The Guardian view on Labour’s plan for stability: austerity in disguise | Editorial

Rachel Reeves campaigned on a message of change, but in office offers more of the same. The public are tuning outRachel Reeves’s spring statement mattered as much for what she didn’t say as what she did. The chancellor mentioned neither the poor nor inequality. There was no defence of the welfare state, no transformative ambition, no urgency – even amid a climate crisis. Labour promised a break with the past, but she delivered continuity in technocratic clothing. She cast Labour as a competent manager, not a party of ideas – comfortable with markets constraining policy. Ms Reeves framed spending cuts as pragmatic, not ideological. In her vision, “responsibility” means restraint, not redistribution. Labour was once called a moral crusade. For her, it is neither.She will dismay many in her party. Their disappointment will deepen if they read the documents accompanying her statement. The Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) warns unemployment is set to rise. Unprotected spending will be cut in real terms. It spells out that welfare cuts are driving a deficit reduction, and taxes are at record highs without matching social investment. More than 20 people will be poorer for every one person her reforms push into work. It’s hard not to conclude that Ms Reeves has repackaged austerity as “stability”, sacrificing the most vulnerable on the altar of prudence. Continue reading...

Mar 26, 2025 - 22:14
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The Guardian view on Labour’s plan for stability: austerity in disguise | Editorial

Rachel Reeves campaigned on a message of change, but in office offers more of the same. The public are tuning out

Rachel Reeves’s spring statement mattered as much for what she didn’t say as what she did. The chancellor mentioned neither the poor nor inequality. There was no defence of the welfare state, no transformative ambition, no urgency – even amid a climate crisis. Labour promised a break with the past, but she delivered continuity in technocratic clothing. She cast Labour as a competent manager, not a party of ideas – comfortable with markets constraining policy. Ms Reeves framed spending cuts as pragmatic, not ideological. In her vision, “responsibility” means restraint, not redistribution. Labour was once called a moral crusade. For her, it is neither.

She will dismay many in her party. Their disappointment will deepen if they read the documents accompanying her statement. The Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) warns unemployment is set to rise. Unprotected spending will be cut in real terms. It spells out that welfare cuts are driving a deficit reduction, and taxes are at record highs without matching social investment. More than 20 people will be poorer for every one person her reforms push into work. It’s hard not to conclude that Ms Reeves has repackaged austerity as “stability”, sacrificing the most vulnerable on the altar of prudence. Continue reading...