logo
Keir Starmer unveils major Armed Forces plan - 'our duty'

Keir Starmer unveils major Armed Forces plan - 'our duty'

Daily Mirror6 days ago
Military personnel, veterans and their families will see their rights and access to public services legally protected under major plans announced by the Prime Minister
Military personnel, veterans and their families will see their rights and access to public services legally protected under major plans announced by the Prime Minister.
As the nation marks Armed Forces Day on Saturday, Keir Starmer will announce a new legal duty for all government departments to consider the needs of the armed forces community when making new policy.

Initiatives could include extending travel benefits to the families of veterans and the bereaved, or flexible working for partners of serving personnel who are required to move as part of their role in the Armed Forces.

Legislation will be brought forward to deliver Labour 's manifesto promise to bring the Armed Forces Covenant fully into law. The Covenant is a promise to ensure those who serve or have served in the armed forces, and their families, are treated fairly.
READ MORE: 'I've seen first-hand the grit, sacrifice and pride our service men and women carry'
Mr Starmer, who met trainee pilots at RAF Valley in Wales on Friday, said: 'When I became Prime Minister, I made a promise to serve those who have served us.
'Through the new Armed Forces Covenant, we are delivering on that promise — ensuring our service personnel, veterans and their families are treated with the respect they deserve – that is our duty.
'Our Armed Forces Covenant will put our Armed Forces community at the very heart of government decision-making. Their courage, duty, and sacrifice are the foundation of our national values, and they deserve nothing less.'
As part of the Covenant's new legal duty, priority support will be given to those who have sacrificed the most, including the injured or bereaved. Local authorities, NHS bodies, and schools will also have a duty to consider the needs of the armed forces community in their decision-making.

The government will also be legally required to publish an annual report on the Covenant's delivery and progress.
Ministers have also committed to delivering two above inflation pay awards for service personnel and an extra £1.5bn investment this parliament to improve forces' family housing through the Strategic Defence Review.

Saturday's announcement follows the Prime Minister's 'homes for heroes' policy guaranteeing housing for all UK Armed Forces veterans, exempting them from local connection rules for social housing. It also comes after a £3.5million funding injection for wraparound support services for veterans at risk of homelessness, including mental health, employment, and independent living support.
Mark Atkinson, Director General, Royal British Legion: Those who have served in the Armed Forces often face unique challenges, for example moving frequently during service can make it hard for families to receive consistent support from public services or for spouses and partners to build careers.
'Expanding the Covenant Legal Duty will help public services better respond to these challenges by ensuring the needs of the Armed Forces community are taken into account when making decisions.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

UK government bond markets rally after Starmer backs Reeves
UK government bond markets rally after Starmer backs Reeves

The Guardian

time12 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

UK government bond markets rally after Starmer backs Reeves

UK government bond markets have rallied after Keir Starmer backed Rachel Reeves to remain as chancellor for 'a very long time' despite lingering investor concerns over a multibillion-pound hole in Britain's public finances. The yield – in effect the interest rate – on British government bonds, also known as gilts, fell by about 0.1 percentage points on Thursday morning to trade close to 4.5%, reversing a sharp rise on Wednesday sparked by feverish speculation over Reeves's future. The pound rose against other leading currencies, while a closely watched business survey showed that Britain's dominant service sector recorded its fastest rate of growth in 10 months. After Starmer had failed initially to give his full backing to a tearful Reeves at prime minister's questions, he used a BBC interview late on Wednesday to publicly express his support for the chancellor and denied suggestions she was upset by the fallout over the government's welfare bill. However, investors warned that a climbdown over the bill and the backtracking on cuts to winter fuel payments for most pensioners had left a large hole in the public finances that would need addressing at the autumn budget. After Thursday morning's recovery in the bond markets, Neil Wilson, the UK investor strategist at Saxo Bank, said: 'The calculation was that [Reeve's] probably the most market-friendly chancellor Labour could field, so replacing her indicated a higher chance of changing fiscal rules, implying more debt and instability. 'But there is a deeper problem for the government here even if she stays – the market is getting nervous about its ability to make the sums add up whether she is 'market-friendly' or not and the economic outlook is hardly improving.' A broad rebellion by Labour backbench MPs forced ministers to withdraw a planned £5.5bn cut to disability benefits this week, on top of earlier concessions on winter fuel payments worth £1.25bn. Reeves has repeatedly promised to stick to her 'iron-clad' fiscal rules, which require day-to-day spending to be matched by receipts within five years. This is despite mounting spending pressures and rising debt interest costs. Having committed not to make further large tax increases after last autumn's budget, the chancellor turned to welfare savings in her spring statement to rebuild the £9.9bn of headroom against the government's main fiscal target after a deterioration in the outlook for the government finances. Economists said Reeves could break her fiscal rules unless corrective action was taken at the autumn budget. Meanwhile the is speculation that the financial hit from Labour's U-turns could be further complicated by a cut to the growth forecasts of Office for Budget Responsibility, the Treasury watchdog. Sign up to Business Today Get set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morning after newsletter promotion But in a potential boost for the chancellor, the latest snapshot from the S&P Global UK Services PMI, a closely watched business survey, showed a sharp rise in private sector activity buoyed by improving business and consumer spending. Yet concerns remain over the impact from lingering inflationary pressures, Labour's tax increases introduced in April and the end of Donald Trump's 90-day pause in his US tariff plans on 9 July. Economists said tax increases would probably be required given the challenges Labour has faced in cutting spending, and warned that ditching the fiscal rules to allow more borrowing could provoke a sharp reaction in bond markets. Jim Reid, the head of macro and thematic research at Deutsche Bank, said: 'For markets, the logic is that Reeves has been a big defender of the fiscal rules, and there've been growing calls for these rules to be eased and for borrowing to go up. So the concern in bond markets is that a new chancellor might trigger a fresh wave of borrowing that pushes rates up further. 'Unless we got a big burst of growth before the budget, then the government would need to announce further tax rises or spending cuts if they still want to meet the fiscal rules. So this leaves them in a tricky position.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store