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Sir Keir Starmer has promised to change the country “for the better” if Labour wins the next election – but warned his plan for “national renewal” may take a decade to see through.

The leader was speaking at a major pre-election party event in Essex, setting out the “first steps” of a Labour government before the public heads to the polls later this year.

The pledges are to:

– Deliver economic stability
– Cut NHS waiting lists
– Crack down on anti-social behaviour
– Recruit 6,500 new teachers
– Launch a new border security command
– Set up publicly-owned Great British Energy

Sir Keir said the programme “is going to be hard” to achieve, adding that the public could expect to see the promises materialise within two terms of a Labour government

What are Labour’s pledges for government?

He said: “We can deliver this over five or 10 years, a decade of national renewal”.

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Sky News gets a sneak peak at the new advertising campaign being launched by Labour alongside Sir Keir's speech today.

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The headline speech came as Labour continues to dominate the polls over the Conservatives, and after a set of local elections that saw them win key battleground seats – including taking the West Midlands mayoralty from their rivals.

But there are still questions over whether Sir Keir himself or his party’s policies will be popular enough with the public to secure victory when the general election is called – making today’s speech, and the “evolution of its traditional pledge card” made famous during Tony Blair’s 1997 landslide win, an important moment in the campaign.

Along with the NHS, crime and education pledges, the leader reiterated his promises to deliver “economic stability” – including a pledge to keep taxes “as low as possible” – and to set up a publicly-owned power company, Great British Energy.

Sir Keir also highlighted his sixth priority for government, which he launched last week – setting up a new Border Security Command with hundreds of new specialist investigators, using counter-terror powers “to smash the criminal boat gangs” behind Channel crossings.

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Starmer unveils Labour ‘missions’

In what is being dubbed “Labour’s doorstep offer to the British people”, a fresh advertising campaign is now being launched as the party ramps up its election offering.

A party spokesman described it as the largest spend since the previous general election that will see the Labour leader appear on ad vans and billboards, alongside his six priorities – though they stressed those pledges would not be the “sum total” of the party’s election offer.

Presenting the “first steps” pledges on a card to the room, Sir Keir said: “So here we are. One card, six steps, in your hand, a plan to change the country.

“This is a message that we can take to every doorstep across the country and make the argument that decline is not inevitable, politics can make a difference.

“Britain will have a better future and you can choose it with Labour. Stop the chaos with Labour. Turn the page with Labour. Return politics to service with Labour.

“And with patience, with determination, with these first steps, we can rebuild our country with Labour.”

Delivery will matter on Starmer’s key pledges


Nick Martin - News correspondent

Nick Martin

People and politics correspondent

@NickMartinSKY

The six individual pledges announced today set out Labour’s priorities.

But delivering on them will be key to building trust in politics, which a recent Sky News poll revealed was miserably low.

Sir Keir Starmer described this as the first steps in a “mission”. Big, bold change, he said.

But Labour seem to be making bold promises, while trying not to promise too much.

Sir Keir’s refusal in the Q&A after his speech to put a number on how many extra NHS appointments they could deliver in the first few weeks of a Labour government, for example, goes to the heart of their fear.

The potential problem is that Labour’s pledges are broadly similar to the Conservative ones; migration, economy, health – the usual big election issues.

But voters will want to see clearly how the parties differ.

But the Tories hit out at what they said was Labour’s “16th relaunch”, adding it “won’t amount to a hill of beans”.

Chair of the party Richard Holden said: “Today’s speech was devoid of any plan for Britain.

“Sir Keir Starmer is a serial promise breaker who doesn’t have the courage or conviction to stick to a single a pledge he has ever made.

“His unfunded spending, higher taxes and amnesty for illegal migrants would take Britain back to square one.”

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The SNP’s deputy Westminster leader Mhairi Black also claimed the speech was “was full of broken promises and empty slogans”.

She added: “The problem for Sir Keir is that he has u-turned on nearly every policy he has ever promised – so it’s little wonder the public don’t trust a single promise he now makes.”

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Trump renews push to oust Fed’s Cook ahead of expected rate cut

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Trump renews push to oust Fed’s Cook ahead of expected rate cut

Trump renews push to oust Fed’s Cook ahead of expected rate cut

US President Donald Trump has appealed the district court’s block on Fed Governor Lisa Cook’s removal, but new evidence has emerged.

