Current:Home > InvestLabour Party leader Keir Starmer makes his pitch to UK voters with a speech vowing national renewal -WealthRoots Academy
Labour Party leader Keir Starmer makes his pitch to UK voters with a speech vowing national renewal
View
Date:2025-04-13 00:05:12
LIVERPOOL, England (AP) — U.K. Labour Party leader Keir Starmer delivers a speech on Tuesday that amounts to a public job interview for the post of prime minister. He’ll set out to answer the question in many voters’ minds: “Why Labour?”
Starmer is addressing the opposition party’s annual conference, likely the last before a national election next year. He needs to persuade voters fed up with economic stagnation and political turmoil to switch allegiance to his party, which has been out of office since 2010.
He plans to pledge “a decade of national renewal,” after what he depicts as 13 years of decline under the Conservatives.
“What is broken can be repaired, what is ruined can be rebuilt,” Starmer will say, according to the party.
Starmer’s speech to the conference in Liverpool is a key moment for a politician who has managed to unite a fractious party and gain a substantial lead in opinion polls, but remains a blank slate to many voters. A barrister and former head of the national prosecution service, he’s widely seen as managerial and a bit dull.
Labour has lost four straight national elections. Its landslide 1997 election victory under Tony Blair — the peak of its popularity — was a quarter-century ago and in the last national election in 2019, voters handed Labour its worst drubbing since 1935.
But with an election due next year, polls put Labour as much as 20 points ahead of the governing Conservative Party.
Starmer, elected leader in 2020, steered the social democratic party back toward the political middle ground after the divisive tenure of predecessor Jeremy Corbyn, a staunch socialist who advocated nationalization of key industries and infrastructure.
Starmer’s actions angered some grassroots Labour members who want a bolder agenda, but it has revived the party’s poll ratings.
Underscoring the way the party has changed, Starmer plans to say he leads “a changed Labour Party, no longer in thrall to gesture politics, no longer a party of protest. … Those days are done. We will never go back.”
In a sign that corporate Britain is warming to Labour, companies thronged to the conference in The Beatles’ birthplace of Liverpool, buying space in the exhibition hall, sponsoring panel discussions and attending a business forum with party leaders. The mood was noticeably buzzier than at the Conservatives’ muted conference last week in Manchester.
Labour is trying to walk a delicate line. Party leaders want to convince voters it can ease the U.K.’s chronic housing crisis and repair its fraying public services, especially the creaking, overburdened state-funded National Health Service – but without imposing tax increases on the public.
Labour economy spokeswoman Rachel Reeves told the conference on Monday that a Labour government would “tax fairly and spend wisely,” using economic growth to fund public services and boosting investment through a new national wealth fund. She pledged to build 1.5 million homes to ease Britain’s chronic housing crisis and repair the creaking, overburdened state-funded National Health Service.
Former Cabinet minister Peter Mandelson, one of the architects of Blair’s election victories, said Starmer has to “make an offer the country feels it can’t refuse.”
“He’s got to bring home to working people in this country what a difference a Labour government will make, both in the short term but more seriously in the long term,” Mandelson told The Associated Press. “And I think he will do that. At the moment people are cynical about the difference any government can make. … He’s got to give them hope mixed with realism.”
veryGood! (1)
Related
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- Biden’s challenge: Will he ever satisfy the media’s appetite for questions about his ability?
- Sebastian Maniscalco talks stand-up tour, 'Hacks' and selling out Madison Square Garden
- Daisy Edgar-Jones Addresses Speculation Over Eyebrow-Raising Paul Mescal & Phoebe Bridgers Met Gala Pic
- Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
- Travis Kelce Jokingly Dedicates Karaoke Award to Girlfriend Taylor Swift
- An Ohio mom was killed while trying to stop the theft of a car that had her 6-year-old son inside
- Kim Kardashian Shares Tip of Finger Broke Off During Accident More Painful Than Childbirth
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- 2024 ESPY Awards: Winners and highlights from ESPN show
Ranking
- As Trump Enters Office, a Ripe Oil and Gas Target Appears: An Alabama National Forest
- National French Fry Day 2024: Get free fries and deals at McDonald's, Wendy's, more
- The Esports World Cup, with millions at stake, is underway: Schedule, how to watch
- JPMorgan Q2 profit jumps as bank cashes in Visa shares, but higher interest rates also help results
- Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
- New York’s top court allows ‘equal rights’ amendment to appear on November ballot
- Helicopter carrying 3 people crashes in the ocean off the Hawaiian island of Kauai
- Referendum set for South Dakota voters on controversial carbon dioxide pipeline law
Recommendation
Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
AT&T 2022 security breach hits nearly all cellular customers and landline accounts with contact
Theater festivals offer to give up their grants if DeSantis restores funding for Florida arts groups
'Stinky' giant planet where it rains glass also has a rotten egg odor, researchers say
All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
Senator calls out Big Tech’s new approach to poaching talent, products from smaller AI startups
Review: Believe the hype about Broadway's gloriously irreverent 'Oh, Mary!'
Dollar General agrees to pay $12 million fine to settle alleged workplace safety violations