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On Monday, Chancellor Rachel Reeves will urge business leaders to focus on the threat posed by UK reform, as part of a fierce attack by the Nigel Varage Party and the “racist” immigration policy.
Reeves will use her speech at the Liverpool Labor Conference to claim that Farraj will go in the borrowing boom, disrupt the labor market and tear a commercial deal for the European Union. On Sunday, Starmer urged his party to prepare for “fighting our lives” with UK reform.
Reeves allies are frustrated Business leaders They failed to speak against Faraj and his economic policies, as one of them said: “They must wake up – they cannot be negative.”
Its observations are part of an attack on the UK reform, which leads to opinion polls but currently has only five deputies. This step is partially aimed at unifying work representatives and activists against the common enemy.
“Who stands for Britain’s stability,” will ask Reeves in her speech in Liverpool. “A party government is strengthening to reduce interest rates and borrowing or a reform party, which chanted the Liz Treos budget?”
“Who is defending Britain’s business?

Reeves will argue that Farraj has made obligations in not funded spending, and will disrupt the trade and that his plan to deport migrants who have a legal right to live in the UK would cause chaos in the workplace.
Reeves ally said that companies need to speak against the right -wing Farraj Party.
The person said: “They welcome or criticize government policies, but they do not welcome or criticize what reform says.”
Reeves’s speech comes against a difficult economic background because it looks to fill a financial hole of up to 30 billion pounds in its budget in November, with speculation in the work circles that it may have to tear the tax pledges in the party.
The BBC challenged whether it will respect the labor statement pledges not to increase the value -added tax. Starmer was repeatedly used the same formula in its response: “The statement stands.” The undertaking also covers the income tax and national insurance contributions.
Conservatives have seized this phrase as evidence that although policy may stand at the present time, Starmer leaves open that Reeves will retract the tax pledge in its budget on November 26.
Meanwhile, Starmer claimed on Sunday that the Farraj plan to cancel the unlimited vacation (ILR) – the main road for permanent settlement in the United Kingdom – and forcing people to re -submit visas every five years was “racist”.
“I think it is a racist policy,” he told the BBC. “I think he is immoral and should be called up for what it is.”
Starmer aides admitted that the use of the “word r” was not previously planned and that the Prime Minister explained immediately that it means that the Farage immigration policy was racist, and not the people who supported the reform.
But this step left him vulnerable to allegations that he attacks members of the public who are concerned about high levels of migration and community cohesion.
Diaa Youssef, head of reform policies in the United Kingdom, said on Sunday: “The Labor Party’s message to the country is clear: pushing hundreds of billions to flaws to foreign citizens to live outside the state forever, or that the Labor Party will invite you racist.”

On Monday, the new Minister of Interior will accept Shabana Mahmoud implicitly that Farraj has benefited from public interest in immigration through the promise Tightening About how immigrants can have citizenship in the UK.
Mahmoud will say that immigrants will have to earn money in Britain, and do not demand any benefits, and they have a clean criminal record and volunteer in society to obtain permanent residence in Britain.
You will add that many British people feel that things are “out of control” on the issue of immigration. But it will argue that “patriotism, strength for good” turns into something smaller, “something similar to ethnic nationalism.”
Its proposed reforms depend on a pledge to the workers government submitted by the Labor Party government earlier this year to extend the period that migrants need to Britain before they can apply for an ILR from five to 10 years.
On the sidelines of the conference, The great mayor of Manchester, Andy Bornham He continued his attacks on the style of leadership, assumed attempt to withdraw work to the right, and suppress the internal opposition.
“How can you have an open discussion about all these things if there is a lot of fear climate within our party and the way the party is running?” Burnham, who launched a blocked show this week, said at a crowded meeting.
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