Labour Manifesto 2015
Labour Manifesto 2015
Labour Manifesto 2015
Contents
Foreword by Ed Miliband... p5
A better future for Britain... p7
Building an economy that works for
working people... p15
Providing world-class health and
education services... p31
Helping our families and communities
to thrive... p43
Reforming government to give more
power to people... p61
Standing up for Britains interests in
Europe and the world... p73
Time for change... p83
t h e l a b o u r p a r t y m a n i f e s t o 2015
oreword
We are a great country. With great people. In the last five years I have heard your
stories, your hopes and your dreams. And I have heard too your frustrations.
The countless people working as hard as they possibly can and still struggling to
pay the bills. The young people with great ambitions but great anxieties about
the future. The dedicated staff of our NHS, who are deeply concerned about
its future. And all those who have served our country, are now retired, and ask
where our country is going.
This manifesto is inspired by you.
I take a simple view. We are a great country, but we can be even better
The fundamental truth that runs through this manifesto is that Britain will only
succeed when working people succeed. It is an idea at the heart of my beliefs.
And it drives our better plan for a better future.
It means a country where hard work is rewarded, with high skill, high wage jobs.
An economy built on strong and secure foundations, where we balance the books.
It means building a future for all our young people, so they can get world-class
apprenticeships and access to affordable, higher education. It means strong
public services, rescuing our NHS.
It means strong communities, where power is shared by people in every part of
the country and where we respond to peoples concerns about immigration, with
proper controls.
It means a Britain where everyone plays by the same rules, including those at the
very top of our society. And it means an outward looking country, engaged in the
world for our national interest.
For me, the privilege of serving as Prime Minister in our country would be for one
purpose alone: to work every day to help build a country that works again for
working people. This manifesto is our plan to achieve that goal.
Ed Miliband
e will build
a better
future for Britain
The British people, are known for tolerance, responsibility to others and for
our belief in the value of hard work. We look confidently outward to the world.
These are great British traditions - things we all believe in, things our country is
good at. We are at our best when we work together. We see this every day in
our workplaces, in our families, and in our communities. People want to get on,
they want to give their children a better future, and they want to help to change
Britain for the better.
But across Britain working people also know a simple truth: the economy is not
working for them. For years now, our economy has not rewarded everyone who
put in a good, honest days work. However hard people work, many dont earn
enough to make ends meet. Too many have been driven from secure, full-time
work, into precarious, badly paid jobs many working on zero-hours contracts.
Time to enjoy friends and family is increasingly squeezed, as mothers and fathers
juggle the demands of work and caring for children, and often an older relative.
The problems mount for the next generation too. Young people are taking on
a mountain of debt to go to university and too many still cannot find a job
worthy of their talents. We lack a proper system of vocational education and
apprenticeships to give our young people the start in life that they deserve.
We are not building the homes we need. Our sons and daughters have been
shut out of the housing market and too often they are forced to leave the
communities where they were brought up.
Our economy and our system of government are failing people. Many have
come to believe that politics ignores the things that matter to them. Too much
power is unaccountable, concentrated in the market and the state, at the
expense of individuals and their communities.
Many of these problems have been mounting for years. Some, like the rise of
inequality, are felt in countries all around the world. So the Conservatives did
not cause all of them, but they have made them far worse. Their view is that
economic success depends just on a few at the top. They think that insecurity
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will make people work harder and that low pay is the only way to be competitive
in the global market. They dont believe we can afford decent public services
when times are hard. They have been giving power to large unaccountable
firms rather than to people, and now they want to make deeper cuts in the next
three years than we have seen in the last five years.
There are some who believe there is nothing we can do to change things for
the better. They feel powerless. They are losing faith that those with power
will ever listen to them. We understand these feelings. But we believe we can
renew our country and make a better future for working people. We have
learned the lessons of the past. We were in government for thirteen years and
left the country a far better place to live in. But we did not get everything right.
We have learned and we have changed.
Labour is renewing our traditions as the Party of work, family and community.
We believe in a society of trust and mutual obligation, in which we look after
the vulnerable, and people can bring up their families with hope for a better
future. And we believe in helping people to help themselves, both to improve
their own communities, and to achieve their ambitions.
We are also the Party of equality. We believe that no person should suffer
discrimination or a lack of opportunity. The decisions we take in government
will always be taken with this in mind. The policies in our manifesto will help
remove the barriers that stand in the way of greater equality. We know we
achieve more when we work together to challenge inequalities of power and
build a common good.
In this election, the country has a choice. We can continue with a Conservative
plan based on the view that success comes only from a privileged few at the
top. Or we can change direction, begin to return power to people and build an
economy together in which everyone can contribute to a shared and enduring
prosperity.
We believe that Britain only succeeds when working families succeed. As the
economy at last recovers, people want the opportunity to use their skills and
talents to make a better life for themselves and their children. Our countrys
greatest asset is the hard work and talent of our people.
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The common life we share is who we are as a country. Not everyone is the
same, but each of us sharing a sense of belonging, being valued equally and
being able to contribute to the common good. Immigration has made an
important contribution to our economic and social life, but it needs to be
properly controlled. With a Labour Government, migrants from the EU will not
be able to claim benefits until they have lived here for at least two years. We will
make it illegal to undercut wages by exploiting migrant workers, and work to
strengthen integration within our communities. Everyone who works with the
public in our public services must be able to speak English.
We will help to make communities safer, by protecting and strengthening
neighbourhood policing, countering extremism, and putting in place tough
new laws to reduce violence against women and child sexual exploitation.
People want more say in the decisions that affect their lives. We, in Labour,
know that Government has to do things differently. The old command and
control politics doing things to and for people, but never with them will not
work. We need a new approach to government that involves more people in
decisions that affect them. So we will devolve more power and control, not only
to Scotland and Wales, but to our great English cities and county regions too.
And we will share power and responsibility with people in their communities to
help them help themselves and shape their services in response to their local
circumstances.
