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Evening Standard
Evening Standard
World
Nicholas Cecil

Sir Keir Starmer to promise ‘decade of national renewal’ in conference speech

Sir Keir Starmer was on Tuesday seeking to answer the question of millions of voters: “Why Labour?” as his party prepared for a General Election as soon as next May.

The Labour leader set his sights on a decade in power as part of his mission of “national renewal” after 13 years of Conservative rule.

His aim for two terms in power highlighted the optimism at the party’s annual rally in Liverpool that it is on the verge of power which would mark an extraordinary turnaround given the 2019 General Election disaster under Jeremy Corbyn.

He was expected to seize the moment of his keynote speech to the Labour’s conference on Tuesday to cut through to voters to try to convince more to back his party and him as the next Prime Minister.

Sir Keir was set to say: “People are looking to us because they want our wounds to heal and we are the healers.

“People are looking to us because these challenges require a modern state and we are the modernisers.

“People are looking to us because they want us to build a new Britain and we are the builders.”

Keir Starmer enjoys breakfast with his wife in the Pulman hotel (Jeremy Selwyn)

Labour MPs are talking up the prospect of a May General Election, though, senior Tories were suggesting last week that it was more likely to take place in the autumn.

Despite his party enjoying consistent double-digit poll leads over the Tories, Sir Keir will acknowledge that some voters still need to be given a reason to back his party at the next election.

The surveys suggest that the Conservatives are deeply unpopular but that Labour has yet to seal the deal with some sections of the electorate.

Aides said Sir Keir’s speech would answer the question: “Why Labour?”

Labour would be “totally focused on the interests of working people”, he was set to say.

A Labour victory would give the chance to “turn our backs on never-ending Tory decline with a decade of national renewal” and give the British people the “government they deserve”.

Sir Keir will contrast the approach with Rishi Sunak’s decision to use his Conservative conference speech to axe the northern leg of HS2, which business leaders say threatens to hit wider investment.

He will promise that Labour will “get Britain building” and “the winner this time will be working people, everywhere”.

Promising a “big build” for the country, he will say: “What is broken can be repaired, what is ruined can be rebuilt.”

He is expected to announce a “new generation” of large towns and suburbs, with Georgian-style townhouses in urban developments.

The Times reported they will be developed by state-backed companies with compulsory purchase powers, with amenities including doctors surgeries, schools and transport links “hardwired” into the plans.

A six-month consultation would identify sites for new towns with potential for high economic growth and “significant unmet housing need”.

Sir Keir has committed to ensuring the UK has the highest sustained economic growth in the G7 group of leading democracies as one of his “missions” for government.

He was set to say: “An economy that works for the whole country, will require an entirely new approach to politics: mission government, ending the Tory disease of sticking plaster politics with a simple Labour philosophy that together we fix tomorrow’s challenges, today.”

In a sign that he will resist further tax rises while people’s living standards are squeezed he will tell activists: “We should never forget that politics should tread lightly on peoples’ lives, that our job is to shoulder the burden for working people - carry the load, not add to it.”

He will promise a government that “takes care of the big questions” so working people have “freedom to enjoy what they love” with “more time, more energy, more possibility, more life”.

“That’s what getting our future back really means,” he will say.

“It boils down to this: can we look the challenges of this age squarely in the eye and amidst all the change and insecurity find the hunger to win new opportunities and the strength to conserve what is precious.”

He will promise to devolve power to towns and cities across England, giving them the kinds of powers enjoyed by London, Greater Manchester and the West Midlands, the Guardian reported.

“If we want to challenge the hoarding of potential in our economy then we must win the war against the hoarders in Westminster,” he will say.

“Give power back and put communities in control.”

The Daily Mirror reported Sir Keir will “reverse the de-prioritisation of shoplifting under £200 and create a new specific offence of assault against shop workers”.

Labour began its conference buoyed by by-election success in Rutherglen and Hamilton West and insiders are hopeful of picking up dozens more seats from the SNP at the general election - something which could help Sir Keir overturn a still sizeable Tory majority in Westminster.

“For the first time in a long time we can see a tide that is turning,” Sir Keir will say. “Four nations that are renewing. Old wounds of division - exploited by the Tories and the SNP - beginning to heal.”

Shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves told the party faithful on Monday that Labour was “ready to serve and lead” Britain as she unveiled plans to modernise Britain by reforming its “antiquated” planning system so new infrastructure gets build.

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