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Articles and Speeches
Remarks at Parliamentary Links Day
23-Jun-09
It’s a pleasure to be here today.
Thank you for the invitation.
And my thanks goes to Stephen Benn for
being such an energetic and effective advocate and organiser
on your behalf.
Parliamentary Links Day is now a
well-established fixture in the Westminster calendar.
It’s good to see so people from the
scientific industry here today,
Because this year has been a turbulent
one.
Many of the things we have taken for
granted now look shaky.
When uncertainty surrounds our everyday
lives, the field of science has not stood unaffected.
Recession has swept through the economy
revealing dangerous imbalances.
What’s been exposed is an economy
that’s leaning too heavily on house prices and government
borrowing.
We cannot continue with the same old
approach.
It is time to start innovating.
It is time to use our world-class
research base to engineer the products and services that
will form the basis of the new economy.
Thankfully, Britain has many
research-intensive industries that can be built upon.
We are strong in fields ranging from
chemicals and biosciences to aerospace and pharmaceuticals.
And I hope that this will bode well for
the future or our science and engineering base.
Because ultimately, the pace of
innovation will determine our place in the world.
SCIENCE AND GLOBAL SECURITY
This year’s theme is Science and
Global Security.
It’s the right theme.
The biggest security challenges are
also biggest global challenges.
The solutions are scientific.
Whether it’s tackling climate change,
cyber terrorism or the economic downturn, governments around
the world will rely on input from science.
There is good reason to be hopeful for
Britain.
We’re leading the way in plastic
electronics, nanotechnology and synthetic biology.
With the right decisions, I believe
that we can continue to lead the world with the emerging
technologies of the future.
Britain is not just a nation of bankers
and borrowers.
We have a proud tradition of
scientific excellence:
excellent scientists,
excellent laboratories,
and excellent universities.
This scientific tradition deserves
proper recognition in Parliament and in government.
SCIENCE IN DBIS
Now I have to say that the recent
changes in my department are disconcerting.
In 2007 many people couldn’t quite see
the sense of creating the Department for Innovation,
Universities and Skills.
I’m not here to defend it.
But at that time it was given the
benefit of the doubt.
I’m much more interested in the
position of science in government.
And that’s why I am pretty concerned
about the latest reshuffle.
The sheer size of the new Department
for Business, Innovation and Skills is quite unusual.
Science now competes with more
departmental bedfellows than ever before.
For me and my colleagues in opposition,
it is really frustrating.
We have 6 of the 11 ministers in the
unelected House of Lords.
This includes the science minister and
the secretary of state.
It restricts the ability of the elected
MPs to hold the government to account.
So today, I want to say a few words
about the place of science in public life.
When politicians talk about putting
science and engineering at the heart of public policy, they
should mean it.
And I suspect you’ll want to know what
that means if there is an incoming Conservative Government.
3 Key Points
So I want to make three key points
today.
First, I am committed to working
with scientists, the learned societies and professional
institutes to raise the level of scientific literacy.
- Both science and our policy-making
will benefit from a solid understanding of science among
politicians;
We really
cannot afford another re-run of the MMR fiasco.
- This is why I’ve been pretty
firm.
Scientific
literacy lessons are compulsory for all incoming
Conservative MPs.
They will
include a basic understanding of the scientific approach,
evidence-based policy-making, the use of statistics and key
contemporary scientific concepts.
- And I’m delighted to say that I am
working with the Parliamentary Office of Science and
Technology to develop the programme which will be
available to all incoming MPs.
Second, I am committed to preserving
the independence of science from undue political
interference.
- Successive governments have
rightly emphasised the synergy between science and
economic growth.
- But there are questions that
really must be answered:
How far
should science policy answer to government industrial
policy?
How far
should the science budget support regional economic
development as well as scientific excellence?
- So this is why I’ve urged the
government to conclude the debate and provide certainty
about the future of the Haldane Principle.
I want to
clearly establish the proper roles and responsibilities for
ministers.
We need to
have clarity on where their control of the allocation of
research budgets ends.
And
finally, Parliament must be able to scrutinise science
policy.
The
return of a reinvigorated science committee is essential.
-
Science matters in Parliament: debating stem cells,
responding to flu pandemics and setting budgets requires
scientific input and effective scrutiny.
-
I’m
not convinced that a single, unwieldy ‘BIS’ select
committee can possibly do justice to science.
-
When
I first entered parliament I was a member of the Science
and Technology Committee.
-
It
did a good job.
-
It
would be a sorry day for science in Parliament if it
were reduced to a bit-part in a new ‘super committee’.
-
And
this is why I will not let the matter rest.
CONCLUDING REMARKS
In
conclusion:
An incoming Conservative government
recognises the role and value of science and engineering.
Basic research is essential and cannot
be sacrificed.
Applied research is vital for economic
recovery.
It is not one or the other, it is both:
they are not mutually exclusive.
David
Cameron has said, ‘we have to broaden our
economic base to include more science, more hi-tech
services, more green technologies, more engineering and more
high-value manufacturing…’
So be in no doubt that a Conservative
Government will want Britain to lead the world in science
and innovation.
With the public finances are under
exceptional pressure, the science base must be free to
flourish.
It must deliver a more balanced economy
and it must secure the pace of innovation for the future.
Making
‘Parliamentary links’ between scientists and MPs today is an
established and important part of the process.
When ministers promise to put science
at the heart of public life, they should mean it.
Raising the level of scientific
literacy,
Re-affirming scientific independence
and
Scrutinising science policy in
Parliament.
That’s the least we can do.
And I look forward to working with you
in the future.
Thank you.
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