News

Starmer gives woeful justification for cutting winter fuel payment_l

Sir Keir Starmerdefended taking “unpopular” decisions on policies amid a furious backlash over stripping pensioners of winter fuel payments.

In his speech to Labour’s conference, the Prime Minister said: “I understand many of the decisions we must take will be unpopular.

“If they were popular, they’d be easy, but the cost of filling that black hole in our public finances, that will be shared fairly.”

Promising “no return to Tory austerity” and rebuilt public services, he added: “If you can’t take that on faith, perhaps because you’re concerned about the winter fuel allowance, then I get that.

“As I say, if this path were popular or easy we would have walked it already.

“But the risk of showing to the world, as the Tories did, that this country does not fund its policies properly, that is a risk we can never take again.

“Stabilising our economy is the first step of this long-term plan, the only way we keep prices low, cut NHS waiting lists, and secure the triple lock so that every pensioner in this country, every pensioner, will be better off with Labour.”

 

Starmer defends ‘unpopular decisions’ such as winter fuel cuts

Sir Keir Starmer defended taking “unpopular” decisions on policies such as axing winter fuel payment for millions of pensioners.

He said: “I understand many of the decisions we must take will be unpopular.

“If they were popular, they’d be easy, but the cost of filling that black hole in our public finances, that will be shared fairly.”

Promising “no return to Tory austerity” and rebuilt public services, he added: “If you can’t take that on faith, perhaps because you’re concerned about the winter fuel allowance, then I get that.

“As I say, if this path were popular or easy we would have walked it already.

“But the risk of showing to the world, as the Tories did, that this country does not fund its policies properly, that is a risk we can never take again.

“Stabilising our economy is the first step of this long-term plan, the only way we keep prices low, cut NHS waiting lists, and secure the triple lock so that every pensioner in this country, every pensioner, will be better off with Labour.”

PM takes swipe at Rwanda scheme

Sir Keir said the previous government’s Rwanda deportation policy was “never a credible option because politically it was an easier answer”.

He added: “And just look at the difference you can make if you bring the curtain down on the show. A 23% increase in returns of people who have no right to be here, compared with last summer.

“But it’s not just Rwanda. It was the same story on everything. Energy security, the housing crisis, telling people they’re tough on crime without building enough prison places.”

Starmer warns of ‘shared struggle’

The Prime Minister said: “First, we stabilise our economy, second we fix the foundations and third we build with pride and determination a Britain that belongs to you.

“But it will be hard. That’s not rhetoric, it’s reality. It’s not just the financial black hole, the £22 billion of unfunded spending commitments concealed from our country by the Tories.

“It’s not just the societal black hole. Our public services decimated, communities held together with little more than goodwill.

“It’s also the political black hole, because the politics of national renewal, they are collective.

“They involve a shared struggle, a project that says to everyone: this will be tough in the short term, but in the long term is the right thing for our country and we all benefit from that. To coin a phrase, we’re all in it together.”

PM says there is need to ‘build a new Britain’

Sir Keir Starmer said there is a need to “build a new Britain”, telling conference: “Built from that age-old spirit of creativity and enterprise. The pride and ambition of working people.

“That when matched by a government of service, a decisive government, a government prepared to use its power for justice, opportunity and equal respect, can deliver a Britain that belongs to you.”

The Prime Minister said the Government has “clear, measurable targets”, adding: “Progress displayed publicly. So every single person in this country can judge our performance on actions not words.”

Sir Keir said there is also a need to protect from the “whims of Westminster, making sure we don’t get blown off course”.

He said “true service” must “listen to people far beyond the walls of the state and empower them to make our country better”, adding: “Because trust me, that is without question the quickest way to clear away the Tory rot and build that Britain which belongs to you.”

Starmer warns against ‘easy answers’

Sir Keir Starmer said “staying the course” and “keeping a cool head” would help to improve the UK as he warned some “easy answers” to its problems “do not move a nation forward”.

The Prime Minister said: “There’s no time to waste wondering why people think politics has failed.

“We have to show what it can do for their lives restore after 14 years of chaos, faith in the values that have always guided this nation, the stability, moderation, the common sense, keeping a cool head, staying the course, facing the future, the defiance of ambition, the determination of service, and above all, our faith, no matter the challenge.

“It’s practical solutions that work, not the easy answers that may well move the crowd, but do not move, a nation forward.”

Starmer says ‘we have to restore’ Britain’s confidence

Britain’s confidence in its own future is “brittle and fragile, and so we have to restore it”, Sir Keir Starmer said.

