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Starmer urges change over St George’s Cross design

The FA revealed the new kits to be worn by England men’s, women’s and para teams in 2024 earlier in the week…reports Asian Lite News

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer has called on Nike to change a new England football shirt featuring different colours in the cross of St George. Nike says the shirt, launched ahead of Euro 2024, includes a “playful update” to the cross “to unite and inspire”.

But it has been criticised for featuring navy, light blue and purple in a flag on the back of the collar. The US firm said the colours were inspired by the training kit worn by England’s 1966 World Cup winners.

Some football pundits, politicians and fans have criticised the shirt’s design and price after it launched earlier this week. Going on sale on 21 March, the “authentic” version is priced at £124.99 for adults and £119.99 for children, while a “stadium” version costs £84.99 and £64.99 for children.

Sir Keir told The Sun that the “flag is used by everybody, it is a unifier, it doesn’t need to be changed”. He said: “We just need to be proud of it. So I think they should just reconsider this and change it back.

“I’m not even sure they properly can explain why they thought they needed to change in the first place.” The Labour leader also called on Nike to reduce the price of the shirts.

Pundit Chris Sutton told Mail Sport’s podcast It’s All Kicking Off: “It’s not the cross of St George, is it? I do understand that there will be people out there who will say it’s not representative when it’s on an England jersey and shouldn’t represent an England jersey. I do understand that.” “I’m not going to get angry about that, but for heaven’s sake, could the FA have not just, you know… explained?”

The FA revealed the new kits to be worn by England men’s, women’s and para teams in 2024 earlier in the week.

England’s men’s team are set to wear the new kits – with a purple away shirt launched at the same time as the white home one – for the first time during matches with Brazil and Belgium at Wembley on 23 and 26 March.

In a post on X on 18 March, Nike described the redesigned flag as “a playful update to the cross of St George” which “appears on the collar to unite and inspire”.

A Nike spokesperson told media outlets: “The England 2024 Home kit disrupts history with a modern take on a classic. The trim on the cuffs takes its cues from the training gear worn by England’s 1966 heroes, with a gradient of blues and reds topped with purple. The same colours also feature an interpretation of the flag of St George on the back of the collar.”

ALSO READ-Starmer says budget is ‘bereft of ideas’

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Starmer says budget is ‘bereft of ideas’

Sir Keir called the move, which is expected to raise £2.7bn a year, a “short-term, cynical political gimmick” – adding there was not a “more obvious example of a government that is totally bereft of ideas”…reports Asian Lite News

Keir Starmer has attacked the budget as “the last desperate act of a party that has failed” as he branded Jeremy Hunt and Rishi Sunak “the Chuckle Brothers of decline”.

The Labour leader criticised the chancellor for presiding over a recession and the highest tax burden in 70 years and accused Mr Hunt of using the budget to “give with one hand and take even more with the other”.

The chancellor announced a 2p cut to national insurance and abolished the current tax system for non-doms, which has been a Labour policy for some time.

Sir Keir called the move, which is expected to raise £2.7bn a year, a “short-term, cynical political gimmick” – adding there was not a “more obvious example of a government that is totally bereft of ideas”.

The Labour leader said Hunt was a chancellor who “breezes into this chamber in a recession and tells the working people of this country that everything’s on track”. “Crisis? What crisis? Or as the captain of the Titanic and the former prime minister herself might have said, iceberg? What iceberg?” he joked.

“Smiling as the ship goes down, the Chuckle Brothers of decline, dreaming of Santa Monica or maybe just a quiet life in Surrey not having to self-fund his election,” he added. Sir Keir said Britain deserved better than a “Rishi recession” and claimed the Tories had “maxed out the nation’s credit card”.

And calling for the government to confirm a May general election, he added: “It’s time to break the habit of 14 years – stop the dithering.” Hunt unveiled his budget – expected to be the last before the general election later this year – after speculation in the media pointed towards a possible cut in income tax to woo voters.

But the chancellor resisted calls from Tory MPs for income tax to be reduced and instead stuck to bringing down national insurance further from 10% to 8%.

Hunt said that, combined with the reduction in national insurance in the autumn statement last year, the average worker would be £900 better off. However, both Labour and the Liberal Democrats have argued that frozen income tax thresholds effectively cancel out the benefit of the national insurance cut.

The Office for Budget Responsibility, the independent public finances forecaster, has also said living standards will remain below 2019 levels until 2025-26.

In his statement responding to the budget, Sir Keir said his party would support the cuts to national insurance because it had “campaigned to lower the tax burden on working people for the whole parliament”.

