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By Chas Geiger
Political reporter in Liverpool
A Labour government would set up a "tough love" youth programme to help combat crime, the shadow home secretary has told the Labour party conference.
Yvette Cooper said it would be focused on tackling knife crime and a mental health crisis among young people.
"We need urgent interventions to stop young people getting drawn into crime or exploitation," Ms Cooper said.
The policy evokes Tony Blair's "tough on crime, tough on the causes of crime" pledge in the 1990s.
Under cross-department proposals drawn up by Labour, a programme would be rolled out across the UK to identify vulnerable young people, with the aim of stopping them being pulled into lives of crime and violence.
The party has described the policy, which it says would cost £100m a year, as a "key part" of its mission to halve knife crime and youth violence within a decade.
It wants to create "youth futures" hubs to bring together services for at-risk young people, modelled on the Sure Start early-years initiative introduced by the Blair government.
Ms Cooper secured her biggest cheer when she reminded delegates she was one of the ministers responsible for launching Sure Start in 1998.
Labour would also place youth workers in A&E units, custody centres and pupil referral units to help those with mental health issues or straying into criminal behaviour.
Last year, former Children's Commissioner for England Anne Longfield called for community hubs to be set up to support children most at risk from criminal exploitation.
Ms Cooper said young people had been "totally let down" by the Conservatives, with ministers failing to "recognise the growing vulnerability of many teenagers".
She listed county lines drugs gangs, the Covid pandemic and the rise of damaging content on social media as among the problems teenagers faced.
For too long, she argued, they had been "pushed from pillar to post between local authorities, mental health services, the police and youth offending teams".
She promised "proper local plans" to identify those most at risk and to help them access the support they needed.
For young people who repeatedly caused trouble in their community or were found to be carrying knives, "there also need to be stronger interventions and clear consequences to stop their behaviour escalating and to keep other young people safe", Ms Cooper added.
Labour would "give young people their future back", she said.
In his speech to the party conference in Liverpool, Sir Keir Starmer will say that Labour's plan to recruit 13,000 neighbourhood police and community support officers across England and Wales, and would guarantee patrols for town centres, as part of a plan to crack down on crime and anti-social behaviour.