Our country faces global challenges of climate change, terrorism and the spread
of disease. In particular, tackling climate change is an economic necessity and
the most important thing we must do for our children, our grandchildren and
future generations. A Labour government will face up to these challenges and
re-engage with the world. We will build alliances in Europe, promoting our
countrys interests and security, and standing up for human rights and social
justice. We will work to reform the European Union, and we will retain our
membership of it.
Labours plan for national renewal will bring about real, meaningful change that
each person will be able to feel in their daily life. We know that to make Britain
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a better country, opportunity must belong to everyone and not just a few. We
will lend a helping hand to all those who need it, but we will also ask more of
individuals and communities. We can only rebuild our country if everyone plays
their part and feels they have a stake in society.
We believe in living within our means. We will not make promises we cannot
keep, and we will not introduce changes unless they are funded. There is not
a single policy in this manifesto that is funded by additional borrowing. Not a
single one.
Our plan is to build a secure, prosperous and more equal country open to
the world, in which everyone has the opportunity to get on and do their best.
We will provide strong and effective government but everyone will need to
contribute and play their part. It will be hard, but working together we can do it.
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Lesley, Physicist
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e will build
an economy
that works for
working people
it will succeed in the future. But so many people are putting in the hours
and not seeing the rewards. That is why there is a cost of living crisis. Our
first task in government is to change our economy so that it works for all
of Britains businesses and working people.
The Conservatives claim that the economy is fixed and that our country is on
the right track. But the economy is not creating the productive, high-skilled
and well-paid jobs that we need to raise living standards. The lack of rewarding
work and training opportunities is trapping hundreds of thousands of young
people in a cycle of benefits and low-paid, insecure jobs. And consumers are
overcharged in markets they rely on to meet their everyday needs, whether to
heat their homes or travel to work.
For most of the 20th century, there was a vital link between the success of
the country and family finances. As the country got better off, so did working
people. But the link between the success of the country and the family budget
has been broken. Since 2010, working people are earning on average 1,600
less a year after inflation. We have seen the greatest fall in wages over a
parliament since 1874.
Over five million people are in low-paid jobs, earning less than the Living Wage.
There are 1.8 million zero-hours contracts. 1.3 million are working part-time
because they cannot get a full-time job. Half of all those in poverty live in
working households. 900,000 people, many of them in work, used food banks
last year.
This cost-of-living crisis is bad for families, bad for business, and bad for Britain.
Lower levels of pay have meant lower tax receipts and higher spending on
social security.
We will have to work and earn our way toward a more fairly shared and
enduring prosperity. We are a great commercial nation that has been at the
centre of global trade for centuries. We have a long tradition of innovation and
enterprise.
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We have been quick to seize the opportunities of the internet. We have big
strengths to build upon: world-leading universities, an outstanding science
research base, an open economy with one of the highest rates of foreign direct
investment in the world, and many successful global companies.
An inclusive wealth-creating economy works when there is a shared sense
of responsibility, so we will be a government that is both pro-business and
pro-worker. We value all our businesses as organisations of innovation and
wealth production, and we will work strategically with them to create wealth.
We value our trade unions as an essential force for a decent society and as
guarantors of skills and fair wages.
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We will live within our means. We have no proposals for any new spending paid
for by additional borrowing. All of our commitments will be paid for by reducing
spending elsewhere or by raising extra revenue. For example, we will introduce
a tax on properties worth over 2 million to help raise the 2.5 billion a year for
an NHS Time to Care Fund part of our plan to save and improve the health
service. We will legislate to require all major parties to have their manifesto
commitments independently audited by the Office for Budget Responsibility at
each general election.
We will cap structural social security expenditure in each spending review
so that it is properly controlled. We will implement the proposals of Labours
Zero-Based Review, which has already identified savings we will make through
reforming old government bureaucracies, devolving power and services to our
towns and cities, and redesigning public services, and which we will continue
in government. We will invest to prevent social problems rather than waste
money reacting to them. And we will use digital technology to create a more
responsive, devolved, and less costly system of government.
Fairer taxes
We will create a fairer tax system, helping those on middle and lower incomes
by introducing a lower 10p starting rate of tax, paid for by ending the
Conservatives Marriage Tax Allowance. We will not increase the basic or higher
rates of Income Tax or National Insurance. Nor will we raise VAT, and we renew
our pledge not to extend it to food, childrens clothes, books, newspapers or
public transport fares.
Our first Finance Bill will close the tax loopholes that cost the Exchequer billions
of pounds a year. We will introduce tougher penalties for those abusing the
tax system, end unfair tax breaks used by hedge funds and others, and bear
down on disguised employment. We will seek international agreement to make
country-by-country reporting information publicly available, and we will act
at home if agreement is not reached. British Overseas Territories and Crown
Dependencies will be required to produce publicly available registries of the
real owners of companies based there.
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We will carry out an immediate review into the culture and practices of HMRC
so that everyone follows the same rules and we increase the rigour of the tax
system. And we will abolish non-dom status so that all those who make the UK
their home pay tax in the same way as the rest of us.
It is by tackling tax avoidance in this concerted fashion that we can reduce the
deficit and protect the family budgets of working people.
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Our universities are amongst the finest in the world. Some are already helping
our regional economies by forming strong links with industry and creating
high-tech clusters. They have already spun out hundreds of companies creating
thousands of jobs. We will support this model of knowledge clusters, especially
outside the South East.
Britains economy is being held back by the culture of short-termism, which is a
major obstacle to the development of productive businesses and industries. We
will reform corporate governance to protect our leading firms from the pressure
to put tomorrows share price before long-term growth potential.
Institutional investors will have a duty to act in the best interests of ordinary
savers. They will have to prioritise long-term growth over short-term profits for
the companies in which they are investing. We will change takeover rules to
enhance the role of long-term investors by restricting voting to those already
holding shares when a bid is made. In addition, we will strengthen the public
interest test.
We will improve the link between executive pay and performance by simplifying
pay packages, and requiring investment and pension fund managers to disclose
how they vote on top pay. And we will make sure employees have a voice when
executive pay is set by requiring employee representation on remuneration
committees.
In this way we can start to create an economy based on mutual obligations,
encouraging employers and employees to build partnerships for improving both
business performance and job quality. Outdated practices, like blacklisting, have
no place in a modern economy.
