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Archbishop Welby apologises for ‘tone-deaf’ valedictory speech to House of Lords

06 December 2024

This story was updated on the afternoon of 6 December

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The Lords Spiritual during Thursday’s debate

The Lords Spiritual during Thursday’s debate

THE Archbishop of Canterbury has apologised a day after his final speech in the House of Lords was described by a survivor of John Smyth’s abuse as “tone deaf”.

In a statement released on Friday, he said that he wanted to “apologise wholeheartedly” for the hurt that his speech had caused.

“I understand that my words — the things that I said, and those I omitted to say — have caused further distress for those who were traumatised, and continue to be harmed, by John Smyth’s heinous abuse, and by the far reaching effects of other perpetrators of abuse.

“I did not intend to overlook the experience of survivors, or to make light of the situation — and I am very sorry for having done so,” he said.

In his valedictory speech in the House of Lords on Thursday, Archbishop Welby said that “a head had to roll” for safeguarding failings, and that his was the only one that “rolls well enough”, before recounting the story of a medieval predecessor who was beheaded. He also joked that his resignation had meant his diary secretary had “months of work disappear”.

A survivor of Smyth’s abuse, Graham, told the Church Times that the speech “should have been an occasion for sorrow and reflection”, and it was “not the time to be light-hearted”.

Graham said: “He pities his diary secretary, but not a word for victims of John Smyth.” He also said that Archbishop Welby was “ducking personal responsibility . . . suggesting he has only resigned because he was head of the Church”.

On Friday, the Church’s three lead bishops for safeguarding — the Bishop of Stepney, Dr Joanne Grenfell; the Bishop of Birkenhead, the Rt Revd Julie Conalty; and the Bishop of Tewkesbury, the Rt Revd Robert Springett — described the speech as “mistaken and wrong”.

They said in a statement to survivors that they had heard from several of them about the “distress and anger” the speech had caused. “Both in content and delivery, the speech was utterly insensitive,” they said.

“We know that the Church of England has seriously failed over many years at many levels in relation to safeguarding, and we are so sorry that yesterday’s speech was the antithesis of all that we are now trying to work towards in terms of culture change and redress with all of you,” the statement continued.

They concluded with an apology for the Archbishop’s words, and a pledge to “continue to do all we can to change the culture of the Church”.

The same day, the Archbishop of York ended his speech in a House of Lords debate on social cohesion by talking about safeguarding in the Church of England, and said: “I pledge myself to work purposefully for independent scrutiny of safeguarding in the Church of England and greater operational independence.”

On Channel 4 News on Thursday evening, Dr Hartley also criticised the tone of the speech, saying that it wasn’t “the time or place for humour”, and that his speech failed to “show due regard and care and compassion for victims and survivors of abuse”.

Archbishop Welby’s remarks appeared to “put the focus away from personal responsibility to a sense of corporate responsibility”, she said.

In his speech, Archbishop Welby said: “There comes a time, if you are technically leading a particular institution or area of responsibility, where the shame of what has gone wrong, whether one is personally responsible or not, must require a head to roll.”

Acknowledging that Archbishop Welby had taken responsibility by resigning, Dr Hartley suggested that there was in his remarks “a level of ambivalence between whether that’s actually personal, or was it more of a sense of corporateness in his role as Archbishop”.

In the statement announcing his resignation, Archbishop Welby said that he took “personal and institutional responsibility for the long and retraumatising period between 2013 and 2024”.

He reiterated this in Friday’s statement.

The Makin review found no evidence that Archbishop Welby knew about Smyth’s abuse before he was informed in 2013, but said that he had a “personal and moral responsibility” to ensure action was being taken after this point.

“The conclusion that must be reached is that John Smyth could and should have been reported to the police in 2013,” the review said.

Three retired police detectives, however, have criticised Mr Makin’s conclusion, telling the Church Times that, on the evidence presented in the report, Smyth’s abuse was properly referred to police in 2013 (New, 27 November).

The Church, one of the former officers said, had “trusted the professional judgement of the police, and discharged its obligation in terms of referral”, and that it was a matter for the police that they did not pursue the case at this point.

On her interview on Thursday, however, Dr Hartley said: “The Makin review named quite clearly [Archbishop Welby’s] own failings in the matter.” She reiterated her call for “anyone named in the Makin review” to step back from public ministry.

A number of clerics named in the Makin report have been asked to stand back from ministry, including the former Bishop of Durham, the Rt Revd Paul Butler (News, 28 November).

Bishop Butler was president of the Scripture Union from 2011 to 2017, which had connections with the Iwerne Trust which ran the camps at which Smyth groomed his victims. He told the Makin review that he was not given any detailed information about the abuse when it was raised in 2015.

On Tuesday, it was announced that the Anglican Communion’s Bishop for Episcopal Ministry, Dr Jo Bailey Wells, had stood back from her role as an honorary assistant bishop in the diocese of London.

Dr Bailey Wells was the Archbishop of Canterbury’s chaplain from 2013 to 2016, and liaised with the diocese of Ely after a Smyth survivor made a disclosure in that diocese in 2013.

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