Child poverty will be a test of Labour’s fiscal prudence
Its MPs, members and voters will want rapid action on a totemic issue
For a taste of the pressures that Labour will almost certainly soon be grappling with, watch a recent interview with Sir Keir Starmer on Sky News, a broadcaster. Pushed on how he would help families struggling with rising taxes and high energy bills, the Labour leader asked voters to trust his instincts: “It’s about who do you have in your mind’s eye?” The interviewer moved swiftly onto child poverty: could Sir Keir pledge to remove the two-child limit, which means families on benefits get no extra support beyond their second child? “I’m not going to make promises that I can’t keep,” he said.
Explore more
This article appeared in the Britain section of the print edition under the headline “Expectation management”
Britain June 22nd 2024
- Britain’s Conservatives rule the Thames Estuary. Not for long
- What taxes might Labour raise?
- Child poverty will be a test of Labour’s fiscal prudence
- Climate change casts a shadow over Britain’s biggest food export
- Jeremy Corbyn wants more nice things, fewer nasty ones
- The silence of the bedpans
- Britain’s Conservatives are losing as they governed. Meekly
Discover more
British MPs vote in favour of assisted dying
A monumental social reform is closer to being realised
The slow death of a Labour buzzword
And what that says about Britain’s place in the world
Britain’s Supreme Court considers what a woman is
At last. Britons had been wondering what those 34m people who are not men might be
Can potholes fuel populism?
A new paper looks at one explanation for the rise of Reform UK
Are British voters as clueless as Labour’s intelligentsia thinks?
How the idea of false consciousness conquered the governing party