Starmer
says Tories ‘sliding into abyss’ and Reform is main challenger
Nigel
Farage’s tax and spend plans are ‘Liz Truss all over again’, prime minister
tells workers in Merseyside
Peter Walker
Senior political correspondent
Thu 29 May
2025 13.35 BST
The
Conservatives are “sliding into the abyss”, Keir Starmer has said, as he
described Nigel Farage and Reform as the main challengers to his Labour
government.
During a
hastily arranged visit to a glass factory in St Helens, the prime minister
castigated Farage as a fake defender of working people and compared him to Liz
Truss as someone whose fiscal plans would crash the economy.
In a media
Q&A after his speech, Starmer was asked why he was focusing so much
attention on Reform, and whether he believed they were the main threat to
Labour.
“I do think
that the Conservative party has run out of road,” Starmer said. “Their project
is faltering. They’re in the decline. They’re sliding into the abyss. It’s very
important, therefore, that we say that and identify that.
“And the
choice at the moment is between the choice of a Labour government that thinks
stable finances are at the heart of building better lives for working people,
or Nigel Farage and Reform, who only this week said they would spend billions
upon billions upon billions, tens of billions of pounds, in an unfunded way,
which is an exact repeat of what Liz Truss did.”
With recent
polls consistently showing Reform ahead in national polling and the
Conservatives a distant third – or in one case fourth – Starmer used Thursday’s
event in Merseyside as a direct riposte to Farage’s event in London on Tuesday,
in which the Reform leader tried to argue his was the party of the working
classes.
However,
much of Farage’s focus was on tax and spend plans that thinktanks have said
could cost many tens of billions of pounds a year, which Starmer compared
directly with Truss’s hastily unwound mini-budget in 2022.
Reform’s
commitment to “completely unfunded spending” was, Starmer said, “Liz Truss all
over again” and “Liz Truss 2.0”.
The prime
minister continued: “We’re once again fighting the same fantasy, this time from
Farage – the same bet in the same casino that you could spend tens of billions
of pounds on tax cuts without a proper way of paying [for] it, using your
family finances, your mortgages, your bills as the gambling chip of this mad
experiment.”
Starmer also
took personal aim at Farage for arguing that he spoke for working people,
contrasting the public school-educated Reform leader’s upbringing with his own
background.
“Unlike
Nigel Farage, I know what it’s like growing up in a cost of living crisis,”
Starmer said. “I know what it’s like when your family can’t pay the bills, when
you fear the postman, the bills that may be brought.
“I know what
it means to work 10 hours a day in a factory, five days a week, and I know that
because that is what my dad did every single working day of his life, and
that’s what I grew up with. So I don’t need lessons from Nigel Farage about the
issues that matter most to working people in this country.”
He also
condemned Farage for saying Jaguar Land Rover (JLR) “deserved” to go bust after
a controversial marketing rebrand. He said: “I would challenge him to go to
JLR, stand in front of the workforce and tell them that his policy for JLR is
they should go bust. I [would] very much like to see the reaction.
“This is a
company at the absolute forefront of British engineering, and he says they
deserve to go bust.
“Can you
trust him? Can you trust him with your future? Could you trust him with your
job? Can you trust him with your mortgages, your pensions, your bills? He gave
the answer – a resounding no.”
Asked about
the comments, Zia Yusuf, the Reform chair, said Starmer’s speech showed it was
“panic stations at Labour”. He told Sky News: “Look, Keir Starmer is panicking
because his awful government is now trailing Reform by a staggering eight
points in the latest YouGov poll.”
He also
accused Labour of resorting to “their magic money tree” to increase spending
beyond manifesto commitments.
When Starmer
was asked about whether he would back moves to end the two-child limit on some
benefits, reportedly being considered, he avoided the question twice before
giving a slightly non-committal answer.
“I’m
determined we’re going to drive down child poverty,” he said. “One of the
proudest things that the last Labour government did was to drive down child
poverty, and that’s why we’ve got a taskforce working on this.
“I think
there are a number of components. There isn’t a single bullet, but I’m
absolutely determined that we will drive this down, and that’s why we’ll look
at all options, all ways of driving down child poverty.”
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