The frightening thing is not that Tories are paraded as more fiscally competent. It’s that even Labour believes it | Andy Beckett

Abandoning its £28bn green plan betrays a lack of self-belief that has long bedevilled the party – a flaw it must address

In our punitive politics, the Labour party is almost always on probation. You can see it in Keir Starmer’s sometimes jumpy public manner, in the party’s dumping or scaling down of policies as a general election nears, and in its often cautious approach in power, even when it has a commanding majority.

Labour’s lingering insecurity and its related lack of credibility as a governing party in the eyes of others are clearest in how it handles, or is believed to handle, the public finances. State spending, investment, borrowing and deficits can seem dry topics. But they are also treacherous ones for the party which, since its founding, has been torn between seeking financial respectability – the terms of which are usually defined by establishment interests and Labour’s political enemies – and using government to create a more equal society.

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Published on February 09, 2024 08:00
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