The information on this page is not official voting advice. The purpose of this information is to be a classroom aid for understanding (broadly) what makes the different political parties different from one another.

Broad Comparison

Party Broad political position Main idea
Labour Party Centre-left Government should play an active role in improving public services, workers’ rights, economic growth and equality.
Conservative Party Centre-right Lower taxes, smaller state, stronger borders, law and order, business growth, tradition and national sovereignty.
Liberal Democrats Centre / centre-left liberal Individual freedom, fairness, human rights, local democracy, closer Europe links, public services and environmental action.
Reform UK Right-wing / populist-right Strong border controls, leaving/limiting international legal constraints, lower taxes, anti-net-zero, smaller state, “Britain first” politics.
Green Party Left-wing / environmentalist Climate and nature first, higher investment in public services, wealth redistribution, social justice and political reform.

In plain English

  • Labour tends to believe that government should be active in fixing problems: improving the NHS, investing in clean energy, growing the economy, widening opportunity and supporting working people. Its current “Plan for Change” is built around economic stability, secure borders, national security, growth, clean energy, safer streets, opportunity and the NHS.
  • Conservatives usually argue for lower taxes, tighter public spending, stronger policing, stronger borders, support for business and more traditional social values. Their current plan talks about reducing the deficit, delivering tax cuts, tougher crime policies, leaving the ECHR, and a stricter immigration approach.
  • Liberal Democrats are more socially liberal. They put a lot of emphasis on civil liberties, fairness, human rights, democracy, local decision-making, carers, the NHS, social care, education, the environment and closer cooperation with Europe. They describe their core values as liberty, equality, democracy, community, human rights, internationalism and environmentalism.
  • Reform UK is most focused on immigration, borders, sovereignty, lower taxes, cutting regulation, opposing net zero policies and reducing what it sees as waste in government. Its policy page says it would leave the ECHR, detain and deport illegal arrivals, keep the NHS free at the point of use, cut taxes on workers, scrap net zero policies and prioritise British workers and businesses.
  • The Green Party puts climate, nature and social justice at the centre. Compared with the others, it is generally more willing to tax wealth, spend more on public services, expand council housing, protect nature, invest in the NHS and social care, and move faster away from fossil fuels. The LGA summary of its manifesto highlights major investment in social care, NHS access, local government funding, council housing, rent controls and a proposed Nature Act.

Main differences by issue

Issue Labour Conservative Liberal Democrat Reform UK Green
Economy Growth plus public investment Tax cuts and spending control Fairer economy, business support, public services Lower taxes, deregulation, smaller state More redistribution and green investment
NHS/public services Improve and reform public services Efficiency, technology, workforce expansion Strong focus on NHS, care and carers Keep NHS free, cut “back office” costs Major extra investment, oppose privatisation
Immigration Controlled borders, managed system Much tougher border/asylum policy More humane, rights-based system Hardest line; deportations and ECHR withdrawal More humanitarian and rights-focused
Climate Clean energy and net zero direction Slower/less regulatory approach Pro-environment and net zero Anti-net-zero policies Climate and nature are central priorities
Rights and democracy Moderate reform, equality focus More emphasis on sovereignty and tradition Strong civil liberties, human rights, voting reform Sovereignty over international law Strong voting reform, equality and protest/civil liberties
Europe Pragmatic cooperation, not rejoining soon Brexit-supporting, sovereignty-focused Closest to pro-EU; long-term EU membership aim Strongly anti-EU/international constraints Generally internationalist and pro-cooperation