- By Laura Kuenssberg
- Presenter, Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg
Politics has fashions too – what’s in and out. It’s not so long ago that world leaders were jostling to be pictured with celebs like Leonardo diCaprio, Stella McCartney or Emma Watson at the huge COP26 climate conference in Glasgow where Boris Johnson played host.
Then, it was hip to be green – being at COP in 2021 was the political equivalent of the fashion week front row. But with Labour shrinking away from its big £28bn commitments this week, and the Conservatives shifting tack and rumoured to be dropping the so-called “boiler tax”, there’s no doubt trends have changed.
What’s different?
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak took the first steps back in September. He didn’t junk the government’s green commitments but slowed the pace of existing plans.
Some Conservatives were delighted at he was heeding some voters’ concerns about the cost of going green, most notably extending the ultra low emissions zone to outer London. Other Tories were infuriated it sent the message that the environment was less important, and that irritation has festered since then, with former minister Chris Skidmore quitting as an MP.
This week however it’s been the Labour leadership’s turn, finally getting rid of its vow to spend £28bn a year to help the country go green.
Without adding to the vast acreage of coverage about this decision, it shows above all that Labour wants to reassure voters it would be careful with their cash over anything else.
It’s worth noting this week was the deadline for Labour’s top team to give their manifesto plans to shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves.
The decision was finally made, after weeks of Tory taunting, when the sums actually had to add up. Alongside its manifesto, Labour will publish a “grey book” that will set out its exact spending plans.
So close to an election the view at the top is that every line of those calculations has to be accurate.
Former cabinet minister Robert Jenrick is one of those thundering about the risks of “dangerous green fantasy economics”. But there’s a pull from the other direction too.
The previously mentioned Chris Skidmore suggested that “if the UK does not step up, or turns its face against net zero opportunities, it would be an economic disaster”.
In turn, Sir Keir Starmer’s been accused by Labour former minister Barry Gardiner of being “economically illiterate and environmentally irresponsible”.
Others are frankly relieved the big number has gone, with one insider telling me it was “not our finest hour in terms of handling but we will look back and be really grateful that we did it”.
While the parties’ political attitudes have been shifting what has not budged at all is the obligations they face – not because of star-studded celeb pressure or activists gluing themselves to roads.
This is because, just before she left office, Theresa May changed the law in an absolutely profound way by introducing legislation that would force the UK to hit net zero by 2050.
In 2020 that was followed by another target to cut emissions by nearly 70% by 2030.
At the time the former PM pushed it through at breakneck speed 2050 seemed very far away. The practicalities of how such an ambition would be achieved were so vague that MPs (mostly) happily signed up.
One of those involved in the decision told me this week: “We thought it was the right thing to do but we understood we didn’t have all the answers. It was a bit like when JFK said we are going to land a man on the moon at the end of the decade. He had no idea how he’d do it but it was a clear ambition.”
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This article was originally published by a www.bbc.com . Read the Original article here. .