ALSO READ-Starmer calls for Gaza ceasefire

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Starmer calls for Gaza ceasefire

The leader made the comments in a speech to the Scottish Labour conference, where he has faced renewed pressure ahead of a crucial Commons vote…reports Asian Lite News

Keir Starmer has said the “fighting must stop now” in Gaza, warning Israel not to extend its military offensive to the southern city of Rafah ahead of another potential crunch point for his party over the crisis.

The Labour leader made the comments in a speech to the Scottish Labour conference in Glasgow, where he has faced renewed pressure ahead of a crucial Commons vote on Wednesday over a motion calling for an immediate ceasefire.

“I have just returned from the Munich security conference, where every conversation I had came back to the situation in Israel and Gaza and the question of what we can do practically to deliver what we all want to see – a return of all the hostages taken on 7 October, an end to the killing of innocent Palestinians, a huge scaling-up of humanitarian relief and an end to the fighting,” he said.

“Not just for now, not just for a pause, but permanently. A ceasefire that lasts. That is what must happen now. The fighting must stop now.”

In a stance that has caused deep divisions across the Labour party, Starmer has previously refused to support calls for an “immediate” end to the violence, using the more cautious phrasing of a “sustainable ceasefire”.

His speech came a day after the conference passed a motion that explicitly called for an immediate ceasefire on both sides and was endorsed by the Scottish Labour leader, Anas Sarwar, who has previously been critical of Starmer’s more cautious stance.

Labour faces another perilous vote in the Commons on Wednesday, with the Scottish National party tabling a motion calling for an immediate end to the violence. The party is desperate to avoid a repeat of last November’s significant rebellion over a similar SNP motion, when 56 Labour MPs defied the party whip to back it, with eight frontbenchers stepping down to do so, including Jess Phillips.

Calling for a return to a “genuine peace process”, with a two-state solution back on the table, Starmer told Scottish Labour members on Sunday: “The offensive threatened on Rafah – a place where 1.5 million people are now cramped together in unimaginable conditions with nowhere else for them to go – this cannot become a new theatre of war. That offensive cannot happen.”

The SNP has ramped up the pressure on Starmer, writing to backbenchers urging them to back its fresh motion.

The party’s Westminster leader, Stephen Flynn, published a letter inviting Starmer to a meeting on Monday to discuss the motion but making it “crystal clear” that the wording of the motion “must maintain the clarity of pressing for an immediate ceasefire”.

After backing calls for an immediate ceasefire on Saturday, Sarwar suggested he was willing to work with the SNP, saying its Commons motion looked “pretty decent”.

Sarwar said: “If we can send a unified message from the UK parliament, then we should take that opportunity and I hope people will engage in good faith in trying to find that unified position.”

On Sunday, David Lammy sought to play down Wednesday’s vote, arguing that party political debates in Westminster were not going to achieve peace in the region.

“Yes, we will have a vote in parliament this week,” the shadow foreign secretary said. “But it’s not that vote that will bring about a ceasefire. It’s the diplomatic action, it’s Hamas, it’s Benjamin Netanyahu, it’s partners for peace saying the fighting must now stop.”

Starmer also cautioned Scottish delegates – who appeared enthused and energised by their best-attended party conference in decades – against complacency, telling them there was still “a mountain to climb” to win back former Labour voters who had found a new political home with the SNP.

He took on the SNP leader, Humza Yousaf, whose message to voters since the new year has been that Starmer “doesn’t need Scotland to win the general election”, and that SNP MPs will “keep [Starmer] honest” on issues such as child poverty and the green-energy transition.

“No matter what the SNP say, the Tories can win the next election,” Starmer said.

Addressing wavering voters, who polling indicates will be crucial to Labour’s election results across the UK, Starmer said: “I know there will always be a debate about Scotland’s constitutional future.

“If, right now, you want a Britain that places Scotland at the heart of the Westminster debate, if you want a politics that is committed to smashing the class ceiling … then that’s the change we can deliver for Scotland.”

Sarwar said: “The entire UK Labour Party want to see the violence stop right now, we want to see a ceasefire.” Sarwar said Labour had been in touch with the SNP’s whips about the wording of the ceasefire motion that will be voted on this Wednesday. However, the SNP’s chief whip, Owen Thompson, denied there had been any contact.

