providers who exploit
their staff.
We will:
♦ Finish
the job of implementing the Dilnot Report proposals for a cap on the
cost of social care.
♦ Provide
more choice at the end of life, and free end-of-life social care for
those placed on their local end-of-life register if evidence shows it
is affordable and cost effective.
♦ Ask
the Care Quality Commission to showcase examples of good and bad
practice in care commissioning by Councils.
♦ Raise
the professional status and training of care home managers through
statutory licensing.
♦ Ensure
those who work in the care sector are properly trained and suitable
to practice by introducing a statutory code of conduct backed up by a
care workers’ suitability register.
♦ Work
with local government and providers to promote paying a Living Wage.
6.
Better places to live: communities, farming and the natural
environment
Liberal
Democrats are the only major party that takes seriously the
responsibility of protecting our natural environment. We believe it
is vital to make sure everyone has access to clean water, clean air
and green spaces. We want to hand our countryside and green spaces on
to the next generation in a better condition than when we were
children. That is why we have consistently defended the natural
environment in government, bringing forward plans for a 5p charge for
plastic bags, planting a million extra trees in England and ensuring
Natural England remains a strong and independent organisation able to
speak up for nature. We have fought to protect the Green Belt and
Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty, and we have increased public
access to our coastal paths.
Liberal
Democrats are proud to represent a large part of rural Britain and
many farming constituencies. We believe a fair society is one where
people can afford to work and live in the countryside, and where
farmers get the support they need. We want them to have a prosperous,
sustainable future, and help them cope with the challenges facing
them, from floods to animal diseases. That is why we introduced the
Groceries Code Adjudicator to ensure large supermarkets treat their
suppliers lawfully and fairly. We have spent £3.2 billion on flood
management and defences over the course of this Parliament. Liberal
Democrats have kept farming and the natural environment at the top of
the agenda over the past five years. We will ensure it remains a
priority in the next Parliament.
A
Record of Delivery ♦ Planted a million trees and protected our
national forests by blocking plans to sell them off ♦ A Promise of
More
Expand
accessible green space with new National Nature Parks chosen by local
communities, and plant a tree for every child born
Introduced
a 5p charge on throwaway plastic bags to reduce waste
Drive
up recycling to 70% of household waste and minimise landfill
£500m
investment package to promote Ultra Low Emission cars which will cut
emissions and improve air quality
Save
lives by cleaning up our air, with low emission zones in towns with a
pollution problem
Halted
the Post Office closure programme and brought broadband to 80% of
homes.
Complete
broadband rollout to every home, and create an innovation fund to
help keep local GPs, post offices and libraries open
6.1
Protecting nature
Britain’s
natural environment is precious. Without our green spaces, we would
live less satisfying lives; they are critical to health, wellbeing
and our sense of community. Even in cash terms, short-term profits
from exploiting the environment carry a longer-term penalty in
squandered resources, clear-up costs and the impact on health.
We
will ensure that protecting the natural environment becomes a core
commitment of every government department and agency.
We will:
♦ Pass
a Nature Act to put the Natural Capital Committee (NCC) on a
statutory footing, set natural capital targets, including on
biodiversity, clean air and water, and empower the NCC to recommend
actions to meet these targets.
♦ Significantly
increase the amount of accessible green space. We will complete the
coastal path, introduce a fuller Right to Roam and create a new
designation of National Nature Parks to protect up to a million acres
of accessible green space valued by local communities.
♦ Place
the management of public forests on a sustainable footing, in line
with the recommendations of the Independent Panel on Forestry, and
plant at least an additional tree for every child born – about
750,000 every year – as part of a major afforestation plan.
♦ Tackle
wildlife and environmental crime with increased enforcement of
environmental regulations by all relevant authorities and higher
penalties to ensure environmental crime is not a financial risk worth
taking.
♦ Improve
UK enforcement of the EU Birds and Habitats Directive.
♦ Bring
forward a package of measures to protect bees and other pollinators,
including legal protection for bumblebee nests.
♦ Designate
an ecologically coherent network of marine protected areas with
appropriate management by 2020.
♦ Encourage
the uptake of water metering, including introducing metering in all
defined water-stressed areas by 2025, coupled with the development of
national social tariffs to protect low-income households.
Liberal
Democrats believe in the highest standards of animal welfare. We will
review the rules surrounding the sale of pets to ensure they promote
responsible breeding and sales and minimise the use of animals in
scientific experimentation, including by funding research into
alternatives. We remain committed to the three Rs of humane animal
research: Replace, Reduce, Refine.
6.2
Waste not, want not: using our resources to generate lasting
prosperity
The
successful economies of the future will be ‘circular’ - where
waste and the use of non-renewable resources are minimised and
recovery, reuse and recycling are maximised. Britain has a real
opportunity to lead the way, generating sustainable prosperity and
jobs.
We
will bring forward a comprehensive waste strategy to build a thriving
reuse and recycling industry and pass a Resource Efficiency and Zero
Waste Act to:
♦ Task
the Natural Capital Committee with producing a ‘Stern report’ on
resource use, identifying resources being used unsustainably and
recommending legally binding targets for reducing their net
consumption.
♦ Use
regulation both nationally and in the EU to promote sustainable
design where reparability, reuse and recyclability are prioritised,
and to reduce packaging waste.
♦ Establish
a coherent tax and regulatory framework for landfill, incineration
and waste collection to drive continuous increases in reuse and
recycling rates and ensure only non-recyclable waste is incinerated,
including reinstating the Landfill Tax escalator and extending it to
the lower rate and consulting on the introduction of an Incineration
Tax.
♦ Commission
the Natural Capital Committee to investigate the potential for other
resource taxes, including deposit refund schemes.
♦ Establish
a statutory waste recycling target of 70% in England.
♦ Encourage
the growth of anaerobic digestion to produce biogas for heat and
transport, and sustainable fertiliser, working with Local Authorities
to extend separate food waste collections to at least 90% of homes by
2020.
6.3
Food and farming
Our
farmers do an essential job putting food on our tables and enhancing
the natural environment, but food policy has been neglected for too
long. We will encourage investment, growth, innovation and new
entrants, securing the future of the UK food and farming industry.
Liberal
Democrats want continued reform of the Common Agricultural Policy,
eliminating the remaining production and export subsidies and
supporting the development of environmentally sustainable solutions
to growing demand for food.
We will:
♦ Ensure
farming support is concentrated on sustainable food production,
conservation and tackling climate change, shifting CAP payments to
the active farmer rather than the landowner.
♦ Introduce
a National Food Strategy to promote the production and consumption of
healthy, sustainable and affordable food. Our strategy will increase
the use of locally and sustainably sourced, healthy and seasonal
food, including in public institutions like schools and the NHS,
implementing and expanding Defra’s Plan for Public Procurement.
♦ Work
at EU level to ensure clear and unambiguous country of origin
labelling on meat, meat products, milk and dairy products.
♦ Continue
to support the Groceries Code Adjudicator. We will allow the
Adjudicator to use discretion when holding a supermarket responsible
for the treatment of suppliers so they can help ensure farmers get a
fair price. This will help all suppliers, including in the dairy
industry, which is under particular pressure.
♦ Ensure
the Food Standards Agency is adequately resourced to enforce food
safety standards, and strengthen food fraud surveillance.
♦ Help
farmers and growers compete internationally by continuing to reduce
the administrative and regulatory burden and developing an Animal
Disease Strategy to reduce the risks and costs of animal disease.
♦ Continue
to improve standards of animal welfare, building on Britain’s
leadership. We will review the use of cages, crates and routine
preventive antibiotics.
♦ Introduce
effective, science-led ways of controlling bovine TB, including by
investing to produce workable vaccines, in line with the TB
Eradication Strategy. We will only support extending the existing
cull pilots if they are shown to be effective, humane and safe.
♦ Fully
implement recent reforms of the Common Fisheries Policy, working with
industry and others to develop a national plan for sustainable UK
fisheries, with fair treatment for the inshore small boat fleet.
6.4
Adapting to climate change
The
devastating floods experienced over the past few years are a sign of
accelerating climate change, exacerbated by changing patterns of land
use. We need to find better ways of adapting to storms, gales,
flooding and heat waves that put increased pressure on
infrastructure, water supplies and ecosystems.
We will:
♦ Prepare
a national resilience plan to help the UK economy, national
infrastructure and natural resources adapt to the likely impacts of a
3-4 degree global average temperature rise.
♦ Work
with local government to review the governance of flood risk and land
drainage, including the role of Internal Drainage Boards, and
introduce high standards for flood resilience for buildings and
infrastructure in flood risk areas.
♦ Set
up a commission to research back-to-nature flood prevention schemes,
including the role of habitats such as upland bogs and moors,
woodlands, wetlands and species-rich grasslands in absorbing and
holding water.
♦ Implement
programmes to help farmers and other land users adapt to climate
change impacts including protecting soil and forest carbon sinks,
encouraging planting in uplands and restoring flood plains.
♦ Review
the system of approvals required by landowners to repair existing
flood protection measures on their land.
♦ Increase
the uptake of Sustainable Urban Drainage Systems to maximise value
for money for the taxpayer. We will consult on the best ways to
finance this.
♦ Update
construction and planning standards to futureproof buildings against
higher summer temperatures.
6.5
Air quality and greener transport
Poor
air quality is a significant health problem. After smoking, estimates
suggest it is Britain’s second biggest public health challenge,
responsible for the equivalent of 29,000 deaths every year. We will
pass a Green Transport Act, including a National Plan to improve
dramatically Britain’s air quality by 2020.
Our
National Air Quality Plan for consultation will include:
♦ A
legal requirement targeted at the most polluted towns and cities, to
create Low Emission Zones.
♦ New
incentives for local schemes that cut transport-related pollution,
and encourage walking and cycling.
♦ A
review of the MOT process, to see whether changes could be introduced
to cut emissions from existing vehicles.
♦ Support
for new EU proposals on air quality targets and updated plans to more
quickly meet existing EU air quality standards for concentrations of
nitrogen dioxide.
To
promote innovation and greener transport choices We
will:
♦ Support
ambitious EU vehicle emission standards, and reform Vehicle Excise
Duty to drive continuous reductions in greenhouse gas and other
pollutants from the UK car fleet and return revenues to levels
projected in 2010. This will include introducing separate banding for
new diesel cars.
♦ Encourage
the market for electric vehicles, including with targeted support for
buses, taxis and light freight, and early requirements to use low
emission vehicles in the public sector. We will set a target of 2040
for the date after which only Ultra-Low Emission vehicles will be
permitted on UK roads for non-freight purposes.
♦ Work
with industry to accelerate the commercial introduction of zero
emission fuel cell electric vehicles, and facilitate the UK-wide
introduction of hydrogen fuelling infrastructure.
♦ Review
the best way to keep our regulatory framework updated to permit use
of driverless & personal electric vehicles.
♦ Support
options for an intercity cycleway along the HS2 route, within the
overall budget for the project.
♦ Implement
the recommendations of the Get Britain Cycling report, including
steps to deliver a £10 a head annual public expenditure on cycling
within existing budgets. This will allow greater investment in
cycling including bike lanes, high-volume secure bike parking, and
road safety measures to keep cyclists safe.
6.6.
