Deregulation, streamlining planning decisions, and clamping down on judicial reviews – you might have found much of what Rachel Reeves said on Wednesday a bit dry and abstract.
But keep reading, because it is also a very big deal, and years down the track will probably be looked back on – for good or for ill – as a definitive moment for Sir Keir Starmer‘s Labour government.
That’s because, on Wednesday, the chancellor finally laid out in no uncertain terms the scale of her ambition to deliver economic growth and the scale of the fights this government is prepared to have to achieve it.
The promises were bold. She was going to unlock planning and cut down on judicial reviews in order to build 1.5 million homes across the UK.
Her government was going to crack on with the OxCam Arc to create “Europe’s Silicon Valley” with a new rail line to connect Oxford and Cambridge, better roads, and up to 18 new towns along that corridor.
And she was going to be the first chancellor to get planning approval for a third runway at Heathrow before the end of this parliament.
It’s quite the list: The third runway for Heathrow was first mooted in 2001 before being bogged down in years of political wrangling and legal challenges.
The OxCam Arc – first mooted in 2003 – was a key priority of successive Conservative governments, only to be shelved by Boris Johnson in 2021 as he shifted focus to “levelling up” in the north of England.
As for house building, prices remain well over five times average earnings, with previous governments’ building targets consistently missed.
Courageous or audacious? Take your pick.
What was clear from this speech is that Ms Reeves thinks she can succeed where so many politicians have failed and overcome significant opposition – from environmentalists, NIMBYs, MPs, her own Labour mayors – to do what countless other politicians have failed to do before her.
Many will be betting she and Sir Keir will fail, and even if they succeed in getting these projects off the ground, it will take years, even decades, for the benefits to be felt – which isn’t much use for Sir Keir at the ballot box in four years.
The political calculation is that there will always be challenges and facing those down with a huge parliament majority is easier than without. The government also hopes the battles and the beginnings of development will be enough of a proof point to win over voters.
“[The long length of delivery] was always going to be the challenge, there’s no alternative,” said one Treasury figure. “But if people see change – cranes in the sky, new buildings – that will give them faith.”
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2:24
‘Low growth is not our destiny’
Without those cranes in the sky, Labour has no hope at all in turning around bad polling because the entire Starmer project rests on growth. Without it, Labour won’t be able to invest in public services and improve people’s living standards. That’s why this is a definitive moment – the government have no option but to pull this off.
Critics will argue that if recent months are anything to go by, this Labour government doesn’t look like a bunch of politicians that can succeed in delivering growth where others have not.
The budget, which Ms Reeves again on Wednesday defended as being a necessary part of delivering economic stability, dented confidence and hit employers with a £25bn tax bill they were not expecting. Last week Sainsbury cut 3,000 jobs in the face of a “challenging cost environment”, while today Tesco announced 400 job cuts shortly after the chancellor wrapped up her speech.
Meanwhile, there are contradictions. On the one hand, the government says it wants to remove barriers to growth and the chancellor announced on Wednesday she will publish an action plan in March to rip up anti-growth regulations.
Image: Sir Keir and Ms Reeves need the growth to stay in power. Pic: PA
But on the other, the government is facing criticism from businesses that growth will be hampered and jobs hit by the new workers’ rights package Labour is pushing through – something the Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch took aim at on Wednesday during Prime Minister’s Questions.
The government’s own analysis says it could cost businesses up to £5bn a year. As Ms Reeves talks about growth, the Conservatives hit back with cries of indignation over taxes and regulation.
Ask businesses, and they will concur on this – saying the Conservatives have a point.
But what Ms Reeves wanted to do today was show that she wants to move past the gloom of last autumn and give businesses something to think about beyond the consequences of tax rises, in the hope that it might change the perception that this Labour government is all about tax and spend.
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This was a chancellor openly borrowing from the Conservative playbook of supply-side reform in order to find economic growth, while Sir Keir wrote an article in The Times in which he compared his endeavour on deregulation with the Thatcherite financial reforms that precipitated the 1980s big bang.
Of course, the big unknown is whether Ms Reeves and Sir Keir will really follow through. Many past Conservative governments folded in the face of fierce resistance. They say they are up for the fight – and it is one they can ill afford to lose.
Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren has called on government officials to address questions related to US President Donald Trump’s memecoin and his media company.
In an April 25 letter to Jamieson Greer, acting director of the US Office of Government Ethics (OGE), Warren, a Democrat from Massachusetts and California Democratic Senator Adam Schiff requested that officials address concerns about Trump’s memecoin after the president announced a dinner and White House tour for some of the individuals who held the most TRUMP tokens. The two senators requested that Greer provide information on safeguards and guidelines related to whether foreign actors and others could buy political influence with the president, potentially impacting his policy positions and federal pardons.
“President Trump’s announcement promises exclusive access to the presidency in exchange for significant investment in one of the President’s business ventures,” wrote the two senators.
“In promising such access, this proposition may implicate several federal ethics laws and constitutional prohibitions, including the federal bribery statute and emoluments clauses of the US Constitution. It also raises the troubling prospect that foreign actors are using the memecoin as a vector to buy influence with President Trump and his associates without needing to disclose their identities publicly.”