ALSO READ-US to veto Algerian resolution for Gaza ceasefire

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Tories launch attack on Starmer

“Are you a terrorist in need of legal advice? Better call Keir,” read a mocked-up poster published by the Conservatives this week on X…reports Asian Lite News

Conservatives are stepping up personal attacks on opposition Labour leader and former prominent lawyer Keir Starmer, who is tipped to become prime minister after the next general election. Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s Tories and sympathetic right-leaning newspapers are targeting Starmer’s record as a leading human rights lawyer and public prosecutor in a bid to haul back support from his centre-left party. Political scientists view the broadsides as an increasingly desperate tactic by a government that is running out of ideas and probably in its death throes, after 14 years in power.

“Are you a terrorist in need of legal advice? Better call Keir,” read a mocked-up poster published by the Conservatives this week on X, the social media site formerly called Twitter. “When @RishiSunak sees a group chanting jihad on our streets, he bans them. Keir Starmer invoices them,” the party added in an adjacent comment. The dig related to advice that Starmer gave the Islamist group Hizb ut-Tahrir in 2008, when the organisation challenged a ban on its activities in Germany. The government in London this week declared Hizb ut-Tahrir a “terrorist” organisation and banned it from operating in the UK.

Sunak said during the weekly prime minister’s questions in the House of Commons on Wednesday that the now-proscribed group had once been “a client” of Starmer’s. “If Keir Starmer wasn’t leader of the opposition, he’d be representing a lot of these people still today,” Sunak’s press secretary told reporters afterwards. A Labour spokesman stressed that Starmer did not formally represent Hizb ut-Tahrir, and shortly afterwards became the chief state prosecutor in England and Wales. “The nature of being a lawyer is that you represent and give advice to a whole range of clients, including people that you don’t agree with,” he added. The brickbats fit a pattern.

Britain’s Tory-supporting press recently reported that Starmer had represented an Irish Republican Army member and hate preacher Abu Qatada. Labour and legal experts reiterate that Starmer would have been obliged to do so under the “cab rank rule”, which ensures that everyone receives legal representation whoever they are. The personal slights also tie into Britain’s so-called culture wars, with 43-year-old Sunak — a privately educated former investment banker — fond of accusing Starmer, 61, of being a “lefty lawyer”. Starmer defended a number of salient causes as a human rights barrister, including defending trades unions and anti-McDonald’s activists.

He also worked to ensure police in Northern Ireland complied with human rights legislation. In 2008, Starmer was appointed director of public prosecutions for England and Wales at the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS), a role he held until 2013. He oversaw the prosecution of lawmakers for abusing their expenses, journalists for phone hacking and young rioters involved in 2011 unrest across England, earning a knighthood, giving him the title “Sir Keir”, in 2015. The privately wealthy Sunak has accused Starmer, the son of a toolmaker and a nurse who ran a donkey sanctuary, of being “soft on crime, soft on criminals”, and has dubbed him “Sir Softie”. Starmer told an ITV documentary this week that “of course” there will have been mistakes committed during his tenure leading the CPS. “But there’ll be no smoking gun, no skeletons in the closet,” he insisted.

A YouGov poll released this week found Labour 27 points ahead of the Conservatives, before the election, the date of which Sunak is yet to announce. The survey put the ruling party on only 20-percent support, suggesting it is heading for a landslide defeat. The Tories have presided over a crippling cost-of-living crisis in recent months, record waiting lists for hospital treatment and served up five prime ministers since the 2016 Brexit vote. “The cupboard is bare, isn’t it?” Robert Ford, a political scientist at Manchester University, said of the motivation for the personal attacks. “They haven’t got much to run on.” Tim Bale, politics professor at Queen Mary University of London, does not think the barbs will land with voters. “The personal stuff is unlikely to trump the bread and butter issues that are killing this government, most obviously the state of the economy and the National Health Service,” he said.

ALSO READ-UK charity TUFF donates INR One Crore to Ayodhya Temple

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Jaishankar meets Starmer in London

Jaishankar also met UK’s Shadow Foreign Secretary David Lammy, with the two leaders holding discussions on security and development issues as well as bilateral cooperation…reports Asian Lite News

External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar on Wednesday called on the UK’s Leader of the Opposition, Keir Starmer in the Parliament, with the two leaders reaffirming the bipartisan commitment towards strengthening India-UK relations.

Taking to his official handle on X, EAM Jaishankar shared details about his meeting with the UK’s Leader of the Opposition, posting, “Delighted to meet UK’s Leader of Opposition @Keir_Starmer in the Parliament. Value the bipartisan commitment in the United Kingdom towards strengthening our relationship. Our discussion covered bilateral aspects and shared regional and global interests.”

Earlier, on Wednesday, EAM Jaishankar met UK’s Shadow Foreign Secretary David Lammy, with the two leaders holding discussions on security and development issues as well as bilateral cooperation.

