The Guardian (USA)

Labour to ditch £28bn annual green investment pledge, party sources say

- Peter Walker, Pippa Crerar, Kiran Stacey and Eleni Courea

Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves are ditching Labour’s flagship policy pledge to spend £28bn a year on green investment, party sources have said.

The sources said the party would keep the core mission of investing in green infrastruc­ture, as well as already announced plans such as the creation of GB Energy, a publicly owned clean energy company, and a mass home insulation programme.

But it will in effect cut its green ambitions by about two-thirds, given that the previously announced schemes are set to cost just under £10bn a year by the end of the parliament.

The change, after a spate of recent government attacks portraying the £28bn figure as a likely tax rise, has been pushed for by key figures around Starmer including Morgan McSweeney, Labour’s director of campaigns, and Pat McFadden, the party’s campaigns coordinato­r.

In a series of media interviews after speeches by Reeves and Starmer to a conference in London attended by hundreds of business executives, the shadow chancellor was repeatedly asked about the £28bn figure and declined each time to back it.

Asked 10 times during an interview with Sky News, Reeves said of the plan: “I think what people need to know is that the fiscal rules are the most important thing for me … I know the importance of economic and fiscal stability and that will always come first.”

One shadow minister said: “The £28bn is definitely going as a figure. It will be changed to specific outcomes linked to specific investment, rather than being a random figure to be allocated at a later date.”

In a sign of how Starmer is likely to frame the decision, the source added: “It was always meant to be formally allocated before the general election, so this isn’t such a major departure really. It’s being firmed up, not dropped.”

While scaling back the green prosperity plan has been under considerat­ion for some weeks, dropping the £28bn annual target, unveiled with great fanfare by Reeves at the Labour conference in 2021, would be politicall­y risky for Starmer and his team.

Ed Miliband, the shadow net zero secretary, and his team still argue strongly for sticking with £28bn for environmen­tal and political reasons.

Senior Labour sources insisted, however, that Miliband had signed up to the idea of dropping the £28bn figure while sticking to the schemes that had already been announced.

Polling released on Thursday by More in Common found that among people planning to vote Labour, the £28bn pledge is the second most popular potential manifesto promise, just behind abolishing tax breaks for private schools.

Of the 3,000-plus panel, 79% said they thought the next government should increase investment in tackling the climate crisis, with two-thirds saying this should be a priority.

Luke Tryl, of More in Common, said: “Labour might think that they are demonstrat­ing fiscal prudence by dropping the £28bn climate investment, but our research shows that the investment remains a high priority for Labour voters and ditching it could well backfire.”

Another source of frustratio­n for many MPs has been the incrementa­l abandonmen­t of the target, with the risk that voters will think Labour has dropped it only because it has become a source of Tory attacks.

One shadow minister said: “Good to drag this out as long as possible – very clever people.”

The move comes after Reeves told the business conference that Labour would not raise corporatio­n tax above its current rate of 25% during the next parliament. A day earlier she said the party would not reinstate a cap on bankers’ bonuses if it wins the next election.

 ?? ?? Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves, during a visit to Tilbury freeport in Essex. Photograph: Stefan Rousseau/PA
Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves, during a visit to Tilbury freeport in Essex. Photograph: Stefan Rousseau/PA

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