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Keir Starmer vows to protect public services from fresh austerity! B

Prime minister insists he offers more than ‘doom and gloom’ in an interview with the Observer, but admits that leaks and squabbles are damaging the Downing Street operation

Keir Starmer and his deputy, Angela Rayner, arriving at the Labour party conference in Liverpool on Saturday.

Keir Starmer and his deputy, Angela Rayner, arriving at the Labour party conference in Liverpool on Saturday. Photograph: Stefan Rousseau/PA

Keir Starmer today pledges to defend public services from further austerity and protect working people from tax rises as he battles to stem a disastrous collapse in his party’s popularity ratings since the general election.

In an exclusive interview with the Observer before his first Labour conference as prime minister, Starmer moves to counter an impression of enduring “gloom and doom” and instead reassure increasingly restive Labour delegates heading this weekend to Liverpool that better times are around the corner.

He concedes, however, that leaks from Downing Street, particularly from staff angered by the influence wielded by his chief of staff, Sue Gray, are destabilising his administration less than three months on from the party’s landslide general election win.

“It is my job to do something about that and I accept that responsibility. And that just damages everybody,” he says, suggesting he wants to root out the leakers and restore unity to the heart of the Downing Street operation.

Labour’s gathering, which had been planned as a celebration of its election success, opens on Sunday with Starmer and his ministers facing an old-style union revolt on the conference floor on Monday over cuts to winter fuel payments, and the direction of economic policy.

The anger among some delegates has been compounded by disbelief at the way Starmer and his ministers have accepted “freebie” gifts, including clothes, from wealthy donors, inviting accusations that his so-called “government of service” is no different to the Tories.

After weeks of warnings about tough economic times ahead, as a result of the disastrous Tory management of the economy, Starmer went out of his way to make clear he was not about to usher in a new round of austerity.

In the interview, he insisted that public services were already starved of funds and could not take more cuts if they were to provide what the public needed: “I’m acutely aware that our public services are on their knees, and there will always be some that say there’s an argument for deep cuts … I ran a public service. I know what cuts feel like. And I know that a lot of them are cut to the bone. And therefore we have got to make sure that our public services are functioning properly.”

Sue Gray, the prime minister’s chief of staff

Sue Gray, the prime minister’s chief of staff: Keir Starmer admits that leaks about disquiet over her influence have damaged the Downing Street operation. Photograph: Stefan Rousseau/PA

 

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