UK voters do not want extremes of left or right, says Keir Starmer – UK politics live

UK voters do not want extremes of left or right, says Keir Starmer – UK politics live

interview in the Times, Keir Starmer has said he believes that elections are won from the “centre ground”, because that is where most people in the country are.

He told the newspaper “I think you win from the centre ground, the centre ground is where most people are. As a nation, broadly speaking we’re a pretty reasonable, tolerant bunch but we are in the centre ground of politics. People don’t like the extremes of the right or the left. They are reasonably tolerant. They want themselves, their families and the country to improve and make progress.”

Stressing his message that he has changed the Labour party, he said you did not have to be a lifelong Labour supporter to be part of his mission. He said “One of the invitations we’ve thrown out is to say we want a decade of national renewal. The national bit is really important to people. This isn’t a tribal Labour. You don’t have to be a lifelong Labour supporter and voter to want to have a decade of national renewal. Very many Tories would want it. I want it to be wide enough to accommodate people who wouldn’t identify as Labour. They’d vote Labour this time.”

Starmer told the Times that he wanted “politics that treads a little lighter on all our lives”, saying many politicians had become “too self-entitled”. He said “There would be a mindset shift if we are privileged enough to come and serve.”

He said he believed Labour needed to pass a test in the eyes of voters on whether it could trusted primarily on the economy and on security.

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Conservatives and Liberal Democrats, despite the Scottish Greens being the fourth largest party at Holyrood.

The centrepiece of Labour’s campaign message today is its “Back to Work plan”. The party is announcing that it intends to target an increase in the employment rate from 75 per cent to 80 per cent, which it says would be the highest in the G7.

Keir Starmer said “With Labour, those who can work, will work. We want more people into work, to get on at work and to get the benefits bill down. Under the Tories, there are too many people who are not in work, who should be. Too many people stuck in jobs with no promise of earning a better income. Young people who are yet to experience work, at risk of falling off the radar. We can’t go on like this. It’s time for change.”

Saying that the country needed to get a grip on what he described as “the spiralling welfare bill” he said “We will set about, within days of a future government, reforming work support to get more people into work.”

Shadow work and pensions secretary Liz Kendall said the policies “includes a youth guarantee that will mean training, an apprenticeship or help to work for all 18- 21 year olds.”

She added there will also be “New local plans, supported by Mayors across the country, to get people from economic inactivity and into work. And a national jobs and careers service to help people not only get into work but get on at work.”

In another section of his interview with the Times, Keir Starmer has said that “you could say our number one mission is wealth creation,” saying “It’s the only way our country can go forward and we should nourish and encourage that. Not just individuals but businesses.”

Confirming that Labour will stick to Conservative plans to freeze income tax thresholds until 2028, a move which is expected to drag millions of people into paying income tax for the first time, Starmer said “We’re going to keep the decision as it is because we cannot afford to do otherwise.”

He said he had told his team “there are good Labour things that we won’t be able to do as quickly as we would like” and an emphasis will be on public service reform rather than simply increasing public spending.

He gave job centres as an example, saying “I think the government has turned the DWP and job centres into places where they administer the rules on benefits rather than get people back to work”, and promising that a national careers service offering advice and free training courses would be embedded in them.

Conservatives, which they suggest “appears to be leaning into Davos/WEF/Great Reset conspiracy theories” by asking whether Keir Starmer prefers Davos or Westminster.

It is a somewhat disingenuous line, as while Rishi Sunak himself has not been seen at the Davos World Economic Forum gathering over the last couple of years, Kemi Badenoch and Grant Shapps were there in 2023, and in January this year the government sent Jeremy Hunt and David Cameron, and was happily issuing press releases about what they would achieve there for the UK.

Rishi Sunak has pledged cash to 30 more towns as part of a bid to try to capitalise on the party’s levelling up agenda.

Tamworth, Preston, Corby, Halifax, Bognor Regis, Newtown, Flint, Perth and Newry would be among the places to benefit.

PA Media reports Sunak said: “We, the Conservatives, have a plan for towns because we know they are the beating heart of our country. This bold action will transform 30 more towns – reviving their high streets, growing their local economies and making people feel proud of the place they call home.”

Labour’s deputy leader Angela Rayner has described the Tories levelling up agenda as “a scam and a sham”. She said “For 14 years the Tories have failed to do what they promised and held back Britain’s potential. Levelling up was a phoney gimmick which has now been abandoned to fund mandatory national service. It was a scam and a sham, and we should call it what it is.”

He told the Times his wife Victoria will continue to work in occupational health if Starmer becomes prime minister, saying “She’s absolutely going to carry on working, she wants to and she loves it. It’s also good for me because it gives me an insight into the NHS.”

Starmer also said the election had come at an unfortunate time for one of his children, who is in the middle of his GCSEs. He said the Labour team had been preparing for an election for four-and-a-half years, and were “buzzing” when it was called, but on the exam front “At the moment I just want to create the environment where he can get on with what he’s got to get on with as untroubled as he can be.”

interview in the Times, Keir Starmer has said he believes that elections are won from the “centre ground”, because that is where most people in the country are.

He told the newspaper “I think you win from the centre ground, the centre ground is where most people are. As a nation, broadly speaking we’re a pretty reasonable, tolerant bunch but we are in the centre ground of politics. People don’t like the extremes of the right or the left. They are reasonably tolerant. They want themselves, their families and the country to improve and make progress.”

Stressing his message that he has changed the Labour party, he said you did not have to be a lifelong Labour supporter to be part of his mission. He said “One of the invitations we’ve thrown out is to say we want a decade of national renewal. The national bit is really important to people. This isn’t a tribal Labour. You don’t have to be a lifelong Labour supporter and voter to want to have a decade of national renewal. Very many Tories would want it. I want it to be wide enough to accommodate people who wouldn’t identify as Labour. They’d vote Labour this time.”

Starmer told the Times that he wanted “politics that treads a little lighter on all our lives”, saying many politicians had become “too self-entitled”. He said “There would be a mindset shift if we are privileged enough to come and serve.”

He said he believed Labour needed to pass a test in the eyes of voters on whether it could trusted primarily on the economy and on security.

a scratchy start to his campaign

  • Keir Starmer, Angela Rayner and Rachel Reeves will be launching a battle bus in London. He maybe could have done with that yesterday to avoid awkward headlines about private jets

  • Liberal Democrat Treasury spokesperson Sarah Olney will be visiting Eastbourne, while Scotland’s first minister John Swinney will be in Aberdeen with Stephen Flynn

  • D:Ream have said they won’t let Labour use their anthem Things Can Only Get Better

  • It is Martin Belam here today for the next few hours. I always try to read all of your comments, but if you want to get my attention then email is usually the best way – [email protected].

    Source: theguardian.com