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Programme

9.30 – Welcome to Conference and introduction to keynote speaker

  • Jim McMahon MP, Chair Co-operative Party and Shadow Secretary of State for Transport

9.40 – Session 1: In conversation with Anneliese Dodds MP, chair of the Labour Party

  • Interviewed by Richard Partington, Economic Correspondent, The Guardian

Followed by facilitated Q&A

10.15 – Session 2: Co-operative Recovery Partnership: Shaping a fairer economy post-Covid

  • Joe Cullinane, Leader of North Ayrshire Council
  • Rose Marley, Chief Executive, Co-ops UK
  • Cllr Georgia Gould, Leader Camden Council
  • Chair – Anna Birley, Policy Officer, the Co-op Party

Followed by facilitated Q&A

11.00 – Keynote 2: Driving economic growth from the bottom up

  • Vaughan Gething MS,  Welsh Minister for Economy
  • Chair – Joe Fortune, General Secretary, Co-operative Party

Followed by facilitated Q&A

11.20 – Session 3: Campaign launch: Who owns your high street?

  • James Butler, Campaigns Officer, the Co-op Party
  • Cllr Arooj Shah, Leader Oldham Council
  • Cllr Doina Cornell, Leader Stroud District Council
  • Chair – Anna Birley, Policy Officer, the Co-op Party

11.35 – Session 4: How can communities breathe new life into high streets?

  • Nick Plumb, Power to Change
  • Cllr Kate Groucutt, Deputy Portfolio Holder for Inclusive Growth & Third Sector for Liverpool City Region
  • Cllr Tricia Gilby, Leader Chesterfield Council and Member of Labour Party Commission on High Streets
  • Chair – Kieran O'Neill, Scottish Labour & Co-operative MSP candidate for Glasgow Maryhill & Springburn in recent Holyrood elections

12.20 – Keynote 3: Tapping into the power of community politics

  • Steve Reed MP, Shadow Minister for Local Government
  • Chair – Anna Birley, Policy Officer, the Co-op Party
  • Followed by facilitated Q&A

12.40 – Event sum up

  • Anna Birley, Policy Officer, the Co-op Party
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Essay collection

The Co-operative Recovery Partnership – the fact-finding mission, call to evidence and series of roundtables – has resulted in “A Co-operative Recovery”, an essay collection from thought-leaders in the co-operative movement which explores ideas from levelling up to community ownership and how communities are already driving change from Plymouth to Dumfries.

You can read the essay collection, with foreword from Anneliese Dodds MP, now.

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One of the key themes identified in submissions to the Partnership was the crisis of decline in our high streets and town centres.

In response, the Co-operative Comeback Summit will also see the launch of the Co-operative Party’s new Unlock The High Street campaign, which seeks to unlock the potential of our high streets by tackling issues like absent landlords and burdensome business rates, and helping communities to reimagine their high streets through community ownership.

What is the Co-operative Recovery Partnership?

2020 has been a dark year for all of us, but in that darkness we have seen the very best of this country’s co-operative values, as people right across the country have come together to support one another.

Delivering change from the bottom up – an approach so central to the co-operative movement – is what saw many communities through this crisis. Whether it was co-operative pubs delivering food to local elderly people, credit unions helping families avoid loan sharks, or co-op supermarkets campaigning to end holiday hunger; people have been able to count on the support of our movement when they needed it most.

Sadly, too often that great work has been undermined by the UK Government’s terrible mishandling of the coronavirus crisis – a shambolic approach characterised by poor decision making, cronyism and a failure to listen to experts, and which has resulted in the tragedy of our death rate passing 100,000 and our economy being the worst-hit in the G7.

The British people deserve so much better than this. And this is why the Co-operative Party and Shadow Treasury team are working together as part of a ‘Co-operative Recovery Partnership’ to understand the impact of Covid-19 on the co-operative sector, and to look at how the co-operative movement and its values can help shape our economic recovery.

“We need to build wealth and resilience in all of our communities. We need to promote purposeful, responsible businesses right across the country. And we need to develop co-operative solutions to eradicating many of the awful economic inequalities exposed during this crisis.”

- Anneliese Dodds MP

Ideas we're exploring.

Levelling Up

Levelling up: co-operatives and socio-economic inequality

How can employee ownership save jobs?

Jobs
CWB

What future does community wealth building have in a time of local government funding challenges?

Harnessing the power of community ownership to save our high streets

Town Centres
Renewables

A co-operative green recovery

How can co-operative growth embed resilience in the post-Covid economy?

Growth
Businesses

Doing business better, from fairer taxes to board transparency

As a proud Co-operative MP, I know that we can only hardwire fairness into the economy if we learn from the best of our movement. So, over the next six months, I’ll be meeting and listening to co-operators from every part of the movement, bringing together your collective expertise to help shape our policy thinking. The work of this Co-operative Recovery Partnership will be critical as we develop our offer to ensure that a Labour & Co-operative Government delivers a Britain that works for everyone. It will consider how we deliver that vital agenda. We need to build wealth and resilience in all of our communities. We need to promote purposeful, responsible businesses right across the country. And we need to develop co-operative solutions to eradicating many of the awful economic inequalities exposed during this crisis.

- Anneliese Dodds MP

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