Sunday, December 22, 2024

1,200 homes and new jobs could make ‘massive difference’ in town

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Birkenhead could see 1,200 new homes and free breakfast clubs in every primary school if Labour delivers on its plans.

The party has seen off a perhaps stronger than expected challenge from the Greens, with a 17% surge in the polls but Labour decisively held onto the seat with 52% of the vote and a nearly 14,000-vote majority. The seat has had a Labour MP since it was formed in the 1950s but Alison McGovern, its new representative, will be its first female MP.




Despite previously representing the constituency of Wirral South, Ms McGovern put herself for the Birkenhead Labour nomination in 2023 after boundary changes abolished that constituency meaning she now lived in an expanded Birkenhead seat. Throughout her campaign, Ms McGovern referenced her time growing up in the town as well as Labour’s plans which she said would tackle poverty there.

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According to independent research unit Centre for Cities, Birkenhead performs poorly in relation to productivity and jobs despite having a strong employment rate. Since 2010, productivity only increased 0.3% each year compared to 1.5% every year from 1998 to 2010.

At the same time, people have less spare cash and housing has become less affordable in Birkenhead, with prices now 7.5 times local people’s earnings. Around 3,000 more children were living in poverty in 2021 than in 2014.

Labour has put forward policies it says will help speed up the town’s regeneration, build new homes, and offer new industry jobs with a focus on renewable energy. This includes moving forward an initial 1,200 homes in the town, an investment in insulation upgrades, giving councils more powers to buy up land, and more funding to speed up planning decisions.

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