“Pleased to meet Shadow Foreign Secretary @DavidLammy this morning. A wide-ranging conversation on security and development issues, as well as bilateral cooperation. Appreciated his perspectives and insights,” the EAM posted from his official X handle.

“Also thank Shadow Minister for Asia and the Pacific @CatherineWest1 for joining on the occasion,” Jaishankar added. Jaishankar will conclude his five-day visit to the UK on Wednesday.

Meanwhile, earlier in the day, the EAM also met the UK’s National Security Advisor Tim Barrow and discussed regional and global challenges.

“Glad to meet UK NSA Tim Barrow. A good discussion on pressing regional and global challenges,” the EAM posted on X.

On Tuesday, Jaishankar met with his British counterpart David Cameron and discussed progressing a Free Trade Agreement and partnerships on defence, science and technology.

During the meeting, the two leaders reflected on the strength of the UK-India relationship, including meeting the ambitions of the UK-India 2030 Roadmap.

Notably, India and the UK are negotiating a Free Trade Agreement (FTA). Talks for an FTA between India and the UK started in 2022 and the 12th round of negotiations took place from August 8-31 this year.

During his UK visit, EAM Jaishankar acknowledged the transformations in the world, the UK, and the evolving India-UK relationship and also emphasised the pivotal role played by PM Modi in shaping the nation’s trajectory.

Outlining the significant impact of PM Modi’s initiatives over the last decade, EAM Jaishankar emphasised that the cumulative effect of these efforts has led to a socioeconomic revolution in India.

Addressing the evolving India-UK relationship, Jaishankar expressed the need to reframe the partnership in light of the profound changes in both nations. He emphasised the importance of preparing for a contemporary era and exploring new convergences to unlock the unrealized potential between India and the UK.

India and the UK have a “growing bilateral partnership”, the MEA stated in a release earlier, noting that the two countries launched a Comprehensive Strategic Partnership in 2021.

Jaishankar is currently on a five-day visit to the UK and will conclude his visit today.

The EAM on Wednesday also met the National Security Advisor of the United Kingdom, Tim Barrow and discussed regional and global challenges.

“Glad to meet UK NSA Tim Barrow. A good discussion on pressing regional and global challenges,” EAM said in a post on X.

On Tuesday, Jaishankar met with his British counterpart David Cameron and discussed progressing a Free Trade Agreement and partnerships on defence, science and technology.

During the meeting, the two leaders reflected on the strength of the UK-India relationship, including meeting the ambitions of the UK-India 2030 Roadmap.

Jaishankar visits BAPS temple

Praying for peace and harmony for Indians across the world, External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar visited the BAPS Shri Swaminarayan Mandir in London on Diwali as part of his five-day visit to the UK.

“Blessed to visit the BAPS Shri Swaminarayan Mandir, London on Deepavali. Prayed for the peace, harmony and prosperity of our community around the world,” Jaishankar, who was accompanied by his wife, wrote on platform X.

The minister also spoke to the Indian community there and thanked them for their contributions that “are raising our profile around the world”.

Also known as the Neasden Temple, the BAPS temple thanked the minister for taking time out to meet the devotees and taking part in the Diwali celebrations.

“Thank you @DrSJaishankar for taking time out to join the #Diwali celebrations at #NeasdenTemple today. We appreciate your kind words, which inspired the thousands of devotees and visitors from the local community who had joined the celebrations,” the temple wrote in a message posted on X.

“May the #LivingBridge between Great Britain and Great Bharat grow and glow from strength to strength,” it added.

ALSO READ-Piyush Goyal Touts India’s Investment Appeal in US Tour

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Starmer Seeks Closer Ties with India

Starmer was joined by Shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves and shadow minister for International Development Lisa Nandy at the event…reports Asian Lite News

Expressing his gratitude to the Hindu, Sikh and Jain communities in the UK, opposition leader Sir Keir Starmer joined top members of the British Indian community, including Indian High Commissioner Vikram Doraiswami, to celebrate Diwali.

In the event hosted on Tuesday by the British Asian Trust, a charity founded by The King in 2007, Starmer lit the symbolic ‘diya’ and also addressed the Indian diaspora.

“In dark times such as these, it is more important than ever that we focus on a positive future in which we work together across communities and faiths. Only by doing so will we ensure that everyone, no matter their background, has an opportunity for a peaceful, fulfilled and happy life,” Starmer said.

