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    You are at:Home»Politics»Starmer calls Reform’s policy on immigration ‘racist’ and says Farage’s party would ‘tear country apart’ – Labour conference live | Politics
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    Starmer calls Reform’s policy on immigration ‘racist’ and says Farage’s party would ‘tear country apart’ – Labour conference live | Politics

    onlyplanz_80y6mtBy onlyplanz_80y6mtSeptember 28, 20250016 Mins Read
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    Starmer calls Reform’s policy on immigration ‘racist’ and says Farage’s party would ‘tear country apart’ – Labour conference live | Politics
    Keir Starmer on Sunday. Photograph: Ian Forsyth/Getty Images
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    Starmer says Reform’s indefinite leave to remain policy immoral and ‘racist’

    Q: Do you think the Reform UK indefinite leave to remain policy is immoral?

    Yes, says Starmer.

    He says it is one thing to remove illegal migrants.

    But removing people who are settled in the UK is a “completely different thing”, he says.

    He says most elections in this country have been between Labour and the Conservatives.

    But Reform are different, he says. It is the sort of politics we have seen in France or Germany, he says (implying they are far-right).

    Q: Do you think this is a racist policy?

    Starmer says:

    I do think that it is a a racist policy. I do think it is immoral. It needs to be called out for what it is.

    But Starmer says he is not saying people who are considering voting for Reform are racist. They are people “frustrated” by the lack of change, he says.

    UPDATE: Starmer said:

    It is one thing to say we’re going to remove illegal migrants, people who have no right to be here. I’m up for that.

    It is a completely different thing to say we are going to reach in to people who are lawfully here and start removing them. They are our neighbours.

    They’re people who work in our economy. They are part of who we are. It will rip this country apart.

    Asked if Reform were trying to appeal to racists, Starmer said:

    No, I think there are plenty of people who either vote Reform or are thinking of voting Reform who are frustrated.

    They had 14 years of failure under the Conservatives, they want us to change things.

    They may have voted Labour a year ago, and they want the change to come more quickly. I actually do understand that.

    Share

    Updated at 08.12 EDT

    Key events

    • 8m ago

      Scotland being held back by ‘tired and out of touch SNP’, Sarwar says

    • 24m ago

      Alan Miliburn warns there is risk of state services being ‘overwhelmed’ without more focus on problem prevention

    • 32m ago

      Attorney general Lord Hermer rejects suggestions he is blocking attempts to stop ECHR being misused

    • 48m ago

      Anas Sarwar suggests Starmer should ‘stop being shy’ of promoting UK government’s successes

    • 55m ago

      Anthony Albanese says Labor in Australia has shown patriotism can by ‘truly progressive force’

    • 2h ago

      Reed says housebuilding will start in at least 3 new town locations before

    • 2h ago

      Modern Tories like Jenrick don’t have ‘values system’ like old-style Conservatives, Labour’s general secretary claims

    • 3h ago

      Labour members welcome Starmer’s decision to describe Reform UK’s immigration policy as racist

    • 3h ago

      Armed forces families and veterans to get priority for some housing built on surplus MoD land under ‘Forces First’ plan

    • 3h ago

      Badenoch claims Starmer’s ‘manifesto stands’ interview answer implies VAT may rise in budget

    • 3h ago

      Labour activists applaud Angela Rayner as Reed calls her ‘true working class hero’

    • 4h ago

      Reform UK accuses Starmer of describing its supporters as racist – despite PM saying he wasn’t

    • 4h ago

      Anas Sarwar says he, not Starmer, will lead Labour’s campaign in next year’s Holyrood elections

    • 4h ago

      Steve Reed says he does not think Unite will disaffiliate from Labour, despite Sharon Graham saying it could

    • 4h ago

      Starmer thanks campaigners as he opens conference saying Hillsborough law show government ‘on side of justice’

    • 5h ago

      Government identifies sites for 12 new towns

    • 5h ago

      Starmer’s BBC interview – snap verdict

    • 6h ago

      Starmer says goverment will restrict spending on taxi rides for asylum seekers in hotels after huge bills revealed

    • 6h ago

      Starmer says he has ‘for some time’ thought left wrong to ignore concerns about illegal immigration

    • 6h ago

      Starmer brushes off criticism, saying it’s part of ‘job description’ and he’ll be judged on his 5-year record

    • 7h ago

      Starmer denies putting donkey field he bought for his parents into trust, after report claims he did, with potential tax benefits