April 25 letter from Sens. Warren and Schiff to OGE. Source: Sen. Schiff
The letter was sent the same day Warren reportedly expressed similar concerns about Trump’s potential conflicts of interest with the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). According to an April 25 Reuters report, the Massachusetts senator urged SEC Chair Paul Atkins to ensure that oversight of Trump’s media company was “free from undue political interference and influence from the President and his administration.”
Though ranking member of the Senate Banking Committee, Warren does not have the authority to direct Congress’s agenda with Democrats in the minority. Two Democrats in the Senate and House of Representatives have already called for Trump’s impeachment over his memecoin dinner.
Warren added:
“The American people deserve the unwavering assurance that access to the presidency is not being offered for sale to the highest bidder in exchange for the President’s own financial gain.”
At the time of publication, it was unclear who among the top TRUMP memecoin holders would attend the dinner, scheduled to be held on May 22 at Trump’s golf club in Washington, DC. Speculation and analysis of users suggested that Trump supporters, including Tron founder Justin Sun, Tesla CEO Elon Musk, and others, could attend, though none had been confirmed as of April 28.
Crypto users betting on the outcome of the snap election to determine the next Prime Minister of Canada appear to be favoring a Liberal Party victory as residents head to cast their votes.
As of April 28, cryptocurrency betting platform Polymarket gave current Canadian Prime Minister and Liberal Party candidate Mark Carney a 79% chance of defeating Conservative Party candidate Pierre Poilievre in the race for the country’s next PM. Data from the platform showed users had poured more than $75 million into bets surrounding the race, predicting a Poilievre or Carney victory.
Polymarket chances favor the Liberal Party’s Mark Carney over the Conservative Party’s Pierre Poilievre to be the next Canadian Prime Minister. Source: Polymarket
The odds suggested by the platform, as well as those from many polls, show a nearly complete reversal of fortunes between the two candidates after former Prime Minister Justin Trudeau resigned in January. Trudeau and, by association, many in the Liberal Party, faced criticism over the handling of Canada’s housing crisis and questions about how he would face US President Donald Trump’s then-proposed tariffs.
Following Trudeau’s resignation, Trump stepped up rhetoric disparaging Canada, repeatedly referring to the country as the US’s “51st state” and Trudeau as its “governor.” The US President also imposed a 25% tariff on goods imported from Canada in March. The policies seem to have led to increasing anti-Trump sentiment in Canada, with many residents booing the US national anthem at hockey games and making comparisons between the president and Poilievre.
This is a developing story, and further information will be added as it becomes available.
Sir Keir Starmer promised to clear the backlog of asylum applications and “Smash The Gangs” of people smugglers upstream, but critics say he has failed to do this almost a year into his stint in Number Ten.
Reform’s Nigel Farage has made the issue key to his party’s pitch to voters.
The 10,000 figure is understood to have been passed on 28 April. Official figures only go until 27 April at the time of writing, with 9,885 people detected crossing the Channel by the UK government at this point
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This compares to 7,167 by the same date in 2024, 5,745 in 2023, 5,352 in 2022, and 1,796 in 2021. Data only started to get collected in 2018, and for the first three years fewer than 1,000 people were observed crossing the Channel before 28 April.
Fine weather conditions are known to lead to an increase in people crossing the Channel, with some efforts earlier this year stymied by heavy winds.
Sir Keir scrapped the Conservative’s Rwanda deportation plan when entering office. In March, the prime minister said his government had “returned” 24,000 people who had no right to be in the UK.
Chris Philp, the shadow home secretary, said: “Britain’s borders are being torn apart under Labour. This year is already the worst on record for small boat crossings after over 10,000 illegal immigrants arrived in Britain, but Labour just sit on their hands.
“Labour scrapped our deterrent before it even started, flung open the door to extremists and criminals, and handed the bill to hardworking taxpayers.
“Under new Conservative leadership, we are serious about tackling this crisis with deliverable reforms, but Labour continue to block these at every turn. Labour’s open-door chaos is a betrayal of the British people, and we will not let them get away with it.”
Mr Philp was part of previous Conservative governments, which also failed to reduce crossings.
Speaking to broadcasters, Mr Farage said: “If this carries on at this rate, by the end of this Labour government another quarter of a million people will have come into this country, many of whom frankly don’t fit our culture or cost us a fortune.”
He claimed that Reform is “the only party” saying that “unless you deport those that come illegally, they will just continue to come”.
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A Home Office spokesperson said: “We all want to end dangerous small boat crossings, which threaten lives and undermine our border security.
“The people-smuggling gangs do not care if the vulnerable people they exploit live or die, as long as they pay and we will stop at nothing to dismantle their business models and bring them to justice.
“That is why this government has put together a serious plan to take down these networks at every stage.
“Through international intelligence sharing under our Border Security Command, enhanced enforcement operations in Northern France and tougher legislation in the Border Security and Asylum Bill, we are strengthening international partnerships and boosting our ability to identify, disrupt, and dismantle criminal gangs whilst strengthening the security of our borders.”