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‘Things will get worse before they get better’, Starmer to warn

25 Aug 2024 4 minute read
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer speaks during a press conference after his first Cabinet meeting at 10 Downing Street. Photo Claudia Greco/PA Wire

Britain will get worse before it gets better, the Prime Minister is set to warn in his first major speech since taking office.

Marking a week before Parliament returns from a shortened summer recess, Sir Keir Starmer is expected to use the speech on Tuesday to ramp up attacks on the inheritance left by the Conservatives.

He will say: “We have inherited not just an economic black hole but a societal black hole. And that is why we have to take action and do things differently.

“Part of that is being honest with people – about the choices we face. And how tough this will be.

“Frankly – things will get worse before we get better.”

Challenges

Since coming to power in July, Labour has sought to emphasise the challenges it faces in government and pile blame on the Conservatives for failing to address those problems prior to the election.

Rachel Reeves, the Chancellor, began that theme in her statement before the summer recess in a statement accusing the Tories of leaving a £22 billion black hole in this year’s budget.

Sir Keir is expected to develop that line of attack further on Tuesday, saying things are “worse than we ever imagined”.

He will say: “In the first few weeks, we discovered a £22 billion black hole in the public finances. And don’t let anyone say that this is performative, or playing politics.

“The OBR did not know about this. They wrote a letter saying so. They didn’t know – because the last government hid it.”

But he will also address the condition of the wider public sector, saying those taking part in the recent riots had been able to exploit “the cracks in our society after 14 years of populism and failure”, including a lack of prison places.

One of Labour’s first acts in government was to reduce the proportion of their sentences offenders must spend in prison before being released on parole, arguing the previous government had allowed jails to almost completely run out of space.

Prison spaces

He will say: “Not having enough prison spaces is about as fundamental a failure as you can get. And those people throwing rocks, torching cars, making threats – they didn’t just know the system was broken. They were betting on it. They were gaming it.”

Arguing that change will not happen “overnight”, the Prime Minister is also expected to say Labour has achieved “more in seven weeks than the last government did in seven years”, including setting up a National Wealth Fund, changing planning policy to build more homes and ending public sector strikes.

Sir Keir’s speech comes ahead of a potentially tough period for the Government as it prepares its first budget, due on October 30.

Ms Reeves faces the challenge of delivering on Labour’s promises on taxation and spending amid what she has already described as a worse fiscal situation than she was expecting, with some tax rises looking increasingly likely.

The Government also faces the prospect of another rebellion over its plans to restrict the winter fuel payment to only the poorest pensioners, especially in light of Friday’s announcement of an increase in the energy price cap.

The Chancellor has argued this is necessary to help bridge the £22 billion gap in this year’s budget, but opposition parties and some Labour backbenchers have warned about the impact on pensioners with incomes just above the limit for claiming pension credit.

But with its large majority, the Government is unlikely to see a defeat should the policy come to a vote in the Commons.

‘Cronyism’

Conservative Party chairman Richard Fuller said: “Just two months in and Keir Starmer has taken winter fuel payments off 10 million pensioners, showered billions of taxpayers’ money on his union paymasters and is now engulfed in a cronyism scandal after parachuting donors and supporters into top taxpayer-funded jobs.

“The soft touch Labour Chancellor is squandering money whilst fabricating a financial black hole in an attempt to com the public into accepting tax rises, and literally leaving pensioners in the cold.

“The Prime Minister really should tell his Chancellor to reverse course or step in himself to reverse her decision.”


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hdavies15
hdavies15
14 days ago

OBR didn’t know … it’s their job to know. We’re only 7 weeks into a new regime and they are already making it up as they go along. Pet projects will thrive, real needs will be ignored. Red Tories no better than their Blue predecessors.

Mawkernewek
Mawkernewek
14 days ago

The concept of a financial black hole is astrophysically naive. A financial black hole would be more like a massive mountain of money distorting all economic spacetime around it.

Ash P
Ash P
14 days ago

We’ve actually somehow moved backwards into the Tory austerity years. I thought Labour were the ones saying that austerity doesn’t work. It’s a nonsense, both parties are essentially the same now.

Howie
Howie
13 days ago

£11.6bn of the ‘black hole’ is for pay rises given above the 2% that Tories had put in budget which was the inflation target. A decision Labour made to provide rises above what was previously offered by Tories albeit in some cases only 1% above the Tory offer which had productivity and working practice changes attached, ditched by Labour. It may be the right thing to raise real term wages in Public Sector but it could have been done over an agreed longer term of x% over inflation. Labour are well aware it was planning opposition that stopped a lot… Read more »

Mab Meirion
Mab Meirion
13 days ago

Old Clark of Kent could have burst out of his phone box on his first day at work and put the government on notice that they would face real consequences…but no. his plan. let the place fall down then I will walk in. The man has been party to what he claims he will fix over our dead bodies…wake-up and smell the dead from here to eternity…

Lord Custard
Lord Custard
13 days ago

Yes but for whom will it get worse ? The tax dodging monarchy (inheritance tax anyone?),tax credits for multinationals, the super rich, offshore tax havens, MPs, covid loan scammers, dodgy PPE contract holders, war profiteering energy firms, water companies borrowing to fund dividend payments, private banks creating loans out of thin air and charging interest, PFI rip off loans…. or are we going to freeze pensioners to death instead? Are we going to continue with more austerity, given that 14 years of it didn’t work and sent 300,000 to an early grave? Perhaps the English establishment could tell us why… Read more »

hdavies15
hdavies15
13 days ago
Reply to  Lord Custard

Nice summary of what lies ahead. This crowd may yet plumb depths the Tories couldn’t reach. They kid the electorate to expect better and then whack them with repeated shocks. After all, removing winter fuel allowance and consenting to 10% energy price hike within days is almost like Liz Truss is still running the show.

Doctor Trousers
Doctor Trousers
13 days ago

‘Things will get worse before they get better’
D:REAM, your big comeback single is pretty much writing itself here lads, you know what to do.

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