Maria Eagle writes:
A One Nation Labour Party has to reach out beyond
Britain’s cities. It’s essential electorally if we are to win in 2015, but also
if we aspire to be a government that serves all parts of our country.
That’s
why we need a clear offer to communities outside Britain’s cities at the next
election.
And that means not just those living in villages in the heart of the
countryside, but in our market and coastal towns too.
In electoral terms, it
means ensuring that we campaign and gain seats that we won in 1997 and which we
must do so again if we are to ensure that Ed Miliband is leading a majority
Labour government after the election.
This is why this Saturday’s Third
Place First conference is so important.
It’s also essential that we have a clear plan for
communities outside Britain’s cities to ensure we are ready to challenge the
city-focussed, and particularly London-centric, instincts of Whitehall.
There
is often little understanding of the additional pressures that come from living
in more isolated communities, particularly on the cost of living.
The higher
costs of travel, whether fares or fuel. The lack of bus services, especially
early in the morning and during the evening that can be the difference between
taking up a job, college place or apprenticeship.
The extra heating costs from
being off-grid. The lack of affordable housing, particularly driving many young
people away from the communities in which they grew up.
The greater impact of
the bedroom tax in areas that have a smaller social housing stock and fewer one
bedroom properties in particular, forcing tenants away from family and friends.
The job of a One Nation Labour government will be
to ensure that these additional challenges are understood in each and every
department and the experience of those living outside of our cities is listened
to and addressed.
I am clear that it should be a central role of the Department
for the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs to ensure this is the case – to be
the loud voice across government for communities outside Britain’s cities.
It’s
a role that the hopelessly out of touch Owen Paterson is failing to fulfil,
instead focussing on his failed badger cull, weakening the protection of our
ancient forests and Tory demands for a fresh vote on hunting.
The One Nation Labour offer that we make at the
next election will instead focus on the real concerns of those living in
communities outside of Britain’s cities.
It will ensure that where we set
out a clear policy agenda, we have actually given serious thought to how to
ensure it benefits all parts of the country.
Take energy costs and the need for
fast broadband for example. As well as our pledge to freeze energy prices
while we reset the broken market, we have also committed to bringing the
off-grid energy sector under regulation for the first time.
And we have
made clear we will deliver Winter Fuel Payments earlier to those pensioners who
are using off-grid energy, enabling them to purchase their gas or heating oil
ahead of the rapid price spikes we’ve seen in the Autumn.
On broadband, where
the Government’s programme to connect local communities outside of our cities
is now two years behind schedule and over-budget, we have committed to
switch £75 million from the ‘super-connected cities’ programme to a new
digital inclusion fund that will benefit all communities.
Over the coming months we must ensure that we
apply a similar One Nation focus to each area of policy.
That is the best way
to ensure that our candidates can engage effectively with communities outside
Britain’s cities. It is how we deliver the successful campaign for a Labour
majority that the country so desperately needs.
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