Our charities, mutuals, co-operatives and social enterprises are pioneering new
models of production that enhance social value, promote financial inclusion,
and give individuals and communities power and control. We will continue
to support and help develop the social economy by improving access for
co-operative and mutual organisations to growth finance through the new British
Investment Bank. And we will consider how to support employee buy-outs when
businesses are being sold.
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We will safeguard the public interest in the Royal Mail, supporting the creation
of a staff-led trust for the employee share, and keeping the remaining
30 per cent in public ownership. We will also support the universal service
obligation, ensuring competition does not undermine it and introducing
protections as necessary.
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We will make sure that apprenticeships can lead to higher level qualifications
by creating new Technical Degrees and supporting part-time study. They will
be co-funded, co-designed and co-delivered by employers and they will be the
priority for expansion within our university system.
Young people who do not have the skills they need should be in training, not
on benefits. We will replace out of work benefits for 18 to 21-year-olds with a
new Youth Allowance dependent on recipients being in training and targeted
at those who need it most.
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We will bring down energy bills by making homes more energy efficient,
delivering a million interest free loans for energy home improvements in the
next Parliament. For those on low incomes, we will make 200,000 homes
warm every year, delivered street-by-street by local authorities and community
organisations. Privately rented properties will have to meet a decency standard,
bringing warmth to a further three million homes.
The water industry, too, also requires reform. One in five people struggle to
pay their water bill. Despite this, only a fraction of customers have benefited
from the social tariffs offered by water companies. Under our reforms all water
companies will be required to sign up to a new national affordability scheme,
helping those who cannot afford to pay their water bill. And we will strengthen
the powers of the regulator to change licenses, limit price rises and enforce
industry standards.
Living standards have been hit by fare increases on public transport. Since
2010, rail fares have risen by 20 per cent, leaving passengers paying the highest
fares in Europe. Similarly, bus fares have risen by 27 per cent while at the same
time 2,000 bus routes have been cut.
Labour will reform our transport system in order to provide more public control
and put the public interest first. We will review the franchising process as a
priority to put in place a new system and avoid a repeat of the Conservatives
franchising fiasco. A new National Rail body will oversee and plan for the
railways and give rail users a greater say in how trains operate. We will legislate
so that a public sector operator is allowed to take on lines and challenge the
private train operating companies on a level playing field.
Rail fares will be frozen next year to help commuters while we implement
reforms. A strict fare rise cap will be introduced on every route for any future
fare rises, and a new legal right for passengers will be created to access the
cheapest ticket for their journey.
City and county regions will be given more power over the way buses are
operated in their area. They will be able to decide routes, bear down on fares,
drive improvements in services, and bring together trains, buses and trams
into a single network with smart ticketing.
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Labour will:
cut the deficit every year and balance the books as soon as possible in the
next Parliament
reverse the 50p tax cut so that the top one per cent pay a little more to help
get the deficit down
not increase the basic or higher rates of Income Tax, National Insurance or
VAT
cut and then freeze business rates and maintain the most competitive
corporate tax rates in the G7
abolish non dom status
increase the National Minimum Wage to more than 8 an hour by October
2019 and introduce Make Work Pay contracts to provide tax rebates to firms
becoming Living Wage employers
ban exploitative zero-hours contracts
guarantee an apprenticeship for every school leaver who attains the
grades and require any firm that gets a large government contract to offer
apprenticeships
reduce tuition fees to 6,000 a year
freeze energy bills until 2017 and give the regulator the power to cut bills this
winter
introduce a British Investment Bank and support a network of regional banks.
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e will provide
world-class
health and education
services
able to live secure and fulfilling lives. Britain needs them if we are to
succeed as a country. But under the Conservatives they are under threat.
The next Labour Government will protect, improve and invest in our public
services, while giving individuals and communities more control over
their design and delivery.
The NHS is one of our great national institutions, and it is one of Labours
proudest achievements. It embodies our belief that by the strength of our
common endeavour, we achieve more than we achieve alone. But the future
of the NHS is under threat. The Conservatives have put the wrong values at its
heart, and patients are finding it harder to get the care they need.
Care is at the heart of Labours values. No-one should fear old age or be left
to struggle alone caring for a loved one. But too many older people suffer
insecurity, loneliness and exclusion. And the growing social care crisis is one
of the biggest challenges we face. Since 2010, billions of pounds have been
cut from budgets that pay for adult social care. The result has been 300,000
fewer older people getting vital care services, at the same time as the number
of older people in need of care is increasing.
A good education is vital to achieving personal fulfillment and economic
prosperity. A good society depends upon an education system that can open
minds and teach the skills and knowledge we each need to get on in life. But
our education system is failing to meet the needs of young people who do not
follow the traditional academic path from school to university.
Our public services are a measure of the strength and decency of our society.
But we need a change in how we design them by pushing power down and
organising them around individuals and families not centralised bureaucracies.
Good public services also need committed staff who are treated fairly and
whose ethos of service is respected. They require decisions on pay that prioritise
those on lower incomes, which are evidence-based, and which respect Pay
Review Body recommendations rather than brushing them aside irresponsibly.
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Government spends far too much money dealing with the symptoms of
problems, instead of investing smaller amounts in dealing with their causes.
Every taxpayer pays the cost of low educational achievement, poor aspirations,
drink and drug misuse, and criminality. So we will promote early-years
intervention, supporting young children and their parents and dealing with
problems before they get out of hand.
We can save money and create more responsive services by building
co-operation between public services and organisations. Pooling funds across
local areas reduces inefficiency and avoids duplication. Services must be joined
up in ways that make sense to the people who use them.
Labour will use digital technology in reforming our public services. People will
be able to feed back on services quickly and simply, making sure their voices
are heard, stimulating improvement and saving on the costs of service failure.
The NHS
Labour will rescue our NHS, invest in its future and join up services from home
to hospital.
We will start with the promise of investment so that the NHS has time to care.
