The manifesto's title refers to the chance for voters to stop the "endless
Conservative chaos" that, according to
Keir Starmer, has "directly harmed the finances of every family in Britain", and to instead vote for the
Labour Party, with Starmer calling this "an opportunity to begin the work of national renewal, and to rebuild of our country so that it once again serves the interests of working people." The Labour general election campaign adopted "Change" as their slogan.[5] When launching the manifesto, Starmer referred to it as "a fairer, healthier, a more secure Britain, at the service of working people, with growth from every community. A Britain ready to restore that promise. The bond that reaches through the generations and says – this country will be better for your children."[6][7][8]
The manifesto itself focuses on economic growth, planning system reforms, infrastructure, what Starmer describes as ‘clean energy’, healthcare, education, childcare, crime, and strengthening workers' rights.[9][10] It pledges a
new publicly owned energy company, a 'Green Prosperity Plan', reducing patient waiting times in the
National Health Service (NHS), and
renationalisation of the
railway network.[11] It includes wealth creation and 'pro-business and pro-worker' policies.[12][13] The manifesto also pledged to give votes to 16 year olds, reform the
House of Lords, and to tax private schools, with money generated going into improving state education.[14][15]
Major points
First steps
During the 2024 general election campaign, six first steps were issued and detailed in the manifesto too. The six steps are:[16]
Deliver economic stability with tough spending rules, so the economy can grow and keep taxes, inflation and mortgages as low as possible.
Cut NHS waiting times with 40,000 more appointments each week, during evenings and weekends, paid for by cracking down on tax avoidance and non-dom loopholes.
Launch a new Border Security Command with hundreds of new specialist investigators and use counter-terror powers to smash criminal boat gangs.
Set up Great British Energy, a publicly owned clean power company, to cut bills for good and boost energy security, paid for by a windfall tax on oil and gas giants.
Crack down on antisocial behaviour, with more neighbourhood police paid for by ending wasteful contracts, tough new penalties for offenders, and a new network of youth hubs.
Recruit 6,500 new teachers in key subjects to set children up for life, work and the future, paid for by ending tax breaks for private schools.
Channel 4 News's
fact-checking of the manifesto found that a Labour government would "almost certainly preside over a lower net migration rate in the next few years – even if it’s done little to bring this about" on the manifesto's immigration policies, while finding that it "may be difficult to evaluate in the future" whether a Labour government had met its pledge on GP outpatient appointments, and that the pledge on new teachers would "deliver half the increase in teacher numbers that the Conservatives managed in this parliament."[22]Full Fact's fact-checking evaluated as accurate the manifesto's claims that the 2010-2024 Conservative government had raised the tax burden to a 70-year high, had overseen a significant decrease in
British Armed Forces staff, and a significant increase in child poverty.[23]
The
Institute for Fiscal Studies described the manifesto as "not a manifesto for those looking for big numbers," saying there was "almost nothing in the way of definite promises on spending."[24]
Reactions
The
Child Poverty Action Group criticised the manifesto for not committing to ending the
two child benefit cap, saying that until it was ended, "real change won’t come for the four million children in poverty."[25]
The charity
Humanists UK welcomed pledges on Lords reform, updating the curriculum, for a
ban on conversion therapy, and for assurances that the UK would remain a member of the
European Convention on Human Rights. It did however express disappointment that pre-manifesto Labour pledges on incorporating the
UN Convention on the Rights of the Child into domestic law, tackling unregistered illegal schools, and parliamentary time for assisted dying did not feature.[26]