WORLD / EUROPE
Labour fit to govern: party chief
UK PM Truss has ‘lost control of the British economy’
Published: Sep 28, 2022 09:07 PM
Labour leader Keir Starmer on Tuesday accused the ruling Conservatives of presiding over "endless" crises as he vowed to steer Britain back to long-term prosperity after recent tumult on financial markets.

Noting soaring inflation, imminent recession and a weakening currency, he told the main opposition party's annual conference that the Tories under new Prime Minister Liz Truss had "lost control of the British economy."

A Labour government would instead create a publicly owned company to propel a revolution in renewable power - "Great British Energy" - and invest long term in healthcare, education and policing, Starmer said. 

The speech, a rare moment for an opposition leader to dominate Britain's airwaves, was met with standing ovations and fervent applause from the upbeat Labour rank and file.

They can scent power after 12 years in the political ­wilderness and bouts of ideological ­infighting - especially now, ­after Truss and her finance minister Kwasi Kwarteng unnerved markets with a new budget plan.

The pound slumped against the dollar after the plan was unveiled on Friday to slash taxes - including for the highest earners - and raise government borrowing, in a bid to kick-start anaemic economic growth.

"Higher interest rates. Higher inflation. Higher borrowing. And for what?" Starmer queried. "For tax cuts for the richest one percent.

"Don't forget, don't forgive," he said. "The only way to stop this is with a Labour government."

Starmer promised that if elected, his party would "get us out of this endless cycle of crisis" with a "fresh start, a new set of priorities and a new way of governing."

"I think that was the future prime minister talking to us there," said Mo Malik, 44, a ­Labour activist attending the conference in Liverpool, northwest England.

"I think we're ready [for power]," he told AFP.

Starmer's speech came as a new poll gave Labour its biggest lead in two decades over Truss' Conservatives.

The YouGov survey showed the party 17 points ahead of the Tories, its biggest lead since 2001 and the electorally successful Tony Blair era.

Another YouGov poll found 57 percent of Britons think the budget measures collectively were unfair - the worst score for any financial statement since the Conservatives took power from Labour in 2010.

But the confident mood in Liverpool was punctured somewhat after it emerged MP Rupa Huq had been suspended after describing Kwarteng as "superficially" black at a fringe conference event.

After senior Labour figures condemned the remark, Huq tweeted that she had contacted Kwarteng "to offer my sincere and heartfelt apologies."

Starmer, 60, took over the leadership in April 2020 from the left-wing Jeremy Corbyn and has gradually revived Labour's fortunes following his predecessor's divisive 5-year tenure. 

In his speech, Starmer said it was now "the party of the center ground" and of "sound money" as he took the attack to Truss, who only succeeded the scandal-plagued Boris Johnson in September.

Starmer has vowed not to reverse the Conservatives' "hard Brexit" deal, which took Britain out of the European Union's single market and customs union.