Southern Charm XL | Page 7

Boosting the economy Fiona Mactaggart, Labour MP for Slough Fiona Mactaggart was elected as the MP for Slough in 1997 and during her time in office has served as a Home Office Minister and as Parliamentary Private Secretary for Chris Smith. Before becoming an MP, Fiona worked for the National Council for Voluntary Organisations, the Joint Council for the Welfare of Immigrants and a private company. She was a London primary school teacher and a university lecturer. Twitter: @fionamacmp Labour lost the argument about handling the economy while we were looking inwards after the last general election and it’s not clear that we have a strategy to reverse that. But unless we do, we cannot win support in the South. The risk is that the next general election will be a repeat of 1992, when despite predictions that Labour would win, the British public chose “to hang on to nurse for fear of worse”. “The risk is that the next general election will be a repeat of 1992” In 2015 we need a strategy which will grow our economy in a way which benefits voters. Although UK growth between 2003 and 2007 outstripped that in many other countries and home-owners benefited from a boom, many workers were no better off. Despite the recent recovery, Britain's economy is still smaller than it was in 2007. Labour now has so little representation in southern seats outside cities that we can be insensitive to the attitudes of voters there. 750 people in Slough are affected by the bedroom tax, but ten times as many live in expensive overcrowded private sector rented accommodation on a housing waiting list with little prospect of a move. They resent the spare bedrooms available to people who got housing in times when there was enough to go around. And it is in these urban and suburban areas that Labour should look to regain seats. We can appeal to commuters who resent the fact that they travel for longer, and to residents in coastal towns forced out of cities by high housing costs. These people are committed to work, and we need to make that available and financially rewarding. Britain’s strengths are clear: we are world leaders in financial services, creative industries and science. We also have some of the best universities. We are part of the largest trading bloc in the world, the EU. We speak English, have strong legal systems and a good record of paying debt. These qualities combine to make us a more revolutionise.it 6