The Prime Minister told the audience at Labour’s annual conference in Liverpool: “Conference, strength in this dangerous world depends on strength at home and yet, look at our country. Look at our country.

“Do you see a Britain where people feel with the certainty that they deserve, that the future will be better for their children? Because when I was growing up, that’s what we believed people of a completely ordinary, working class background like mine, we took it for granted.

“We built our lives around it. But that is not the country we inherited in July, that confidence, that certainty, it’s brittle and fragile, and so we have to restore it. That is the mandate we won. The meaning of change.”

He said it “all comes back” to “that question: can politics be a force for good in people’s lives?”

PM pledges to build ‘a Britain that works for you’

Sir Keir Starmer promised to build “a Britain that works for you”.

He said: “Brick by brick, we can build a new home, a better home, built to last, built with pride, but above all, built together.

“A nation rebalanced so it once again serves the interests of working people, and through the power unleashed by that process, a renewal of who we are.

“A country that gives equal voice to every person, a country that won’t expect you to change who you are just to get on, a country that doesn’t just work for you and your family, but one that recognises you, sees you, respects you as part of a story – a Britain that belongs to you.”

Starmer: The work of change has begun

Sir Keir Starmer said “the work of change has begun” as he listed action already taken by Labour in Government.

He said: “This is a long-term project, I have never pretended otherwise. But, conference, make no mistake, the work of change has begun.”

To applause from conference delegates, the Prime Minister reeled off a lsit of measures including planning reform, an end to the junior doctors’ strike and the launch of GB Energy, concluding: “Change has begun.”

Starmer says criticism is ‘water off a duck’s back’

Sir Keir Starmer said “service is the responsibility and opportunity of power”, adding: “Service does not mean we’ll get everything right, it doesn’t mean everyone will agree.

“But it does mean we understand that every decision we take, we take together and that it is our duty to the British people to face up to necessary decisions in their interests.”

The Prime Minister also criticised those people who “still hanker” for the “weak and cowardly fantasy of populism”, saying it is “water off a duck’s back” to him.

 

PM announces Hillsborough law

Sir Keir Starmer confirmed that a Hillsborough law requiring a duty of candour on public officials would be introduced to Parliament before the next anniversary of the disaster, condemning “the countless injustices over the years suffered by working people at the hands of those who are supposed to serve them”.

The Prime Minister told the Labour conference that it was “also a law for the subpostmasters of the Horizon scandal, the victims of infected blood, Windrush, Grenfell Tower and all the countless injustices over the years suffered by working people at the hands of those who were supposed to serve them”.

“Truth and justice concealed behind closed ranks of the state, and conference, this is the meaning of clause one, because today I can confirm that the duty of candour will apply to public authorities and public servants, the Bill will include criminal sanctions and that the Hillsborough law will be introduced to Parliament before the next anniversary in April,” he said.

Starmer hails changed Labour Party

The Prime Minister said: “Thank you conference, thank you from the bottom of my heart, thank you conference, for everything you have done to fulfil the basic duty of our party, our clause one, so we can return this great nation to the service of working people.”

Sir Keir added: “Take pride in your victory. Take pride that Labour won in every single region in England. Take pride that Labour won in Wales. Take pride that Labour won in Scotland.

“I never forget that this opportunity is only here because we changed the party, country first, party second.

“That isn’t a slogan, it’s the foundation of this project, a pact with working people we must fulfil to retain the privilege of serving their interests on economic stability, national security, wealth creation, protecting our borders, rooting out antisemitism, standing with Nato and Ukraine.

“The changes we made are permanent, irreversible, and the work of service never stops – country first, party second.”

Starmer kicks off conference address

Sir Keir Starmer has begun his speech to the Labour Party conference.

The Prime Minister took to the stage after a short video was played featuring scenes from the general election.

He was met with applause and a standing ovation.

 

Labour Leader Delivers His First Speech To Party Conference As Prime Minister

The PM delivers his conference speech (Image: Getty)

Starmer arrives with wife ahead of keynote speech

Sir Keir Starmer has arrived at the Labour conference centre joined by wife Lady Victoria ahead of his speech at 2pm.

It is his fourth address as Labour leader and first as Prime Minister.

Sir Keir Starmer

Sir Keir Starmer and his wife Lady Victoria (Image: PA)

Queues form for Starmer’s speech

Large queues are snaking through the conference centre for Sir Keir Starmer‘s keynote speech, which starts at 2pm.