The NHS is struggling with staffing shortages. Accident and emergency is in
crisis, and more people are facing long waits for tests, treatment, or to see a
GP. Labour will invest in 20,000 more nurses, 8,000 more GPs, and 3,000 more
midwives, paid for by a Mansion Tax on properties worth over 2 million, a levy
on tobacco firms, and by tackling tax avoidance. The threshold for the Mansion
Tax will rise in line with house prices for these high-value properties, and those
on lower incomes will be protected with a right to defer the charge until the
property changes hands.
We will guarantee people a GP appointment within 48 hours, and on the same
day for those who need it. We will create a Cancer Treatments Fund so patients
have access to the latest drugs, surgery and radiotherapy. By 2020, patients will
wait no longer than one week for vital cancer tests. Catching the disease early
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is critical, so we will raise public awareness of symptoms and make sure there
is training and support for GPs in spotting early signs.
The answer to the health challenges we face is not to set hospital against
hospital, but to join up services around patients needs. We will repeal the
Governments Health and Social Care Act, scrapping the competition regime
and restoring proper democratic accountability for the NHS. We will establish a
sensible commissioning framework, based on the principle of an NHS preferred
provider, to stop the drive towards privatisation and make sure that NHS
services are not destabilised by competition and fragmentation. Where private
companies are involved in providing clinical services, we will impose a cap on
any profits they can make from the NHS, to ensure that the needs of patients
are always put first. We support the principles behind the negotiations on the
Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership Treaty (TTIP). We will hold the
European Commission to account on issues of concern, including the impact
on public services and the Investor to State Dispute Settlement Mechanism.
And we will ensure the NHS is protected from the TTIP treaty.
Our health reforms will focus on prevention and early intervention, and joining
up services from home to hospital. When people cannot get to see their GP,
many go to A&E instead. When mental health problems are not spotted early,
people can deteriorate and need more intensive support. And when elderly
people cannot get the care they need at home, they are more likely to end up
in hospital.
The current system is too fragmented. It was not designed for the growing
numbers of people living with chronic conditions or multiple needs. Rather
than having three separate systems for dealing with physical, mental and social
care, we will create a whole person approach: a single service to meet all of a
persons health and care needs.
This will be underpinned by new rights for patients. Vulnerable older people,
disabled people and those with complex needs will be helped to have more
control of their lives with the entitlement to a personal care plan designed
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with them and shaped around their needs, the option of personal budgets
where appropriate, and a single named person to coordinate their care. They
will also receive better information and advice on managing their condition.
These changes will help to end the frustration of families sick of being passed
from pillar to post between different individuals and agencies.
Commissioning and budgets will be brought together at a local level to join
up services and make sure that providers are incentivised to help people stay
healthy and outside hospital, rather than simply waiting for them to fall ill.
Mental health will be given the same priority as physical health. People will
have the same right to psychological therapies as they currently have to drugs
and medical treatments. To help address the problem of undiagnosed mental
illness, NHS staff training will include mental health. We will increase the
proportion of the mental health budget that is spent on children, and make
sure that teachers have training so they can identify problems early and link
children up with support. To support young peoples health and wellbeing, we
will encourage the development of social and emotional skills, for example
through the use of mindfulness to build resilience. And we will set out a strategy
with the goal of ensuring that the great majority of patients can access talking
therapies within 28 days, and that all children who need it can access schoolbased counselling.
A greater emphasis on prevention and public health is essential, not just to
improve outcomes and tackle inequalities, but to ensure the NHS remains
sustainable. For example, 3.2 million people are currently diagnosed with
diabetes, and it is estimated that spending on treatment will rise from 10
billion to 17 billion a year over the next 25 years if action is not taken, such
as to reduce levels of obesity. We will set a new national ambition to improve
the uptake of physical activity and take targeted action on those high strength,
low cost alcohol products that fuel problem drinking. And we will set maximum
permitted levels of sugar, salt and fat in foods marketed substantially to
children.
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Everyone involved in the NHS must learn lessons when things go wrong, for
example, from the failings at Mid-Staffordshire and Morecambe Bay. Labour
will prioritise action to improve care quality and patient safety. In addition to
recruiting extra nurses to help provide safe levels of staffing on wards, we want
every hospital death to be subject to an appropriate level of review. We will also
take action to modernise the regulation of healthcare professionals.
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The burden of the care crisis is falling on carers, especially women, who
account for six in every ten carers. Labour will introduce a new duty on NHS
organisations to identify carers so that they can be linked up with the right
support. We will ring-fence the money councils get for carers breaks to ensure
this money gets spent on carers.
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a new Master Teacher status. Teachers will also be expected to update their
knowledge and skills as a condition of remaining in the profession, and we will
support plans for a new College of Teaching. These measures will help us close
the attainment gap between disadvantaged children and their peers, and work
towards all children reading well by age 11. We have supported the successful
Teach First since its inception and will continue to do so.
A new School Leadership Institute will support headteachers and improve
school leadership. It will accredit gold-standard headship qualifications,
support leadership training and development, and identify and develop the
school leaders of the future.
The Government has attempted to oversee thousands of schools from the
centre. This approach is not working. Underperformance is going unchallenged
and parents do not have enough of a voice. Labour will introduce new Directors
of School Standards at a local level to monitor performance, intervene in
underperforming schools and support them to improve.
Where a majority of local parents have concerns about underperformance, or
a dip in standards, they will be able to call in their local Director of School
Standards to hold a school to account.
Labour will promote innovation in schools. We will give all schools freedoms
currently only granted to some. Directors of School Standards will be responsible
for commissioning new schools where there is a shortage of school places,
encouraging innovative bids from established providers, good local authorities,
parents, teachers and entrepreneurs. They will also encourage local schools to
work together to improve the quality of education.
We will end the wasteful and poorly performing Free Schools programme, and
switch resources to where they are needed, allowing us to cap class sizes for
five, six and seven-year-olds at 30 pupils or under.