Improving local public transport
High-quality
public transport is essential to building sustainable communities and
local economies, and two thirds of public transport journeys are made
by bus. With more people commuting to work by bus than any other mode
of public transport, buses are of significant importance to the
economy. Bus services are also particularly important to many rural
and isolated communities, where one in five of the population lives.
♦ Carry
out a review of bus funding and bus policies and introduce a
five-year investment plan to give the industry and Local Authorities
certainty and help plan investment. We will support local areas that
want to bring forward plans for regulating the bus network in their
area.
♦ Give
new powers to Local Authorities and communities to improve transport
in their areas, including the ability to introduce network-wide
ticketing like in London.
♦ Support
the expansion of smart ticketing systems.
♦ Continue
funding for local economic and sustainable transport infrastructure
through the Local Growth Fund.
♦ Help
bus companies trade in older, more polluting buses and coaches for
newer, low emissions ones, helping develop the market for low-carbon
buses.
6.7
Sustainable rural communities
A
thriving rural community needs local services and community
facilities like schools, public transport, local shops, cultural
venues and pubs. It needs enough homes, affordable for local
families, to ensure those services are viable. and it needs public
transport: travel costs are a major component of rural poverty.
Liberal Democrats understand the changes needed to support a living,
working countryside.
We will:
♦ Renew
the 2010–15 commitment that there will be no programme of Post
Office closures and protect Royal Mail’s Universal Service
Obligation to deliver across the UK for the same price.
♦ Introduce
‘retained’ police officers, fully trained officers available to
respond when needed, to increase police presence in rural
communities.
♦ Develop
the Community Budgets model for use in rural areas to combine
services, encouraging the breaking down of boundaries between
different services. This will help keep rural services like GP
surgeries, pharmacies, post offices and libraries open by enabling
them to cooperate, share costs and co-locate in shared facilities.
♦ Continue
the fuel discount scheme for remote areas implemented by Liberal
Democrat Ministers and work with the European Commission to extend it
to further remote areas with high fuel costs.
♦ Work
with Local Authorities to integrate transport networks in rural
areas, building on the work of Liberal Democrat Ministers’ Total
Transport pilot.
Green
Britain guarantee: five green laws
Liberal
Democrats will put the environment at the heart of government policy.
We will pass five green laws to establish a permanent legal framework
for a prosperous, sustainable economy.
A
Nature Act which will include:
♦ Placing
the Natural Capital Committee on a statutory footing. The Committee
was set up in 2012; it provides advice to the government on the state
of England’s natural assets including forests, rivers, land,
minerals and oceans.
♦ A
requirement for government to set out a 25-year plan for recovering
nature, with annual updates to Parliament, including how to reverse
the decline of UK species and their habitats and ensure that bees and
other insects are able to fulfil their important role as crop
pollinators.
♦ The
introduction of a new Public Sector Sustainability Duty, requiring
steadily higher green criteria in public procurement policy, and
placing requirements on public authorities to act in a sustainable
manner.
♦ Implementation
of the findings of the Independent Panel on Forestry, creating a new
public body, free from political interference and securely funded, to
own and manage the national forests.
♦ Transposition
of EU air and water quality targets into UK law to confirm our
commitments.
♦ A
sustainable water abstraction regime, for the public, industry and
the natural environment.
♦ The
formation of a 1 million square kilometre southern Atlantic Ocean
reserve.
A
Resource Efficiency and Zero Waste Britain Act which will
include:
♦ Implementation
of recommendations from our planned ‘Stern Report’ on resource
efficiency, which the Natural Capital Committee will conduct.
♦ Increased
penalties for waste crimes, aiming to move from an average fine of
£50,000 to £75,000 and to an average sentence of 12 to 18 months.
♦ A
statutory recycling target of 70% for waste in England.
♦ Regulation
to promote design that enhances repairability, reuse and recycling,
requiring specified products to be sold with parts and labour
guarantees for at least five years.
A
Green Transport Act which will include:
♦ A
statutory target of 2030 by which time all major, regularly used rail
routes will need to be electrified.
♦ A
requirement that every new bus and taxi is Ultra Low Emission from
2030 and every car on the road meets that standard by 2040.
♦ The
creation of Low Emission Zones as part of a national air quality
plan, including a legal requirement for the most polluted towns and
cities.
♦ A
new statutory framework that all new rail franchises include a
stronger focus on customers.
♦ Updates
to roads regulation to promote innovation in transport like
driverless cars and personal electric vehicles.
A
Zero Carbon Britain Act which will include:
♦ A
new legally-binding target for Zero Carbon Britain by 2050, to be
monitored and audited by the Climate Change Committee (CCC). The
Climate Change Act 2008 established an aim to reduce UK greenhouse
gas emissions by 80% by 2050 based on the 1990 baseline.
♦ A
2030 power sector decarbonisation target of 50-100g per kWh, as
recommended by the CCC.
♦ Emission
Performance Standards for existing coal power stations, designed to
ensure electricity generation from unabated coal will stop by 2025.
♦ Giving
full borrowing powers to the Green Investment Bank, to boost further
investment in low-carbon technologies.
A
Green Buildings Act which will include:
♦ A
Council Tax discount for significant improvements in energy
efficiency in homes.
♦ Ambitious
targets for all social and private rented homes to reach Energy
Performance Certificate Band C by 2027.
♦ A
statutory target to bring the homes of all fuel-poor households to
Band C by 2027.
♦ A
new legal framework to require regulators to facilitate the
development of deep geothermal heat, large-scale heat pumps, waste
industrial heat and energy storage systems.
♦ New
powers for government to introduce new energy efficiency and heat
saving regulations to reduce heat and energy use.
7.
Affordable homes for all: meeting housing needs
For
people to live fulfilled lives they need a decent home at a cost they
can afford. But that simple ambition is getting further and further
out of reach. Britain has failed for decades to build enough homes,
and in many places property prices and rents have risen beyond what
normal working families can afford. Meanwhile many older people in
homes that are no longer right for their circumstances would like to
move but do not have suitable options.
We
have made a start in addressing this. The supply of affordable rented
housing has been increasing. We have liberalised the planning system,
while protecting important green spaces. We have pushed government
departments to release unwanted sites for homes.
But
the problems are now in danger of becoming a crisis, with home
ownership plummeting among the under 40s, many young people priced
out of even renting a place of their own, and the risk of a new
housing bubble, focused on London and the South East. We have to
speed up house building and stop prices from getting any further out
of reach of families.
A
Record of Delivery ♦ Restored house building from record lows to
nearly 150,000 a year ♦ A Promise of More
Set
an ambitious goal to build 300,000 homes a year, including in 10 new
Garden Cities in areas where homes are needed most
Helped
families buy a home with Help to Buy equity loans
New
Rent to Own homes where your monthly payments steadily buy you a
stake in the property
Banned
‘revenge evictions’ where rogue landlords evict tenants who make
complaints
New
Help to Rent tenancy deposit loans to help young people get into
their first place
Improved
the energy efficiency of a million homes since 2013, cutting overall
UK energy use by 2.5% a year
Cut
Council Tax by £100 for 10 years if you insulate your home, and ban
landlords from letting out homes tenants cannot reasonably afford to
heat
7.1
Building more and better homes
For
far too long Britain has built many fewer homes than we need; unless
we build enough to meet demand, year after year, we will find housing
costs rise further out of reach. That is why we have set an ambitious
target of increasing the rate of house building to 300,000 a year.
Within the first year of the next Parliament, we will publish a
long-term plan that sets out how this goal will be achieved.
Our
plans will include:
♦ At
least ten new Garden Cities in England, in areas where there is local
support, providing tens of thousands of high-quality new homes, with
gardens and shared green space, jobs, schools and public transport.
We will encourage rural Local Authorities to follow these principles
on a smaller scale, too, developing new garden villages or suburbs as
part of their plans for growth.
♦ Up
to five major new settlements along a Garden Cities Railway between
Oxford and Cambridge.
♦ Ambitious
targets for development on unwanted public sector sites through the
Homes and Communities Agency, with Local Authorities given new powers
to ensure development happens on any unused site in which the public
sector has an interest.
♦ A
review of Compulsory Purchase legislation to facilitate site
assembly, including for Garden Cities. We will also pilot techniques
for capturing the increase in land values from the granting of
planning permission, helping to deliver our Garden Cities.
♦ A
government commissioning programme to boost house building towards
our 300,000 target; where the market alone fails to deliver
sufficient numbers, government agencies will directly commission
homes for sale and rent to fill the gap. We are already piloting this
direct approach in Cambridgeshire.
♦ A
new government-backed Housing Investment Bank to provide long-term
capital for major new settlements and help attract finance for major
house building projects.
7.2
Improving planning
Good
planning is essential to delivering sustainable communities. With
effective planning rules, we can ensure the new homes we build are
well connected to public transport, resilient to the threats of
climate change, safe, warm and secure, and situated in real
communities where people can easily come together. We will work with
Local Authorities to ensure they think for the long term, and use
their powers to facilitate an affordable local housing market.
We will:
♦ Put
Local Authorities in the driving seat for plan-led development by
requiring them to make a plan for 15 years of housing need, working
collaboratively with neighbouring Councils where necessary to
identify sites. We will strengthen the Duty to Cooperate to help
authorities – like Cambridge, Oxford and Luton – with
insufficient space within the Local Authority boundary to meet
housing demand to grow, through development on sites beyond the Local
Authority boundaries. This long-term approach will enable us to
secure the homes we need while being much stricter about proposals
that deviate from the Local Plan. We
will:
-
Create a Community Right of Appeal in cases where planning decisions
go against the approved local plan, or a Local Plan that is emerging
and has undergone substantive consultation.
-
Not allow developers’ appeals against planning decisions that are
in line with the Local Plan.
-
Not allow planning appeals solely on the basis of challenges to the
15-year master plan.
♦ Improve
housing needs assessments to ensure they respond to demand, including
through price signals, rather than simply need, and segment more
effectively demand from different kinds of household, including
high-quality shared accommodation for young people. All areas will be
expected to plan for the needs of older people for age-appropriate
housing and we will work with Local Authorities to help people who
wish to ‘right size’, particularly in later life.
♦ Require
Local Authorities to keep a register of people who want a self-build
plot in the local area and plan to meet demand for these plots,
including through ‘affordable land’: plots on which self-builders
can take a long-term lease at an affordable rent and build or
commission a home.
♦ Update
planning law to introduce the concept of ‘landscape scale planning’
and ensure new developments promote walking, cycling, car sharing and
public transport and improve rather than diminish access to green
spaces.
♦ Prioritise
development on brownfield and town centre sites and bring to an end
the permitted development rights for converting offices to
residential.
♦ Enable
Local Authorities to:
♦ Attach
planning conditions to new developments to ensure homes are occupied,
tackling the growth of ‘buy to leave empty’ investments from
overseas in property hotspots like London.
♦ Levy
up to 200% Council Tax on second homes where they judge this to be
appropriate.
♦ Pilot
new planning conditions to ensure local communities benefit from
increased housing supply.
7.3
Affordable housing
The
government has an essential role to play in supporting the
development of affordable housing. We have maintained a substantial
programme of affordable house building in the last five years, in
part enabled by designing innovative products that can deliver new
homes at a lower cost. We will continue to innovate, enabling Local
Authorities, Housing Associations and central government alike to
build many more homes.