    • 7h ago

      ‘Manifesto stands’, Starmer says, when asked he remains committed to election commitment not to raise VAT

    • 7h ago

      Starmer says Reform’s indefinite leave to remain policy immoral and ‘racist’

    • 7h ago

      Starmer says Reform UK’s plan to scrap indefinite leave to remain for migrants who have it would ‘tear country apart’

    • 7h ago

      Starmer stresses he always said turning Britain around would take time, in response to questions about poor Labour polling

    • 7h ago

      Steve Reed says he is confident Starmer will lead Labour into next election, after poll suggests members want him replaced

    • 7h ago

      53% of Labour members want new leader before election, poll suggests

    • 8h ago

      Shabana Mahmood says migrants who want indefinite leave to remain should have to be contributing to communities

    • 8h ago

      Starmer calls on Labour to stop ‘navel-gazing’ and join ‘fight of our times’ as Labour conference begins

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    Pro Palestine Action supporters staging a protest outside the Labour conference in Liverpool.
    Photograph: Oli Scarff/AFP/Getty ImagesShare

    Scotland being held back by ‘tired and out of touch SNP’, Sarwar says

    While most speakers at the Labour conference have singled out Reform UK for special criticism today, Douglas Alexander, the Scottish secretary, and Anas Sarwar, the Scottish Labour leader were also withering about the SNP.

    In his speech Alexander said:

    The SNP, as a nationalist party, is dedicated to making Scotland independent – everyone understands that.

    But the harsh truth is that if you wake up every morning thinking: “What can I do today to move Scotland closer to independence?” that means you start the day focussed on difference, division and grievance.

    In today’s world of political, economic and technological turmoil that approach is letting Scotland down.

    Now is the time to focus on building not breaking, on cooperation not conflict, on working together not pulling apart.

    We need and deserve a first minister fully committed to solidarity and not separation to ensure Scotland’s aspirations are backed by the UK’s strength.

    That’s is why the next first minister has to be someone who will put the people of Scotland first.

    And this is what Sarwar said about the SNP.

    In Scotland we are being held back by a tired and out of touch SNP government.

    Look at the contrast.

    In England under Labour, NHS waiting lists are falling.

    In Scotland under the SNP they are still rising – with 1 in 6 Scots on an NHS waiting list.

    Here patients are being seen quicker. But not in Scotland.

    Do you know that there are more people waiting over two years on an NHS waiting list in Glasgow alone than in the whole of England?

    Here schools are now recovering after a decade and a half of Tory misrule. While under the SNP ours are falling down the international league tables.

    Here the Labour government is getting spades in the ground to build new homes, while in Scotland the SNP are failing to deal with a national housing emergency.

    A UK Labour government is returning neighbourhood policing to local communities.

    But in Scotland, under the SNP, police numbers are cut and our police stations are closing.

    Douglas Alexander (left) and Anas Sarwar on the conference platform. Photograph: Stefan Rousseau/PAShare

    Alan Miliburn warns there is risk of state services being ‘overwhelmed’ without more focus on problem prevention

    Rowena Mason

    Rowena Mason is the Guardian’s Whitehall editor.

    Alan Milburn, the lead non-executive director at the Department of Health and former Labour cabinet minister, had a stark warning about the state of public services at a Tony Blair Institute fringe meeting.

    He said:

    The truth is unless we get upstream of some of these issues – family breakdown, knife crime, divisions in communities and, frankly, health – then the system will just be overwhelmed. The state will be overwhelmed. You can see it already. The law of supply and demand isn’t working.

    He said Donald Trump was right that the west would need to spend more on defence and meanwhile the NHS, social care and infrastructure and other public services had increasing demands.

    He said there is a “limit to how much you can tax and how much you can borrow … and it is not even about the bond market, it’s about people”.

    Milburn said the current situation was “not sustainable” and solving it would require a “mindset change” to shift towards spending money on prevention of problems before they get acute.

    ShareAnti-Labour protesters outside the Labour party conference, including farmers opposed to the extension of inheritance tax to cover farms and people opposed to the digital ID scheme Photograph: Danny Lawson/PAShare

    Attorney general Lord Hermer rejects suggestions he is blocking attempts to stop ECHR being misused

    Aletha Adu

    Aletha Adu is a Guardian political correspondent.

    Lord Hermer, the attorney general, has pushed back against claims from colleagues that he is standing in the way of reforming Britain’s human rights framework, insisting that “good lawyers are not blockers, they are enablers.”

