Britain's Treasury chief tries to turn on the economic optimism after
months of gloomy talk
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[September 23, 2024] By
JILL LAWLESS
LIVERPOOL, England (AP) — British Treasury chief Rachel Reeves will
pledge Monday not to return to an era of public spending cuts despite
the dire state of the U.K.’s national finances.
Reeves plans to stress optimism in a speech to the Labour Party’s annual
conference, aiming to reassure party members, jittery despite a recent
landslide election victory, that her first budget next month won’t be
all doom and gloom.
The party said Reeves, the U.K.’s first female finance minister, will
stress that “my optimism for Britain burns as bright as it ever has
done.”
The center-left party is gathering in the northwest England port city of
Liverpool three months after winning power in Britain’s July 4 election.
While Labour's return to office after 14 years in opposition has many
delegates buzzing, some are anxious about the government’s faltering
start and downbeat economic messaging.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer won the election on a promise to banish
years of turmoil and scandal under the Conservatives, get Britain’s
sluggish economy growing and restore frayed public services such as the
state-funded National Health Service.
Since then, he has struck a gloomy note, saying there is a 22 billion
pound ($29 billion) “black hole” in the public finances left by the
Conservative government, and warning that “things will get worse” before
they get better. That has many party members worried that tax increases
and spending cuts loom in the Oct. 30 budget.
Reeves plans to say “there will be no return to austerity” and stress
that the government will invest to reverse declines in “growth,
productivity and family incomes,” according to advance extracts released
by the party.
“Conservative austerity was a destructive choice for our public services
-– and for investment and growth too,” Reeves is to say about spending
cuts imposed by previous governments after the 2008 global financial
crisis. “We must deal with the Tory legacy and that means tough
decisions. But we won’t let that dim our ambition for Britain."
Reeves will lay out how the government hopes to fill some of the fiscal
black hole without raising income tax, sales tax or corporation tax, all
of which she has ruled out. Measures include a crackdown on tax avoiders
and a drive to claw back money defrauded from contracts issued during
the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Contentiously, the government has
also announced it will save money by stripping millions of retirees
of a payment intended to help heat their homes in winter.
Trade unions that are among Labour’s funders and allies hope to
secure a vote among conference delegates opposing the decision to
remove the winter fuel allowance, worth between 200 and 300 pounds
($262 and $393), from all but the poorest pensioners. The result
would not be binding but would add to pressure on the government
over the unpopular new policy.
The party’s mood has been further dampened by a tempest over
Starmer’s acceptance of freebies at a time when millions of people
are struggling with the cost of living.
Starmer insists he followed the rules when he took thousands of
pounds (dollars) worth of clothes and designer eyeglasses from
Waheed Alli, a media entrepreneur and Labour donor. But after days
of negative headlines, the party says Starmer won’t accept any more
free outfits. Neither will Reeves or Deputy Prime Minister Angela
Rayner, both of whom also received donations for clothing.
Starmer will try to change the subject and rally the Labour troops
in his speech Tuesday at the autumn conference, a blend of pep
rally, policy forum and boozy bash that plays a key role in
maintaining morale among party activists.
He’ll point to the government’s early actions, including ending a
wave of public-sector strikes, and plans to take public ownership of
the railways, set up a state-owned green energy firm, impose tougher
rules on water companies that dump sewage and strengthen rights for
workers and renters.
Last year’s Labour conference fizzed with optimism, as a party that
had lost four straight elections sensed power was within its grasp.
If the mood this year is more muted, it will likely be more upbeat
than next week’s gathering by the Conservatives, who suffered their
worst-ever election defeat in July.
The Tory convention in the central England city of Birmingham will
be dominated by the contest to replace former Prime Minister Rishi
Sunak as party leader and internal arguments about how to chart a
way back to power.
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