É essencial que a mão -de -obra minimize a cobrança de bomba fiscal muito usada dos conservadores. Ele soprou Neil Kinnock em 1992 e tem sido a arma conservadora mais eficaz para manter seus oponentes fora do poder por sessenta e sete dos últimos cem anos. Políticas. Há relatos de enormes tensões entre ela e o secretário de mudança climática das sombras, Ed Miliband. Isso pode explicar parcialmente por que essa mudança não ocorreu muito mais cedo. Recebemos a promessa de 28 bilhões de libras em 2021 desde quando tivemos a Guerra da Ucrânia e Liz Truss. Logo depois disso, Reeves poderia ter dito que a economia foi despertada, não podemos mais colocar uma figura em nosso plano verde, mas ainda estamos comprometidos com seus principais objetivos. Se esses objetivos estiverem presos, tudo pode estar bem porque números enormes como £ 28 bilhões não têm sentido de qualquer maneira. Ela também quer um estado menor. Essa é uma proposta interessante quando as pessoas estão na fila do bloqueio para os dentistas e generais do NHS, alertando que uma guerra contra os russos está nos cartões. A reforma está atraindo e assustando o direito dos conservadores em igual medida. A longo prazo, pode levar a uma fusão das duas partes. Há rumores de que os colegas conservadores Lord Frost foram questionados sobre se a reforma estava envolvida em uma pesquisa mostrando um enorme deslizamento de terra trabalhista. Frost usou para tentar criar uma grande rebelião contra o projeto de lei de Ruanda. Talvez uma reunião sem café, mas nenhuma remoção do chicote dele ou de qualquer outra pessoa planejando a queda de Sunak. É isso que eles acusam os rebeldes de direita, afinal. O perigo é que os conservadores podem seguir o caminho republicano na América, mas descobrem que a maioria dos eleitores britânicos não tem apetite por esse tipo de política.
That is why Sir Keir Starmer is risking the wrath of the environmental movement, the despair of business which wants consistency, and fuelling the charge that he is a serial flip flopper on policy, by dropping the promise to spend £28bn a year on green policies.
My two charges against Labour are, why was a price tag put on the plan in the first place and why have we had months of agonising retrenchment from the policy which makes Napoleon’s retreat from Moscow look like a walk in the park?
The Shadow Chancellor, Rachael Reeves, is the real one calling the shots here. There are reports of huge tensions between her and Shadow Climate Change Secretary, Ed Miliband. This may partly explain why this change didn’t take place much sooner. We first got the £28bn promise way back in 2021 since when we have had the Ukraine war and Liz Truss. Straight after that Reeves could have said the economy has been upended, we can no longer put a figure on our green plan, but we are still committed to its main aims.
Let’s turn to those aims which are to insulate homes and set up a publicly owned company, Great British Energy, and a National Wealth Fund to invest in green jobs. If those aims are stuck to then all may be well because huge figures like £28bn are pretty meaningless anyway.
POPCON AND REFORM PARTY
The lines between Liz Truss’ Popular Conservative movement and the Reform Party are becoming blurred.
She launched the latest fringe group this week pledged to cutting tax and immigration. She also wants a smaller state. These are interesting proposition when people are queuing round the block for NHS dentists and generals are warning that a war against the Russians is on the cards.
Nigel Farage was officially in attendance as a journalist, but everyone knows the founder of Reform UK, is once again acting as a magnetic force on the right of the Tory Party.
Just as UKIP spooked David Cameron into the EU Referendum, Reform is attracting and frightening the Tory right in equal measure.
If Reform manage to outpoll the Lib Dems in the General Election and, perhaps, get a couple of MPs elected, it will almost certainly mean a right winger replaces the outgoing Prime Minister, Rishi Sunak. In the longer term it could lead to a fusion of the two parties.
All this is possible because the left and centre of the Conservative Party are supine as this swing to the right takes place. It is rumoured that Tory peer Lord Frost was questioned about whether Reform was involved in a poll showing a huge Labour landslide. Frost used it to try and create a major rebellion against the Rwanda bill. A meeting without coffee perhaps, but no removal of the whip from him or anyone else plotting Sunak’s downfall.
Honourably, One Nation Tories don’t want to rock the boat. That is what they accuse right wing rebels of after all. The danger is the Conservatives may follow the Republican path in America but find that most British voters have no appetite for that sort of politics.