    Speaking at a fringe event at Labour conference, Hermer said he looked forward to working with the home secretary, Shabana Mahmood, to “transform” the asylum and immigration system, promising a “world-class litigation strategy” that would scrutinise every stage of the process “from caseworker decisions through to supreme court cases”.

    He added that the role of lawyers in government was not to dictate policy but to “help [ministers] make the decisions as effectively as they possibly can”, remarks that appear aimed at quelling unease among Labour MPs who believe he should go further on reform of the European convention on human rights (ECHR). Labour has so far ruled out withdrawal from the convention but signalled it wants to be “at the table” in shaping reforms to how it is applied, particularly in asylum cases.

    Hermer said many of the problems lay not in Strasbourg, where the European court of human rights is based, but in the UK. He described himself as “completely shocked” to find that Home Office officials did not always attend first-tier tribunals or counter medical evidence presented by applicants.

    He argued that failures in casework and appeals had fuelled misconceptions about human rights law, citing the chicken nugget story, a widely misrepresented ECHR case, as “completely false”.

    Share

    Anas Sarwar suggests Starmer should ‘stop being shy’ of promoting UK government’s successes

    Severin Carrell

    Severin Carrell is the Guardian’s Scotland editor.

    Anas Sarwar, the Scottish Labour leader, has challenged Keir Starmer and party strategists to “stop being shy” of the UK government’s successes, implying that without a dramatically bolder sales pitch Labour faces obliteration in next year’s Holyrood elections.

    In a speech peppered with direct attacks on John Swinney, leader of the “knackered” Scottish National party leader, and “poisonous” Nigel Farage, the leader of Reform UK, Sarwar directly his main message internally.

    He repeatedly chided Labour for being too shy on boasting about its achievements – appearing to echo growing concerns within the party and the cabinet Starmer is failing to construct a coherent story about Labour’s policies.

    With Scottish Labour has surprised its critics by winning several key byelections, its popularity as measured by opinion polls has plummeted, in line with the UK party’s steep decline.

    The latest Norstat poll for the Sunday Times Scotland underscored growing anxiety in Sarwar’s party, by placing Labour third behind reform in a Holyrood constituency vote, at 17% to Reform’s 20%. The SNP are comfortably in the lead at 34%.

    Despite the byelection wins, many of Sarwar’s allies fear those findings demonstrate Labour is in deep trouble. Sarwar is seen as being increasingly equivocal about whether he believes Starmer is the right Labour leader.

    Sarwar used the word “shy” eight times in his speech, as he drummed home his appeal.

    Conference, since getting rid of the Tories last summer, we have begun the work of clearing up their mess, and changing this country for the better.

    But let’s be honest, it’s not been easy. It was never going to be. That’s why we need to be more confident in telling our Labour story.

    We can’t expect the right-wing press to do our jobs for us. We can’t afford to be shy about the successes we have had.

    Or about the positive changes we are making. If we aren’t going to talk about our successes – then no one else will. If we aren’t going to tell our positive story, then people aren’t going to hear it.

    Anas Sarwar addressing Labour’s conference. Photograph: Stefan Rousseau/PAShare

    Updated at 10.29 EDT

    Anthony Albanese says Labor in Australia has shown patriotism can by ‘truly progressive force’

    Anthony Albanese, the Australian PM and Labor party leader, gave a speech that did not directly refer to Keir Starmer’s leadership difficulties (see 8.59am), but which seemed intended to be as supportive as possible in the circumstances. Speaking as someone who has already won two general elections, he was able to so so with some authority.

    Here are the main points he made.

    [The labour movement should] should build cohesion and respect and harmony at home. We do that by embracing patriotism as a truly progressive force, by demonstrating that our love of country is what drives us to serve, and also to change it for the better.

    This is now Starmer’s core argument. (See 11.23pm.)

    For Labour governments, every single day counts because it takes time to turn promises into progress.

    It takes time for plans to work and be seen to work. For inflation to fall, wages to rise, new homes to be finished, new energy connected, new hospitals to open, new investments in education to flow into results.

    It takes time to tackle problems that have been created over decades. It takes time to repay trust by delivering on commitments, and in doing so, build trust for future action.

    It takes time to make change with people and make change work for people, and none of that means we can expect or ask for patience.

    But Albanese recognised that governments have to be able to respond to some problems immediately.

    The challenges that the world throws at us, from economic turmoil to threats to our national security, never wait, and the action that we need to take on climate change, the work we need to do to seize the jobs and opportunities of clean energy, that cannot wait.

