Labour does not deserve to win next election if it does not deliver change, says Reeves

If Labour does not deserve to win the next election if he fails to change the country, Rachel Reeves acknowledges that some voters are disappointed with the time of the party.
Speaking at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, Chancellor said that he was “impatient for change ,, but the ministers said that he could not do anything immediately”.
With the Prime Minister’s approval grade always reached the lowest level last month, the increasing concern of the Sir Keir Starmer government from both left and right voters.

Speaking with Iain Dale, Ms. Reeves said, “The reason why people vote for the vote in the last election is that they want to change and that they are not satisfied with the way the country is managed.
“They know that we have inherited a confusion. They know it’s not easy to put it right, but people are impatient for change.
“I am impatient for change, but at the same time I have the job to ensure that the sums are always collected – and it does not always make you popular because you cannot do anything you may want to do.”
“You certainly cannot do anything immediately,” he said, if the Labor Party does not provide the change promised by the Labor Party, he added that he does not “deserve to win the next election.
The chancellor claimed that the government had a “right” balance between questions about how to raise the money to fill the black hole in public financing of a number of large U -turn and expenditure commitments of the government when it comes to taxation.
“Of course you will disappoint people. Nobody wants to pay more taxes,” he said.
“Everyone wants more money than public expenditures – and borrowing is not a free option, because you need to pay for it.
“I think people know such restrictions, but nobody really loves them and I have to sort the summaries.”
Annelise Dodds, the former workers’ shadow, comes only a few days after calling the government to think of a reserve tax in the next budget to make a hole in public finances.
In February, Sir Keir Starmer’s government warned the government of MS Dodds, who reserved for the Prime Minister’s decision to reduce the foreign aid budget to finance an increase in defense expenditures, that the expenditure cuts will not “deliver the necessary financial chamber”.
Last month, Sir Keir’s support between the people reached minus 43 depths after a U -turn of welfare cuts worth £ 5 billion.
The questionnaire is first reported Sunday TimesHe also found that only a year after arriving in power, seven out of 10 voters, Sir Keir government, at least as chaotic as Tories’s previous periods found.
This includes one of all three voters who believe that they are more.




