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Change is a political manifesto published in 2024 by the British Labour Party under the leadership of Sir Keir Starmer. The manifesto sets out the party's new approach to policy, ahead of their successful campaign in the 2024 general election, in which they won a landslide victory. [1] [2]
This is a list of the British Labour Party general election manifestos since the nascent party first fielded candidates at the 1900 general election.. From its foundation, general election manifestos were issued for the Labour Party as a whole, whereas the manifestos of the Conservative and Liberal parties generally took the form of a form of a short personal address by the leader of the party ...
2024 was a historic year for Labour. Under Sir Keir Starmer the party came to power in July for the first time in over a decade, winning with a massive number of seats. It was a short election ...
The combined vote share for Labour and the Conservatives reached a record low, with smaller parties doing well. Labour returned to being the largest party in Scotland and remained so in Wales. The election was noted as the most disproportionate in modern British history, [2] mainly as a result of the first-past-the-post voting system.
The party plans to ensure economic stability, cut NHS waiting times and reform planning rules to build more than one million new homes.
The Liberal Democrats have become the first party to publish their General Election manifesto with the other main parties expected to follow suit this week. – What is an election manifesto?
[1] [2] [3] On 29 July 2024, just over three weeks after gaining power in the 2024 general election, the new Labour government led by the new prime minister, Keir Starmer, announced plans to abolish the winter fuel payment for pensioners in England and Wales (these payments are the responsibility of the devolved governments in Northern Ireland ...
1979 Conservative Party General Election Manifesto: October 1974: Edward Heath: Labour: Putting Britain First: February 1974: Edward Heath: Hung (Labour) Firm Action for a Fair Britain: 1970: Edward Heath: Conservative: A Better Tomorrow: 1966: Edward Heath: Labour: Action Not Words: The New Conservative Programme: 1964: Alec Douglas-Home