Private schools currently benefit from generous state subsidies, including
business rates relief worth hundreds of millions of pounds. We believe they
should do more to contribute to raising standards in state education to justify
receiving this subsidy. As a condition for continued business rate relief, private
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Labour will:
invest 2.5 billion more that the Conservatives to recruit 8,000 more GPs,
20,000 more nurses and 3,000 more midwives
guarantee GP appointments within 48 hours and cancer tests within one
week
join up services from home to hospital, with a single point of contact for all
who need it
give mental health the same priority as physical health, with a new right to
access talking therapies
repeal the Governments privatisation plans, cap profits and put the right
values back at the heart of the NHS
end time-limited 15 minute social care visits and recruit 5,000 new
home-care workers to support people in their home
introduce a new gold-standard Technical Baccalaureate for 16 to-18-year
olds
protect the entire education budget from early years through to post-16
education
guarantee all teachers in state schools will be qualified
appoint Directors of School Standards to drive up standards in every area
cap class sizes for five, six and seven-year-olds
ensure all young people study English and Maths to age 18.
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e will help
our families
and communities
to thrive
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There will be a guaranteed, paid job for all young people who have been out
of work for one year, and for all those over 25 years old and out of work for
two years. It will be a job that they have to take, or lose their benefits. And we
will commission a replacement for the Work Programme at a more local level,
working with local authorities to join up support for the long-term unemployed.
We will introduce a higher rate of Job Seekers Allowance for those who have
contributed over years. It will be funded by extending the length of time people
need to have worked to qualify.
Older people
Older people deserve to live a fulfilling life, to continue working if they wish,
and to enjoy a secure retirement. Older people have contributed all their lives
and built the Britain that the next generation will inherit. So it is right that they
are supported with a fair and sustainable pensions system, responsive health
services and a system of care over which they have control. We will keep the
triple-lock so that the state pension increases by inflation, earnings, or 2.5 per
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cent, whichever is highest. And while increases in the state retirement age are
necessary to keep our pensions system affordable, we will ensure that people
have time to plan for changes.
We have taken the tough choice to restrict Winter Fuel Payments for the
richest five per cent of pensioners, but we will guarantee that there will be no
additional changes to the Winter Fuel Payments, free TV licences or bus passes
for pensioners.
Alongside a decent state pension, we must ensure private pensions are good
value for those who have saved. We will reform the pensions market so that
pension providers put savers first, and protect consumers from retirement
rip-offs. We support greater flexibility for those drawing down their pension
pots, but there must be proper guidance for people to avoid mis-selling.
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Labours plan starts with stronger borders. We will recruit an additional 1,000
borders staff, paid for by a small charge on non-visa visitors to the UK. We
will introduce stronger controls to prevent those who have committed serious
crimes coming to Britain, and to deport those who commit crimes while they
are here. We will introduce full exit checks, so that we can count people in
and out of the country. Short-term student visitor visas have dramatically
increased, so we will tighten the system to prevent abuse, whilst welcoming
overseas university students who bring billions into Britain. And we will keep
the cap on workers from outside the EU.
We need fair rules at work to prevent the exploitation of migrant workers,
which undercuts local wages and increases demand for further low-skilled
migration. Labour will introduce a new law to stop employers undercutting
wages by exploiting workers. We will ban recruitment agencies from hiring only
from overseas and crack down on rogue agencies by extending the remit of the
Gangmasters Licensing Authority where there is evidence of abuse.
We need to strengthen our social integration and ensure that migrants can
play their part in British society. People working in public services, in public
facing roles, will be required to speak English. Those who come here will not be
able to claim benefits for at least two years, and we will stop child benefit being
sent to families living abroad.
We will enforce immigration rules humanely and effectively. We will end the
indefinite detention of people in the asylum and immigration system, ending
detention for pregnant women and those who have been the victims of sexual
abuse or trafficking. And we will ensure Britain continues its proud history of
providing refuge for those fleeing persecution by upholding our international
obligations, including working with the UN to support vulnerable refugees from
Syria.
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Safer communities
Crime creates fear and insecurity. We can only live happy and fulfilled lives if
we know that we are safe, and that we are not at risk of violation of our person
or property.
For too many people in our country that is not the reality they see in their
communities. Neighbourhood policing, the vital building block of British policing,
is at risk of being destroyed. Anti-social behaviour is too often tolerated, rather
than dealt with. Violent crimes have gone up, but fewer violent criminals are
being caught. Far too many victims of child sex abuse are being let down by the
services that are supposed to keep them safe.
Labour believes British policing is at its best when it is rooted in local
communities, proactively preventing crime, rather than simply reacting to
emergencies.
We will protect neighbourhood policing. By making different choices to abolish
Police and Crime Commissioners, end the subsidy of firearms licenses, and
mandate police forces to work closer together we will be able to safeguard
over 10,000 police officers for the next three years. This will be backed up
by a new statutory Local Policing Commitment, guaranteeing neighbourhood
policing in every community.
We will strengthen community safety partnerships to give local people a role in
setting priorities for neighbourhood policing and a say over the appointment
of local police commanders.
To raise standards within policing, all police officers will be required to become
Chartered Officers, holding a registration with the College of Policing, and able
to be struck off for serious misconduct, just as doctors and lawyers can be. A
new Police Standards Authority will replace the discredited Independent Police
Complaints Commission. And we will work with the police to improve ethnic
minority recruitment so that the police better reflect the communities they
serve.
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The next part of Labours plan is preventing crime occurring in the first place.
We will nip anti-social behaviour in the bud by making offenders put right the
wrong they have done, with payback orders replacing low-level cautions. And
we will ensure staff who work with the public are given greater protection, with
tougher penalties for those who assault them.
The last Labour Governments reforms of youth justice, which required agencies
to collaborate in preventing youth offending, reduced both youth crime and
the numbers of young people in prison. The next Labour Government will
extend this model, piloting a new approach to 18 to 20-year-old offenders,
incentivising local authorities, police and probation services to work together
to identify those at risk of drifting into criminal activity and, where possible,
divert them into a more constructive way of life. And we will work to embed
restorative justice right across the youth justice system.
We know drug addiction continues to be a major cause of crime. We will ensure
drug treatment services focus on the root causes of addiction, with proper
integration between health, police and local authorities in the commissioning of
treatment. And we will ban the sale and distribution of dangerous psychoactive
substances, so called legal highs.
