Sir Keir Starmer said Britain is the “sick man of Europe once again” and the UK Budget shows the “expiry date looms ever closer” for the Conservatives.
The Labour leader said years of Tory-led governments have led to a “doom loop of lower growth, higher taxes and broken public services” and put the country on a “path of managed decline”.
He criticised British chancellor Jeremy Hunt for “dressing up stagnation as stability”, adding of the public: “They deserve better than another cheap trick from the Government of gimmicks, making them pay whilst trying to claim the credit.”
Rising to respond to Mr Hunt’s hour-long financial statement, Mr Starmer mocked the UK government over recent salad shortages in supermarkets and environment secretary Therese Coffey’s suggestion of a greater reliance on turnips to avoid such a situation.
He told the House of Commons: “His opening boast was that things aren’t quite as bad now as they were in October last year after the kamikaze budget, and the more that he pretends everything is fine, the more he shows just how out of touch they are.”
Mr Starmer added: “After 13 years of his Government, our economy needed major surgery, but like millions across our country, this Budget leaves us stuck in the waiting room with only a sticking plaster to hand.
“A country set on a path of managed decline, falling behind our competitors, the sick man of Europe once again.
“This was a day for ambition, for bringing us together with purpose and intent, for unlocking the pride that is in every community, matching their belief in the possibilities of the future.
“But after today we know the Tory cupboard is as bare as the salad aisle in our supermarket.
“The lettuces may be out, but the turnips are in.
“A hopelessly divided party caught between a rock of decline and a hard place at their own economic recklessness.
“Dressing up stagnation as stability as their expiry date looms ever closer.”
Mr Starmer raised concerns over growth forecasts, adding: “This is a failure you can measure not just in the figures but in the empty pockets of working people right across the country.
“Thirteen years without wage growth, 13 years no better off, 13 years stuck in a doom loop of lower growth, higher taxes and broken public services.”
He said the Office for Budget Responsibility has made clear “things don’t look any better in the long run”.
Mr Starmer went on: “A broken labour market holding back our prospects, seven million on the NHS waiting lists, ill-health and disability on the rise, and the consequences, as we’ve just heard, deferred to the future.
“The classic short-term sticking plaster cycle. Decisions cynically ducked today. Pain for working people tomorrow. It doesn’t have to be like this.”
Mr Starmer said average families in France and Germany are richer despite facing the pandemic and the war in Ukraine, adding: “What we cannot accept is the use of the war as a blanket excuse for failure.”
After he criticised the chancellor for failing to “grip the long-term challenges”, Mr Starmer said Mr Hunt’s “boasts” about lower inflation were “ridiculous”.
He said: “The idea that it’s a tax cut, British people can see through that.
“They see their tax burden at its highest level for 70 years and they know it’s not the Government that’s lowering inflation, it’s working people, earning less, enjoying less, it’s their sacrifice that is helping to bring inflation down.
“And they deserve better than another cheap trick from the Government of gimmicks, making them pay whilst trying to claim the credit.”
Mr Starmer said Labour first committed to extending the fuel duty cut and mocked British prime minister Rishi Sunak for previous gaffes, joking to Mr Hunt: “And a word of advice to the Chancellor as he promotes his policy in the coming days – use your own car and for heaven’s sake make sure you know how to use a debit card.
“I look forward to the Prime Minister promoting the swimming pools policy – unlike the car, he won’t have to borrow one of those.”