Healey leaves conference to chair COBRA meeting – reports

Defence Secretary John Healey has left the Labour Party conference to chair a meeting of the COBRA emergency committee, it has been reported.

Sky News Political Correspondent Tamara Cohen posted on X: “The defence secretary John Healey has left the Labour Party conference early to chair a Cobra meeting on the Middle East, @SkyNews understands.”

Advertisement

Angela Rayner hires foreign affairs adviser to ‘prove she can be a stateswoman’

Angela Rayner has hired a foreign affairs adviser to boost her profile on the world stage, according to reports.

The Deputy Prime Minister has recruited the official in her Housing, Communities and Local Government department to focus on international issues.

They have joined a civil servant after previously working as an aide to several shadow cabinet ministers when Labour was in opposition.

Sources said Ms Rayner may occasionally need to deputise for Sir Keir Starmer on foreign and diplomatic matters.

Tories troll Labour over winter fuel payments

The Tories have shamed Labour at their party conference by parading a billboard highlighting their MPs who voted to axe winter fuel payments from vulnerable pensioners.

A van displayed the face of the politicians drove around Liverpool today which featured images of each Labour MP who failed to support reinstating the £300 lifeline at a crunch vote in the Commons earlier this month.

The Conservatives have also launched a website with a link to a petition, where people can send Labour a message.

The petition will be presented to the Chancellor ahead of the budget on October 30.

Lisa Nandy

Lisa Nandy is among those named and pictured (Image: PA)

Three-quarters of Britons opposed to PM accepting gifts, says poll

Three quarters (75 percent) of Britons believe that it is rarely or never acceptable for the Prime Minister to accept gifts from businesses or organisations, a new IPSOS poll has indicated.

More than two-thirds say the same about accepting gifts from private individuals (68 percent).

The research, carried out September 20 and 23, has assessed whether the public believes that the Prime Minister and Members of Parliament (MPs) earn too much money, and how the public perceives the acceptability of gifts offered to the Prime Minister.

Nearly half (47 percent) of Britons believe that the Prime Minister earns too much money.

Those who voted for Reform UK at the last General Election were most likely to believe the Prime Minister earns too much money, with 68 percent agreeing.

Keir Starmer sets out benefit fraud crackdown with DWP bank account checks

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer is to unveil a new project to ‘root out’ benefit fraud with DWP officials to be granted details of suspects’ bank accounts.

Fraud investigators will be able to force banks to give them information about individual’s finances where they suspect someone is wrongfully claiming benefit payments.

The officials will also be able to carry out searches of property and seizure of assets in cases where organised criminal gangs are abusing the benefits system.

Mr Starmer will set out the plans in a speech at the Labour Party conference, as the project hopes to save the taxpayer £1.6billion over the next five years.

Rachel Reeves to ‘rewrite fiscal rules’ to borrow another £30bn despite 80-year debt high

Rachel Reeves could be gearing up for a £30 billion borrowing bonanza by overhauling fiscal rules.

The Chancellor gave a strong hint she wanted to change the guidelines to encourage more investments.

She said: “It is time the Treasury moved on from just counting the costs of investment in our economy to recognising the benefits too.”

Ms Reeves has committed to meeting the Tories‘ provision that public sector net debt should be falling in the fifth year of a forecast period.

‘Don’t tell me riots were about protest,’ says Yvette Cooper

Yvette Cooper said disorder and violence should not “silence a serious debate” on immigration, as she also claimed the Conservatives are becoming “right-wing wreckers”.

The Home Secretary condemned recent riots and disorder that broke out in parts of the country following a knife attack at a Southport dance studio on July 29 that left three girls dead.

Ms Cooper labelled the incidents “arson”, “racism” and “thuggery” before saying she was “shocked” by the response from some in “political parties on the right who once claimed to care about law and order”.

Speaking at Labour Party conference in Liverpool, Ms Cooper said she had spoken to children about their experiences when the Spellow Hub library was set on fire during disorder on County Road in the city.

She said: “One told me how scared she was that night, how her mum switched off all the lights in the house, and told her to stay quiet and sit on the stairs as bins were set alight along her street.

“So don’t anyone tell me that was protest. Don’t tell me that was about immigration or policing or poverty.”

Winter fuel payments given to almost 12 million pensioners last year

Winter fuel payments to pensioners rose to 11.6 million last year, new figures show as the Government continues to face a backlash over its plan to cut back the benefit.

