this post was submitted on 25 Sep 2023
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UK Politics

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Labour will “double down” on making the case that tackling the cost of living crisis and the climate crisis can only be done in tandem, despite an intensifying Conservative attack on net zero policies, the Guardian has learned.

Labour will argue that seeking green growth is the way to bring down household bills and secure the future of the UK economy.

The party believes that Rishi Sunak’s dramatic U-turns last week on key net zero policies reveals a weakness in his strategy, in a lack of vision for future economic growth, and by adding to the cost of living for people on low incomes.

Ed Miliband, shadow secretary of state for energy security and net zero, told the Guardian: “Rishi Sunak is a man bankrupt of ideas who has shown this week he neither has answers to the cost of living crisis nor the climate crisis. His announcements will put up costs for working people, threaten investment and jobs, and lead to climate delay, loading more costs on to families.”

Some commentators have predicted that Labour would weaken its own stance in response. Miliband made clear the opposite was true.

“We relish the fight ahead on the question of who can really stand up for working people,” he said. “Labour’s plan will cut bills, create jobs, deliver energy security and tackle the climate crisis, while Rishi Sunak will leave Britain stuck in a doom loop of a permanent cost of living crisis and economic stagnation.”

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[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 years ago (1 children)

the Tories are making it really easy to know who NOT to vote for if you want climate action.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 years ago

True. And while I don't like FPTP, its existence means that in very nearly the whole country, there's an obvious answer to the question, 'How do I stop the Tories winning?'