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Bridget Phillipson calls for party unity as she launches deputy leadership bid

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Bridget Phillipson calls for party unity as she launches deputy leadership bid

And they’re off! Bridget Phillipson was first away in her two-horse race with Lucy Powell in the Labour deputy leadership stakes.

Facing a rival who was sacked from the government nine days earlier, the education secretary said the deputy leader should be a cabinet minister, as Angela Rayner was.

Launching her campaign at The Fire Station, a trendy music and entertainment venue in Sunderland, she also vowed to turn up the heat on Nigel Farage and Reform UK.

She also repeatedly called for party unity, at a time when Labour MPs are growing increasingly mutinous over Sir Keir Starmer’s dealings with sacked Washington ambassador Lord Mandelson.

Despite Ms Phillipson winning 175 nominations from Labour MPs to Ms Powell’s 117, bookmakers StarSports this weekend made Ms Powell 4/6 favourite with Ms Phillipson at 5/4.

But though the new deputy leader will not be deputy prime minister, a title that’s gone to David Lammy, Ms Phillipson praised the way Ms Rayner combined the two roles and rejected suggestions that as a cabinet minister she would be a part-time deputy leader.

Phillipson's deputy leadership rival Lucy Powell. Pic: Reuters
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Phillipson’s deputy leadership rival Lucy Powell. Pic: Reuters

“What can be achieved under a deputy leader with a seat at cabinet, just look at Angela Rayner,” Ms Phillipson told her enthusiastic supporters.

“Angela knew the importance of the role she had. There was nothing part-time about her deputy leadership.

“Last year I campaigned up and down the country to get Labour candidates elected – I’ve not stopped as education secretary – and I won’t stop as deputy leader.

“Because with local elections, and with elections in Wales and Scotland right around the corner, that role is going to be more important than ever.

“So that’s why, today, I pledge to continue Angela Rayner’s campaigning role as deputy leader.

“Continuing her mission to give members a strong voice at the cabinet table.

“Her ruthless focus on getting our candidates elected and re-elected, alongside her total determination to drive change from government. Because what mattered was not just what she believed, but that she could act on it.”

Read more
Analysis: Sacking Powell might haunt Starmer
Explainer: How does the deputy leadership contest work?

Ms Phillipson pledged to run a campaign of “hope, not grievance” and claimed the party descending into division would put the chances of children and families benefiting from Labour policies at risk.

But admitting Sir Keir Starmer’s government had made mistakes, she appealed to party members: “You can use this contest to look backward, to pass judgement on what has happened in the last year, or you can use it to shape positively what happens in the run-up to the next election.

“Back me so I can unite our party, deliver the change we want to see and beat Reform. Back me so together, we can deliver that second term of Labour government.”

Phillipson with Labour supporters at her campaign launch on Sunday. Pic: PA
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Phillipson with Labour supporters at her campaign launch on Sunday. Pic: PA

Starmer’s candidate vs Manchester mayor’s

As she did in a speech at the TUC conference last week, Ms Phillipson spoke about her upbringing “from a tough street of council houses in the North East all the way to the cabinet”.

At the TUC, she said she grew up – “just me and my mam” – and told how when she was nine, a man who’d burgled the house turned up at the front door with a baseball bat and threatened her mother.

Ms Powell, who enjoys the powerful backing of Labour’s ‘King of the North’ Andy Burnham, called this weekend for a change in culture in 10 Downing Street, with better decisions and fewer unforced errors.

His backing has led to the deputy contest being seen as a battle between Sir Keir’s candidate, Ms Phillipson, and that of the Greater Manchester mayor, seen increasingly as a leadership rival to the prime minister.

And like all the best horse races, with the betting currently so tight, when the result is declared on 25 October the result could be a photo-finish.

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Mandelson appointment was ‘worth the risk’ despite ‘strong relationship’ with Epstein, says minister

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Mandelson appointment was 'worth the risk' despite 'strong relationship' with Epstein, says minister

Appointing Lord Mandelson as the UK’s ambassador to the US was “worth the risk”, a minister has told Sky News.

Peter Kyle said the government put the Labour peer forward for the Washington role, despite knowing he had a “strong relationship” with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

It is this relationship that led to Peter Mandelson being fired on Thursday by the prime minister.

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Lord Mandelson and Jeffrey Epstein. File pic
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Lord Mandelson and Jeffrey Epstein. File pic

But explaining the decision to appoint Lord Mandelson, Business Secretary Mr Kyle said: “The risk of appointing [him] knowing what was already public was worth the risk.

