Marks & Spencer has dropped a bombshell. A landmark traineeship for 1,000 young Britons. It’s a move that puts the government’s youth employment agenda to shame. The retail giant is bypassing Whitehall’s deadlock. No ministers. No quangos. Just cold, hard private sector delivery.
Westminster insiders are rattled. The scheme targets 18-24 year olds not in education, employment or training. That’s 800,000 NEETs nationwide. A ticking time bomb for the Treasury. M&S is stepping in where the DWP has failed. Their new ‘Work Experience Plus’ programme offers six-month placements with guaranteed interviews. Real jobs. Not the tick-box internships that plague Westminster’s own offices.
The timing is brutal for Number 10. Polling shows youth unemployment as a top voter concern. Labour is circling. Starmer’s team briefed a ‘Youth Guarantee’ just last week. Now M&S has stolen their thunder. The business lobby is purring. The CBI called it “a template for corporate Britain”. But Tory backbenchers are furious. One told me: “We’ve been outflanked by a supermarket. It’s a disgrace.”
Cabinet divisions are surfacing. The Education Secretary wants to replicate the model. The Business Secretary is cautious. No one wants to admit the state has failed. But M&S boss Stuart Machin is unapologetic. He said: “We’re not waiting for politicians. We’re hiring.” That line has already been leaked to the Sunday papers.
What’s the catch? Unions smell a rat. They suspect the traineeships could replace permanent staff. But M&S insists these are additional roles. The details are thin. Insiders say the £50 million cost is being shouldered by the company. No taxpayer subsidy. That’s a direct challenge to the Chancellor’s ‘Back to Work’ plan which spends billions with little to show.
The real game here is political. M&S knows power. Their chairman, Archie Norman, is a former Tory MP and party fixer. This move is calculated. It paints Labour as all talk. It exposes the government as impotent. And it positions M&S as the moral compass of British business. Expect more copycats. Tesco, Sainsbury’s and John Lewis are already watching.
Downing Street is scrambling. A spokesperson called it “encouraging”. But off the record, aides admit it’s a ‘political own goal’. The PM is due to host a ‘Skills Summit’ next month. It now looks like a farce. M&S has already done the heavy lifting.
For the 1,000 young people, it’s a lifeline. For Westminster, it’s a wake-up call. The game has changed.