“Tonight I reiterate my gratitude to the Hindu, Sikh, and Jain communities for the enormous contribution they make to this great country of ours. Your positive impact is felt across so many spheres and sectors, and that your contribution is pursued in accordance with your spiritual convictions, reflects the powerful message of Diwali.”

Starmer was joined by Shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves and shadow minister for International Development Lisa Nandy at the event.

The event highlighted some of the British Asian Trust’s achievements, including a major mental health programme across South Asia and the launch of a $50 million Child Opportunity Fund set up to give millions of children better opportunities for the future.

Chair of the British Asian Trust, Lord Jitesh Gadhia, said that the community is “delighted to celebrate Diwali with Sir Keir Starmer and we hope this helps us to shine a light on the important work we do across South Asia”.

In June this year, Starmer had emphasised the importance of “modern India” and said that “a strategic partnership with India will be key” to a future Labour government.

The Labour party has had an uncomfortable relationship with India after the party under Jeremy Corbyn unanimously passed a motion on Kashmir at the 2019 Labour conference.

But speaking on June 26 at the India Global Forum’s UK-India Week 2023, Starmer said he hoped to visit India soon and was “resetting the relationship”, and that “this is a changed Labour party”.

ALSO READ-Hindu Forum of Europe marks Diwali at European Parliament

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Starmer defies Gaza cease-fire calls

In the past week a dozen Labour frontbenchers have defied the agreed party line on the conflict and called for a cease-fire…reports Asian Lite News

Keir Starmer doubled down on his position on the war between Israel and Hamas Tuesday despite open revolt on the opposition Labour Party’s front bench.

In a speech at the Chatham House foreign policy think tank, Starmer faced down calls to demand a cease-fire in Gaza and said this would only “embolden” Hamas militants to launch another attack.

In the past week a dozen Labour frontbenchers have defied the agreed party line on the conflict and called for a cease-fire.

Dozens of Labour MPs, including some shadow Cabinet members, have been privately lobbying Starmer’s office to change its position and warning that the party is losing significant support from the British Muslim community.

Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar and London and Greater Manchester mayors Sadiq Khan and Andy Burnham all joined calls for a cease-fire last week.

But Starmer warned on Tuesday that a cease-fire “always freezes any conflict in the state where it currently lies. And, as we speak, that would leave Hamas with the infrastructure and the capabilities to carry out the sort of attack we saw on October 7.”

“Hamas would be emboldened and start preparing for future violence immediately,” he said.

Starmer argued that Labour’s current position of calling for humanitarian “pauses” in the fighting was “the only credible approach.”

He issued a warning to shadow ministers to toe the line, saying that he took collective responsibility “extremely seriously.”

Pressed repeatedly by reporters on why shadow ministers have not been disciplined for straying from the party’s position, Starmer said he was “sensitively engaging” with them and that he needed to respond proportionately.

The Labour leader said Israel must act within international law. He stressed the need for “the urgent alleviation of Palestinian suffering” and called for “crystal clear guarantees” that people who flee their homes in Gaza will be allowed to return quickly.

He argued that the supply of water, medicines, electricity and fuel to citizens in Gaza “cannot be blocked by Israel.”

But Starmer declined to say whether Israel is currently adhering to international law and said this matter would be “adjudicated in due course.”

Around two dozen people gathered outside Chatham House on Tuesday morning to protest Labour’s position and urge Starmer to back a cease-fire. Among them was James Schneider, who was press secretary to former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn.

A spokesperson for the left-wing Momentum campaign group said Starmer’s “support for more war, more bombing and more Palestinian deaths is wholly out of touch with his own party and the public at large, who overwhelmingly back an immediate ceasefire.”

But Mike Katz, national chair of the Jewish Labour Movement, an affiliate of the party, hailed what he called “an important intervention” from Starmer which had shown “clear leadership.”

“MPs and others should reflect on how best to achieve the desired outcome in Gaza and how they can ease community tensions on our streets, and unite behind his position,” Katz added.

Starmer’s speech comes after Corbynite MP Andy McDonald was suspended from the Labour Party whip Monday for comments made at a pro-Palestinian protest.

McDonald had told the crowd: “We won’t rest until we have justice. Until all people, Israelis and Palestinians, between the river and the sea, can live in peaceful liberty.” The phrase “between the river and the sea” has been linked to calls for the destruction of Israel.

A Labour spokesperson said the comments were “deeply offensive, particularly at a time of rising antisemitism which has left Jewish people fearful for their safety.”

Last week, Starmer and Rayner met more than a dozen Muslim politicians who said the Labour leader’s positioning on the Israel-Hamas conflict was causing distress to many in the party.

