ID, Labour and U-turn
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Labour ministers face fury over plans to ban one group of Brits from buying 0% alcohol, with critics branding the "gateway drug" theory as a new attack on British pubs.
That’s because U-turns are often more damaging than you might think. They project weakness and a lack of clear direction. They suggest the policy was never properly thought through in the first place.
UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s governing Labour Party slipped behind the main opposition Conservative Party in Bloomberg’s composite poll for the first time since the July 2024 general election.
Sir Keir Starmer’s Labour government have u-turned more than a dozen times since taking power 18 months ago. From trans rights to inheritance tax on farmers, Labour have folded under public pressure a grand total of 13 times following its latest U-turn on mandatory digital ID cards.
On November 21, the government notified provisions of the Labour Codes. These Labour Codes consolidate twenty-nine existing labour laws into a unified framework governing employee benefits.
Sky News interrupted its programming to deliver a scathing critique of the Labour Party's latest update, in which they stated that digital ID cards would not be compulsory for employment in the UK. The decision follows months of criticism from Labour insiders and the Opposition,
Exclusive: Zack Polanski tells The Independent that doing a deal with a Starmer-led Labour Party would ‘lead to a worse version of Nigel Farage’
LABOUR would lose 90 per cent of their MPs at Westminster if a new General Election were held tomorrow, a major new poll has found