This isn't a trick question, as we have different views politically, I would be genuinely interested to hear the ways in which you feel we are having our rights removed and how labour are destroying the economy?
I have repeatedly stated that as a Labour supporter I am more than a little disappointed in Starmer and Labours performance so far, but that is largely because I view them as (ideologically speaking) chasing voters on the right and constantly issuing rhetoric on issues such as immigration which is not in line with a general progressive left view.
However, on the two issues you raise I would disagree, they have taken some concrete steps so far.
Our rights
Introduced the employment rights bill. This plans to introduce a whole raft of workers rights; stronger protections around sexual harassment and unfair dismissal, improved SSP, better flexible working, crackdown on zero hours etc.
Restored NHS funding to highest levels since 2010
Introduced the Renters Rights Bill to offer better protection to renters
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Introduced Water special measures bill. Not a massive first step but at least starting to hold water companies to account and better protect us as consumers and the environment.
Ending 2 child benefit cap will lift half a million kids out of poverty, increasing the living conditions of some of the poorest families. I would argue this improves people's rights and protections.
Introduced new measures to Police to better address violence against women and girls.
The economy
OBR projected growth is 1% annually
Real GDP growth is expected to be around 1.4% in 2025, up from 1.1% in 2024. Nominal GDP is estimated at 2.2% higher than predicted in Qtr 2 of this year. Admittedly one of the main challenges is that growth is being taken up by public sector and not private sector which is also driven by net migration. There would have to be a transition back to private growth but as Labour have decided to continue to enact right wing policies on migration this will not be helped.
Real disposable incomes fell by 0.7% in Qtr 1 of this year which has an obvious impact of household consumption, driving it down as people look to save more and spend less, fuelled by better savings rates. However, inflation has likely peaked and projections are that it will gradually fall from early 2026, aligned with a medium term increase in productivity. This would allow for real wage growth. The IFS predicts this would see household consumption grow 1.4% between 2027-31 and the OBR forecasts private consumption to grow 1.6% over the next five years.
As inflation eases we should also start to see real terms growth in business investment and the trend for higher unemployment to reverse.
The IMF projects UK fiscal balance to increase by 2.2% of GDP, compared with an average of 0.3% in other advanced economies. We would still be a net borrower over the next five years, but are predicted to be around 1% lower than comparable economies.
I am not going to pretend it is all rosy, lots of significant challenges ahead but there is also some slow and steady work being done to try and shift the momentum. The idea that Labour are destroying the economy doesn't seem to really stack up.