Starmer to deliver ‘reset’ speech
There were the five missions, and then the six first steps. And now we are poised for Keir Starmerâs next set of targets which his government hope to achieve by spring 2029.
Expected to be a critical moment we are set to hear a âplan for changeâ designed to persuade disillusioned voters that he can turn things around.
Will it be a set of achievable targets or a set of millstones hanging around the PMâs neck for the next four years?
Key events
Starmer says there is record dissatisfaction with the NHS. The public insititutions but that they are not beyond repair.
Says this is great nation and we are rediscovering that we can do new things and we can deliver the change that they voted.
The purpose of this government is to make our public services work. Itâs cause that demands the full power of government.
Starmer is up. Opening gambit is a swipe at Kemi Badenoch: the leader of the opposition thinks if you do a couple of shifts in McDonaldâs you can become working-class.
Rayner says change has already begun.
She says they have done more for working people in a few months than the Tory government in years. Labour is not afraid to be bold and Labour will deliver the most ambitious plan for the country, with working people at its heart, she says.
âWe will deliver the most ambitious but achievable programme for a government in a generation to create a fairer Britain, where families have more money in their pockets.
âFair pay for a fair dayâs work, good jobs and opportunity to thrive.â
Rayner continues we are already re-building Britain and fixing the failures will be a challenge. âWe will get Britain back on itâs feet!â.
Angele Rayner takes to the podium saying Labour will have an unrelenting focus on change and says cleaning up the mess Labour has inherited seems like a job for superheroes.
The attempted reboot â labelled Starmerâs âplan for changeâ â follows a rocky first five months in power for the government.
A major tax and spend budget was welcomed by campaigners for greater spending on public services but sapped business confidence and led to protests by farmers. Starmer has also faced a row over ministers enjoying freebies, and the resignations of both his chief of staff, Sue Gray and his transport secretary, Louise Haigh, who quit after it emerged she had been convicted of fraud over a missing work phone.
The Conservative party leader, Kemi Badenoch, has branded Thursdayâs speech an âemergency resetâ.
But Starmer will say claim that the new âmilestonesâ are the next phase of the âmissionsâ he said would shape a Labour government. But it is also a tacit admission that those missions are being dumped as they were either too woolly or not achievable.
And here are the six milestone pledges we can expect to hear about from the PM:
Starmer is delivering his speech at the seemingly unlikely venue of Pinewood film studios:
Weâve been briefed that Starmer will seek to relaunch his premiership with a promise to crack down on crime.
In a speech Labour hopes will set out the ânext phaseâ of government, the prime minister will detail half a dozen âmilestoneâ targets covering living standards, NHS backlogs, secure energy, housebuilding and childrenâs readiness for school.
Starmer will also commit to 13,000 extra neighbourhood police and a named âbobby on every beatâ.
As part of a promise to crack down on crime and antisocial behaviour, he will say that every neighbourhood in England and Wales will have a named, contactable police officer.
Each police force will also have an antisocial behaviour lead tasked with coming up with ways to tackle concerns raised by local residents and businesses.
Read our preview here.
Starmer to deliver ‘reset’ speech
There were the five missions, and then the six first steps. And now we are poised for Keir Starmerâs next set of targets which his government hope to achieve by spring 2029.
Expected to be a critical moment we are set to hear a âplan for changeâ designed to persuade disillusioned voters that he can turn things around.
Will it be a set of achievable targets or a set of millstones hanging around the PMâs neck for the next four years?