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Labour to launch five-point plan to breathe new life into high streets

Cutting business rates is among the measures to be announced by Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer and shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves.

Elizabeth Arnold
Tuesday 11 April 2023 17:30 EDT
Shoppers on Great Yarmouthā€™s Regent Road (Alamy/PA)
Shoppers on Great Yarmouthā€™s Regent Road (Alamy/PA)

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Cutting business rates and energy bills, plus stamping out late payments are among measures outlined in a new plan by Labour which the party pledged would ā€œget our high streets thriving againā€.

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer and shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves will visit Great Yarmouth on Wednesday as the party launches its five-point plan to ā€œrevitalise local high streetsā€, warning ā€œthousands of pubs, shops and bank branchesā€ have closed.

A Police Efficiency and Collaboration Programme would, the party said, combat anti-social behaviour and ā€œdeliver over Ā£350 million in procurement and shared services savingsā€ to be used to pay for 13,000 more neighbourhood police and PCSOs.

With our five-point plan, Labour will work in partnership with businesses and local communities to get our high streets thriving again

Sir Keir Starmer

The party said it would cut business rates for small businesses on the high street ā€œpaid for by properly taxing online giantsā€, adding it ā€œwould be worth over Ā£2.6kā€ to the average pub, cafe or restaurant.

Labour, it added, would also introduce ā€œtough new laws to stamp out late payments and make sure more money gets to high street firmsā€ and give councils ā€œstrong new powers to bring empty shops on their high streets back into useā€.

To help cut energy bills, Labour said it would introduce vouchers for energy efficiency measures including ā€œdouble glazing at a local cinema, a new heat pump in a cafe or an electric vehicle for a takeawayā€.

Sir Keir said: ā€œBritainā€™s businesses already give so much to our economy, and hold a huge amount of potential and promise just waiting to be unlocked.

ā€œBut theyā€™re being held back by 13 years of Tory economic failure. The Tories crashed the economy, and business and working people are still paying the price on higher interest rates.

ā€œWith our five-point plan, Labour will work in partnership with businesses and local communities to get our high streets thriving again.ā€

Conservative party chairman Greg Hands said: ā€œLabour have abandoned their pledge to abolish business rates. The only position they remain committed to is more unfunded, uncosted spending pledges.

ā€œWe have a Ā£13 billion package in place now to support firms with the cost of business rates as we push on with our mission to halve inflation, grow the economy and reduce debt to help businesses right across the UK.ā€

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