It is clear that we need a radical change in our approach to dealing with child
abuse. We will bring in tough new powers enabling the police to prevent an
adult from contacting or communicating with a child if there is evidence of
abuse, and strengthen the vetting and barring regime. A new child protection
unit will be established to work across government, driving progress in the
prevention of child abuse and sexual exploitation.
We need prisons that both punish and rehabilitate people. Labour will do more
to increase the amount of time prisoners spend working and learning. Prisons
will be measured by how successful they are in reforming prisoners and
reducing their re-offending. We will also raise professional standards amongst
prison officers, including through the creation of Chartered Prison Officers, and
confront the neglected problem of staff corruption.
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We will enact Britains first Victims Law to give victims of crime a voice and an
entitlement to minimum standards of service from criminal justice agencies.
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humanity in the creation and celebration of beauty. The arts should belong to
all and be open to all to take part in.
We will guarantee a universal entitlement to a creative education so that every
young person has access to cultural activity and the arts by strengthening
creative education in schools and after-school clubs. Institutions that receive
arts funding will be required to open up their doors to young people, and we
will work with public bodies to rebalance arts funding across the country.
The last Labour Government made admission to our national museums
and galleries free to all, leading to a major increase in the number of people
experiencing our greatest cultural treasures. We reaffirm our commitment to
universal free admission to ensure that our great works of art and national
heritage can be enjoyed in all parts of the country.
Creativity is the powerhouse of a prosperous economy. It is the source of
economic innovation and a powerful force in social renewal. We will increase
the number of apprenticeships in the creative industries.
We will create a Prime Ministers Committee on the Arts, Culture and
Creative Industries, with a membership drawn from all sectors and regions.
The Committee will bring issues of concern direct to the attention of the Prime
Minister.
Sport
Sport brings us together in an expression of our local and national pride. It
is where young people learn about leadership, teamwork, the pursuit of
excellence and strength of character. With a Labour Government our children
will participate in a minimum of two hours of organised sport every week at
school.
Football clubs are an important part of many peoples identity and sense of
belonging. They are more than just businesses. But despite their importance
in the lives of their members and supporters, too often there are no effective
means for fans to have a say in how their clubs are run. Labour will provide
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the means for supporters to be a genuine part of their clubs. We will introduce
legislation to enable accredited supporters trusts to appoint and remove at
least two of the directors of a football club and to purchase shares when the
club changes hands. We will also review the role of fan participation in other
sports.
We will ensure the Premier League delivers on its promise to invest five per
cent of its domestic and international television rights income into funding the
grassroots.
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We will build on our strong record on animal welfare starting with an end
to the Governments ineffective and cruel badger cull. We will improve the
protection of dogs and cats, ban wild animals in circuses, defend the hunting
ban and deal with wildlife crime associated with shooting.
We want to create a world-leading Food, Farm and Fisheries sector that creates
better paid jobs and apprenticeships across the rural economy. We will put in
place a long-term strategy for the sector, promote the best of British produce,
and expand the role of the supermarket watchdog to support the growth of
the sector, and protect food producers from unfair practices by the major
supermarkets.
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Labour will:
extend free childcare from 15 to 25 hours for working parents of three
and four-year-olds, and ensure all primary schools guarantee access to
wraparound childcare from 8am to 6pm
double paternity leave from two to four weeks and increase paternity pay
by more than 100 a week
ensure at least 200,000 new homes a year are built by 2020, with first
priority for local first time buyers
provide security for renters by guaranteeing three-year tenancies with a
ceiling on excessive rent rises
introduce a compulsory jobs guarantee, paid for by a Bank Bonus Tax
abolish the Bedroom Tax
ensure migrants will not be able to claim benefits until they have lived here
for at least two years
make it illegal for employers to undercut wages by exploiting workers
protect neighbourhood policing by safeguarding over 10,000 frontline
police officers over the next three years
give football fans a voice in club boardrooms.
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Kirsty, Student
e will reform
government
to give more power
to people
eople who live in this country know that too much power is
concentrated in too few hands. Those who make decisions on behalf
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A better politics
We will give 16 and 17-year-olds the vote by May 2016, and improve the
curriculum for citizenship education, so young people have the knowledge they
need to play a full part in British society. We will encourage young peoples
volunteering and social action by supporting the #iwill campaign of Step up to
Serve, and the National Citizens Service.
Drawing on the work of the Political and Constitutional Reform Committee, we
will take steps to ensure that the move to individual electoral registration does
not leave millions unregistered, nor lead to constituencies that fail to take into
account the people who live in them. This will include block registration by
universities and care homes, extending Northern Irelands successful Schools
Initiative, and exploring the scope for an automatic system of registration.
Labour remains committed to reforming political party funding and taking the
big money out of politics by capping individual donations to parties.
We will safeguard our democracy by repealing the Lobbying Act, which has
gagged charities, and replace it with a tougher statutory register of lobbyists.
We will ban MPs from holding paid directorships and consultancies. And we
will reform the legislative process to strengthen the publics voice and to better
hold the government to account.
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England
We will embark on the biggest devolution of power to our English city and
county regions in a hundred years with an English Devolution Act. It will transfer
30 billion of funding to city and county regions, along with new powers over
economic development, skills, employment, housing, and business support.
This will include control over local transport systems so that in future, local
bodies can integrate trains, buses, trams and cycling into a single network. We
will enable city and county regions to retain 100 per cent of additional business
rates raised from growth in their area.
Fair funding will be restored across England, alongside longer term multi-year
budgets, so that local authorities can plan ahead on the basis of need in their
area and protect vital services. And an English Regional Cabinet Committee,
chaired by the Prime Minister, will be convened regularly, attended by the
relevant Secretaries of State and leaders of our major city and county regions.
In return for greater devolution of funding and responsibility, we will establish
local Public Accounts Committees, so that every pound spent by local bodies
creates value for money for local taxpayers.
Devolution does not end at town halls. Local people know best about the
complex problems they face, and they are best placed to work out how to
solve them.
The English New Deal begins the process of giving individuals and communities
more power and control over how they are governed and over the design of
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their public services. It will support people who need care to live independently,
help troubled families to turn their lives around, and make sure that every child
has a good start in life with early-years intervention and quality childcare.