One person present said Starmer acknowledged the amount of “work to be done” to win back the trust of Muslim voters. They added that they thought the leadership would continue to adapt their position to fall in line with international leaders, depending on how severe the conflict became.

When asked whether Labour was taking Muslim votes for granted, Kyle said: “We’re not thinking how do we win votes or what votes we will lose at a time when there is war and conflict unfolding … Everybody has the legitimate right in a democratic society as ours … What Hamas did was wrong and we stand on the side of Israel within international law to defend itself.”

ALSO READ-Starmer promises ‘a decade of national renewal’

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Starmer promises ‘a decade of national renewal’

Labour leader lauded the change the party has undergone since its landslide election defeat in 2019, proclaiming that Labour is “a party no longer in thrall to gesture politics, no longer a party of protest — a party of service”…reports Asian Lite News

Opposition Labour Party leader Keir Starmer on Tuesday promised “a decade of national renewal” during a keynote conference speech disrupted by a protester.

The man accessed the stage as Starmer opened his remarks and doused him with glitter. After a brief pause as the protester was escorted out of the conference hall, Starmer removed his jacket and dusted himself off to rapturous applause from party members.

“If he thinks that bothers me, he doesn’t know me,” Starmer declared. “Protest or power, that’s why we changed our party, conference. That’s why we changed our party.”

Starmer was speaking to a full conference hall with multiple packed overspill rooms during what the party claims was its most attended conference on record among members and exhibitors.

The Labour leader opened his speech by promising “a decade of national renewal,” a signal of the party’s confidence of a generational shift in power after next year’s General Election.

He also lauded the change the party has undergone since its landslide election defeat in 2019, proclaiming that Labour is “a party no longer in thrall to gesture politics, no longer a party of protest — a party of service.”

“We should never forget that politics should tread lightly on people’s lives, that our job is to shoulder the burden for working people – carry the load, not add to it,” he said.

He also pledged to build 1.5 million new homes and an acceleration of the National Grid along with a wave of new infrastructure, creating jobs in the process, promising that his government would “get shovels in the ground, cranes in the sky and build the next generation of Labour new towns.”

“This Labour Party will fight the next election on economic growth. An economy that works for the whole country is what the British people want,” he added, arguing that investment in national infrastructure was key to securing better distributed growth.

Starmer committed to the creation of a new publicly-owned national energy company, Great British Energy, which will be based in Scotland, along with the already-announced national wealth fund to invest in infrastructure. Labour also plans to set up technical excellence colleges across the country with close links to local communities, he announced Tuesday.

Throughout conference, senior ministers have emphasized Labour’s commitments to economic growth, fiscal responsibility and political stability. Shadow Chancellor Rachel Reeves on Monday said the party was “ready to serve, ready to lead and ready to rebuild Britain” as she announced a slew of sweeping economic reforms Labour plans to implement, should it win power in 2024.

“The barriers of dogma will not block our path. That’s why we hold out the hand of partnership to business, champion the need for a competitive tax regime, understand that private enterprise is the only way this country pays its way in the world,” Starmer said Tuesday.

Labour holds around a 20-point lead over Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s Conservative Party across most major polling, with the ruling party damaged by a string of scandals, the fallout from Sunak’s predecessor Liz Truss’s market-roiling “mini-budget” and a cost-of-living crisis.

“We are here to make the government more dynamic, more joined up, more strategic, focused at all times and without exception on long-term national renewal,” Starmer told conference on Tuesday.

Labour members told CNBC prior to Starmer’s speech that this was the most hopeful conference they had attended in many years, while many fringe events focused on issues the party expects to inherit next year.

However, the leader warned that the wounded Conservative government would be ready for a fight as they head into what promises to be a fierce election campaign.

“A party that has so completely severed its relationship with the future, that is prepared to scorch the earth just to get at us, they will be dangerous. Wherever you think the line is, they have already got plans to cross it,” he said.

Sunak is required to call an election before the end of January 2025, and the overwhelming sense at the Labour conference was of a party that is very much preparing for government.

“I grew up working class. I’ve felt the anxiety of a cost-of-living crisis before and until your family can see the way out, I will fight for you,” Starmer concluded, adding that Labour has a plan for a Britain “built to last.”

“A plan to turn the page and say, in a cry of defiance to all those who now write our country off: Britain must, Britain can, Britain will get its future back.”

The Conservative Party posted on Twitter following the speech that Starmer’s remarks were ”“more of the same old short-term approach that has dominated politics for the last 30 years,” while party Chairman Greg Hands said it made no reference to immigration or inflation and entailed “piling needless costs on to British families to meet Net Zero.”