We will:
♦ Review
the Homes and Communities Agency’s grant programmes to simplify and
streamline the process and enable more innovation.
♦ Allow
Local Authorities more flexibility to borrow to build affordable
housing, including traditional council housing, and devolve full
control of the Right to Buy.
♦ Scrap
plans to exempt smaller housing development schemes from their
obligation to provide affordable homes.
♦ Encourage
affordable housing providers – both Councils and Housing
Associations – to innovate, including using the development of
homes for sale or market rent to help subsidise new affordable homes.
We will refocus the Vacant Building Credit so it only applies to
properties that have been vacant for an extended period.
♦ Tackle
overcrowding with a new system to incentivise social landlords to
reduce the number of tenants under-occupying their homes, freeing up
larger properties.
♦ Introduce
a new Intermediate Housing Fund to fund intermediate housing
products, including:
♦ Affordable
Rent homes, at up to 80% of local market rent.
♦ Shared
Ownership homes, where customers buy a proportion of the home and pay
an affordable rent for the rest.
♦ A
new Rent to Own model where monthly payments steadily accrue the
tenant a percentage stake in the property, owning it outright after
30 years.
♦ New
build shared accommodation at the local LHA Shared Accommodation
Rate.
We
recognise that most people aspire to own their own home, and believe
in supporting people on the journey to home ownership. But policies
that promote home ownership should be focused on newly built homes to
prevent artificial pressure on prices, and should not discriminate on
the basis of previous housing tenure.
7.4
Protecting private tenants and leaseholders
More
and more people – including families – are renting in the private
sector for the long term. We believe private renting is an important
part of the housing market, but the balance has shifted too far
against the tenant, and more needs to be done to help people making a
home in rented property.
We will:
♦ Improve
protections against rogue landlords and encourage a new multi-year
tenancy with an agreed inflation-linked annual rent increase built
in.
♦ Enable
Local Authorities to operate licensing schemes for rental properties
in areas where they believe it is needed.
♦ Establish
a voluntary register of rented property where either the landlord or
the tenant can register the property, to improve enforcement and tax
transparency.
♦ Ban
letting agent fees to tenants if the transparency requirements we
introduced are not successful in bringing fees down to an affordable
level by the end of 2016.
♦ Extend
the use of Rent Repayment Orders to allow tenants to have their rent
refunded when a property is found to contain serious risks to health,
and withhold rent from landlords who have not carried out
court-ordered improvements within a reasonable period of time.
♦ Introduce
a new Help to Rent scheme to provide government-backed tenancy
deposit loans for all first-time renters under 30.
♦ Conduct
a full review of the help single people get under homelessness
legislation.
7.5
Affordable warmth and greener homes
Warming
our homes is an essential part of the fight against climate change,
and also vital to keep bills affordable. Energy prices in Britain are
lower than the EU average but our bills are higher because our homes
are so poorly insulated. We have made huge advances in this
Parliament, increasing standards for newly built homes, and improving
more than a million homes in just two years. In the next Parliament
we will go further, ensuring at least four million homes are improved
by 2020, not only lowering bills and helping to tackle the scourge of
fuel poverty, but generating jobs too.
We will:
♦ Remove
exemptions in the Zero Carbon Standard for new homes, increasing the
standard steadily and extending it to non-domestic buildings from
2019. We will promote the development of off-site manufacturing
techniques, which have been shown to improve energy performance of
buildings.
♦ Pass
a new Green Buildings Act to set new energy efficiency targets,
including a long-term ambition for every home to reach at least an
energy rating of Band C by 2035.
♦ Act
to tackle fuel poverty, ensuring all low-income homes are brought up
to Band C by 2027, with continued support for the Green Deal
Communities programme, enabling local Councils to provide help street
by street.
♦ Improve
the standard of private rented and social housing, requiring these
homes to be upgraded to Band C by 2027.
♦ Introduce
incentives to help everyone invest in energy efficiency:
-
A Council Tax reduction of at least £100 for 10 years, when the
resident’s home has an energy saving improvement of at least two
bands.
-
A new Feed Out Tariff for investment in solid wall insulation, the
most expensive and difficult energy saving investment for some homes.
♦ Reform
the Green Deal ‘pay as you save’ scheme into a new Green Homes
Loan Scheme, funding renewable heat and electricity alongside energy
efficiency.
♦ Boost
community energy efficiency by empowering the Green Investment Bank
to develop innovative financial products for whole street or
district-wide energy efficiency retrofits.
♦ Develop
a range of targeted, innovative programmes to support the above,
including infrastructure funding where appropriate, such as:
-
‘Insulation on prescription’ to link up the NHS with the fuel
poverty agenda.
-
An Off-Gas-Grid Strategy to help rural areas benefit from new
technologies.
-
Interest-free loans to fund energy efficiency home improvements.
8.
Freedom and opportunity: equal rights for all
Liberal
Democrats have always been champions of liberty and human rights. No
one can make the most of their lives if their basic freedoms are
violated. This election comes just a month before we celebrate the
800th anniversary of Magna Carta, a foundation stone of our
liberties. Legal protections have come a long way since then, but as
society and technology becomes more complex there is a never-ending
struggle to reassert the principle of individual liberty. Freedom of
expression has recently been under renewed attack, and siren voices
call for us to sacrifice freedom to gain illusory security. Liberal
Democrats reject this false choice: true security for individuals and
for our nation must be built on a platform of equal rights and civil
liberties.
Discrimination
and inequality can hold people back just as much as a lack of legal
freedoms. Opportunities are not equally distributed in modern
Britain. Where you are from, what your parents did, your ethnicity,
health, sexuality and gender still too often affect your chances in
life, your educational attainments, your work prospects, how you are
treated by the police and the justice system, and even how long you
will live. That must change, and will with Liberal Democrats in
government.
A
Record of Delivery ♦ Scrapped ID cards and blocked the so-called
Snooper’s Charter that would have monitored everyone’s internet
use ♦ A Promise of More
Protect
your privacy by updating data laws for the internet age with a
Digital Bill of Rights
Freedoms
Act to cut intrusive CCTV, stop fingerprinting children
in schools and stop aggressive wheel clamping
A
second Freedoms Act to protect free speech, stop heavy-handed
policing and ban Mosquito devices that discriminate against young
people.
Introduced
equal marriage for gay and lesbian couples
Combat
homophobic bullying and discrimination, including in schools
Reduced
the gender pay gap and increased the number of women on boards
Support
a million more women who want to work with better childcare, help
with caring responsibilities and action against discrimination
Stopped
locking up children of asylum seekers and strengthened rules on
police stop and search
Fight
discrimination in the criminal justice system and recruit more Black,
Asian and Minority Ethnic police officers
8.1
Equality and diversity
A
fair society should treat its citizens equally and with dignity. In
this Parliament, thanks to Liberal Democrats in government, there
have been key advances in the fight for equality – like introducing
same-sex marriage and banning age discrimination. But we must
continue our work to fight prejudice and discrimination based on
race, age, religion or belief, gender, sexuality, and disability. We
will enact the remaining unimplemented clauses of the Equality Act
2010.
To
advance the cause of women and gender equality We
will:
♦ Set
an ambitious goal to see a million more women in work by 2020 thanks
to more jobs, better childcare, and better back-to-work support.
♦ Challenge
gender stereotyping and early sexualisation, working with schools to
promote positive body image and widespread understanding of sexual
consent law, and break down outdated perceptions of gender
appropriateness of particular academic subjects.
♦ Work
to end the gender pay gap, including with new rules on gender pay
transparency.
♦ Continue
the drive for diversity in business leadership, maintaining momentum
towards at least 30% of board members being women and encouraging
gender diversity among senior managers, too. We will work to achieve
gender equity in government programmes that support entrepreneurs.
To
promote equality in relationships and for LGBT+ individuals, We
will:
♦ Give
legal rights and obligations to cohabiting couples in the event of
relationship breakdown or one partner dying without a will.
♦ Permit
humanist weddings and opposite sex civil partnerships, and liberalise
the rules about the location, timing and content of wedding
ceremonies.
♦ Support
schools to tackle homophobic and transphobic bullying and
discrimination, and to establish a tolerant and inclusive environment
for all their pupils. We will remove schools’ exemption from the
bar on harassment in these areas while protecting the right to teach
about religious doctrine.
♦ Promote
international recognition of same sex marriages and civil
partnerships as part of a comprehensive International LGBT Rights
Strategy that supports the cause of decriminalising homosexuality in
other countries.
♦ Seek
to pardon all those with historic convictions for consensual
homosexual activity between adults.
♦ Enhance
the experience of all football fans by making homophobic chanting a
criminal offence, like racist chanting.
♦ Ask
the Advisory Committee on Safety of Blood, Tissues and Organs
periodically to review rules around men who have sex with men
donating blood to consider what restrictions remain necessary.
To
tackle the racial discrimination faced by Black, Asian and Minority
Ethnic (BAME) people We will:
♦ Build
on the Coalition’s BAME Access to Finance report to identify ways
to encourage more BAME applicants to apply for finance and set up
small business. We will publish diversity data on government
entrepreneurship programmes and seek to achieve fair representation
of the BAME community.
♦ Encourage
businesses to ensure at least one place on their board is filled by a
BAME candidate.
♦ Monitor
and tackle the BAME pay gap.
♦ Outlaw
caste discrimination.
♦ Maintain
funding for people to develop and improve their English language
skills to enable them to fully participate in society and achieve
their potential.
♦ Challenge
discrimination in the criminal justice system by:
♦ Improving
the safeguards in police Stop and Search powers in England and Wales
with tighter guidance and requiring police to wear body cameras in
Section 60 areas, the establishment of which will require judicial
sanction.
♦ Boosting
police recruitment from Black and Minority Ethnic groups.
♦ Conducting
a full review of the causes of the overrepresentation of BAME
individuals in the criminal justice system.
To
tackle religious discrimination and support faith and belief
communities in working together We
will:
♦ Continue
support for the Interfaith Network to promote strong and sustainable
relations between different faith communities.
♦ Support
projects aimed at tackling intolerance such as Show Racism the Red
Card and the Anne Frank Trust UK.
♦ Work
closely with faith and community organisations, such as the Community
Security Trust (which works to protect the Jewish community against
antisemitic attacks) and the Muslim Council of Britain, to prevent
hate crime, including at places of worship like synagogues and
mosques. We are determined to combat antisemitism and anti-Muslim
hate in the UK and internationally.
To
empower people with disabilities to live full lives and achieve their
potential We will:
♦ Improve
the benefits system for disabled people, based on the principle of
one assessment, one budget. This will bring together support like
Personal Independence Payment, Employment Support Allowance, a
replacement for the Independent Living Fund and health and social
care entitlements. We will implement the proposals set out in the
2015 Green Paper on Learning Disabilities.
♦ Ensure
disabled people who need an extra room are entitled to one in any
assessment of their Housing Benefit needs.
♦ Help
greater numbers of disabled people work by encouraging employers to
shortlist any qualified disabled candidate and providing advice about
workplace adaptation.
♦ Maintain
Disabled Students’ Allowance to ensure students with disabilities
receive appropriate support in their university studies, and review
the impact of any changes to consider additional protections for the
most vulnerable students with disabilities.
♦ Make
it easier to get around by:
♦ Making
more stations wheelchair accessible and giving wheelchair-users
priority over children’s buggies when space is limited.