We will give English people a stronger voice in shaping the future of their local
NHS services. Patients and the public will have a seat at the table from the
very start of any process that draws up plans for change, including changes to
hospital services.
We will give local communities more power to shape their high streets, and
so preserve their local identities. Councils will be given the power to require
particular types of shops to apply for planning permission, allowing them to
restrict the number of payday lenders or other shops that are clustering on a
single high street. Communities will be able to review betting shop licenses in
their area and reduce the number of fixed-odds betting terminals in existing
betting shops or ban them entirely in response to local concerns.
Scotland
In September 2014, people across Scotland voted overwhelmingly for change.
Labour will keep its vow and implement the Smith Agreement in full. And we
will go further, with a Home Rule Bill to give extra powers to Scotland over tax,
welfare and jobs. Rates of income tax will be set in Scotland. Billions of pounds
of social security spending will be devolved, including benefits that support
disabled people. The Work Programme will also be devolved along with a
greater ability to invest in capital projects.
The new devolution settlement will recognise the strength and security offered
by being part of the United Kingdom. We will maintain the Barnett formula, and
Scotland will continue to benefit from pooling and sharing resources across
the UK.
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Wales
Labour will put Welsh devolution on the same statutory basis as Scottish
devolution, with a clear principle that powers are devolved unless specifically
reserved, and that a Welsh legislature is a permanent feature of our constitutional
arrangements. We will take forward proposals from the Silk Commission to extend
the power the people of Wales have over their elections, transport and energy.
An all-Wales Policing Plan will give the Welsh people the ability to shape local
policing in Wales.
Wales must not be unfairly disadvantaged by the Barnett formula. So while the
Conservatives have cut the Welsh budget by 1.5 billion, we will establish a fair
funding settlement for Wales, with the guarantee of a funding floor.
Northern Ireland
Labour is proud of the role we played in bringing peace and stability to Northern
Ireland through the Good Friday Agreement, and successive agreements. A
Labour Government will engage proactively with the Northern Ireland Executive
to support continued political progress, and deliver on its vision of a shared
future. We will ensure the economic pact between the UK Government and
Northern Ireland Executive is focused on stimulating jobs and growth which
contribute to reducing unemployment and poverty in Northern Ireland. We
will continue to work with the Irish Government to secure peace in Northern
Ireland and strengthen relations between our two countries.
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Our Freedom of Information laws have shone a light into the darker corners
of government and are a crucial check on the power of the Executive. We will
extend their scope so that public services run by large private companies are
included. And we will repair the damage done by this Government to the vital
safeguard offered by judicial review.
The media
The free flow of information and of different points of view is crucial for open
debate and countering concentrations of unaccountable power. That is why the
concentration of media power in too few hands is damaging to our democracy.
No one media owner should be able to exert undue influence on public opinion
and policy makers. No media company should have so much power that those
who run it believe themselves above the rule of law.
Yet the current system for protecting against these threats is inadequate.
Labour will take steps to protect the principle of media plurality, so that no
media outlet can get too big, including updating our rules for the 21st century
media environment.
We remain strongly committed to the implementation of the recommendations
of the Leveson Inquiry. We expect the industry to establish a mechanism for
independent self-regulation, which delivers proper redress for individuals, as
set out in the Royal Charter, and agreed by all parties in Parliament. We made
a promise to victims of the phone hacking scandal. We stand by that promise
and will keep it.
Our system of public service broadcasting is one of Britains great strengths.
The BBC makes a vital contribution to the richness of our cultural life, and
we will ensure that it continues to do so while delivering value for money. We
will also commit to keeping Channel 4 in public ownership, so it continues to
produce vital public content.
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Labour will:
set up a people-led Constitutional Convention to determine the future of
UKs governance
replace the House of Lords with a Senate of the Nations and Regions
pass an English Devolution Act, handing 30 billion of resources and powers
to our great English city and county regions
give new powers for communities to shape their high streets, including
power over payday lenders and the number of fixed-odds betting terminals
meet our promises to devolve further powers to Scotland and Wales
give 16 and 17-year-olds the vote
create a statutory register of lobbyists
ban MPs from holding paid directorships and consultancies
require large companies to publish their gender pay gap
implement the recommendations of the Leveson Inquiry.
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e will stand up
for Britains
interests in Europe
and the world
Global challenges
We will take a multilateral approach to global challenges. We will continue to
uphold our key alliances. These include the United States, our allies in Africa
and Latin America, and our partners from across the Commonwealth. They
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also include the European Union. The crisis in Ukraine over the past year has
demonstrated the importance of NATO and the EU standing up to external
threats in Europes eastern, and southern neighbourhoods. Labour will
continue to advocate an EU which looks outward to promote stability, peace
and prosperity on its borders.
Most immediately we will work with our allies to counter and confront terrorism.
ISILs barbarism and expansionist ideology, alongside terrorist groups such
as Al Qaeda and Al-Shabaab, represent a particular threat to global security.
Following a request from the Iraqi Prime Minister, it was right that the UK joined
other nations in air strikes against ISIL targets in Iraq. But military action alone
will not defeat ISIL. A long-term multinational political strategy, with regional
actors playing a central role, is essential for tackling the rise of extremism
across the region.
A Labour Government will always do what is necessary to defend our country.
Beyond self-defence, Labour has been clear about the need to learn the lessons
of previous interventions, especially the 2003 invasion of Iraq. We will continue
the approach we have taken in this Parliament. A Labour Government would
not propose the use of military force without judging whether reasonable
diplomatic efforts have been exhausted, the action is proportionate and in
partnership with allies, whether there is a clear legal basis, and if there is a clear
plan, not just for winning the war but also for building a lasting peace.
Peace and security in the Middle East are one of Labours most important
foreign policy objectives. We remain committed to a comprehensive two-state
solution a secure Israel alongside a viable and independent state of Palestine.
There can be no military solution to this conflict and all sides must avoid taking
action that would make peace harder to achieve. Labour will continue to press
for an immediate return to meaningful negotiations leading to a diplomatic
resolution.
