By Eliot Wilson Labour’s business plan is hard to oppose, but only because it has nothing to say, writes Eliot Wilson The way we talk about Labour and business has a whiff of anachronism about it. Notwithstanding Jeremy Corbyn’s leadership, the party long ago shed its hardcore eat-the-rich credentials, and it is more than 30 years since Michael Heseltine mocked then-shadow chancellor John Smith for his “prawn cocktail offensive” to woo the City. Nevertheless, Sir Keir Starmer and shadow business secretary Jonathan Reynolds recently commissioned public affairs trouper Iain Anderson to consider …