Labour has today [Saturday] launched its battle bus tour with a
pledge to ‘power up every corner of Britain', as new data shows
that five more years of stagnation under the Conservatives is set
to leave people thousands of pounds worse off.
On day one of the battle bus tour, Labour Leader and Shadow Chancellor
will join Labour's Deputy
Leader, as she sets off on a
5,000-mile journey to battleground seats across the country.
Rayner will brandish the Conservatives' ‘levelling-up' pledge as
a “phoney gimmick” as new data released by Labour today exposes
the areas set to be worst hit if the Conservatives are given five
more years to hold our economy back, hoard power, and prevent
towns and cities across the country from realising their economic
potential.
The data shows that in the North East of England people
are to be £5,400 worse off, and in the South West families will
be £4,300 poorer.
Labour's plan to ‘power up' Britain will:
-
Deliver growth in every corner of the country,
harnessing the potential of every town, village and city by
pushing powers out of Westminster, rolling out Local Growth
Plans and delivering a new national industrial strategy and a
Green Prosperity Plan to leverage Britain's full
potential.
-
Put more money in people's pockets, ensuring
people keep more of the wealth they create through a fiscal
lock of economic stability and Labour's plan to make work pay
with the New Deal for Working People.
-
Give people control over what matters to them,
from better access to GP appointments and safer streets, to
more school places and revived high streets. We will crack down
on antisocial behaviour, breathe life back into our high
streets and neighbourhoods including introducing a community
right to buy, and recruiting 6,500 new teachers.
All of this will be underpinned by Labour's Take Back Control
Act, which will help to establish a new, clear framework for
devolution, structures for local and national leaders to work
better in partnership together and with the communities they
represent, and a presumption towards pushing powers outside of
Westminster and into the hands of those who know how to put them
to the best use.
Labour's plan to power up Britain will be delivered in lock step
with Labour's Green Prosperity Plan, which will create 650,000
jobs across the country, revitalising Britain's industrial
heartlands.
, Labour's Deputy
Leader, said:
“For 14 years the Tories have failed to do what they promised and
held back Britain's potential. Levelling up was a phoney gimmick
which has now been abandoned to fund mandatory national
service. It was a scam and a sham, and we should call it what it
is.
“No more desperate gimmicks or promises that can't be met. This
changed Labour Party will do the hard yards to get our economy
growing. We will power up our towns and cities, and release
Britain's untapped strengths.
“This is our plan for change. We will deliver growth wherever
you're from, more money in your pockets, and hand people control
over what matters to them. That's what people tell me they want,
so up and down the country in this campaign that's what we'll be
talking about.”
Ends
Notes
- In January 2024, Centre for Cities analysis found 14 years of
low growth under the Tories made Britons an average of £10,200
worse off in forgone household income.
- At current rates, economic stagnation under the Conservatives
will leave people worse off compared to a return to the growth in
gross household disposable income seen under the last Labour
government.
- Across England's regions, under five more years of the
Conservatives:
- People in the North East are set to
be £5,400 worse off.
- People in the North West are set to
be £5,500 worse off.
- People in Yorkshire and the
Humber are set to be £2,500 worse
off.
- People in the East Midlands are set
to be £3,200 worse off.
- People in the West Midlands are set
to be £1,900 worse off.
- People in the East of England are set
to be £4,700 worse off.
- People in London are set to be
£9,200 worse off.
- People in the South East are set to
be £3,800 worse off.
- People in the South West are set to
be £4,300 worse off.
- Estimates are based on House of Commons Library data analysis
using assumptions made by the Labour Party.
- Figures come from ONS Regional gross disposable household
income: all ITL level regions and are adjusted by CPIH inflation
to get GDHI per head.
- Centre for Cities analysis ends in 2021 in 2022 prices. This
analysis therefore projects forward 2022-2029 in 2022 prices.
Figures are taken from years 2024-2029 only.
- Figures come from ONS Regional gross disposable household
income: all ITL level regions and are adjusted by CPIH inflation
to get GDHI per head in 2022 prices.
- All figures project the cumulative forgone household income
between 2024-2029, per individual, per region, under current
Conservative growth trends.
- The methodology is based on the Centre for Cities: Cities
Outlook 2024 analysis of forgone growth rates between
2010-2024.
- The estimates compare growth rates in each region and nation
between (a) 1998-2010 and (b) 2010-2021, forecasting the widening
gap over the next five years.