Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

‘Young people need support to get back into work’

‘Young people need support to get back into work’

By Seema Malhotra

Labour MP for Feltham and Heston, and shadow

employment minister


AS THE shadow minis­ter for employment, I have been working hard to hold the government to account on support­ing young people into work during this crisis.

Figures published last month show that more than 620,000 16- to 24-year-olds are un­employed, while Kick­start, the government’s flagship youth job crea­tion scheme, has pro­vided only 2,000 jobs despite its launch more than six months ago.

New analysis from Labour revealed that 292 young people have lost their jobs each day since Rishi Sunak be­came chancellor, yet the Kickstart scheme has created only 13 jobs a day since its launch. Af­ter delays, only one in 100 young people of those eligible have started a Kickstart placement.

Analysis from the House of Commons Li­brary found that BAME people in this age group are more than twice as likely to be unemployed as their white peers.

Last week, the BBC reported on the case of Jamie, 22, who had been through 200 job interviews without suc­cess. “It’s not just the rejection, it’s the feeling that the door is fused shut and you just don’t have a key,” he said.

In June, the prime minister pledged an “Opportunity Guaran­tee” so that every young person would be of­fered the chance of an apprenticeship or an in-work placement. Fast forward eight months, when I ask ministers about the progress on this, they completely avoid the question.

Young people are now suffering the con­sequences. Labour is calling on the govern­ment to implement a genuine Opportunity Guarantee to ensure each young person out of work for more than six months has access to a meaningful choice of an education place­ment, apprenticeship, or a job.

Young people need effective support to help them back into work to avoid the scar­ring impact of long-term unemployment. Instead, what they have had so far has been sorely lacking. The gov­ernment needs to step up and work cross-de­partmentally to generate meaningful opportuni­ties for young people across the country, many of whom face an incredibly challenging year.

While Britain has had the worst recession of any major economy be­cause of this govern­ment’s incompetence, no young person from any of our communities should have to pay the price for its failure.

Throughout this cri­sis, the government has let down our young people time and again. It must urgently get on with delivering the op­portunity guarantee our young people need.

More For You

Why this was the year of governing anxiously

Rishi Sunak and Sir Keir Starmer at the state opening of parliament in July after Labour won the general elections by a landslide

Why this was the year of governing anxiously

THIS year was literally one of two halves in the British government.

Rishi Sunak and Sir Keir Starmer each had six months in Downing Street, give or take a handful of days in July. Yet this was the year of governing anxiously.

Keep ReadingShow less
‘Debate over assisted dying raises risks for medical staff’
Supporters of the ‘Not Dead Yet’ campaign outside parliament last Friday (29) in London

‘Debate over assisted dying raises risks for medical staff’

Dr Raj Persaud

AFTER five hours of debate over assisted dying, a historic private members’ bill passed its second reading in the House of Commons. This is a stunning change in the way we as a nation consider ending our lives.

We know from survey research that the religious tend to be against assisted dying. Given Asians in the UK tend to be more religious, comparatively, it is likely that Asians in general are less supportive of this new proposed legislation, compared to the general public.

Keep ReadingShow less
‘It’s time for UK-India ties to focus on a joint growth story’
Kanishka Narayan (centre) with fellow visiting British MPs, Rajasthan chief minister Bhajan Lal Sharma (left) and other officials

‘It’s time for UK-India ties to focus on a joint growth story’

Kanishka Narayan

FOUR months since my election to parliament, I had the opportunity to join my parliamentary colleagues on a delegation to India, visiting Delhi and Jaipur for conversations with our Indian counterparts, business leaders and academics.

I went to make the case for Indian investment in my constituency and across the UK.

Keep ReadingShow less
‘Ministers must unveil vision for bridging societal divides’
(From left) Professor Ted Cantle, Sunder Katwala, Sara Khan and John Denham at the event

‘Ministers must unveil vision for bridging societal divides’

Sunder Katwala

“SOCIAL cohesion is not the absence of riots.”

John Denham put that central point pithily at the ‘After the Riots’ cohesion summit last week.

Keep ReadingShow less
‘Policy reforms should not halt development’
Environmental policies and grid delays are slowing the delivery of new homes

‘Policy reforms should not halt development’

Amit Bhatia

SINCE 2006, Summix has specialised in securing planning for strategic land and urban, mixed-use regeneration projects.

Working with our development partners, we have successfully delivered more than 6,000 homes in the UK. We continue to bring forward strategic residential development sites with over 18,000 homes in our current pipeline, including a new settlement for 10,000 homes at Worcestershire Parkway, which was recently referenced by Chancellor Rachel Reeves in her inaugural speech.

Keep ReadingShow less