LONDON, Oct 27 (Reuters) – British Prime Minister Keir Starmer will say on Monday he should be judged on his ability to tackle “unprecedented” economic challenges he inherited ahead of a budget he said would restore crumbling public services and speed up growth.
Starmer, whose Labour Party won a landslide election victory in July, has said generating growth is his number one priority, but he said that the situation was different to previous scenarios faced by incoming governments in 1997 and 2010 because both the economy and public services were in a weak state.
“We have to be realistic about where we are as a country… These are unprecedented circumstances,” Starmer will say in a speech on Monday, according to extracts released by his office.
“But I won’t offer it as an excuse. I expect to be judged on my ability to deal with this.”
She announced the government would scrap winter fuel payments for pensioners, a decision that has hurt Labour’s popularity.
“(Working people have) had enough of slow growth, stagnant living standards and crumbling public services. They know that austerity is no solution,” Starmer will say.
“We choose a different path: honest, responsible, long-term decisions in the interests of working people.”
Reeves has said she will announce a change to the definition of public debt in the government’s fiscal rules in order to allow her to borrow more to invest in the hope of speeding up economic growth.
The Conservatives have challenged the new government’s assessment of the public finances, saying they are a pretext for tax rises that Labour had been planning already.
($1 = 0.7717 pounds)
Sign up here.
Reporting by Alistair Smout, Editing by Angus MacSwan
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles., opens new tab