    So while governments always need to be able to tell the difference between what’s urgent and what’s important, in the end, we have to do both.

    In his BBC interview this morning Starmer said he wanted to be judged by what he achieved over five years. (See 10am.)

    We didn’t pretend that we had solved every problem in just three years, but we could point to an economy that was turning the corner, inflation down, wages up, unemployment low, and interest rates starting to fall, and we offered a second term agenda that built on the patient and disciplined work we had done in our first term.

    • He said that, if delegates got angry at conference, it was a sign they were taking politics seriously. He said:

    The debates that we hold here are not just healthy, they’re essential. They’re a sign of life.

    The reason passions run high at our conferences is because we really care, because the stakes are really high, because what happens here really matters.

    There has not been much dissent on the conference floor yet – although there was an argument this morning about why some Gaza motions have been disallowed.

    We all know this is a time when trust in governments and institutions is under challenge.

    We all sense this is an era where our capacity for peaceful disagreement is being tested.

    But what I see here in UK Labour, and this man, this leader, this prime minister, my friend, is the same determination that I know lives in every member of the Australian Labor party, an absolute resolve to stand together and defend democracy itself.

    Anthony Albanese at the Labour conference. Photograph: Phil Noble/ReutersShare

    These are from Sunder Katwala, director of British Future, a thinktank focusing on race, identity and migration, on why he says Keir Starmer was right to describe Reform UK’s indefinite leave to remain policy as racist.

    Its wrong & un-British to strip from people the promise that this was their permanent home

    Is it racist too? Farage is now exempting 4m European nationals with settled status, 9/10 white, but threatening half a million non-Europeans, India, Nigeria, Pakistan, Africa in a similar ethical position

    The impact is discriminatory, whatever the intention. The discrimination is avoided by making new rules apply in future and not reneging on past pledges. Farage appears to accept this principle for Europeans, on reflection, but not the Commonwealth yet. How does he explain the difference?

    Share

    Labour speakers from the platform at conference today have been aimed almost all their fire at Reform UK, with other opposition parties barely getting a mention. This is what Anna Turley, the Labour chair, told the conference about Nigel Farage’s party.

    Let’s be clear, the Reform party isn’t new, or different, as they like to claim.

    They are a party of recycled Tories with recycled ideas.

    And they stand ready to exploit division for their own political gain.

    Masquerading as patriots whilst their leader jets to the US to call for trade penalties on the UK.

    And on issue after issue – asylum, online safety, or how to pay for their policies they have no serious answer on how to fix things aside from saying they ‘don’t know’.

    Conference, that is Reform: cuts, chaos, and trying to turn people against one another.

    Anna Turley speaking to the conference. Photograph: Victoria Jones/ShutterstockShare

    Updated at 09.28 EDT

    Anthony Albanese, the Australian PM, is speaking to the conference now. He was introduced by Keir Starmer who described “Albo” as a genuine friend, and described how he turned up at Downing Street on Friday with four tins of Albo beer as a present.

    Anthony Albanese arriving at No 10 on Friday with 4 tins of Albo beer Photograph: 7 NewsShare

    Reed says housebuilding will start in at least 3 new town locations before

    In his speech to the conference Steve Reed, the housing secretary, said that housebuilding would start before the next election in at least three of the 12 “new town locations” announced by the government this morning. (See 11.39am.)

    He said:

    I can announce today that we will go ahead with work in at least 12 locations with Tempsford, Leeds South Bank and Crews Hill identified as three of the most promising sites.

    We’ll build homes people feel proud to live in.

    Communities with schools, hospitals, good public transport, green spaces on the doorstep, and the investment that brings good, well paid, unionised jobs to the area.

    And we’ll work with world-class architects to design each new town with its own character and distinct, unique identity.

    We’ll back the builders by streamlining planning rules so local people have a voice but we can get spades in the ground much faster.

    So we’ll start building homes in at least three new town locations before the next general election …

    When I said ‘build baby build’, I meant it.

    Steve Reed speaking at the Labour conference. Photograph: Victoria Jones/ShutterstockShare

    In her speech Hollie Ridley, Labour’s general secretary, said that in 2026 the party would be fighting “the Greens with their ‘let’s be all things to all people’ strategy”.

    If that is the Greens’ strategy, it seems to be working. The Green party of England and Wales has just announced that its membership has passed 80,000 – an increase of almost 20% since Zack Polanski was elected leader at the start of September.

    Share

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