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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Politics
Peter Walker Political correspondent

Labour focuses on spelling out alternative vision for the economy

The shadow chancellor, Rachel Reeves, and the Labour leader, Keir Starmer, in Bootle, Merseyside, on Sunday
The shadow chancellor, Rachel Reeves, and the Labour leader, Keir Starmer, in Bootle, Merseyside, on Sunday. Photograph: Colin Mcpherson/The Guardian

One of the curiosities of the sudden re-emergence of stark ideological dividing lines in the Liz Truss era has been the fact that her central policy aim – trying to grow the economy – is not something that Labour would disagree with.

Similarly, for all the reactions of outrage and, at times, genuine surprise at Kwasi Kwarteng’s unofficial budget on Friday, the government’s focus on cutting taxes does not, in the most basic terms, differ that much from Labour’s previous criticism of tax increases under Boris Johnson and Rishi Sunak.

The political dividing lines are shifting at speed, and for all Labour’s largely unspoken delight at facing a government seemingly intent on channelling fiscal giveaways towards the better-off, the party is also wary lest it digs itself into the wrong trench.

Hence the focus on the economy at this week’s Labour conference in Liverpool, and the ways in which Keir Starmer and his shadow chancellor, Rachel Reeves, can present an alternative vision to voters.

An early sign came in Starmer’s interview with the BBC on Sunday morning, in which he committed to reversing the abolition of the top 45p rate of income tax but not the 1p cut to the basic rate.

Half an hour earlier, Andy Burnham, the Labour mayor of Greater Manchester, had argued that both should go, saying there were better ways of targeting help to poorer people than a basic-rate tax cut benefiting everyone.

Economically, Burnham is most probably correct, but politically, Starmer’s position has some logic. Going into an election, a Conservative attack of “you want to increase taxes on the rich” is hardly as resonant as one saying “you want to increase taxes on everyone”.

The second half of this equation, to be spelled out by Reeves on Monday in perhaps the most important speech of the conference, is to set out an alternative vision for growing the economy. And this is where the dividing lines perhaps become more simple.

Reeves is to stress the importance of strong public services, not least the NHS and education. Echoing Truss’s repeated leadership campaign claims about her supposedly failing comprehensive school, Reeves told the Guardian in an interview before her speech that her school used prefab huts for sixth-form buildings.

Most voters would probably agree that public services have deteriorated since 2010, when David Cameron’s coalition government set out on its course of brutal austerity spending cuts, which were mainly outsourced to local authorities.

Johnson declared the era of austerity over, promising a new era of levelling up, however modestly this was funded. Truss and her chancellor have just delivered £45bn of tax cuts, which are intended to be permanent.

Despite Downing Street’s stated insouciance over soaring public debt, Kwarteng has committed to cutting it as a share of GDP before too long, and something has to give. It is thus not a surprise that some are predicting a new round of spending cuts.

Labour believe that most voters would happily pay more in taxes, especially if largely confined to corporations and richer individuals, in return for better public services. Most polling seems to support this idea, so as a winter looms in which the NHS could face its worst crisis for years, and with train services crumbling and the country in the grip of an energy crisis, raising the spectre of renewed austerity could be even more effective.

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