Keir Starmer will launch the party’s campaign in Bury, a iconic site where a local MP, Christian Wakeford, surrendered from the Tories to the Labor Party over Boris Johnson’s conduct during the Partygate investigation. Although the launch will focus entirely on high account prices and the tax burden, Labor party sources said the slogan was also intended to evoke a sense of “a rule for them” expressed by the public during the revelations of lockdown violations. The party will start its campaign with a new analysis, claiming that families will be 2. 2,620, worse, despite additional measures in Rishi Sunak’s spring statement to reduce fuel tax and raise the limit for paying national insurance. Starmer will point to rising energy bills as well as rising national insurance, and says the Labor Party will cut people’s energy bills by up to £ 600 – funded by an unexpected levy on oil and gas companies’ excessive profits. Other campaigns will begin in Worthing, a South Coast town represented by two Conservative MPs where Labor hopes to take the council, and Derby, a bell in the Midlands where the Conservatives control the council. “In exactly five weeks, you have the opportunity to send the Tories a message they can not ignore. “A message that Britain deserves better than the pathetic response we received to the Conservatives’ cost-of-living crisis in the mini-budget,” Starmer said. “You know the reality – prices are falling from the roof and wages are falling. A conservative government that gets much more than it gives to the workers. The biggest drop in living standards since the 1950s. Taxes are the highest in 70 years. “Even if we allow everything the chancellor announced, the families are in a worse position by 6 2,620. “Britain deserves better than that.” Starmer will say that the British “have no government on the side of business, workers and retirees.” The Labor Party will pledge to reform labor law to ban the behavior that led to the dismissal of 800 P&O workers, as well as to promise tougher crackdowns on crime at police stations in every neighborhood. The party is facing a tough test in the election with pressure to take advantage of the difficulties of the Tory Partygate. Labor’s lead in the polls fell from eight to four on average. The Conservatives are also quietly hoping for some new victories, including the Sunderland totem board, which would be a blow to Labor’s chances of recovering on the red wall.