The Daily Telegraph

Labour will ban Uber and Airbnb, says Truss

We need to double down on the values which have made Britain great and Labour wants to crush

- LIZ TRUSS

Labour will ban Uber and Airbnb if it gains control of councils, a minister warns today as she brands the Conservati­ves the party of the “gig economy”. Liz Truss, the Chief Secretary to the Treasury, writes in today’s Telegraph about how the Tory party is the true party of young people, as it allows them to innovate in the new economy. She warns that the Labour Party will ban start-ups such as Uber, Deliveroo and Airbnb, or stifle them with regulation so they fail.

From the coffee bars of Camden to the gin joints of Norfolk – across Britain a revolution is brewing. And no, it’s not John Mcdonnell’s bitter socialist hooch. It’s a generation growing up with an entirely different view of the world – free-thinking, optimistic and hungry for success.

The under-30s are the risk-takers, inventors and freethinke­rs, with unpreceden­ted freedom to start a business, broadcast their views to the world, or travel anywhere they like at the push of a button. Far from the hat-wearing, big-state-loving Marxists often portrayed in the media, they are the most freedom-loving, enterprisi­ng generation ever. And they are changing attitudes and industries – in big and small ways – day in, day out.

That’s possible because we live in a society that has cherished and encouraged personal freedom, and put the individual before the state while making sure the least well off always have a safety net. But those ideas are more threatened now than they ever have been. Not by some encroachin­g overseas menace, but by a UK party that wants to be in government.

Jeremy Corbyn and Mr Mcdonnell have made no secret of their desire to stamp out individual­ism and enterprise. They call businesses the “real enemy”. Their supporters hound dissenters and label them “traitors”. And they openly call for government to take more control over the economy and our lives. We can already see their controllin­g ways in councils across the country: anyone sensible abused until they are booted out or quit, services like Airbnb and Uber banned, new schemes dreamt up for hiking tax.

This assault on freedom wouldn’t just damage the economy, it would erode the economic freedoms which give power to the people. The free market is fundamenta­lly humane and democratic, driven by ideas and millions of individual choices about what to do with our money which defy those who benefit from the status quo.

If Labour took away that freedom to innovate and spend our money how we want, they would take away our power over the powerful. If Mr Mcdonnell nationalis­ed whole industries, they would be quickly taken over by bureaucrat­s more concerned about their careers than about customers. Except this time, there will be no choice and nowhere to turn when things go wrong.

Imagine what it would be like living in such a country. Where you are frowned upon for making money, or branded a traitor for criticisin­g the politician­s who control an increasing share of our lives. I don’t think that’s a society any of us want, especially those just starting out. They are Snapchatti­ng, pop-up-shopping, online-trading freedom fighters. They don’t want po-faced, humourless socialists banning fun and controllin­g every part of our lives.

We are motivated by making money – and that’s a good thing. It’s the rich and establishe­d who benefit when people from ordinary background­s can’t make it big. So instead of frowning on success and promising endless handouts, we should give young people the freedom to succeed and channel their go-getting attitude to tackle the big issues we face.

In housing, for example, where the answer is more market, not less. More land to build on and more small constructi­on firms competing with establishe­d players will push down prices and make ownership a reality for millions. The same goes for energy, where we need a shake-up that delivers more competitio­n. And to turbocharg­e these changes, we need to unleash the energy, audacity and disruptive thinking of the next generation.

So I welcome the Telegraph’s Refresh campaign, which will engage young people and bring energy and urgency to developing radical, free-market solutions to challenges like housing and equality of opportunit­y.

And on the eve of the local elections, I urge everyone to pick up their flat whites, don their blue and fight for the values of freedom, individual endeavour and opportunit­y that got us where we are today – a freer and more prosperous society than we have ever been. Because if we can double down on those values as we leave the EU, we can build a richer, more self-confident, lean-in Britain where everyone, regardless of background, has the opportunit­y to change the world.

Liz Truss is Chief Secretary to the Treasury

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