Key events
Sue Gray cleared to take up Labour job this autumn
The former civil servant Sue Gray has been cleared to take up her new role as Keir Starmer’s chief of staff in the autumn after a vetting board rejected calls for her to have a much longer period of gardening leave, Ben Quinn and Pippa Crerar report.
Keir Starmer to defend Labour’s energy plans in speech saying ‘holding back future’ won’t lead to growth
Good morning. There is some good polling around for Keir Starmer and Labour today – Redfield and Wilton Strategies has Starmer leading Rishi Sunak on every single leadership trait polled, Survation has the Tory lead over Labour in the 100 most rural English seats down from 39 points in 2019 to just five points now – but this morning Starmer has to give a speech to a union whose leader has strongly criticised Labour’s energy policy.
Starmer will respond by telling the GMB that Labour’s plan to transition to clean energy will create jobs for its members. “Jobs – good, union jobs – will be fundamental to cleaner, safer work, new and better infrastructure for Britain,” he will say.
But, according to the extracts from the speech briefed overnight, he will also flesh out Labour’s critique of the Tories.
I’m not even sure [the Conservatives] see the problem. If the City of London races ahead while the rest of Britain stagnates, as long as there was a hint of growth on his spreadsheet, Rishi Sunak would think that’s fine. But it’s not.
If you leave this many people behind, a nation cannot grow fairly. We can’t do it with low wages. We can’t do it with insecure jobs and bad work, with a stand-aside state that doesn’t fight for the future, without a proper industrial strategy.
In this passage Starmer is trying to draw a contrast between his economic mission, which promises “good jobs and productivity growth in every part of the country making everyone, not just a few, better of”, and Sunak’s priorities, which seem to be more focused on just the national, headline rate of growth (although Sunak says growth would lead to “better-paid jobs and opportunity right across the country”).
For too long, Britain has allowed the opportunities of the new energy technologies to pass us by. Without a plan, the energy industries we rely on will wither and decline.
The Tories think it’s the market doing its job when British industry falls behind. It’s not some glitch in their model – it is the model.
There is no way to growth in Britain in holding back the future. But equally, there is no way to growth that doesn’t involve bending and shaping it.
We can create a new business model for Britain, one which creates economic security and grows not just our productivity, but our hope and our optimism.
Although this passage seems to be mostly aimed at the Tories, it is probably also directed at those on the left, such as the GMB leader, Gary Smith, who believe Labour should not be proposing to block all new domestic oil and gas developments. Starmer believes clean energy is the future.
Here is the agenda for the day.
9.30am: Rishi Sunak chairs cabinet.
10.30am: Keir Starmer gives a speech to the GMB conference. He will pledge to put “good, union jobs” at the heart of Labour’s energy policy.
10.30am: Heather Hallett, the chair of the Covid inquiry, is expected to comment on her legal battle with the government over the disclosure of government during a preliminary hearing in public relating to UK decision-making and political governance.
11.15am: Kemi Badenoch, the business and trade secretary, gives evidence to the Commons European scrutiny committee about the retained EU law (revocation and reform) bill.
11.30am: Downing Street holds a lobby briefing.
After 12.30pm: MPs debate all stages of the British nationality (regularisation of past practice) bill.
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