The number of people who received the payment last winter was 214,000 more than the 11.4 million in 2022-23, and it has steadily risen from 11.1 million in 2020-21, statistics released by the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) show.

The annual tax-free payment of between £100 and £300 was introduced in 1997 to help eligible pensioners meet the costs of heating their homes in winter.

The Government is facing opposition to its decision to means-test the payment, stripping it from millions of pensioners.

Pensioners staged a protest outside Labour’s annual conference on Monday to criticise the plan.

Deputy PM Angela Rayner MP has once again sought to blame the previous Tory government after new figures revealed a nine-percent drop in planning applications.

Government figures showed the number fell compared with the same quarter in 2023.

Ms Rayner, currently at the annual conference in Liverpool, said: “The Tories have not learnt their lesson and will not apologise for the mess that they left.

“⁠They watered down housing targets, torpedoed housebuilding, and took a sledgehammer to the dream of a secure home.

“The Tories put country before party, failing to stand up to the vested interests blocking growth and compounding their housing failure. That legacy makes our job all the harder, but it also makes it so much more urgent to reverse the decline.

“The British people voted for change and this Labour government will deliver it. We’re fixing the foundations through sweeping planning reform to get Britain building, grow the economy and deliver the homes our country needs.”

Labour will increase taxes, claims Trott

Shadow Chief Secretary to the Treasury Laura Trott has warned Labour will increase taxes regardless of Pat McFadden’s denial that the party will scrap the single person council tax discount.

She said: “Despite ample opportunities, Labour Ministers still can’t rule out tax rises.

“It should come as no surprise. Labour will do what Labour have always done: mismanage the economy and raise your taxes.

“Having already clobbered pensioners, working people are next in line. The only beneficiaries of this Labour Government are the Labour Party, its donors and the union barons who have filled their coffers with taxpayers’ money.”

Labour civil war erupts as MP blasts freebie ‘donations’ while winter fuel payments axed

A Labour MP has said she is “sickened” by the furore surrounding donations to ministers when pensioners “risk going cold” due to the scrapping of the winter fuel allowance.

Racheal Maskell, the MP for York Central took to X last night to express her opinions on the row which has continued to rumble on ahead of yesterday’s launch of the Labour party conference.

She said: “I have been sickened by revelations of ‘donations’.

“It grates against the values of the Labour Party, created to fight for the needs of others, not self.”

Labour civil war erupts as Keir Starmer’s own Cabinet demands he ‘gets a grip’ of party

Sir Keir Starmer must “get a grip” of Labour’s civil war and end infighting amongst aides, Cabinet ministers believe.

The Prime Minister is facing calls to intervene in the row over Sue Gray’s £170,000 salary, which has infuriated other advisors.

Sir Keir is being urged to “create a moment” to prevent infighting between the rival factions in Downing Street.

The minister said: “Keir has to get a grip. He never resolved in opposition who’s in charge, who has his voice.”

Government has ‘lost control’ says Atkins after RCN snub

The Government has lost control of the process that reviews public sector pay, the shadow health secretary has said.

Conservative minister Victoria Atkins said that the Royal College of Nursing’s rejection of the proposed 5.5 percent pay award showed that Labour were not properly in charge of the system.

Ms Atkins told Sky News: “The Labour Government has lost control of the independent public sector pay process.”

She added: “The ramifications of giving one part of the health workforce an inflation busting pay rise, as they did over the summer with junior or resident doctors, (is that it) will have an impact across the workforce, including for nurses.

“Is it any wonder that having given this inflation busting pay rise with no reform, no productivity improvements for junior doctors in the summer, that nurses and other healthcare professionals are now asking why they are not valued in the same way by this Government.”

The RCN rejected the offer during Chancellor Rachel Reeves’s speech yesterday.

Starmer and wife arrive for breakfast

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer and wife Victoria have been pictured arriving for breakfast at the Labour Party annual conference in Liverpool.

Sir Keir is preparing for first conference speech since moving into Number 10.

He is under pressure to deliver after a rocky few days which have seen him facing awkward questions about accepting donations of free clothes and hospitality, as well as concerns over plans to means-test the £300 winter fuel payment for pensioners.

‘Trains may have to run slower,’ claims Burnham

Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham has warned northern trains may be forced to run slower with fewer seats than they do currently, after the previous government cancelled a plan to extend HS2 between the West Midlands and Manchester.

