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Friday, March 29, 2024

Keir Starmer embraces Brexit slogan with 'take back control' pledge

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Sir Keir Starmer has promised a new “take back control” bill to transfer powers from Westminster to communities.

In his first speech of 2023, the Labour leader – a former Remain supporter – said he wanted to turn the Brexit campaign slogan “into a solution”.

He pledged to devolve new powers over employment support, transport, energy, housing, culture and childcare.

Sir Keir said the legislation would be “a centrepiece” of Labour’s plans if it wins the next general election.

With the country facing severe pressure on the NHS, a wave of strike action and a cost-of-living crisis, Sir Keir said he was “under no illusions about the scale of the challenges we face”.

In his speech in east London, he promised a “decade of national renewal” under Labour and “hope” for the future.

But the Labour leader warned his party “won’t be able to spend our way” out of the “mess” he said would be left by the Conservatives.

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Setting out his priorities for a future Labour government, Sir Keir said he wanted to give communities “the chance to control their economic destiny”.

“The decisions which create wealth in our communities should be taken by local people with skin in the game, and a huge power shift out of Westminster can transform our economy, our politics and our democracy,” he said.

During the Brexit campaign of 2016, Sir Keir said he “couldn’t disagree with the basic case so many Leave voters made to me”.

“It’s not unreasonable for us to recognise the desire for communities to stand on their own feet. It’s what ‘take back control’ meant,” he said.

“So we will embrace the ‘take back control’ message but we’ll turn it from a slogan to a solution. From a catchphrase into change.”

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Analysis box by Chris Mason, political editor

Keir Starmer – a man who voted Remain and campaigned for a second referendum – is cloaking himself in the language of Brexit.

His promise of what he calls a ‘”take back control bill”, a planned new law pushing powers away from Westminster, is nothing if not unsubtle.

Taking the highly effective slogan of the victorious Brexit campaign and claiming it as his own.

Labour needs to win back dozens and dozens of seats that voted Leave and Sir Keir might as well be screaming “I get it” from every rooftop he can clamber on.

It does mean critics will ask what he really believes: it might be savvy politics to court Brexit voters, but who is the real Keir Starmer?

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Sir Keir was Labour’s shadow Brexit secretary under Jeremy Corbyn between 2016 and 2020, when he unsuccessfully campaigned for a second EU referendum.

Asked by reporters whether he now regretted supporting a fresh vote, Sir Keir said: “Even in those turbulent years, 2016 to 2019, I was always making the argument that there was always something very important sitting behind that leave vote.

“That phrase ‘take back control’ was really powerful, it was like a Heineken phrasing, got into people.

“And the more they ask themselves, do I have enough control, the more they answer that question, no.”

Labour said the bill would give English towns and cities the tools to develop long-term plans for economic growth, creating high-skilled jobs in their areas.

The party said there would be “a presumption towards moving power out of Westminster”, with local leaders able to bid for any powers which had already been devolved elsewhere.

Boris Johnson (right) and Michael Gove address workers during a Vote Leave campaign visit in June 2016

Getty Images

Elsewhere in his speech, Sir Keir accused the Conservatives of “sticking plaster politics”, saying they had failed to address long-term issues.

Although he acknowledged investment was needed after the “damage” done by the Conservatives to public services, he warned Labour would not be “getting its big government chequebook out”.

By suggesting a move away from big increases in public spending, Sir Keir appeared to distance himself from his predecessor as Labour leader, Mr Corbyn.

Sir Keir also said he wanted a Labour government to work with business to deliver its aims.

Asked by reporters whether there was more scope for the private sector involvement in public services, Sir Keir said trying to deliver everything through the state did not work.

Instead, he said he was proposing a “partnership model” with “an agile, active state working in partnership with private business”.

Left-wing Labour campaign group Momentum said Sir Keir’s speech was “totally out of step with the scale of the crisis facing us” and the references to partnership with the private sector “makes people’s hearts sink”.

Momentum committee member Martin Abrams, a Labour councillor in Lambeth, called for redistribution of wealth through taxation and “a new system built on public ownership”.

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