♦ Bringing
into effect the provisions of the 2010 Equality Act on discrimination
by private hire vehicles and taxis.
♦ Improving
the legislative framework governing Blue Badges.
♦ Building
on our successes in improving wheelchair access to improve
accessibility of public transport for people with other disabilities,
including visual and auditory impairment.
♦ Setting
up a benchmarking standard for accessible cities.
♦ Tackle
disability hate crime by ensuring proper monitoring of incidents by
police forces and other public authorities.
♦ Formally
recognise British Sign Language as an official language of the United
Kingdom.
To
ensure the highest standards of equality and fairness in public
services We will:
♦ Maintain
the Public Sector Equality Duty and encourage external providers to
the public sector to follow best practice in terms of diversity.
♦ Prohibit
discrimination on the grounds of religion in the provision of public
services.
♦ Move
to ‘name blank’ recruitment wherever possible in the public
sector.
♦ Replicate
the civil service accelerated programme for underrepresented groups
across the public sector.
♦ Require
diversity in Public Appointments. We will introduce a presumption
that every shortlist should include a BAME candidate. We will
establish an independent committee that will monitor the drive for
greater diversity in public appointments and verify the independence
of the appointment process to public bodies, boards and institutions.
♦ Work
to ensure the shift to Digital by Default for public services does
not leave people behind, by upholding the highest standards of
accessibility in digital services and maintaining government
programmes on digital inclusion.
8.2
Freedom of speech and the free press
As
the Charlie Hebdo attacks in Paris showed, freedom of expression
cannot be taken for granted. In an open society there can be no right
‘not to be offended’, which is why Liberal Democrats in
government have strengthened the law to make it harder for
prosecutions to be brought for using ‘insulting words’, and have
led the way in protecting journalists’ sources under the 2000
Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act (RIPA). Yet censorship and
self-censorship are still rife, and the threat of prosecution can
have a chilling effect on the willingness of people to speak out
against injustice and corruption. To change this and promote
investigative journalism, We
will:
♦ Introduce
statutory public interest defences for exceptional cases where
journalists may need to break the law (such as RIPA, the 2010 Bribery
Act, and the 1998 Computer Misuse Act) to expose corruption or other
criminal acts.
♦ Ensure
judicial authorisation is required for the acquisition of
communications data which might reveal journalists’ sources or
other privileged communications, for any of the purposes allowed
under RIPA; and allow journalists the opportunity to address the
court before authorisation is granted, where this would not
jeopardise the investigation.
♦ Undertake
a post-legislative review of the 2013 Defamation Act, which Liberal
Democrats drove through Parliament, to ensure the new provisions are
reducing the chill of libel threats.
♦ Introduce,
after consultation on the detail, the changes to the 1998 Data
Protection Act recommended by Lord Justice Leveson to provide a
fairer balance between personal privacy and the requirements of
journalism, ensuring that the position of investigative journalists
is safeguarded.
To
promote the independence of the media from political influence we
will remove Ministers from any role in appointments to the BBC Trust
or the Board of Ofcom.
To
guarantee press freedom, we will pass a British ‘First Amendment’
law, to require the authorities and the courts to have regard to the
importance of a free media in a democratic society.
To
nurture public interest journalism and protect the public from press
abuse, we are committed to a system of accountability that is totally
independent of both government and the newspaper industry, as set out
in the Royal Charter on Press Regulation.
We
share the hope of Lord Justice Leveson that the incentives for the
press to sign up to genuinely independent self-regulation will
succeed. But if, in the judgment of the Press Recognition Panel,
after 12 months of operation, there is significant non-cooperation by
newspaper publishers, then – as Leveson himself concluded
–Parliament will need to act, drawing on a range of options
including the legislative steps necessary to ensure that independent
self-regulation is delivered. Where possible, we would seek to do
this on the same cross-party basis that achieved the construction of
the Leveson scheme by the Royal Charter.
8.3
Policing and security service powers
Liberal
Democrats believe security and liberty are two sides of the same
coin: you cannot have one without the other. The police and
intelligence agencies do vital work to protect the public and we are
rightly proud of them. But we always have to be vigilant that the
state does not overreach itself, as it has done at times through
corruption, heavy-handedness or illiberal laws.
We will:
♦ Ensure
proper oversight of the security services.
♦ Establish
in legislation that the police and intelligence agencies should not
obtain data on UK residents from foreign governments that it would
not be legal to obtain in the UK under UK law.
♦ Back
a full judicial enquiry into complicity in torture if the current
investigation by the Commons Intelligence and Security Committee
investigation fails to get to truth.
♦ End
indefinite detention for immigration purposes.
♦ Introduce
restrictions on the indefinite use of police bail.
♦ Require
judicial authorisation for the use of undercover police officers to
infiltrate alleged criminal groups.
♦ Get
to the full truth about corrupt practices in parts of the police and
the press by ensuring that the Daniel Morgan Panel Inquiry is
completed expeditiously and that Part 2 of the Leveson Inquiry starts
as soon as the criminal prosecutions in the hacking scandal are
completed.
♦ Identify
practical alternatives to the use of closed material procedures
within the justice system, including the provisions of the
2013Justice and Security Act, with the aim of restoring the principle
of open justice.
8.4
Securing liberty online
In
the modern digital age, the power of the state and of corporate
interests can threaten our privacy and liberty. We have achieved much
in rolling back the over-mighty state – passing the first ever
Protection of Freedoms Act to restore lost civil liberties, securing
the ongoing root and branch review of RIPA and legislating for the
creation of a Privacy and Civil Liberties Board – but we cannot be
complacent. There will be a complete overhaul of surveillance powers
in 2016. We need to ensure this and other opportunities are seized as
a chance to control excessive state power, and ensure that in an era
when surveillance is easier than ever before, we maintain the right
to privacy and free speech. Privacy should always be the norm for
personal data, meaning surveillance must always be justified and
proportionate and any demand to read private encrypted communications
must be targeted and proportionate.
We will:
♦ Pass
a Digital Bill of Rights, to define and enshrine the digital
rights of the citizen.
♦ Safeguard
the essential freedom of the internet and back net neutrality, the
principle that internet service providers should enable access to all
lawful content and applications regardless of the source, and without
favouring or blocking particular products or websites.
♦ Oppose
the introduction of the so-called Snooper’s Charter. We blocked the
draft Communications Data Bill and would do so again. Requiring
companies to store a record of everyone’s internet activities for a
year or to collect third-party communications data for non-business
purposes is disproportionate and unacceptable, as is the blanket
surveillance of our paper post.
♦ Set
stricter limits on surveillance and consider carefully the outcomes
of the reviews we initiated on surveillance by the Royal United
Services Institute and the Independent Review of Terrorism
Legislation, David anderson QC. We are opposed to the blanket
collection of UK residents’ personal communications by the police
or the intelligence agencies. Access to metadata, live content, or
the stored content of personal communications must only take place
without consent where there is reasonable suspicion of criminal
activity or to prevent threats to life.
8.5
Securing our rights and freedoms in law
800
years after Magna Carta, the need for written, legal guarantees of
our rights and liberties has not gone away.
We will:
♦ Protect
the Human Rights Act and enshrine the UN Convention on the Rights of
the Child in UK law. We will take appropriate action to comply with
decisions of UK courts and the European Court of Human Rights.
♦ Block
any further attempts to limit the right to trial by jury.
♦ Pass
a new Freedoms Act, to protect citizens from excessive state powers.
Our
Freedoms Act will:
♦ Tighten
the regulation of CCTV, with more powers for the Surveillance Camera
Commissioner.
♦ Extend
the rules governing storage of DNA and fingerprints by public
authorities to include all biometric data – like facial images.
♦ Protect
free speech by ensuring insulting words, jokes, and non-intentional
acts, are not treated as criminal, and that social media
communications are not treated more harshly than other media.
♦ Prevent
heavy-handed policing of demonstrations by tightly regulating the use
of ‘kettling’.
♦ Reform
joint enterprise laws.
♦ Ban
high-frequency Mosquito devices which discriminate against young
people.
♦ Strengthen
safeguards to prevent pre-emptive arrests and misuse of pre-charge
bail conditions to restrict civil liberties and stifle peaceful
protest.
♦ End
the Ministerial veto on release of information under the Freedom of
Information Act.
♦ Cut
back on the petty over-regulation of everyday life, like removing
licensing requirements for leafleting for community events,
liberalising the restrictions on songs and readings at wedding
ceremonies, and permitting swimming in open bodies of water.
Our
Digital Bill of Rights will:
♦ Enshrine
the principle that everyone has the right to control their own
personal data, and that everyone should be able to view, correct, and
(where appropriate and proportionate) delete their personal data,
wherever it is held.
♦ Forbid
any public body from collecting, storing or processing personal data
without statutory authority, and require any such legislation to be
regularly reviewed.
♦ Give
increased powers and resources for the Information Commissioner and
introduce custodial sentences for egregious breaches of the Data
Protection Act.
♦ Ensure
privacy is protected to the same extent in telecoms and online as in
the offline world. Public authorities should only invade an
individual’s privacy where there is reasonable suspicion of
criminal activity or where it is otherwise necessary and
proportionate to do so in the public interest, and with appropriate
oversight by the courts.
♦ Ensure
that privacy policies and terms and conditions of online services,
including smartphone apps, must be clear, concise, and easy for the
user to understand.
♦ Uphold
the right of individuals, businesses and public bodies to use strong
encryption to protect their privacy and security online.
♦ Make
it clear that online services have a duty to provide age-appropriate
policies, guidance and support to the children and young people who
use their services.
9.
Secure communities: policing, justice and the border force
No
one can fulfil their potential if they live in fear. By ensuring our
laws are upheld, we can build strong communities with opportunity for
all.
With
Liberal Democrats in government, crime is down 10%. That means fewer
homes burgled, fewer communities blighted and fewer people hurt. But
there is much more to do to reduce crime and free people from fear.
The
best way to protect the public is to stop crime from happening in the
first place, whether by designing out crime, intervening early, or
with effective punishments that challenge offenders and address their
criminal behaviour. We will make sure the number one priority for the
criminal justice system is to prevent crime by cutting reoffending.
We
have begun to tackle abuse in our immigration system, too, closing
colleges that break the rules, cracking down on illegal working and
human trafficking, and reintroducing border checks. We will build on
this record to rebuild confidence in our borders and immigration
system.
A
Record of Delivery ♦ Cut crime by 10%, with evidence-based policing
directed at the front line ♦ A Promise of More
Focus
policing on crime prevention, saving money by scrapping Police and
Crime Commissioners
Improved
treatment for addiction and mental health problems in prison
Cut
crime with specialist drug courts and non-criminal punishments that
help addicts get clean
More
prisoners working longer hours with wages contributing to a Victims’
Fund
Reform
prisons to focus on turning offenders away from a life of crime
National
strategy on fighting violence against women and girls and ending the
awful practice of Female Genital Mutilation
End
FGM at home and abroad in a generation, teach sexual consent in our
schools, and crack down on domestic violence
Reintroduced
border checks so we know who is coming in and leaving the UK
Complete
border checks and use the information to improve our visa rules and
deport people with no right to stay
9.1
Preventing crime
Crime
and fear of crime are amongst the greatest threats to our security
and our ability to live our lives to the full. Our focus is on trying
to prevent crime from happening in the first place.
