Press Association
Thursday May 12, 2005 5:08 PM
Prime Minister Tony Blair joined the war on "hoody" gangs which terrorise the public, saying he wanted to make restoring "respect" for others a central plank of his third administration.
He said people were "rightly fed up" with yobbish behaviour and he backed the Bluewater shopping centre in Kent which has banned youths wearing hooded tracksuit tops from its premises.
The premier's comments came as he outlined a "bold" legislative programme for reform and renewal of public services in his third term in office.
He was speaking at his first monthly news conference of the new parliament, just a week after a polling day which saw his majority slashed from 161 to 66.
Mr Blair said it was "fatuous" to think his Government could not get its programme through with such a majority and promised White Papers outlining Government proposals on reform of the NHS and schools before the autumn. The Prime Minister also pledged to develop more personalised public services and said a Green Paper floating ideas on reform of Incapacity Benefit would be produced before the end of July.
Mr Blair, asked about the Bluewater initiative, said: "I have total sympathy with that and I totally agree with that."
He told reporters: "During the election campaign I heard people who have been talking about a loss of respect. We need to address this problem, not just as a Government but as a society. I will be setting out my plans in a speech in the coming weeks. I'm determined to make this a central piece of our third term agenda."
He added: "Society without prejudice should not be one without rules. People are rightly fed-up with street corner and shopping centre thugs, yobbish behaviour sometimes from children as young as 10 or 11 whose parents should be looking after them, Friday and Saturday night binge-drinking which makes our town centres no-go areas for respectable citizens, of the low-level graffiti, vandalism and disorder that is the work of a very small minority that makes the law-abiding majority afraid and angry."
Mr Blair said the Cabinet, meeting this morning, had agreed the Queen's Speech for the new parliamentary session. It will be delivered on May 17.
"It will be a bold programme for the new parliament which starts to implement the manifesto on which we were elected," he told reporters.