Essayer OR - Gratuit
Levelling up is the way to beat Reform
The Observer
|September 28, 2025
It's hardly news that the Labour government lacks clear direction, a powerful overarching narrative and even an interest in ideas.

But maybe, just maybe, under the twin pressures of intense disaffection within the Labour party over its government's performance and the rise of Nigel Farage, it is stumbling towards some policies, and perhaps a wider framework, that might offer a coherence and purpose so far missing.
Last week's £5bn Pride In Place initiative, disbursing £500m a year to 339 disadvantaged neighbourhoods for the next 10 years and putting responsibility for spending money on local social revival firmly in the hands of community leaders, is important. Not only because it will prove popular, but the approach unleashing the bottom-up energy of local social entrepreneurs and community founders - potentially taps into a rich vein of social creativity.
It is to be emblematic of the prime minister's response to Reform, which is a fight, he says, for "the soul of the nation". The 311 seats that last week's Sky poll predicted Reform would win in a putative general election almost entirely included one of those 339 devastated neighbourhoods. But he should beware. Pride in Place, after all, was just one of 12 missions, together with accompanying metrics, that Boris Johnson's powerful levelling up white paper in March 2022 identified as the totality of actions required to turn around Britain's disastrous and poisonous geographical inequalities. Reform is not just a popular revolt against unchecked immigration: it is a revolt against neglect.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition September 28, 2025 de The Observer.
Abonnez-vous à Magzter GOLD pour accéder à des milliers d'histoires premium sélectionnées et à plus de 9 000 magazines et journaux.
Déjà abonné ? Se connecter
PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE The Observer
The Observer
The UN, the US and Tony Blair: can they work together to bring peace?
The US has put forward a 21-point roadmap to end the war in Gaza that would see the former British prime minister Tony Blair lead an interim administration of the territory.
2 mins
September 28, 2025

The Observer
David Lammy: 'I was spat on by skinheads... but the flag-wavers today aren't bovver boys'
The deputy PM tells Rachel Sylvester he is troubled that ordinary people have lined up behind far-right agitator Tommy Robinson
5 mins
September 28, 2025
The Observer
Keir Starmer may be in trouble but Andy Burnham taking the crown is pure fantasy Andrew Rawnsley
It is a symptom of the dreadful pickle the Labour party finds itself in that the man most widely touted to supplant Sir Keir Starmer is not an MP and was passed over on both previous occasions when he applied to be leader.
4 mins
September 28, 2025

The Observer
Children starved of art lose their creative spark - and Britain loses its cultural future
When Keir Starmer became prime minister, he said he wanted to put the arts \"at the centre of a new, hopeful, modern story of Britain\".
3 mins
September 28, 2025
The Observer
Clean blood, deep freeze ... how the super rich plan to live forever (with their pets)
In the Swiss resort of Gstaad last week, investors gathered to shop for the newest luxury - longevity
4 mins
September 28, 2025
The Observer
Kennedy targets popular abortion pill
Robert F Kennedy Jr, the US health secretary, has ordered a review of a widely used abortion pill, a move that activists fear is a fresh attempt to limit women's access to safe abortions.
1 min
September 28, 2025

The Observer
Levelling up is the way to beat Reform
It's hardly news that the Labour government lacks clear direction, a powerful overarching narrative and even an interest in ideas.
4 mins
September 28, 2025
The Observer
Why you need more dough for a pizza
In 2020 a diner in a central London Pizza Express could expect to pay £9.30 for the chain's classic margherita pizza. Now, the same meal costs £14.45.
2 mins
September 28, 2025
The Observer
Meet C, the higher spec Jackson Lamb
It's a long, long walk from Jackson Lamb to Blaise Metreweli. Longer than the road from a raddled ruin of a hasbeen spycatcher to the impeccable poise of a fitness fanatic spy chief, from a rat-infested Victorian firetrap in London's Liverpool Street to the gleaming postmodern block in Vauxhall Cross.
2 mins
September 28, 2025
The Observer
The pheasant
One knows it's not the politically correct thing to say these days, but the fact remains that one is the most important bird in Britain. Humans adore us for our beauty. That's why they shoot all the other birds that get in our way.
2 mins
September 28, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size