We will:
♦ Design
out opportunities for crime, by improving the built environment, the
design of new technologies, and community resilience.
♦ Strengthen
the What Works centre within the College of Policing and require HM
Inspectorate of Constabulary to scrutinise the use of evidence by
local forces in designing their policing plans.
♦ Build
on the success of crime maps to use data more effectively to reduce
crime, working towards the publication of business-by-business data
for crimes committed on commercial premises, and exploring the
feasibility of mandatory reporting of fraud losses by individual
credit and debit card providers.
9.2
Improving local policing
We
are successfully bringing down crime and improving the efficiency of
our police forces, but there is more to do. We believe the police
could be far more effective with proper support and shared best
practice.
We will:
♦ Guarantee
the police pursue the public’s priorities by replacing Police and
Crime Commissioners with Police Boards made up of Councillors from
across the force area.
♦ Encourage
police forces and other emergency services to work together at a
local, regional and national level to reduce back office costs and
deliver efficiency savings.
♦ Support
and expand Police Now, which is bringing high-flying graduates and
skilled mid-career professionals into our police forces.
♦ Explore
the case for transferring responsibility for more serious national
crime to the National Crime Agency, enabling local police forces to
focus on local crime and anti-social behaviour.
♦ Step
up our work with EU partners to tackle serious and organised crime.
9.3
Improve support for victims of crime
The
criminal justice system exists to protect the public from crime;
where crime does occur victims are our first priority. We need to
make sure they, and their families, are supported both in the
aftermath of crimes and throughout the justice system.
We will:
♦ Enact
a Victims’ Bill of Rights.
♦ Create
a single point of contact for victims to give early access to
information and support.
♦ Change
sentencing guidelines to increase sentences available for hate
crimes.
♦ Give
victims of crime a right to review what progress police have made to
investigate the crime committed against them including cases where
the police have declined to investigate.
♦ Give
victims a right to choose restorative justice.
♦ Implement
the Modern Slavery Strategy to reduce people trafficking and support
victims.
9.4
Tackling violence against women and girls
A
fair society cannot tolerate today’s unacceptable level of violence
against women and girls in Britain. We have made progress since 2010
but we will not rest until women feel safe and respected.
We will:
♦ Ensure
teachers, social workers, police officers and health workers in areas
where there is high prevalence of female genital mutilation or forced
marriage are trained to help those at risk.
♦ Require
the teaching of sexual consent in schools as part of age-appropriate
sex and relationships education.
♦ Improve
the provision of rape crisis centres and refuges for victims of
domestic violence with a national network and national sources of
funding.
♦ Protect
funding for tackling violence against women and girls and maintain
the post of International Champion for preventing this violence.
♦ Create
a national helpline for victims of domestic and sexual violence –
regardless of gender – to provide support, encourage reporting and
secure more convictions.
♦ Work
to ensure the whole criminal justice system updates practice in line
with the Director of Public Prosecutions’ guidance on sexual
consent.
9.5
Improving justice and rehabilitating offenders
The
criminal justice system can do more to turn people away from a life
of crime. We have made progress in government, for the first time
providing probation support for offenders serving sentences of less
than twelve months. Yet still, far too many people are simply
warehoused in prison, instead of learning skills that will enable
them to earn an honest living when they are released.
We
believe that a large prison population is a sign of failure to
rehabilitate, not a sign of success. So our aim is to significantly
reduce the prison population by using more effective alternative
punishments and correcting offending behaviour.
We will:
♦ Prioritise
prison for dangerous offenders and those who commit the most serious
offences with increased use of tough non-custodial punishments
including weekend or evening custody, curfews, unpaid work in the
community and GPS tagging. This will enable us to introduce a
presumption against short-term sentences that will help reduce the
prison population and cut crime.
♦ Promote
Community Justice Panels and other local schemes designed to stop
problems from escalating.
♦ Extend
the role of the Youth Justice Board to all offenders aged under 21,
give them the power to commission mental health services and devolve
youth custody budgets to Local Authorities.
♦ Create
a Women’s Justice Board, modelled on the Youth Justice Board, to
improve rehabilitation of female offenders.
♦ Reform
prisons so they become places of work, rehabilitation and learning,
with offenders receiving an education and skills assessment within
one week, starting a relevant course and programme of support within
one month and able to complete courses on release.
♦ Improve
prison governance and accountability with a new value added measure
to assess progress in reducing reoffending, providing education and
tackling addiction and mental health issues, enabling good prisons to
earn greater autonomy. We will strengthen the independence of the
Chief Inspectors of Prisons and Probation.
♦ Provide
experts in courts and police stations to identify where mental health
or a drug problem is behind an offender’s behaviour so they can be
dealt with in a way that is appropriate. We will pilot US-style drug
and alcohol courts.
♦ Strengthen
the ‘realistic prospect of custody’ test to reduce the use of
remand for suspected offenders who can be safely monitored in the
community and are unlikely to receive a prison sentence if found
guilty.
Liberal
Democrats will adopt the default position that – unless there are
strong reasons to the contrary in specific cases – public servants
rather than commercial organisations should provide detention,
prison, immigration enforcement and secure units.
9.6
Ensuring access to justice
Access
to justice is an essential part of a free society and a functioning
legal system. In this Parliament we have had to make significant
savings from the Legal Aid budget, but in the next Parliament our
priority for delivering efficiency in the Ministry of Justice should
be prison and court reform, using technology and innovation to reduce
costs.
We will:
♦ Review
the criminal Legal Aid market and ensure there are no further savings
without an impact assessment as to the viability of a competitive and
diverse market of Legal Aid providers.
♦ Reduce
pressure on the criminal Legal Aid budget by requiring company
directors to take out insurance against prosecution for fraud and
permitting the use of restrained assets to pay reasonable legal
bills.
♦ Carry
out an immediate review of civil Legal Aid, judicial review and court
fees, in consultation with the judiciary, to ensure Legal Aid is
available to all those who need it, that those of modest means can
bring applications for judicial review of allegedly unlawful
government action and that court and tribunal fees will not put
justice beyond the reach of those who seek it. This will mean
reversing any recent rises in up-front court fees that make justice
unaffordable for many, and instead spreading the fee burden more
fairly.
♦ Retain
access to recoverable success fees and insurance premiums in
asbestosis claims and where an individual is suing the police; and
also for both claimant and defendant in publication and data
protection claims, except where one party is significantly better
resourced than the other.
♦ Promote
the use of alternative buildings for magistrates’ courts and local
dispute resolution programmes like Community Justice Panels to bring
justice back into the community.
♦ Support
innovation like the provision of civil justice online and expansion
of alternative dispute resolution procedures.
♦ Encourage
the widespread use of mediation for separating couples, while
protecting access to the family courts where necessary.
♦ Develop
a strategy that will deliver advice and legal support to help people
with everyday problems like personal debt and social welfare issues,
working across government and involving non-profit advice agencies.
9.7
Tackling terrorism and violent extremism
Terrorism
and violent extremism remain a serious threat to the United Kingdom,
which requires a proportionate response.
We will:
♦ Work
with religious and community leaders, civil society groups and social
media sites to counter the narratives put forward by extremists, and
create the space for the expression of contrary viewpoints and
religious interpretations.
♦ Maintain
laws that provide an effective defence against terrorist activity,
including proscription of terrorist groups, Terrorism Prevention and
Investigation Measures, and Temporary Exclusion Orders, which enable
the security services to manage the return of those who have fought
illegally in foreign conflicts.
♦ Ensure
we continue to provide the appropriate resources to the police and
intelligence agencies to meet the threat, including of cyber attack.
♦ Ensure
efforts to tackle terrorism do not stigmatise or alienate Muslims or
any other ethnic or faith group, and that government supports
communities to help prevent those at risk of radicalisation from
being drawn into illegal activity.
♦ Review
the process of assessing threats against different ethnic and
religious communities to ensure all groups in the UK are properly
protected.
9.8
An effective approach to reducing drug harm
For
too long the debate about effective ways to reduce the harm caused by
drugs has been distorted by political prejudice. Around the world,
countries are trialling new approaches that are reducing drug harm,
improving lives, reducing addiction and saving taxpayers’ money. In
the UK we have made good progress on treatment but we continue to
give 80,000 people a year a criminal record for drug possession,
blighting their employment chances, and we still imprison 1,000
people a year for personal possession when they are not charged with
dealing or any other offence.
We will:
♦ Adopt
the approach used in Portugal where those arrested for possession of
drugs for personal use are diverted into treatment, education or
civil penalties that do not attract a criminal record.
♦ As
a first step towards reforming the system, legislate to end the use
of imprisonment for possession of drugs for personal use, diverting
resources towards tackling organised drug crime instead.
♦ Continue
to apply severe penalties to those who manufacture, import or deal in
illegal drugs, and clamp down on those who produce and sell
unregulated chemical highs.
♦ Establish
a review to assess the effectiveness of the cannabis legalisation
experiments in the United States and Uruguay in relation to public
health and criminal activity.
♦ Legislate
to make the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs independent in
setting the classification of drugs, while remaining accountable to
Parliament and the wider public.
♦ Enable
doctors to prescribe cannabis for medicinal use.
♦ Put
the Department of Health rather than the Home Office in charge of
drug policy.
9.9
Restoring confidence in our borders
The
UK secures many benefits from immigration, which boosts our economy
and helps staff our public services, especially our NHS.
But
we need to tackle the weaknesses in our immigration system, which
threatened to undermine confidence in it. That is why we have led
work fully to restore border checks on entry and exit. We need to
improve the administration of our system so we deal with asylum
claims and visa applications promptly and return those who do not
have a valid claim to be in the UK. Then we can start to rebuild an
open, tolerant Britain.
We will:
♦ Complete
the restoration of full entry and exit checks at our borders, to
rebuild confidence in immigration control, and allow targeting of
resources at those who overstay their visas.
♦ Speed
up the processing of asylum claims, reducing the time genuine
refugees have to wait before they can settle into life in the UK and
making it easier to remove those who do not have a right to be here.
We will require working-age asylum seekers who have waited more than
six months for their claim to be processed to seek work like other
benefit claimants, and only to receive benefits if they are unable to
do so. We will end the use of the ‘Azure Card’ for administering
benefits in the asylum system.
♦ Double
the number of inspections on employers to ensure all statutory
employment legislation is being respected.
♦ Separate
students within official immigration statistics, while taking tough
action against any educational institution that allows abuse of the
student route into the UK.
♦ Present
to Parliament an annual assessment of skill and labour market
shortfalls and surpluses and their impact on the economy, public
services and local communities, together with an audit report on the
migration control system, allowing full Parliamentary oversight of
Britain’s migration policies.
♦ Continue
requirements for all new claimants for Jobseekers Allowance (JSA) to
have their English language skills assessed, with JSA then being
conditional on attending English language courses for those whose
English is poor.
♦ Encourage
schools with high numbers of children with English as a second
language to host English lessons for parents.
10.
Power to the people: devolution, democracy and citizenship
For
freedom to be meaningful, people need the power not just to make
decisions about their own lives, but about the way their country,
their community, their workplace and more are run.