Put to him on the BBC‘s Today programme that he is saying train services might get worse, he said: “It’s barely believable, isn’t it, after the promises of the northern powerhouse and all of the debates about HS2, that in the kind of middle of this century, you would find it harder to get a seat on a train going north, because there would be smaller trains serving Manchester, because the HS2 trains couldn’t go at full length, and then they’d have to go at lower speeds because the tilting pendolinos can go faster on the curvy West Coast mainline, but not the HS2 trains, and that’s the point.

“You know, how can this country rely on an overcrowded West Coast mainline and a saturated M6 for the connectivity between the West Midlands and the North West? But that was the effect of the decision taken last year.”

Mr Burnham added that more capacity is needed as “the big arteries up the country are already full”, adding: “If you carry on and do nothing at this point in time, this will be an anti-growth policy, because the overcrowded nature of our rail and road infrastructure between the West Midlands and the North West would be a barrier to economic growth.”

He also agreed he was calling for a link between Liverpool and Manchester, calling it an “investment in growth”.

Labour ‘on the wrong side of history’, claims Corbyn

Advertisement

Jeremy Corbyn, Sir Keir Starmer‘s predecessor as Labour leader, has claimed the party is “on the wrong side of history” as he hailed a demonstrator turfed out of the conference yesterday.

Mr Corbyn, now an independent MP, posted on X: “The brave protestor at Labour conference demanding an end to all arms sales to Israel reminds me of the party member who was dragged out of conference in 2005 for protesting the war in Iraq.

“Who was on the right side of history?”

Pat McFadden skewered by Kay Burley after refusing to rule out tax hikes

Labour’s Pat McFadden found himself in the hot seat during a tense exchange with Sky News’ Kay Burley, as the Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster dodged a direct answer about potential tax increases under the new Labour government.

The grilling came when Burley asked bluntly: “Is it going to be tax increases or cutting spending?” McFadden sidestepped the specifics, replying instead: “We’ve got to stabilise public finances.”

Speaking to Kay Mr McFadden added: “We have inherited a tough financial situation, but if we can stabilise that then the prospects for the country are really good, the prospects for investing in the country, getting the economy moving, for turning around the public services, getting rebuilding going, whether that’s on housing or infrastructure or energy or other big things, this is the prize that awaits us if we can get through this period and deal with some of the things we’ve inherited from the last government.”

Striking a deal ‘an essential first step’, says McFadden

Addressing the decision by the Royal College of Nurses, Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster Pat McFadden has said that getting a deal is an “essential step” in fixing public services.

Speaking after nurses rejected a deal that included a 5.5 percent pay rise, Mr McFadden said: “When we came into office we wanted to try and put these industrial disputes behind us and get the public services back to work.

“That doesn’t fix them overnight, but it’s an essential step on that road.

“So you know, we will do what we can but there’s always competing pressures for public spending.”

He later added: “We’ll try and treat workers fairly, we’ll try and make sure people are properly rewarded.

“But everybody knows there’s not an unlimited amount of public spending.”

Union baron Mick Lynch vows to seize control of UK economy with unions in ‘every sector’

Union baron Mick Lynch has vowed to seize control of the UK economy.

Speaking as Sir Keir Starmer prepares to deliver his crucial Labour Party conference speech, Mr Lynch, whose RMT union brought much of the country to a standstill through rail walkouts, said the “prize” is “universal” influence over all of the nation’s industries.

The Royal College of Nursing left Chancellor Rachel Reeves red-faced after announcing it was rejecting the Government’s 5.5 per cent pay hike offer in the middle of her speech.

And Mr Lynch called for a sweeping expansion of union powers which would make it easier to shut down industries if their demands are not met.

Former Shadow Chancellor John McDonnell launches brutal attack on Starmer’s Labour

Former Labour shadow chancellor John McDonnell said the party’s messaging about the economy and spending is the same as that from the Conservative Party during austerity.

Speaking to BBC Radio 4’s Today programme, Mr McDonnell, who had the whip removed from him by Labour when he voted against the Government over the removal of the two-child benefit cap said: “If you close your eyes and listen to the language being used, it’s almost like George Osborne speaking again in 2010.

“When you hear politicians talk about tough choices or painful decisions, and then you hear some of the rhetoric around fraud and social security, literally that’s a replica of a speech made by George Osborne in 2010.

“What I’m worried about is the first measure the Government has actually introduced is an austerity measure of winter fuel allowance, which for many of my constituents will cause immense hardship.”

