Sir Keir Starmer will make changes in areas such as immigration, energy and private schools. /bc72b371-0215-4d99-b27b-4223678de837.html?direct=true&id=bc72b371-0215-4d99-b27b-4223678de837&template=articleRendererHTML' class='tmg-particle Sticky-nav-bc72b371-0215- 4d99-b27b-4223678de837' title='General Election' data-business-type='editorial' loading='eager' Scrolling='no' Frameborder='0'allow='web-share' style='width: 100%; min-width: 100%; border: none; position: relative; display: block; padding: 0px; margin: 0px;'>
Labour's first 100 days in power will set the tone for what the government under Sir Keir Starmer does.
However, relatively little has been revealed about the party's plans for taking power if he wins the general election on July 4.
Sir Keir has adopted a ming-waza strategy, carefully revealing as little as possible about his political platform to avoid losing his 20-point lead in the polls.< /p>
But hints of a Labor Government will mean blood has begun to drip for Britain now that the election campaign is underway.
Day One
Royal Assent
If his party wins the election, Sir Keir's first stop will be Buckingham Palace, where he will ask the king for permission to form a government.
Immediately afterwards he was taken to Room 10, where he traditionally made a short speech to the public from the podium on Downing Street.
He would then head behind the famous back door to meet and greet the staff. , before inviting inside those Labor MPs who would be appointed to his first cabinet.
Cancel Rwanda
Labour has said it will cancel Rishi Sunak's flagship Rwandan migrant deportation scheme «on day one» if it is elected.< /p>
Jonathan Ashworth, the shadow treasurer general, said on Thursday that Labor would scrap the scheme even if the flights were planned because it was an «expensive gimmick».
Mr Sunak said he had no hope of canceling the flights . ahead of the election, but the Home Office is continuing to work towards the previous target of June 24 for the first deportations.
Instead, Labor said it would create a «border security team», appoint «hundreds» of investigators and empower the Border Force service with anti-terrorism powers to «defeat criminal gangs.»
First week
NATO summit
Just four days after his appointment, Sir Keir will embark on his first overseas trip, attending a NATO summit in Washington alongside US President Joe Biden and other global figures. leaders
Private school tax
Sir Keir promised on Friday morning that Labour's plan to introduce VAT on private school fees would go ahead » immediately». if he had won the election.
The Labor leader said the exact timing would depend on the «parliamentary schedule» but promised to introduce the policy «as soon as possible.»
Labour has previously said the changes would pay off as one of six «first steps to change” – recruitment of 6,500 new teachers. They have not set a date by which they will recruit them.
Rachel Reeves, Labour's shadow chancellor, told last year's party conference she would introduce the policy in her first budget.
Week two
EU Political Community Summit
On 18 July, as Prime Minister, Sir Keir will host leading EU leaders, including Emmanuel Macron and Olaf Scholz, at the European Political Community Summit at Blenheim Palace in Oxfordshire.
The first 100 days
Expand workers' rights
Angela Rayner, deputy leader of the Labor Party, is leading the party's plans to introduce new workers' rights through legislation.
This is likely to be done at the start of the new Parliament, in line with Labor's pledge to deliver a «new deal for working people».
This would include an end to zero-hours contracts, redundancies and rehirings. practices and easing of “restrictions on trade union activities.”
Businesses have criticized the plans, with the Confederation of British Industry warning that the «European model» they envision will make companies reluctant to take on new workers.
p>
The Institute of Directors has warned that «contracts with «zero hours could make a really big difference» which Labor wants to scrap.
Rishi Sunak's smoking ban
Major smoking ban , proposed by Rishi Sunak, was not included in the legislation, which is being rushed through ahead of the dissolution of Parliament on Thursday, May 30.
The Prime Minister had previously described it as an example of «the bold action I am prepared to take».
The policy, which would make the sale of tobacco to people born after 1 January 2009 illegal, was aimed at phasing out smoking, supported by Labor.
Sir Keir said on Friday the party was “committed” to the legislation, indicating his party would reintroduce the law if elected.
It is therefore likely This will be another of the first measures that the Labor Party will introduce in Parliament.
Create Great British Energy
Labour said it wants to “make the UK a clean energy superpower” by creating Great British Energy, the government's own green electricity generator.
In As one of its six «first steps», the party said setting up the company would cost £8.3 billion and would be paid for through a windfall tax on oil and gas companies.
The Trades Union Congress (TUC), however, says it will actually require public investment of between £61 billion and £82 billion over 10 years — almost ten times more than Labor has promised for the project.
Official creation company is likely to be one of Labor's first decisions in government.
Свежие комментарии