Liberal
Democrats have made a good start on modernising and decentralising
the state. We have taken away the Prime Minister’s power to call
elections. We have improved Parliament with more powers for
backbenchers and more internal democracy. We have devolved power to
Councils and communities. We have enacted the biggest transfer of
fiscal power from Westminster to Scotland in three hundred years. We
have supported employee democracy and the mutuals movement.
But
we were thwarted in some of our attempts to reform politics. When it
came to reforming the House of Lords and giving citizens a stronger
voice with fair votes, our proposals were blocked. We still believe
these are essential changes and will continue our work to deliver
them.
A
Record of Delivery ♦ Passed a Lobbying Act to introduce a
register of consultant lobbyists and curb the influence of special
interest money in elections ♦ A Promise of More
Get
big money out of politics with a £10,000 cap on donations as part of
wider funding reform
Fixed
term Parliaments, taking away a Prime Minister’s power to call
elections when it suits their own party
Better
democracy with a fair voting system in local government and at
Westminster and votes at 16
New
powers for Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, including more
financial devolution than ever before
Deliver
on our promises to Scotland in full, devolve more powers to Wales,
and work for a shared future in Northern Ireland
Devolved
£7 billion of funding for transport and economic growth to local
areas in England.
Meet
the needs of England with Devolution on Demand, letting local areas
take control of the services that matter most to them
10.1
Better politics
Unfair
votes, overcentralisation of decision-making, the power of patronage
and the influence of powerful corporate lobbies mean ordinary
citizens and local communities are too often excluded and sidelined
in politics today. We need to reform British politics to make it more
representative and more empowering of our citizens so it commands
greater public confidence.
We will:
♦ Take
big money out of politics by capping donations to political parties
at £10,000 per person each year, and introducing wider reforms to
party funding along the lines of the 2011 report of the Committee on
Standards in Public Life, funded from savings from existing
government spending on politics.
♦ Protect
the rights of trade union members to have their subscriptions,
including political levies, deducted from their salary, and
strengthen members’ political freedoms by letting them choose which
political party they wish to support through such automatic payments.
We will encourage wider participation in trade union ballots through
electronic voting.
♦ Introduce
votes at age 16 for elections and referendums across the UK, and make
it easier to register to vote in schools and colleges.
♦ Reform
the House of Lords with a proper democratic mandate, starting from
the proposals in the 2012 Bill.
♦ Reform
our voting systems for elections to local government and Westminster
to ensure more proportional representation. We will introduce the
Single Transferable Vote for local government elections in England
and for electing MPs across the UK. We will reduce the number of MPs
but only as part of the introduction of a reformed, fair, voting
system.
♦ Cancel
the boundary review due to report in 2018. While new constituencies
would need to be established for a new voting system, we believe
constituency boundary reviews should respect natural geographical
communities, with greater flexibility for the Boundary Commission to
deviate from exact equality to take account of community ties and
continuity of representation.
♦ Explore
options to strengthen and simplify the voting rights of UK citizens
living abroad and address disenfranchisement experienced by some.
♦ Work
with the broadcasters to formalise the process for Leaders' Debates
in General Elections, helping ensure they happen and setting a clear
threshold for those eligible to participate.
♦ Strengthen
and expand the lobbying register and prohibit MPs from accepting paid
lobbying work. We will consider carefully the work of the independent
reviewer into the impact of third party spending regulations to
ensure the right balance has been struck. We will also remove the
discrimination against third parties by requiring political parties
to include the cost of staffing in their national expense limits in
the same way as third parties now do.
To
reform Parliament in particular We
will:
♦ Strengthen
the role of MPs in amending the Budget and scrutinising government
spending proposals.
♦ Make
Parliament more family-friendly, and establish a review to pave the
way for MP jobsharing arrangements.
♦ Implement
a House Business committee to ensure that Parliament and not the
executive decides the Parliamentary timetable, ending the ‘talking
out’ of private members’ business. Building on the Wright
Committee recommendations of 2009, and experiences of coalition, we
will conduct a full review of Parliamentary procedures which should
formally recognise individual political parties not just Government
and Opposition.
10.2
A decentralised but United Kingdom
Liberal
Democrats have a proud record of leading the way on giving greater
powers to the nations of the UK. Liberal Democrat Ministers were the
ones to lead the 2012 Scotland Act and the 2014 Wales Act through
Parliament, transferring more financial autonomy to Scotland than
ever before, and Wales’ first tax powers. and in the last months,
we have given the governments of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland
the power to lower the voting age to 16.
Now
we need go further. We must deliver on the promises made to the
people of Scotland and the rest of the UK to further decentralise
power. In short, we will deliver Home Rule to each of the nations of
a strong, federal United Kingdom.
Constitutional
change has taken place rapidly. We now need to make sure all the new
arrangements work together coherently and we will therefore establish
a UK Constitutional Convention, made up from representatives of the
political parties, academia, civic society and members of the public,
tasked with producing a full written constitution for the UK, to
report within two years.
There
are many powers that we think should be devolved on an equal basis to
the existing Parliaments and Assemblies. We will transfer power to:
♦ Borrow
for investment.
♦ Manage
the Crown Estate’s economic assets.
♦ Control
a range of benefits for older people, carers and disabled people.
Scotland
After
the independence referendum, the Smith Commission brought Scotland’s
five main parties together to agree what further powers should be
assigned to the Scottish Parliament. Liberal Democrats ensured the
package of powers reflects Scotland’s key priorities.
The
Scottish Parliament should raise in tax more than half of what it
spends in its budget. A Scottish welfare system should allow the
Scottish Parliament to change the benefits regime where there is
specific Scottish need or priority, with a starting budget of around
£3 billion.
These
powers and more will deliver for the Scottish people: an empowered
and accountable Scottish Parliament in a strong and secure United
Kingdom.
We
will deliver Home Rule for Scotland by implementing the Smith
Commission proposals in full in the first session of the next
Parliament. We will continue to make the case for powers currently
held at Westminster and Holyrood to be transferred directly to local
government where appropriate.
Wales
We
endorse the recent St. David’s Day announcement and will implement
it in full, devolving powers over energy, ports, local elections,
broadcasting and more, and implementing a reserved powers model.
But
this announcement does not go far enough. Liberal Democrats will go
further and deliver proper Home Rule for Wales and a Welsh Parliament
by:
♦ Implementing
the remaining Silk Part 1 proposals on financial powers for Wales. We
will consider the work of the Government’s review on devolution of
Air Passenger Duty (APD), with a view to devolving long-haul APD.
♦ Implementing
the Silk Part 2 proposals by:
-
Transferring powers from the UK Parliament to the National Assembly
over S4C, sewerage, transport, teachers’ pay, youth justice,
policing and in the longer term other justice powers.
-
Devolving funding of Network Rail in relation to the Wales network.
-
Strengthening the capacity of the National Assembly to scrutinise
legislation and hold the Welsh Government to account.
♦ Allowing
the Welsh Government to set its own bank holidays.
♦ Providing
for a Welsh Parliament, preventing Westminster from being able to
override Wales on devolved matters, and devolving the power to amend
electoral arrangements for the Assembly and local elections in Wales
with a two thirds majority.
♦ Giving
the Children’s Commissioner for Wales the power to examine issues
that affect children in Wales but are not within the control of the
Welsh Government.
In
addition, to help create jobs and boost growth in Wales, we will
abolish the economically distorting tolls on the Severn Bridge once
the debts are paid off.
Northern
Ireland
Liberal
Democrats wish to see a permanently peaceful, stable, non-sectarian
and truly democratic society in Northern Ireland. We will work
constructively with the political parties in Northern Ireland and
with the Irish Government to ensure the political stability of the
Northern Ireland Assembly and other institutions of the Belfast
Agreement. To grow the economy, tackle social exclusion, overcome
inequality and deliver efficiencies in public services, Liberal
Democrats will support policies and initiatives that promote sharing
over separation and counter the cost of division. A key aspect of
this is dealing with the legacy of the past. The Stormont House
Agreement represents another stage in the intensive work necessary to
build long-term peace, stability and prosperity in Northern Ireland.
In
Government we delivered on the commitment to enable the devolution of
Corporation Tax to Northern Ireland by April 2017. We will continue
to work with all parties to implement the full package of measures in
the Stormont House Agreement and address outstanding issues. We will
build on this by:
♦ Keeping
under review the prospect of further devolution of fiscal powers to
the Northern Ireland Assembly and other powers that would improve the
financial accountability of the Assembly.
♦ Promoting
a strong mechanism for working constructively with civic society in
Northern Ireland.
♦ Working
to ensure the interface is smooth and effective between national
security and counter-terrorism policing on the one hand, and local
policing and criminal justice activities on the other.
♦ Supporting
changes to the powers and internal mechanisms of the Northern Ireland
Assembly that reinforce the development of normal, democratic
principles and enhances the creation of a shared future beyond
sectarianism and division.
♦ Working
with the political parties in Northern Ireland to tackle the cost of
division and ensuring all Government policies in Northern Ireland
support the aim of a genuine Shared Future for all.
England
Devolution
of power to Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland has implications for
the UK Parliament and its dual role in legislating for England as
well as the federal UK. It is possible that a future UK government
could use the support of MPs representing Scotland, Wales or Northern
Ireland to secure the passage of legislation that only affects
England, even if the majority in England were opposed. This would be
a key issue for our proposed Constitutional Convention to address.
Liberal
Democrats believe an English-only stage in legislation affecting
England should be considered, so English MPs can have a separate say
on laws that only affect England. However, this would need to be on a
proportional basis, genuinely reflecting the balance of opinion in
England, not the distorted picture generated by the First Past the
Post system.
Beyond
Parliament, there is much to change to improve the way communities in
England are governed. By returning power to the villages, towns,
cities and regions of England we can drive growth, improve public
services and give people freedom to run their own lives.
To
rejuvenate local government in England, We
will:
♦ Reduce
the powers of Ministers to interfere in democratically elected local
government.
♦ Remove
the requirement to hold local referenda for Council Tax changes,
ensuring Councillors are properly accountable for their decisions by
introducing fair votes.
♦ Build
on the success of City Deals and Growth Deals to devolve more power
and resources to groups of Local Authorities and Local Enterprise
Partnerships, starting with back-to-work support.
♦ Establish
a Government process to deliver greater devolution of financial
responsibility to English Local Authorities, and any new devolved
bodies in England, building on the work of the Independent Commission
on Local Government Finance. Any changes must balance the objectives
of more local autonomy and fair equalisation between communities.
In
some areas of England there is an even greater appetite for powers,
but not every part of the country wants to move at the same speed and
there cannot be a one-size-fits-all approach. We will therefore
introduce Devolution on Demand, enabling even greater devolution of
powers from Westminster to Councils or groups of Councils working
together – for example to a Cornish Assembly.
Funding
The
nations of the United Kingdom have long had different needs with
regard to funding. The Barnett Formula is the mechanism used to
adjust spending allocations across the UK.
The
Liberal Democrats have already delivered a substantial extension of
financial powers to the nations of the UK and we will devolve further
fiscal powers to the devolved governments. In order to ensure
reliable funding, we will retain the Barnett Formula as the basis for
future spending allocations for Scotland and Northern Ireland. This
will protect the individual nations’ budgets from external shocks
like the recent global drop in the price of oil. We recognise the
findings of the Holtham Commission that the current formula
underfunds Wales and will commission work to update this analysis. We
will address the imbalance by immediately entrenching a Barnett floor
set at a level that reflects the need for Wales to be funded fairly,
and seek over a Parliament to increase the Welsh block grant to an
equitable level.
