Manchester Evening News

Labour ‘will cause economic crisis’

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LABOUR would plunge Britain into an economic crisis “within months”, Sajid Javid has warned, as he defended the Conservati­ves’ claim that Jeremy Corbyn’s policies would cost £1.2 trillion.

The Chancellor said the opposition would spend an extra £650 million a day if they win the General Election – labelling the levels of spending “eye-watering”.

But Labour has condemned the analysis as a “ludicrous piece of Tory fake news” and an “incompeten­t mish-mash of debunked estimates and bad maths”.

Mr Javid said the proposals – which include plans to renational­ise rail, mail, water and energy – were “absolutely reckless” and equivalent to funding the entire NHS budget for nine years.

He told BBC One’s The Andrew Marr Show: “This is the true cost of Corbyn’s Labour: these are the numbers that John McDonnell did not want you to see, and they’re out there today...

“These are eye-watering levels of spending – £1.2 trillion.

“It will be absolutely reckless and will leave this country with an economic crisis within months, not years.”

But shadow chancellor John McDonnell said: “Labour will tax the rich to pay for things everyone needs and deserves, like decent housing, healthcare and support for our children.

“We will also use the power of the state to invest to grow our economy, create good jobs in every region and nation and tackle the climate emergency.

“The Conservati­ves will be able to read all about these plans – and how much they actually cost – when we publish our fully costed manifesto.”

The analysis, overseen by Mr Javid, and published in a 35-page dossier, is based on costings for Labour’s last manifesto and its most recent pledges, spread across a fiveyear period. It assumes the Opposition would immediatel­y sign up to the 32-hour week, abolish private schools, and pilot a universal basic income.

However, shadow defence secretary Nia Griffith said Labour would not implement every policy from its annual conference – as the party could “only do a certain amount at once”.

Meanwhile, business minister Kwasi Kwarteng was unable to put a price on his own party’s pledges.

Labour’s shadow communitie­s secretary Andrew Gwynne refused to say whether a Labour government’s Brexit deal would end freedom of movement.

He told the BBC that the £1.2 trillion claim was an “absolute work of fiction” by Tories. “We will have a fully costed manifesto in due course when we launch that, and the challenge actually is for the Conservati­ves to fully cost their own manifesto, something they didn’t do in 2017,” he said.

Meanwhile, the Conservati­ve candidate for the Labour-held seat of Wakefield, Antony Calvert, quit the race amid a storm over comments he made on food banks and feminism.

 ??  ?? Chancellor Sajid Javid
Chancellor Sajid Javid

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