ALSO READ-Starmer pledges 2m extra NHS appointments a year

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Starmer pledges 2m extra NHS appointments a year

Labour has previously said it wants to set up a new expert body, Skills England, to improve skills training, comprising trade associations, companies, trade unions, councils and education leaders…reports Asian Lite News

A Labour government would cut NHS waiting lists in England by funding two million more hospital appointments a year, Sir Keir Starmer has said.

On the eve of the party’s conference in Liverpool, he said that £1.1bn per year would be spent to ensure 40,000 out-of-hours appointments each week. This would be paid for by savings from ending the non-dom tax status, he said.

Labour is also promising to set up specialist further education colleges to tackle local skills shortages. It says it plans to work with local political leaders and businesses to identify these shortages and focus on fixing them.

“Everything we do will be about delivering growth,” Sir Keir told the Observer. He told the newspaper his plans to shake-up skills training were key to his mission of firing up the economy – and he was responding to calls from business leaders who told him they could not find workers trained for their needs.

Sir Keir said that, if Labour won power, it would work with local councils – using money raised from a revamp of the apprenticeship levy – to set up specialist “technical excellence colleges”. These would equip workers specifically for local industries, with a particular emphasis on sectors such as renewables, nuclear, engineering, computing and modern toolmaking.

Labour has previously said it wants to set up a new expert body, Skills England, to improve skills training, comprising trade associations, companies, trade unions, councils and education leaders.

Under a government scheme, bodies representing employers – mostly chambers of commerce – have drawn up skills “improvement plans” to influence what is taught in their local area. Under legislation passed last year, the government will be able to intervene at further education colleges that fail to “adequately reflect” the blueprints in what they teach.

Labour’s NHS appointments initiative would involve paying existing staff overtime to increase capacity. The party says it wants to recruit more staff to the NHS, but that this will take several years to have a significant impact on waiting list numbers.

It says it would spend £1.1bn to cover the extra overtime, which would be paid for by scrapping non-dom tax status for wealthy individuals. Speaking to the Sunday Mirror, he said: “We will use the money from abolishing the non-dom status. That’s where the super-rich don’t pay their tax in this country. I think they should.”

Labour claims scrapping non-dom tax status would save just under £2bn. It would also spend £171m on doubling the number of CT scanners in NHS hospitals and in £111m on improving dentistry out of the planned savings. The party also plans to use part of the cash to fund breakfast clubs that are run by primary schools, providing £365m so the service will be provided to pupils for free.

Under Labour’s NHS waiting list plan – which the party claims would add 40,000 extra appointments a week – staff would be offered overtime to work evening and weekend shifts, so procedures could be carried out. Neighbouring hospitals would also be encouraged to pool staff and use shared waiting lists. Patients would be given the option of travelling to a nearby hospital for treatment on an evening or weekend, rather than wait longer.

In June, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak announced plans to recruit and train thousands more doctors, nurses and support staff in a major NHS England workforce plan.

Rayner vows ‘biggest’ affordable housing boost

Labour will create the biggest increase in affordable housing “in a generation” if it wins power, deputy leader Angela Rayner has promised. Rayner vowed to “get tough” with developers who tried to “wriggle out” of their social obligations.

The party would also free up funds for councils and housing associations to build more homes for rent, she said. Rayner was speaking as Labour gather for what could be their final conference before a general election.

The party arrives in Liverpool in high spirits after winning Rutherglen and Hamilton West back from the SNP by a huge margin in a by-election on Thursday. The result has raised hopes in the party of a Labour comeback in Scotland, potentially paving the way to victory at the general election, expected next year.

The Labour leadership will be hoping to use their week in Liverpool to draw dividing lines with the Conservatives on issues such as housing, net zero and climate. But it is under pressure from some in their own ranks to be bolder in spelling out what the party stands for, after being cautious in recent months about announcing big spending commitments.

Sharon Graham, general secretary of the Unite union, which has been the party’s biggest funder at recent elections, told BBC News that Labour needed policies “people can go out and vote for”. If the leadership was too cautious – on issues such as nationalisation and economic reform – it could pay the price at the ballot box, she warned.

Angela Rayner, who is shadow housing secretary as well as Labour’s deputy leader, will set out the party’s housing policies in a speech to conference on Sunday.

She says Labour is focused on exceeding the unmet Tory pledge of 300,000 new homes a year, although she will not be putting a figure on that. “If I get into government, if we’re fortunate enough that the British people give us that opportunity, then my number one focus is to deliver on making sure we’ve got those houses for the future,” she told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.

