Politics

Rachel Reeves has just reminded Brits of everything they forgot about Labour over 14 years

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Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves are accused of causing serious harm to the British economy. Under their leadership, the UK has gone from leading the G7 in growth to falling behind. Ordinary people are the ones paying the price.

Instead of taking responsibility, they blame others, but the facts speak for themselves. In just six months, they have raised taxes to record levels, hurt small businesses, increased inflation, pushed borrowing costs to a 27-year high, and caused job losses. Their actions, aimed at pleasing trade unions, have hurt working people and expanded government size.

Labour’s approach has been criticized as misguided. Growth, spending, and borrowing are all moving in the wrong direction, leaving the UK’s economy in bad shape. The Conservatives acknowledge they made mistakes while in power but always prioritized rewarding hard work and supporting businesses as key to economic success—something missing in Labour’s policies.

Labour’s current struggles stem from presenting policies without solid plans. They seem to believe that government creates growth, when in fact, businesses drive economic progress. Businesses need lower taxes, fewer regulations, and government support—something Labour fails to provide.

Rachel Reeves has been accused of misleading the public, and the results are visible. Just this week, two major retailers announced thousands of job cuts, citing Labour’s poor economic decisions. The government’s own Employment Rights Bill is expected to cost 50,000 jobs, hitting families hard.

Labour promised not to raise taxes on working people or harm businesses, but they’ve done both. Now, businesses and families are suffering. Strong economic growth means more jobs, higher wages, and better public services, but Labour’s choices are leading the country in the opposite direction.

Most people now believe the UK is heading in the wrong direction. What’s needed are sensible, business-friendly decisions—not more quick fixes, spending, and higher taxes. This week, the Chancellor is expected to announce another “emergency reset,” but critics argue she’s in over her head and failing to deliver solutions.