LONDON — Britain's new Labour Party government announced 63 billion pounds ($82 billion) in investment in U.K. artificial intelligence, life sciences, infrastructure and technology on Monday at a business summit attended by executives from major international companies — though it was the absence of Elon Musk that made headlines.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer 's center-left administration is eager to attract investment into Britain's sluggish economy and to convince corporations that its push to improve workers' rights won't come at the expense of businesses. It also needs to reassure trade unions, key Labour backers, that wooing business won't come at workers' expense.
Starmer told about 300 executives from banks, investment firms, pharmaceutical companies, tech and media firms and others that after several years of economic and political turmoil and ''policy churn'' under the Conservatives, Britain is once again a stable place for investors.
''This is the moment to back Britain,'' he said, pledging to oversee a ''hard-headed'' industrial strategy and ''galvanize growth'' by slashing unnecessary regulation, especially around planning.
''We will rip up the bureaucracy that blocks investment,'' Starmer said.
Unions worry that may mean lowering standards on health, safety and the environment, a claim the government denies. Technology Secretary Peter Kyle said reducing red tape did not mean ''cutting corners or lowering standards, but making sure that the government takes on some of the burden of compliance so that our nation can benefit.''
A sign of the tensions facing the government as it tries to please both employers and employees came after Transport Secretary Louise Haigh last week urged people to boycott P&O Ferries, which in 2022 fired 800 seafarers to replace them with cheaper contract staff.
Its parent company, Dubai-based DP World, reportedly threatened to pull out of the investment conference because of the remarks. After Starmer rebuked Haigh and reassured the company that hers was ''not the view of the government,'' DP World confirmed Monday it would invest in a 1 billion pound ($1.3 billion) expansion of the London Gateway container port.