10.3
Everyday democracy
To
lead a fulfilled life, people need power over more than just their
government. Liberal Democrats will spread democracy in everyday life
by encouraging mutuals, cooperatives, and employee participation and
by increasing the opportunities for people to take democratic control
over the services on which they rely. We will encourage citizens to
engage in practical social action, seeing government as an enabler
and facilitator rather than just a commissioner and provider of
services.
We will:
♦ Aim
to increase the number of Neighbourhood, Community and Parish
Councils and promote tenant management in social housing.
♦ Encourage
employers to promote employee participation and employee ownership,
aiming to increase further the proportion of GDP in employee-owned
businesses. We will change company law to permit a German-style
two-tier board structure to include employees.
♦ Introduce
mandatory arbitration for strikes likely to cause widespread public
disruption, enabling us to defend workers’ rights to strike while
ensuring continued service in essential public services.
♦ Strengthen
worker participation in decision-making, including staff
representation on remuneration committees, and the right for
employees who collectively own 5% of a company to be represented on
the board.
♦ Give
football fans a greater say in how their clubs are run by encouraging
the reform of football governance rules to promote engagement between
clubs and supporters.
♦ Support
local libraries and ensure any libraries under threat of closure are
offered first for transfer to the local community.
♦ Spread
mutual structures and employee participation through the public
sector.
♦ Strengthen
community rights to run local public services, and protect community
assets like pubs by bringing forward a Community Right to Buy. We
will ensure planning permission is required to convert a pub into
alternative uses.
♦ Support
social investment, ensuring charities and social enterprises can
access the support and finance they need to develop and deliver
innovative, sustainable solutions to challenges in their communities.
10.4
Protecting the space for democratic debate
We
recognise the importance of a plural and diverse media, free from
state influence or from monopolistic or dominant market control, in
guaranteeing a vibrant national conversation. We will therefore
reform the existing arrangements for safeguarding plurality in the
media broadly in line with the recommendations of the 2014 Lords
Communications Select Committee report.
We will:
♦ Give
lead responsibility to Ofcom and enable it to conduct reviews
periodically, as well as when triggered by proposed mergers and
acquisitions, and enable Ofcom to set down conditions to prevent the
reach of any media company damaging the public interest.
♦ Ensure
any conditions or requirements that Ofcom lays down following a
plurality review can only be vetoed or interfered with by a Minister
after a vote of both Houses of Parliament.
♦ Use
a variety of measures to ensure that there is a vibrant local and
‘hyperlocal’ media to help inform citizens about their local area
and their local politics, including:
-
Redirecting the current subsidies for ‘local TV’, which have
failed to contribute significantly to cultural life.
-
Extending Ofcom’s community radio grant support to online
hyperlocals, and allowing non-profit local media outlets to obtain
charitable status where the public interest is being served.
11.
Britain in the world: global action for security and
prosperity
Liberal
Democrats are internationalists because we respect the rights of
human beings wherever they live and understand that by working
together countries can achieve more than they can alone. This is
particularly true for a country like the UK with a rich web of global
relationships, which gives it the potential to wield greater
influence than its economic or military power alone would permit.
In
a more globalised, interdependent world, freedom for individuals is
not best protected solely by the nation state. Corporations, banks
and markets now operate across the globe with little respect for
national borders. Climate change, one of the greatest challenges of
our age, is by its nature global. and criminals, hackers and
terrorists now operate across borders, too. It is in the interests of
all countries to create a system of international law and governance,
both treaty-based and multilateral, at the global level.
Liberal
Democrats have worked tirelessly in government to keep Britain at the
heart of the European Union, to secure the best deal for British
citizens. Our Ministers have represented the UK across the world on
vital issues from climate change to nuclear disarmament and secured
agreements that will keep us all safer, not least the International
Arms Trade Treaty. We have stood up for human rights, the rule of
international law and humanitarian aid, delivering for the first time
on the 40 year old UN ambition for developed countries to spend 0.7%
of national income as Official Development Assistance.
We
will ensure Britain actively and constructively works with our allies
and partners in the European Union, Commonwealth, UN and NATO to
engage with and develop policy responses when liberal
internationalism and the rules-based system are challenged.
A
Record of Delivery ♦ Increased aid spending to 0.7% of national
income, and guaranteed this in law ♦ A Promise of More
Ensure
the 2015 Sustainable Development Goals aim to end poverty, protect
the environment and leave no-one behind
Secured
a record £23.9 billion last year from clamping down on tax evasion,
avoidance and fraud, and won G8 agreement on transparency on the real
owners of businesses
Improve
tax transparency including in low-income countries by extending
country-by-country reporting from banks and extractive industries to
all UK listed companies
Passed
a law to guarantee a referendum before Britain passes any more powers
to the EU
Ensure
Britain plays a constructive part in the European Union and any
referendum triggered by the EU Act is on the big question: In or Out
Agreed
an ambitious EU target of 40% cuts to carbon emissions by 2030, and
secured Rio+20 agreements on sustainable development
Work
to secure a binding global agreement on cutting emissions, and a
stronger commitment within the EU to a 50% reduction by 2030
Supported
our armed forces and veterans, enshrining the Armed Forces Covenant
in law
Focus
on ensuring our armed forces have the training and equipment they
need for the threats of today and end continuous nuclear weapon
patrols
11.1
Working for peace and security across the world
From
the recent collapse of talks between Israelis and Palestinians to
Russian interference in Ukraine, this is a challenging time for peace
and security across the world. At times like these we need to
redouble our diplomatic efforts and work closely with our EU and NATO
partners to promote an active, rights-based foreign policy for our
mutual defence.
The
UK has a proud record of playing a leading role in the European Union
and in international institutions like the UN, NATO and the
Commonwealth and should continue to do so, wherever possible
promoting our values of freedom and opportunity for all.
We
will:
♦ Use
all aspects of government policy – trade, aid and diplomacy as well
as military cooperation – to focus UK policy on conflict
prevention. This will require a joint approach across the MOD, FCO,
DFID and other departments, and we will continue to assess UK
government actions for their impacts on conflict prevention and
security. This will be a priority within the 2015 Strategic Defence
and Security Review (SDSR), which should begin immediately after the
election.
♦ Engage
with and strengthen multilateral UN and treaty-based institutions
worldwide.
♦ Support
the UN principle of Responsibility to Protect. This principle focuses
on the security of individuals, rather than states.
♦ Improve
control of arms exports by:
♦ Implementing
a policy of ‘presumption of denial’ for arms exports to countries
listed as countries of concern in the Foreign Office’s annual human
rights report.
♦ Requiring
end-user certification on all future arms export licenses with an
annual report to Parliament on this certification.
Should
all these institutions and policies fail, we recognise it will be
necessary to consider military interventions to protect ourselves and
fulfil our international obligations. However in these circumstances,
Liberal Democrats believe the UK should intervene only when there is
a clear legal and/or humanitarian case, endorsed by a vote in
Parliament, working within the remit of international institutions
wherever and whenever possible.
In
response to current major conflicts worldwide, We
will:
♦ Promote
democracy and stability in Ukraine and neighbouring countries against
an increasingly assertive Russia. We will work closely with EU and
other international partners to exert maximum economic and political
pressure on Russia to stop interfering in the affairs of sovereign
Eastern European nations, and will stand by our obligations under the
NATO treaty in the event of threats to NATO member states. We will
work with the EU to develop an EU energy strategy that will reduce
reliance on Russia’s energy supplies.
♦ Continue
to work with international partners – Western, African and Arab –
to tackle Islamic fanaticism embodied by organisations like the
so-called Islamic State (IS) in Iraq and Syria and Boko Haram in
Nigeria. These extremist organisations pervert Islam and carry out
appalling atrocities against Muslims as well as non-Muslims. This is
a generational challenge that will take time and patience. We favour
broadening the international coalition against IS.
♦ Recognising
that Airstrikes alone will not defeat IS, continue a comprehensive
approach, in compliance with international law, to supporting the
Iraqi government in standing against IS, including:
♦ Assistance
in strengthening its democratic institutions.
♦ Training
the Iraqi Security Forces and Kurdish Peshmerga fighters.
♦ Humanitarian
relief to help alleviate the suffering of displaced Syrians and
Iraqis.
♦ Support
the moderate opposition in Syria, who are fighting both President
Bashar al-Assad and IS. We will continue to push for an inclusive
political transition in Syria, which would enable Syrian moderates
from all sides to unite against extremism and tyranny.
♦ Remain
committed to a negotiated peace settlement to the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict, which includes a two-state solution. We condemn
disproportionate force used by all sides. We condemn Hamas’ rocket
attacks and other targeting of Israeli civilians. We condemn Israel’s
continued illegal policy of settlement expansion, which undermines
the possibility of a two-state solution. We support recognition of
the independent State of Palestine as and when it will help the
prospect of a two-state solution.
♦ Support
multilateral negotiations to stop Iran obtaining nuclear weapons. We
will continue to seek normalisation of our diplomatic relations with
Iran, including reopening the British Embassy in Tehran and promoting
peaceful dialogue between Iran and Saudi Arabia.
11.2
Our armed forces and security services
The
UK must be able to defend itself and the territories for which it has
responsibility, support its neighbours and allies, and engage in
humanitarian intervention. Many of the security challenges the UK
faces are shared by our partners and allies in the EU and NATO and
the UK is more effective and more resilient when we work closely with
those partners.
Liberal
Democrats are clear that the security offered by our continued
membership of the EU is more crucial than ever, as are our bilateral
relationships with our key European allies. We favour greater
integration of military capabilities and procurement to address
common problems, to overcome economic constraints and to maintain a
full spectrum of defence capabilities. To achieve this, we will build
on the treaty-based arrangements we have established and extend this
cooperation to other suitable European partners.
Liberal
Democrats are committed to meeting our national and international
obligations in security and defence. This is why in government over
the last five years we met the NATO commitment to spend 2% of our GDP
on defence, most recently restated in the Readiness Action Plan and
Defence Industrial Pledge at the Wales NATO Summit in 2014. We are
committed to completing a comprehensive Strategic Defence and
Security Review early in the next Parliament to inform future defence
spending decisions. We recognise that the world has changed
fundamentally since the last such review. It is vital that our real
security and defence needs and international obligations are
considered in the SDSR, and this is why we wish to move towards a
Single Security Budget.
We will:
♦ Conduct
a Strategic Defence and Security Review in which we will revisit and
update the Future Force 2020 vision and ensure the capabilities we
are invested in are relevant for keeping Britain safe.
♦ Use
the SDSR to establish a Single Security Budget, including not just
conventional defence spending but the work of our security agencies,
cyber defences and soft power interventions. The Single Security
Budget will be distributed by the SDSR process, as part of an overall
Spending Review. This integrated approach will ensure spending
choices follow the capabilities we need, not traditional departmental
silos.
♦ Maintain
strong and effective armed forces and the capability to deploy
rapidly expeditionary forces.
♦ Set
long-term budgets to invest in the right equipment at competitive
prices.
♦ Recognise
the expansion of warfare into the cybersphere, by investing in our
security and intelligence services and acting to counter cyber
attacks.
