Looking for Growth

British political campaign group From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Looking for Growth (LFG) is a British political campaign group founded in 2024.[1] It has been described in UK media as a pro-growth, "anti-decline" movement combining policy advocacy with campaign actions and events.[2][3]

History

In January 2025, The Times reported on the group's proposals aimed at speeding up major infrastructure delivery, including changes related to planning and legal processes affecting major projects.[1]

In June 2025, The Times and the London Standard reported on LFG's graffiti-removal activity on the London Underground as part of its broader campaigning.[2][4] In the same period, PoliticsHome described the group as organising events and building local chapters, and reported that it planned a hackathon in late June 2025 for participants to develop tools and present them to judges and potential investors.[3]

In a June 2025 interview, LFG co-founder Lawrence Newport used the term "vegetable lobby" to refer to environmental activists opposing some development proposals.[3] Media coverage has also described LFG as seeking cross-party support for a pro-growth agenda and hosting events with speakers from more than one political party.[3]

On 23 October 2025, LFG held an event titled Make or Break at indigo at The O2 in London; the venue listing advertised speakers including Dominic Cummings, Matt Clifford, Chris Curtis MP, and Katie Lam MP.[5] A City AM column described the event as attracting "over 1,000 people".[6]

Reception

A City AM comment piece described Looking for Growth as an "energetic and optimistic" pro-growth movement and highlighted its ability to draw a large audience to its October 2025 event at The O2.[6]

A MoneyWeek feature described Looking for Growth as a grassroots organisation of "founders, professionals and tradespeople" pushing for pro-growth policies.[7]

A Guardian comment article criticised the group's emphasis on visible quality-of-life issues such as graffiti, arguing that this can distract from deeper structural causes of decline.[8]

See also

References

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