
The proposals include a pledge to allocate £2.7 billion of capital investment over the next parliament to ensure that places exist to meet demand.
The party says it will transition to a new supply-side funding model with direct Government subsidy.
By 2020 Labour would extend the 30 hours to all parents of three- and four-year-olds, not just those in work, which it says would benefit an extra 626,739 extra children, on top of the 390,000 who would currently qualify.
It would also extend the two-year-old 15-hour offer to all twos, which it says would benefit 409,578 extra children, by 2021.
Labour says that it estimates that its plans would cost an extra £5bn a year by the end of the parliament.
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