“Now, of course, we’ve seen the emails which were not published at the time, were not public and not even known about. And that has changed this situation.”

Speaking to Sunday Morning with Trevor Phillips, he rejected the suggestion that Lord Mandelson was appointed to Washington before security checks were completed.

More on Peter Mandelson

He explained there was a two-stage vetting process for Lord Mandelson before he took on the ambassador role.

The first was done by the Cabinet Office, while the second was a “political process where there were political conversations done in Number 10 about all the other aspects of an appointment”, he said.

This is an apparent reference to Sir Keir Starmer asking follow-up questions based on the information provided by the vetting.

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‘We knew it was a strong relationship’

These are believed to have included why Lord Mandelson continued contact with Epstein after he was convicted and why he was reported to have stayed in one of the paedophile financier’s homes while he was in prison.

Mr Kyle said: “Both of these things turned up information that was already public, and a decision was made based on Peter’s singular talents in this area, that the risk of appointing knowing what was already public was worth the risk.”

Mr Kyle also pointed to some of the government’s achievements under Lord Mandelson, such as the UK becoming the first country to sign a trade deal with the US, and President Donald Trump’s state visit next week.

Mr Kyle also admitted that the government knew that Lord Mandelson and Epstein had “a strong relationship”.

“We knew that there were risks involved,” he concluded.

PM had only ‘extracts of emails’ ahead of defence of Mandelson at PMQs – as Tories accuse him of ‘lying’

Speaking to Sky News, Kyle also sought to clarify the timeline of what Sir Keir Starmer knew about Lord Mandelson’s relationship with Epstein, and when he found this out.

It follows Conservative Party leader Kemi Badenoch accusing the prime minister of “lying to the whole country” about his knowledge of the then US ambassador’s relationship with the paedophile.

Allegations about Lord Mandelson began to emerge in the newspapers on Tuesday, while more serious allegations – that the Labour peer had suggested Epstein’s first conviction for sexual offences was wrongful and should be challenged – were sent to the Foreign Office on the same day by Bloomberg, which was seeking a response from the government.

But the following day, Sir Keir went into the House of Commons and publicly backed Britain’s man in Washington, giving him his full confidence. Only the next morning – on Thursday – did the PM then sack Lord Mandelson, a decision Downing Street has insisted was made based on “new information”.

Read more:
Witch-hunt vibe in Labour on who approved appointment
Senior Labour MP demands answers over Mandelson vetting

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Vetting ‘is very thorough’

Speaking to Sunday Morning with Trevor Phillips, Mr Kyle said: “Number 10 had what was publicly available on Tuesday, which was extracts of emails which were not in context, and they weren’t the full email.

“Immediately upon having being alerted to extracts of emails, the Foreign Office contacted Peter Mandelson and asked for his account of the emails and asked for them to be put into context and for his response. That response did not come before PMQs [on Wednesday].

“Then after PMQs, the full emails were released by Bloomberg in the evening.

“By the first thing the next morning when the prime minister had time to read the emails in full, having had them in full and reading them almost immediately of having them – Peter was withdrawn as ambassador.”

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Government deeming Mandelson to be ‘worth the risk’ is unlikely to calm Labour MPs

The Conservatives have claimed Sir Keir is lying about what he knew, with Laura Trott telling Sky News there are “grave questions about the prime minister’s judgement”.

The shadow education secretary called for “transparency”, and told Sunday Morning with Trevor Phillips: “We need to understand what was known and when.”

Laura Trott says there are 'grave questions about the prime minister's judgement'
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Laura Trott says there are ‘grave questions about the prime minister’s judgement’

They believe that Sir Keir was in possession of the full emails on Tuesday, because the Foreign Office passed these to Number 10. This is despite the PM backing Mandelson the following day.

Ms Trott explained: “We are calling for transparency because, if what we have outlined is correct, then the prime minister did lie and that is an extremely, extremely serious thing to have happened.”

She added: “This was a prime minister who stood on the steps of Downing Street and said that he was going to restore political integrity and look where we are now. We’ve had two senior resignations in the space of the number of weeks.

“The prime minister’s authority is completely shot.”

But Ms Trott refused to be drawn on whether she thinks Sir Keir should resign, only stating that he is “a rudderless, a weak prime minister whose authority is shot at a time we can least afford it as a country”.

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