No prime minister comes into power without a bulging in-tray of stuff that needs sorting, but Keir Starmer’s is overflowing. The new PM told Big Issue on the campaign trail he’ll “be as bold as Attlee” in avoiding austerity and tackling the “moral stain” of poverty.
Now he must live up to those words.
There was barely time to toast Labour’s landslide victory before Starmer announced his cabinet, drawing heavily on the experience of his existing shadow ministers. Other appointments came out of left-field, tapping into Covid-era chief scientific adviser Sir Patrick Vallance as science minister and Timpson boss James Timpson as prisons minister.
Inside the early days of power, Keir Starmer has killed the wasteful Rwanda scheme – it was “dead before it started”, he quipped – and chancellor Rachel Reeves laid out the plan for growth, targeting the need to change the planning system to unlock 1.5 million homes.
Health secretary Wes Streeting offered striking junior doctors an olive branch and said his department’s default position is that the NHS is broken. Housing counterpart Angela Rayner killed off the Tories’ flagship levelling up policy. Reeves was emphatic in her speech that things would take time and there is plenty to come, setting up Great British Railways and Great British Energy to nationalise railways and an energy firm chief among them.
In this week’s issue, we dive into what Keir Starmer and Labour need to focus on to bring the promised ‘national reset’ to light.