Labour will also continue to honour the UKs commitment to support
Afghanistan as it seeks to secure an inclusive and durable political settlement.
In December 2014, the NATO-led ISAF mission in Afghanistan ended. We can
never repay the debt owed to the brave servicemen and women who have
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sacrificed and risked their lives in Afghanistan to protect our national security.
As power and wealth continues to shift from West to East, our relationship with
Asia will be fundamental to our long-term prosperity. Labour will set up an Asia
Step-Change Taskforce to ensure a more strategic and effective dialogue with
regional partners, including China, both in the commerical realm, and in other
areas, from cultural exchange to human rights.
This commitment to universal human rights will be at the heart of our foreign
policy across the world. We will continue to promote womens rights. We
will join with those campaigning to attain gender equality, the eradication of
poverty and inclusive economic growth. We will appoint a Global Envoy for
Religious Freedom, and establish a multi-faith advisory council on religious
freedom within the Foreign and Commonwealth Office. And we will appoint
an International LGBT Rights Envoy to promote respect for the human rights
of LGBT people, and work towards the decriminalisation of homosexuality
worldwide.
Europe
Labour believes that our membership of the European Union is central to
our prosperity and security. It is why we will work to change the EU, so that it
operates in the best interests of our country. And it is why we will re-engage
with our European allies to protect our national interest after five years of
Britain being sidelined in Europe and isolated abroad.
The economic case for membership of the EU is overwhelming. Over 3 million
jobs in the UK are linked to trade with the European Union, and almost half
of our trade and foreign investment comes from the EU. Competing in the
single market, with the best companies in the world, drives competitiveness
and innovation for firms in all parts of our economy. And it helps boost the
living standards of people across Britain, encouraging the inflow of capital and
investment.
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Our reforms will help deliver a Europe focused on jobs and growth, not simply
more austerity and rising unemployment. Labour will focus on the completion
of the single market and tougher budget discipline, including on those items
where spending at the EU level can save money at the national level. That
means driving reform of the Common Agricultural Policy and a Commission-led
zero-based review of spending on EU agencies to reduce waste and inefficiency.
We will not join the Euro, and we will ensure EU rules protect the interests of
non-Euro members.
A Labour Government helped to introduce sensible measures at EU level to
protect the rights of British workers, and we remain committed to fighting to
protect these measures.
People coming to Britain from the EU to look for work are expected to contribute
to our economy, and to our society. So we will secure reforms to immigration
and social security rules, as well as pushing for stronger transitional controls,
which will enable member states to manage the flow of workers for longer
when new countries join.
We will also continue to open up EU decision-making, and implement
institutional reforms to help build levels of trust among European citizens.
We will work to strengthen the influence national parliaments over European
legislation, by arguing for a red-card mechanism for member states, providing
greater parliamentary scrutiny.
Labours priority in government will be protecting the NHS and tackling the
cost-of-living crisis. It is not to take Britain out of Europe. However, Labour will
legislate for a lock that guarantees that there can be no transfer of powers
from Britain to the European Union without the consent of the British public
through an in/out referendum.
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Climate change
We will put climate change at the heart of our foreign policy. As the
terrible impact of the floods in Britain showed last year, climate change
is now an issue of national, as well as global security. From record
droughts in California, to devastating typhoons in the Philippines,
the world is already seeing the effects we once thought only future
generations would experience.
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has made clear that if
the world is going to hold warming below two degrees (the internationallyagreed goal), global emissions need to peak in around 2020, and then
decline rapidly to reach net zero emissions by the second half of this
century. The weaker the action now, the more rapid and costly the
reductions will need to be later.
The effects of climate change hit the poor, the hardest. If we do not tackle
climate change, millions of people will fall into poverty. We will expand
the role of the Department of International Development to mitigate the
risks of a changing climate, and support sustainable livelihoods for the
worlds poorest people.
We want an ambitious agreement on climate change at the UNFCCC
conference in Paris, in December. We will make the case for ambitious
emissions targets for all countries, strengthened every five years on the
basis of a scientific assessment of the progress towards the below two
degree goal. And we will push for a goal of net zero global emissions
in the second half of this century, for transparent and universal rules
for measuring, verifying and reporting emissions, and for an equitable
deal in which richer countries provide support to poorer nations in
combatting climate change.
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International development
We are proud that Labour MPs passed the historic law that commits Britain to
spend 0.7 per cent of our gross national income on international development.
Labour will use that commitment from the British public to transform the lives
of the worlds poorest people, whilst ensuring value for taxpayers money. We
will work in fragile and conflict-affected states to improve the lives of those
affected by violence, prioritising the protection and education of women and
children. We will rebalance the budget to focus funding on the worlds poorest
countries.
While progress has been made towards the Millennium Development Goals,
it is unacceptable that over a billion people still live on less than $1.25 a day.
We will work with other countries at this years Sustainable Development
Goals Summit to unite the world to eradicate extreme poverty, tackle growing
economic inequality, and place human rights at the heart of development. We
will establish a Centre for Universal Health Coverage to provide the support,
encouragement, and global partnerships needed to help countries provide
free healthcare. We will lead efforts to reshape the UN humanitarian system to
better equip it to save lives.
The private sector is essential to long-term development, and is often a positive
force for change. We will extend the sharing of tax information to developing
countries, increase DFIDs help to governments to collect more of their own
taxes, tackle corruption, and ensure good governance. We will work with
companies to ensure they have sustainable supply chains that are free from
slavery, treat their workers fairly, and pay taxes where they are due.
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Labour will:
conduct a Strategic Defence and Security Review in the first year of
government
return Britain to a leadership role in Europe, but reform the EU so that it
works for Britain
guarantee no powers will be transferred to Brussels without an in/out
referendum
appoint an International LGBT Rights Envoy and a Global Envoy for Religious
Freedom
outlaw discrimination against and abuse of members of the Armed Forces
enshrine the Military Covenant in the NHS Constitution
push for global targets to tackle inequality and promote human rights
establish a Centre for Universal Health Coverage
push for an ambitious target in Paris to get to goal of net zero global
emissions in the second half of this century.
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Andy, Docker
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