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Speaking skills key to break class barriers, says Keir Starmer


Sir Keir Starmer has pledged to improve children’s speaking skills, as part of a drive to break down class barriers to opportunity.

In a speech on education policy, the Labour leader also promised to level vocational and academic learning.

Touching on his own background, he said people from working class backgrounds were now less able to advance in life.

But his speech was interrupted by protesters, unveiling a banner saying: “No more u-turns, Green new deal.”

The two young people who were protesting were standing right behind Sir Keir on the podium. Later, climate group Green New Deal Rising claimed responsibility for the disruption.

The Labour leader’s speech unveiled details of the fifth and final “mission” the party is focused on ahead of the general election, expected next year.

The missions are expected to form the backbone of the party’s election offer to voters, and shape its priorities in government if it wins power.

In his speech, Sir Keir promised a goal of half a million more children reaching early learning targets by 2030, as well as a review of the curriculum from the beginning of primary school through to the end of compulsory education.

Creative arts

He said a Labour government would “tear down” obstacles to opportunity, which he dubbed the “class ceiling”.

“There’s something more pernicious here, a pervasive idea, a barrier in our collective mind that narrows our ambitions for working class children and says – sometimes with subtlety, sometimes to your face – this isn’t for you,” he said.

He said the previous Labour government didn’t “eradicate the snobbery that looks down on vocational education, didn’t drain the well of disrespect that this creates, and that cost us.”

He said more children should study sport or a creative arts subject until they are 16, as well as a focus on digital skills.

Video caption,

Climate change protesters interrupt Sir Keir Starmer speech calling for a “green new deal right now”.

“For our children to succeed, they need a grounding in both, need skills and knowledge, practical problem-solving and academic rigour,” he said.

“But now – as the future rushes towards us, we also need a greater emphasis on creativity, on resilience, on emotional intelligence and the ability to adapt.”

Labour has already committed to recruiting 6,500 extra teachers in shortage subjects such as maths, paid for by removing tax breaks for private schools, which the party calculates will raise over £1bn a year.

It also wants to use that additional funding to pay teachers a £2,400 retention bonus after they have completed their first two years of training.

But the Labour leader declined to commit to giving teachers in England a 6.5% pay rise this year – the figure reportedly set to be recommended by the pay review body for the profession, amid the economic backdrop.

He told the BBC’s political editor Chris Mason he would be negotiating “every day of the week” to resolve the strike.

Speaking to BBC Radio 4’s Today programme he also did not committed to delivering universal free school meals in primary schools, something the Labour-run Welsh government has committed to delivering by next year.

In his interview, he admitted financial constraints would be a “big factor” for him to consider, amid a “broken” economy.

Sir Keir’s speech unveils the detail on Labour’s education pledge, marking the last of his “missions” as the party eyes the next general election. The Labour leader has said his missions would form “the backbone of the Labour manifesto and the pillars of the next Labour government”.

The other commitments include securing the “highest sustained growth” in the G7 group of nations, by the end of Labour’s first term, removing fossil fuels from all of Britain’s electricity generation by 2030, improving the NHS and reforming the justice system.

The National Association of Headteachers (NAHT) union welcomed Labour’s proposals but warned they must be matched by “significant additional investment”, not only in education but in community support and social care.

“There is no doubt that schools can play a vital role in helping children to thrive no matter what their background, but they need the appropriate resources to do so,” Paul Whiteman, NAHT general secretary, said.

But Education Secretary Gillian Keegan said there was “no guarantee” Labour would keep its promises on education reform, given several recent U-turns on policy proposals.

Sir Keir has scrapped a pledge to abolish university tuition fees, and last month the party rowed back on its plan to invest £28bn a year in green industries if it wins power.

“Labour offers nothing but flip-flop after flip-flop, from tax hikes to tuition fees – showing there is…



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