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What has Labour actually achieved?

Keir Starmer has translated his majority into some significant laws but it’s no accident that the public has barely noticed
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{"text":[[{"start":9.1,"text":"There are many complaints about Sir Keir Starmer at Westminster. A common one is that he has squandered his huge 165-seat majority in the House of Commons. "}],[{"start":18.7,"text":"Even some ministers say that it is unclear to the public what the first Labour administration in 14 years has achieved."}],[{"start":25.85,"text":"In fact, when the first parliamentary session ends this week, the prime minister will be able to point to 47 new laws since the general election in July 2024. "}],[{"start":36.25,"text":"Those laws include: the scrapping of hereditary peers; improved rights for renters; the biggest overhaul of employment rights for half a century; and changes to planning rules. "}],[{"start":46.3,"text":"Robert Saunders, a reader in modern British history at Queen Mary University, said that Stamer’s legislative record was “not a bad haul for less than two years in government”. "}],[{"start":56.949999999999996,"text":"But he said the list compared badly to the most radical governments of the past 100 years — Clement Attlee’s elected in 1945, Margaret Thatcher’s in 1979 and Tony Blair’s in 1997."}],[{"start":70.1,"text":"Those previous administrations had done serious preparation work for governing years ahead of time, Saunders said. Their legislative plans also fitted into a clear narrative. "}],[{"start":80,"text":"By contrast, under Starmer “most of the public don’t know these laws have been passed or, if they do, they don’t know what they do. There isn’t a clear narrative that you can craft around them”."}],[{"start":null,"text":"

A large group of House of Lords members in red and white ceremonial robes gather in the chamber after the State Opening of Parliament.
"}],[{"start":91.35,"text":"No government can be judged entirely on lawmaking. “Sometimes if ministers are legislating it’s a failure of imagination,” said one Labour aide. "}],[{"start":101,"text":"The prime minister has, however, boasted of the following laws: "}],[{"start":105.05,"text":"The Employment Rights Act is controversial with business leaders, because it gives greater workplace rights to millions of people, strengthening sick pay, maternity and paternity leave and tackling zero-hours contracts, while also making it easier for unions to go on strike. "}],[{"start":121.8,"text":"The Passenger Railway Services (public ownership) Act has begun the process of nationalising Britain’s railways, albeit only as existing contracts with private companies expire. "}],[{"start":132.3,"text":"The Water (Special Measures) Act gives regulators powers to bring criminal charges against water industry executives for environmental damage, bans bonuses for polluting bosses, and mandates real-time monitoring of all sewage outlets. However, key tranches have yet to be brought into force, limiting regulators’ ability to crack down on bad actors. "}],[{"start":153.05,"text":"A Great British Energy Act has set up a new quango in Aberdeen to invest in, develop and own renewable energy projects."}],[{"start":161.15,"text":"A Renters’ Rights Act has abolished “no-fault” section 21 evictions, eliminated fixed-term contracts in favour of rolling tenancies and capped rent increases to only once every year. "}],[{"start":174,"text":"Two significant new laws were originally introduced by the last Tory government: a smoking law, which means someone born after 2008 can never legally buy cigarettes in the UK, and the football governance act, which established a new regulator for English football. "}],[{"start":190.1,"text":"Labour has also removed the last 92 hereditary peers from the House of Lords. However, Starmer’s ambitions for a smaller, elected second chamber have fallen by the wayside: even some hereditaries may be allowed to stay as life peers."}],[{"start":206.4,"text":"Starmer’s government is far less popular than many of its flagship policies. "}],[{"start":211.25,"text":"That is partly because the public know much more about the unpopular policies — such as higher taxes on farmers — than the popular ones, according to polling by Ipsos. The fragmented media environment makes it harder for government messaging to penetrate the public consciousness."}],[{"start":227.25,"text":"The government’s own communications strategy may also be to blame. By targeting largely older, working class voters, it has been “pulling in an opposite direction” to the legislative agenda, says Saunders."}],[{"start":239.75,"text":"“The irony is that the government thinks it’s been quite busy but looks to the public like it’s inert and rudderless.” "}],[{"start":246.65,"text":"The government’s first two years will also be remembered for two failed bills. "}],[{"start":251.15,"text":"It was unable to push through reforms to disability benefits designed to save £5bn, after a revolt by Labour MPs. The emasculated final legislation could now even cost the Treasury more money overall. "}],[{"start":null,"text":"
Protesters outside the Houses of Parliament hold signs reading “BENEFIT CUTS KILL,” “YOU CUT WE BLEED,” and “STARMER FORENSIC FIBBER.”
"}],[{"start":264.55,"text":"An assisted dying bill proposed by Labour MP Kim Leadbeater — and backed by many ministers, including Starmer — ended up in the long grass. "}],[{"start":273.05,"text":"It passed the Commons by 314 votes to 291, and enjoyed wide public support, but collapsed in the Lords, where Labour does not have a majority. "}],[{"start":284.5,"text":"The government was also forced to drop cuts to pensioners’ winter fuel payments. "}],[{"start":289.7,"text":"“For me, there are three things that didn’t happen which will define our time in government,” said one senior Labour figure. “The fact that we retreated from welfare reform and cutting the winter fuel allowance, and that assisted dying didn’t make it.”"}],[{"start":304.95,"text":"In May, the prime minister is preparing to present King Charles III with roughly 30 new bills for the next parliamentary session. "}],[{"start":313.3,"text":"Those bills will include a closer alignment with the EU, the introduction of digital ID, and reforms to special educational needs funding. Partly because of his record so far, Starmer may no longer be in government to oversee them. "}],[{"start":332,"text":""}]],"url":"https://audio.ftcn.net.cn/album/a_1777183887_2335.mp3"}

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