Sir Keir Starmer has sought to reassure business leaders that they will have a say in shaping the party’s workers’ rights plans if Labour wins the next general election.
The Labour leader has dispatched senior colleagues, including shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves and deputy leader Angela Rayner, to allay business fears that the party would rush headlong into delivering radical labour market reforms within 100 days of taking office.
Starmer told a Labour business event in February he would “level up workers’ rights in a way that has not been attempted for decades”, even though it “might not please everyone in the room”.
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