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Only a quarter of the 13,000 police officers Keir Starmer will commit to putting on the streets will be new, fully-warranted officers_Nhy

Only a quarter of the 13,000 police officers Sir Keir Starmer will commit to putting on the streets will be new, fully-warranted officers.

In a major speech outlining his ‘plan for change’ on Thursday, the Prime Minister will announce the first tranche of funding to start recruiting neighbourhood police.

Labour has promised to put 13,000 more police and Police Community Support Officers (PCSOs) back on the beat by the next election.

But only 3,000 will be additional fully-warranted officers. The rest will be made up of 4,000 extra PCSOs, 3,000 additional volunteer special constables and 3,000 officers from the existing workforce.

Shadow Home Secretary Chris Philp said the £360million set aside to recruit and train new officers was insufficient.

In a major speech outlining his ‘plan for change’ on Thursday, the Prime Minister, pictured, will announce the first tranche of funding to start recruiting neighbourhood police

Labour has promised to put 13,000 more police and Police Community Support Officers (PCSOs) back on the beat by the next election. But only 3,000 will be additional fully-warranted officers

Labour has promised to put 13,000 more police and Police Community Support Officers (PCSOs) back on the beat by the next election. But only 3,000 will be additional fully-warranted officers

‘Starmer has once again misled the public by claiming to recruit 13,000 extra officers, when in fact it is only 3,000 – which he hasn’t even bothered properly funding,’ he added.

‘This announcement means 3,000 police will also be cut from 999 response and investigations – making the public less safe.’

Labour has said it wants additional police in communities to deter crime and catch criminals by being visible.

The mission to ‘take back our streets’ commits Labour to ‘halving serious violent crime and raising confidence in the police and criminal justice system to its highest levels’.

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Rachel Reeves refuses FOUR times to repeat her ‘no more tax rises’ promise – as Chancellor opens door to new wave of hikes

Rachel Reeves opened the door to a new wave of tax rises yesterday – just a week after ruling them out.

During exchanges in the Commons, the Chancellor refused to repeat her claim last week that she would not be ‘coming back for more’ tax.

Labour’s Budget in October was the biggest tax-raiser in history, with £40billion of new levies.

It was met with a business backlash, with firms warning a £25billion rise in employers’ National Insurance will cost jobs, raise prices and force closures.

Ms Reeves tried to defuse the row over her Budget last week by saying she would not require further tax rises before the next election.

‘I’m really clear I’m not coming back with more borrowing or more taxes,’ she told the Confederation of British Industry (CBI).

But No 10 has distanced itself from the remarks, and in the Commons yesterday Ms Reeves four times refused to repeat the pledge.

During exchanges in the Commons, the Chancellor, pictured, refused to repeat her claim last week that she would not be ¿coming back for more¿ tax

During exchanges in the Commons, the Chancellor, pictured, refused to repeat her claim last week that she would not be ‘coming back for more’ tax

Shadow Chancellor Mel Stride, pictured, asked her whether Downing Street had ¿changed its mind¿, or if she ¿spoke without thinking¿ when she told business chiefs she would not repeat her Budget hikes

Shadow Chancellor Mel Stride, pictured, asked her whether Downing Street had ‘changed its mind’, or if she ‘spoke without thinking’ when she told business chiefs she would not repeat her Budget hikes

Ms Reeves, pictured, said she had been left to deal with a £22billion ¿black hole¿

Ms Reeves, pictured, said she had been left to deal with a £22billion ‘black hole’

Shadow Chancellor Mel Stride asked her whether Downing Street had ‘changed its mind’, or if she ‘spoke without thinking’ when she told business chiefs she would not repeat her Budget hikes.

Ms Reeves said she had been left to deal with a £22billion ‘black hole’, adding: ‘So we did have to raise taxes to fund our public services, but never again will we have to repeat a Budget like that, because we have now wiped the slate clean and drawn a line under the mess created by the last government.’

Asked again to rule out further tax rises, she added: ‘No chancellor is going to write five years’ worth of Budget in their first five months, but what I can say is that we will never have to deliver a Budget like that again.’

Shadow Treasury minister Richard Fuller said the Chancellor’s apparent backtracking would ‘undermine business confidence’.

He added: ‘She told the CBI last week there would be no more borrowing and no more taxes. Days later the business secretary and then the Prime Minister refused to stand by what she said. Now even she cannot repeat her own words.’

But Ms Reeves later suggested she could not close down the possibility of tax rises to deal with a national emergency.

Speaking at the Yorkshire Post’s Great Northern Conference in Hull, she told reporters: ‘I can’t write five years’ worth of Budgets in just five months. We don’t know what might happen in the future in terms of shocks to the economy, but I can give businesses the confidence in this Budget that we have wiped the slate clean, we will never have to do a budget like this again.’

She said public services would have to ‘live within’ the spending ‘envelope’ set out at the Budget rather than relying on extra tax rises in the future.

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