♦ Remain
fully engaged in international nuclear disarmament efforts.
♦ Step
down the nuclear ladder by procuring fewer Vanguard successor
submarines and moving from continuous at sea deterrence to a
contingency posture of regular patrols, enabling a ‘surge’ to
armed patrols when the international security context makes this
appropriate. This would help us to fulfil our Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty commitments and reduce the UK nuclear
warhead stockpile.
♦ Work
for new global standards to end the use of conventional explosive
weapons with wide-area effects in populated areas.
♦ Promote
European defence integration where appropriate by enhancing European
defence industry co-operation.
Liberal
Democrats recognise the vital role the UK’s armed forces play in
the defence of the nation and believe that it is the role of
government to safeguard the interests of service personnel and
veterans. We strongly support the Armed Forces Covenant, now
enshrined in law in the 2011 Armed Forces Act.
We
also propose:
♦ Transferring
the Office of the Veterans’ Minister to the Cabinet Office, so that
the services of all departments can be marshalled in support of
veterans and creating a post of Veterans’ Commissioner.
♦ Improving
support for personnel and veterans with mental health problems,
including alcohol dependency.
♦ Strengthening
local military covenants by defining more exacting guidelines and
ensuring best practice is rolled out across all Local Authorities.
The
government in 2011 set a target for increasing the size of the
Reserves to 30,000, but it is significantly behind in achieving this
goal, with continued problems of retention. We acknowledge the
different pressures that Reserves face and propose that:
♦ Emphasis
be put on improving retention and training of Reserves at current
levels.
♦ Employers
be required to offer two weeks’ unpaid leave annually to assist
Reserves attending training camps.
11.3
Britain in Europe: prosperity and reform
Britain’s
membership of the EU is essential for creating a stronger economy and
for projecting influence in the world. Millions of British jobs are
linked to our trade with the EU, and being in Europe puts us on a
more equal footing when negotiating trade deals with global players
like the USA and China and in countering security threats. A
modernised EU is crucial to responding to the global challenges
Britain faces, whether they are climate change, cross-border crime
and terrorism, or conflict.
If
the UK were to leave the EU, trade rules would be made without us,
our voice would not be heard in climate change negotiations and our
borders would be more vulnerable. There is no doubt the UK would be
poorer and weaker if we walked away from our closest neighbours and
most trusted allies and left the EU.
But
that does not mean that the institutions and policies of the European
Union are perfect and do not need reform. Liberal Democrats are the
party of reform whether that is in Westminster, Holyrood, the Senedd
or in local Councils and the EU is no exception.
Liberal
Democrats in Government have already secured significant reforms like
cutting the EU budget by £30 billion and reforming the Common
Fisheries Policy, ending the discarding of usable fish. We have also
shifted the balance of EU spending towards jobs, growth and
innovation. Only by remaining fully engaged in the EU can we deliver
the further reforms that are urgently needed not only for the UK, but
also for the rest of the EU.
We will:
♦ Work
to deepen the EU single market in the energy sector, in the digital
economy and for services. We will boost British exports by scrapping
national barriers to British firms trading online and by concluding
ambitious EU trade agreements with key markets like Japan and India.
We will implement the recommendations made by Michael Moore MP in
October 2014, including publishing an annual European Business White
Paper and appointing an EU Business Minister to lead this
competitiveness agenda.
♦ Support
negotiations at the World Trade Organisation as well as an ambitious
Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) between the EU
and the USA, which could bring benefits of up to £10 billion a year
to the British economy. We will only support an agreement that
upholds EU standards of consumer, employee and environmental
protection, and allows us to determine how NHS services are provided.
♦ Work
to reform the EU to make it more efficient, reducing the proportion
of the EU budget spent on the Common Agricultural Policy, abolishing
unnecessary EU institutions like the European Economic and Social
Committee and scrapping the second seat of the European Parliament in
Strasbourg.
♦ Continue
to reduce the burden of EU legislation on business by curbing
unnecessary red tape, exempting small businesses from EU rules where
possible and defending the UK opt-out to the Working Time Directive.
♦ Increase
the accountability of the EU by enhancing the role of national
Parliaments in scrutinising EU decision-making and by giving a
combined majority of national Parliaments the automatic ability to
block unwanted legislation. We will strengthen UK scrutiny of
European legislation and the positions taken by British Ministers in
Europe including by proposing an explicit role for British
Parliamentary Select Committees.
♦ Hold
an In/Out referendum when there is next any Treaty change involving a
material transfer of sovereignty from the UK to the EU. Liberal
Democrats will campaign for the UK to remain in the European Union
when that referendum comes.
♦ Reinforce
the EU’s tools for tackling cross border crime, strengthening the
role of the European Cyber Crime Centre and reforming the European
Arrest Warrant to prevent miscarriages of justice while ensuring
swift delivery of justice.
♦ Cooperate
with other European countries to address environmental threats and
tackle climate change by securing agreement to reduce greenhouse gas
emissions by 50% by 2030 and developing the EU Energy Union.
♦ Support
EU free movement, which is hugely beneficial to millions of British
citizens living in other European countries as well as to the British
economy and the public sector, for example the thousands of European
health workers who make a vital contribution to the running of the
NHS. We will prevent any perceived ‘right to claim’ by tightening
benefit rules for EU migrants, including reducing, and ultimately
abolishing, payment of Child Benefit to children who are not resident
in the UK. We will also lengthen transitional controls for new EU
member countries, and eliminate loopholes.
♦ Cooperate
with other European countries to address the pressure of migration
across the Mediterranean. We will push for more effective EU measures
to prevent the tragic loss of life for many crossing the
Mediterranean, including through greater cooperation with
anti-human-trafficking operations.
♦ Continue
to work closely with other EU governments on foreign policy issues
towards Russia, Ukraine, the Middle East and North Africa. We will
build on our already close defence cooperation with France, the
Netherlands, the Nordic states and other European countries, as the
most reliable basis for British security.
11.4
International development
In
government, Liberal Democrats have led the way on international
development and aid. We have worked to end the use of rape as a
weapon of war. We have led international efforts to tackle the Ebola
crisis in Sierra Leone and, through investment in the Global Alliance
for Vaccines and Immunisations (GAVI), Britain is a global leader in
preventing communicable diseases.
Now,
we need to build on progress made since the agreement of the
Millennium Development Goals and work to eliminate absolute poverty
by 2030 – through aid but also through economic development.
We will:
♦ Develop
a whole-government approach to development.
♦ Continue
to promote private sector economic development, ensuring this
benefits local people and small businesses not just multinational
corporations. We will lead international action to ensure global
companies pay fair taxes in the developing countries in which they
operate, including tightening anti-tax haven rules and requiring
large companies to publish their tax payments and profits for each
country in which they operate.
♦ Maintain
our commitment to spend 0.7% of UK Gross National Income on overseas
development, which the International Development Act 2015, introduced
by a Liberal Democrat, now enshrines in law. We will adhere to the
OECD’s definition of what activities qualify.
♦ Conduct
a full Bilateral and Multilateral Aid Review to ensure Department for
International Development continues to work in the right places and
through the right channels.
♦ Continue
building the resilience of poorer countries to resist future
disasters, investing in healthcare and infrastructure and training
emergency response volunteers, and respond generously to humanitarian
crises wherever they may occur.
♦ Work
to ensure the Sustainable Development Goals aim to:
♦ Safeguard
the sustainability of the planet.
♦ Leave
no one behind, helping the most vulnerable as well as improving
average living standards. We will ensure people do not suffer
discrimination or disadvantage because of gender, sexual orientation,
disability or ethnic origin.
♦ Eliminate
absolute poverty by 2030.
♦ Invest
to eliminate within a generation preventable diseases like TB, HIV
and malaria and explore new ways to support public and private
research and development into treatment for these and other deadly
diseases and infections.
♦ Create
a new civil society partnership scheme to build links between peoples
in rich and poor countries, including partnerships between
communities, trades unions or emergency services.
11.5
International action on the environment
The
open and internationalist approach Liberal Democrats have always
adopted is particularly crucial when it comes to environmental
policy. Pollution does not respect national borders, and wildlife and
ecosystems are not constrained by political boundaries. Challenges
like climate change and deforestation are too massive for individual
countries to tackle alone.
We will:
♦ Continue
pushing for a 50% reduction in EU greenhouse gas emissions by 2030
and the greater use of EU funds to support low-carbon investments,
while ensuring the UK meets its own climate commitments and plays a
leadership role on efforts to combat climate change.
♦ Work
to secure agreement on a global climate treaty at the 2015 UN Climate
Conference, supported by a well-financed Green Climate Fund to assist
poorer countries to tackle and adapt to climate change.
♦ Work
with regulatory bodies and financial investors to establish a global
reporting standard for fossil fuel companies on the potential impact
of future restrictions on carbon emissions on their asset base.
♦ Provide
greater resources for international environmental cooperation,
particularly on actions to tackle illegal trade in timber, wildlife
and fish.
♦ Argue
for an EU and global target of halting net global deforestation by
2020 – including supporting better forest law enforcement and
governance and sustainable agriculture, closing loopholes in the EU
Timber Regulation and ensuring that by 2020 only legal and
sustainable timber products can be sold in the UK.
♦ Ensure
UK and EU development aid, free trade and investment agreements
support environmental goals and sustainable investment, including
maintaining the UK’s International Climate Fund and supporting
direct bilateral programmes with developing countries on climate
change.
♦ Create
a 1 million square kilometre southern Atlantic Ocean reserve.
♦ Push
for the creation of a marine nature reserve in the Arctic Ocean,
promote the highest possible environmental standards for UK companies
operating in the region and press for a ban on EU-flagged vessels
undertaking industrial fishing in the previously unfished areas of
the Arctic.
11.6
Standing up for Liberal values
Liberal
Democrats believe British foreign policy and international aid should
seek to advance human rights and democracy throughout the world. We
believe all people – regardless of ethnicity, disability, age,
belief, gender or sexual orientation – deserve a freer, fairer and
more prosperous world.
We will:
♦ Continue
to support free media and a free and open Internet around the world,
championing the free flow of information.
♦ Maintain
funding to BBC World Service, BBC Monitoring and the British Council.
♦ Develop
a comprehensive strategy for promoting the decriminalisation of
homosexuality around the world, and advancing the cause of LGBT+
rights.
♦ Prioritise
support, protection and equal rights for women and girls, which is
essential for effective, sustainable economic development. We will
pursue an International Gender Equality Strategy, work to secure
women’s rights to education and freedom from forced marriage; and
aim to end female genital mutilation worldwide within a generation.
♦ Extend
existing reporting rules to establish consistent requirements on all
large UK companies to report on the social, environmental and human
rights impacts of their activities and those of their supply chains.
The
recent Islamist extremist attacks on journalists in Europe are a
sharp reminder of the need to protect freedom of speech and belief
internationally. We will appoint an Ambassador-level Champion for
Freedom of Belief to drive British diplomatic efforts in this field,
and we will campaign for the abolition of blasphemy, sedition,
apostasy and criminal libel laws worldwide, having already been
responsible for ending them in this country.
–
Plain
text version or the Liberal Democrat Manifesto for England , printed
roughly formatted & delivered without permission or funding by J
Robertson No 2, SW14 8BP.
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