Tory Leadership candidates respond to techUK’s priorities for sector

23 Jul 2019 01:24 PM

The Conservative Leadership candidates respond to techUK's letter outlining its priorities for the tech sector.

Today, the Conservative Leadership contest draws to a close and we will finally know who the next Prime Minister will be – Jeremy Hunt or Boris Johnson. As the leadership contest has rumbled on and we have been faced with the prospect of a new government, techUK has written to all of the candidates for the Conservative Leadership on their priorities and asks for the tech sector. With the tech sector growing at 2.5x the rate of the rest of the economy, how any new incoming administration plans to deal with the sector is a significant consideration.

techUK engagement

In its letter to the candidates, techUK outlined five core policy asks for the new government, as well as putting six questions to the candidates. We asked that under their premiership they would:

In order to better understand the policies and thoughts of candidates, techUK also asked the following questions:

Jeremy Hunt’s response

Although we have not yet received a response from Boris Johnson’s campaign, we are pleased to have heard back from Jeremy Hunt. In his response to our letter, Hunt highlighted that he has placed the tech sector at the centre of his economic pitch, with plans to cut corporation tax and increase the Annual Investment Allowance to achieve his stated belief that “the whole of the UK can be the world’s next Silicon Valley”.

Addressing the questions posed, Jeremy Hunt said he was the only candidate who has published a detailed plan for leaving the European Union and that he is the candidate most likely to get a deal while setting out how he would prepare for No Deal. In the case of No Deal, Hunt told techUK that he would seek to call an early budget and offer a commitment to support all businesses impacted by No Deal – including the digital and tech sectors.

On research and development, Hunt expressed his support for the current Government’s research and development pledge and assured that this would continue under his Government. Hunt also put on record his support for digitisation and the development of digital technologies to support the target of becoming carbon net zero by 2050.

Where education was concerned, Hunt reiterated his education priority of focusing on the 50% of people who do not go to university. He stated that this commitment stems from his belief that it is vital that everyone who leaves our education system is able to get a well-paid job and hold on to a job throughout their working lives.

Finally, speaking on his commitment to a full fibre network rollout by 2027, Hunt said that a combination of increased public spending, prioritisation of the works necessary to deploy the technology by local authorities, and a review of the business rates system, alongside other measures, can see this completed by the target date.

Moving forward

techUK thanks Jeremy for his helpful letter and is agreed that a meeting to discuss these issues in more detail would be fruitful should he be successful in the Conservative Leadership contest. We eagerly await the response from Boris Johnson’s campaign to our letter and intend to publish his response once it is available.

With the result of the leadership race to be announced imminently, techUK is committed to working with the new Prime Minister to ensure that technology remains a priority in any new Government and that the tech sector is given the support it needs in order to thrive.