He added: “We were desperate to get rid of the Tories. I was so elated at the election of a Labour Government, but I don’t believe that actually what we’re hearing this week is going to inspire people around the sort of objectives that we have as a party, of changing our society, ending austerity.”

John McDonnell

John McDonnell, the former Shadow Chancellor, has launched a scathing attack (Image: GETTY)

‘A big moment for the party and the country’

Pat McFadden also emphasised that Sir Keir Starmer‘s speech to the Labour Party conference as Prime Minister is a big moment for the party and the country.

The Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster told Nick Ferrari on LBC: “I think you almost underplay it in terms of the twists and turns over 14 years of opposition. I woke up this morning thinking ‘This is the first speech from our Labour Prime Minister to a Labour conference for 15 years.’ It’s such a long time. So much has changed in the country during that period.

“I think this is a big moment certainly for my party, it’s a big moment for the country, whether people support Labour or don’t support Labour. Just the change that it symbolises when Keir Starmer stands up and makes a speech this afternoon is enormous.”

‘No plans to force early pub closures’

Pat McFadden has denied that there are plans to change pub licensing rules to force them to shut early.

Speaking to Nick Ferrari on LBC’s Breakfast programme, he denied a report in the Telegraph that venues could be targeted under measures to cut down on harmful drinking.

Andrew Gwynne, the public health minister, had told a Labour Party fringe event that the Government was considering “tightening up the hours of operation” of bars and pubs.

Mr McFadden, the Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, said: “I don’t think there’s any plan to shut the pubs early. The pub is a great part of British life. I don’t have a drink during conference, partly so I can look forward to having a nice one when the conference is over and I hope that the pub will be open when I go in.”

He told Mr Ferrari that his drink of choice after the conference ends on Wednesday would be a pint of Guinness.

Starmer set to paint gloomy picture with ‘tough decisions’ looming

Sir Keir will add: “The reality is that if we make tough long-term decisions now, and remain focused on our core goal – higher economic growth – we can raise living standards in every community; bring down hospital waiting lists; make our streets safer; strengthen our borders; create more opportunities for our children; power our homes with clean British energy; and make our country more secure.

“Then, that light at the end of the tunnel, that Britain that belongs to you, will be reached much sooner.”

Addressing Labour activists in Liverpool, Sir Keir will emphasise that “it will be hard”, highlighting the “financial black hole” of £22 billion in unfunded spending left by the Tories, the “societal black hole” of crumbling public services, and the “political black hole” created by disillusionment with the political system.

Angry lifelong Labour voter vows to never back them again over ‘sickening’ winter fuel row

Unions have slammed Labour for trying to “silence” pensioners and avoid humiliation by blocking a crunch vote on reversing the winter fuel payment.

Dozens of pensioners gathered outside the Party’s conference venue today to voice their anger at Chancellor Rachel Reeves’s decision to axe the £300 lifeline.

Delegates at the event also booed when it was announced that a debate set for today on a winter fuel U-turn would be delayed until Wednesday when many activists will have left.

Sharon Graham, Unite union general secretary, said: “Right now it is fair to say that the Labour leaders have tried to silence the voice of pensioners, workers and communities at Party conference, in this blatant manoeuvre to block debate on winter fuel cuts and the departure towards Austerity Mark 2.”

starmer

Starmer tipped to unveil £1.6 billion benefits crackdown

Key measures promised by Sir Keir in his speech include:

* A crackdown on benefit fraud, aimed at saving £1.6 billion over five years

*A commitment to reducing net migration by training British workers to fill job vacancies rather than relying on overseas labour

*A pledge to introduce a Hillsborough Law, enforcing a duty of candour for public officials.

Pensioners braced for another bombshell as Starmer warns of ‘tough’ measures

Sir Keir Starmer will tell the British public there is “light at the end of this tunnel”, but they must first unite in a “shared struggle” to overcome tough short-term pressures.

In his first Labour Party conference speech as Prime Minister, Sir Keir – who along with other senior Labour figures has faced criticism over his acceptance of clothing, hospitality and other freebies – will outline his vision to “build a new Britain” with faster economic growth, reduced hospital waiting times, and safer streets.

However, he will caution that there are no quick fixes and that he cannot offer “false hope” regarding the challenges ahead.

Sir Keir will attempt to set out his positive vision of “national renewal”, though the speech comes amid anger within the Labour movement over the decision to means-test winter fuel payments, which will strip millions of pensioners of this benefit.

LEAVE A RESPONSE

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *