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  3. /Labour claims Reform UK won’t protect women, as poll suggests Farage’s party heading for ‘seismic’ wins in May – UK politics live
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Labour claims Reform UK won’t protect women, as poll suggests Farage’s party heading for ‘seismic’ wins in May – UK politics live

The Guardian WorldApr 156 min readOriginal source →
Labour claims Reform UK won’t protect women, as poll suggests Farage’s party heading for ‘seismic’ wins in May – UK politics live

TL;DR

Labour's health secretary, Wes Streeting, is unveiling a new women's health strategy while criticizing Reform UK for failing to protect women's rights. The party claims Nigel Farage's Reform UK is untrustworthy on women's issues ahead of local elections.

Key points

  • Wes Streeting is publishing a revised women's health strategy.
  • Labour claims Reform UK cannot be trusted to protect women's rights.
  • Concerns include Reform UK's stance on abortion and the Equality Act.
  • Reform UK has links to anti-abortion campaigns and controversial figures.

Mentioned in this story

Wes StreetingNigel FarageLabourReform UK

Why it matters

The outcome of local elections could significantly impact women's rights and healthcare policies in England.

Good morning. Wes Streeting, the health secretary, is publishing a revised women’s health strategy for England today. As Andrew Gregory reports, the strategy implicitly accepts that women have been let down by a (largely male) medical establishment which has not always taken their health concerns seriously.

But, for Labour, this is not just a health announcement. The English local elections are just over three weeks away, and Labour is using this announcement as a platform to attack Reform UK, saying that Nigel Farage’s party can’t be trusted to stand up for women.

Labour HQ has sent out a briefing note backing up this claim with this list of 10 reasons why is says Reform are not on the side of women. For the record, here is the list in full.

double quotation mark1. Reform want to reopen the debate on abortion limits

Nigel Farage has described the current 24-week abortion limit as “utterly ludicrous” and called for Parliament to revisit it - raising concerns about rolling back long-established reproductive rights.

2. Reform figures have questioned women’s bodily autonomy

Senior Reform figure, Danny Kruger MP, has argued that women do not have an “absolute right” over their own bodies in the context of abortion, undermining a fundamental principle of women’s healthcare and rights.

3. Reform would scrap the Equality Act

Suella Braverman MP, Reform’s equalities spokeswoman, has pledged to repeal the Equality Act - removing key legal protections against sex discrimination in workplaces, services and public life.

4. Reform have links to anti-abortion campaigns

Farage has accepted payment to speak at events linked to anti-abortion groups, while candidates with similar views are standing for the party - raising concerns about the direction of travel.

5. Reform would roll back workplace protections

Plans to scrap the Employment Rights Act would put at risk protections for maternity leave, workplace discrimination and job security - undermining progress made for women at work.

6. Reform would bring back the two-child benefit limit

This policy disproportionately impacts women, particularly single mothers, pushing families into poverty and limiting financial support for children.

7. Reform figures have made regressive comments about women at work

Farage has previously backed claims that employers avoid hiring women because of maternity rights - echoing outdated attitudes that penalise women for having families.

8. Reform figures have criticised breastfeeding in public

Farage has suggested women should not breastfeed in a way that is “openly ostentatious” - policing women’s behaviour in public spaces.

9. Reform has platformed and defended controversial figures

Farage has described Andrew Tate as an “important voice for men”, despite widespread concern about misogyny and the impact of such views on young people.

10. Reform’s record on violence against women raises serious concerns

The party is considering bringing back former MP James McMurdock, who was jailed for assaulting his then-girlfriend.

Commenting on this, Anna Turley, the Labour chair, said:

double quotation markToday Labour is taking action to fix a system that has too often ignored women - cutting waiting lists, improving care and putting women’s voices at the centre.

But Reform’s record speaks for itself. From attacking reproductive rights to undermining protections at work, they simply can’t be trusted to stand up for women.

Reform UK has been approached for a comment. I’ll post it when I get a reply.

Farage is probably more interested in the Telegraph splash. It reports the findings of a poll by JL Partners which, as well as saying Labour is on course to lose power in Wales (no surprise), also says “Labour is also facing a Reform rout across England, with the near-total collapse of the Red Wall and the loss of stronghold councils held since the 1970s.”

James Johnson, the co-founder of JL Partners, told the Telegraph:

double quotation markIf these results come to pass, we will be looking at a major political earthquake across Britain.

It could be the worst local election ever for Labour in England, a collapse for the Conservatives in their historic Blue Wall heartlands, and a brutal third place for Starmer’s party in Wales.

One cannot overstate how seismic that result in Wales would be – it is a place that has stayed Labour even in the party’s darkest days. Plaid Cymru, the SNP, and the Greens are all contributing to this, but it is Reform that looks set to be the real story, potentially moving into opposition in Wales and securing England councils across the country.

Here is the agenda for the day.

9.30am: Russell Findlay, the Scottish Tory leader, holds a campaign event on postal voting. Anas Sarwar, the Scottish Labour leader, is doing a separate event at 10am on maternity services, and John Swinney, the first minister and SNP leader, is campaigning in South Ayrshire at 2pm.

10am: Wes Streeting, the health secretary, is on Radio 4’s Women’s Hour speaking about the government’s women’s health strategy, ahead of speaking at a formal launch at 11am.

11am: Zack Polanski, the Green party leader, speaks at a Green event about ending the “normalisation” of food bank use.

Noon: Keir Starmer faces Kemi Badenoch at PMQs.

3.15pm (UK time): Rachel Reeves, the chancellor, speaks at a CBNC event in Washington, where she is attending IMF spring summit meetings. She also has a meeting at some point with her US counterpart, Scott Bessent.

3.45pm (UK time): John Healey, the defence secretary, is expected to speak at a press conference in Berlin after a meeting of fellow defence ministers from the Ukraine Defence Contact Group.

If you want to contact me, please post a message below the line when comments are open (between 10am and 3pm), or message me on social media. I can’t read all the messages BTL, but if you put “Andrew” in a message aimed at me, I am more likely to see it because I search for posts containing that word.

If you want to flag something up urgently, it is best to use social media. You can reach me on Bluesky at @andrewsparrowgdn.bsky.social. The Guardian has given up posting from its official accounts on X, but individual Guardian journalists are there, I still have my account, and if you message me there at @AndrewSparrow, I will see it and respond if necessary.

I find it very helpful when readers point out mistakes, even minor typos. No error is too small to correct. And I find your questions very interesting too. I can’t promise to reply to them all, but I will try to reply to as many as I can, either BTL or sometimes in the blog.

Explore more on these topics

  • Politics
  • Politics live with Andrew Sparrow
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  • PMQs
  • Labour
  • Kemi Badenoch
  • Conservatives
  • US-Israel war on Iran

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Q&A

What is Labour's new women's health strategy about?

Labour's new women's health strategy aims to address the shortcomings of the medical establishment in taking women's health concerns seriously.

Why does Labour criticize Reform UK regarding women's rights?

Labour claims Reform UK cannot be trusted to protect women's rights due to their positions on issues like abortion limits and the Equality Act.

What are the main concerns Labour has about Reform UK's policies?

Labour's concerns include Reform UK's stance on abortion, potential repeal of the Equality Act, and proposals that could undermine workplace protections for women.

How is Nigel Farage's Reform UK linked to anti-abortion views?

Nigel Farage has accepted payments to speak at anti-abortion events and has expressed views that challenge established reproductive rights.

People also ask

  • Labour women's health strategy details
  • Reform UK women's rights criticism
  • Nigel Farage abortion views
  • Reform UK Equality Act repeal plans
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At a glance

  • Wes Streeting is publishing a revised women's health strategy.
  • Labour claims Reform UK cannot be trusted to protect women's rights.
  • Concerns include Reform UK's stance on abortion and the Equality Act.
  • Reform UK has links to anti-abortion campaigns and controversial figures.

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