Labour has pledged give local authorities greater powers to negotiate with property firms and build in the areas they need.

The party says it would prevent developers “wriggling out” of their affordable housing obligations, known as section 106 rules, by introducing an expert unit to give councils and housing associations advice on negotiating with property firms.

It would publish guidance that would, in effect, limit companies to challenging these requirements only if there were genuine barriers to building homes. Labour says it would also make it easier for councils to use cash from right-to-buy to build new homes.

ALSO READ-Labour will re-write Brexit deal, says Starmer 

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Labour will re-write Brexit deal, says Starmer  

Labour leader says he would seek closer trading ties with Brussels when the pact negotiated by Boris Johnson comes up for review in 2025…reports Asian Lite News

Keir Starmer has committed to pursuing a major rewrite of the Brexit deal with the EU if Labour is elected, citing his responsibility to his children and future generations.

As the Labour leader begins to unveil his blueprint for power if the party wins the next general election, he told the Financial Times he would seek a closer trading relationship with Brussels when the agreement negotiated by then-prime minister Boris Johnson comes up for review in 2025.

“Almost everyone recognises the deal Johnson struck is not a good deal – it’s far too thin,” Starmer said. “As we go into 2025 we will attempt to get a much better deal for the UK.”

Starmer made the comments in Canada at a conference of centre-left leaders, the Global Progress Action Summit, in Montreal, where he had a bilateral meeting with the country’s prime minister, Justin Trudeau. The trip is part of a wider tour of the international stage: Starmer visited The Hague last week and will arrive in Paris to see the French president, Emmanuel Macron, on Tuesday.

The Labour leader said there is “more that can be achieved across the board” between the UK and EU in a revised deal – on business, veterinary compliance, professional services, security, innovation, research and other areas. He ruled out rejoining the EU, the customs union and the single market.

Johnson’s deal is up for review in 2025 but the process is seen more by Brussels as an ironing-out procedure. European appetite for renegotiating a deal that commenced in 2021 is uncertain.

“We have to make it work,” Starmer told the paper. “That’s not a question of going back in. But I refuse to accept that we can’t make it work. I think about those future generations when I say that.

“I say that as a dad. I’ve got a 15-year-old boy and a 12-year-old girl. I’m not going to let them grow up in a world where all I’ve got to say to them about their future is, it’s going to be worse than it might otherwise have been. I’ve got an utter determination to make this work.”

His comments join other recent interventions in which the leader – who has frustrated some for being tight-lipped – has started to outline what Starmer’s Britain might look like, as Labour begins to plan for power.

The party is consistently polling above the Conservatives. Last week Starmer sat down to dinner with union leaders gathered for the Trades Union Congress, with one official present summing up Starmer’s message as “eyes on the prize”.

In Paris on Tuesday, Macron and Starmer are expected to discuss post-Brexit relations, as well as a potential returns agreement with the EU to stop people travelling across the Channel in dangerously small boats.

“We have to make it work. That’s not a question of going back in, but I refuse to accept that we can’t make it work,” he said, adding that he was thinking about “future generations”.

The Labour leader spent the weekend meeting fellow centre-left leaders in Canada, including the country’s prime minister Justin Trudeau.

He is also expected to travel to Paris to meet French President Emmanuel Macron later this week, where post-Brexit relations are expected to feature heavily in talks.

He also travelled to the Hague, the Netherlands, last week to meet with the EU’s law enforcement agency Europol, seeking a deal to try and stop smuggling gangs bringing people across the channel in small boats.

Meanwhile, Starmer is on course to clinch a landslide majority of 140 for Labour at the next UK general election, the first modelling based on a mega poll of new constituency boundaries suggests.

With the Conservatives still suffering from a large polling deficit, Labour’s support was found to be at about 35 per cent to 12 per cent ahead of Rishi Sunak’s party, The Guardian reported.

The results were revealed in an analysis of polling known as multi-level regression and post-stratification (MRP), and will boost Starmer’s hopes of victory as the long campaign in the run-up to the next election progresses.

John Curtice, a political commentator, said that since the sleaze scandals that engulfed Boris Johnson and Liz Truss’s mini-budget, there had been a “very substantial” drop in support for the Tories. Though Sunak had sought to steady the party, Curtice said there had been only “a bit of a narrowing” of Labour’s lead, The Guardian reported.

The general election poses a headache to pollsters and campaign strategists, as constituency boundaries are being redrawn for the first time in several election cycles.

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