logo
First Thatcherism, now ‘Starmerism': How welfare reform could be the quiet revolution shaping Labour's future

First Thatcherism, now ‘Starmerism': How welfare reform could be the quiet revolution shaping Labour's future

Independent17-03-2025

We all know that there used to be no such thing as 'society' because there was an individualistic 'thing' called Thatcherism: a body of values, attitudes and policies personified by Margaret Thatcher.
Should we, I wonder, now be speaking of ' Starmerism '?
The answer to that, after a mere eight months of Labour government, is obviously 'not yet' – it's far too early. But what is emerging is a remarkable infusion of populism into Starmer's very traditional and conventional brand of social democracy.
We see this almost every week now in the choices the Starmer administration has been making – on the two-child benefit rule, the tougher rhetoric and messaging on immigration, on shredding overseas aid, boosting defence spending, downgrading net zero by expanding airports, sacking half of NHS England's staff – and, now, some cuts to social security. Only the cuts to pensioners' winter fuel allowance could be said to be something Nigel Farage wouldn't back.
Yet the surprising thing is we still expect mass protests and Commons drama when the work and pensions secretary Liz Kendall presents her package of cuts, which, at about £5 billion to £6 billion, aren't all that big in the great scheme of things.
We have not yet come to terms with the fact that this is the most right-wing (using the term loosely) parliamentary Labour Party in history and she won't encounter that much trouble.
Labour MPs are, by historical Labour standards and recent Conservative standards, incredibly and impressively disciplined. The 2024 cohort don't actually seem to have discovered that there's a voting lobby for 'No' in the Commons; or perhaps, more generously and realistically, they actually agree with Starmer and Reeves, broadly, and don't think it worth capsizing the government and giving the Tories some easy talking points for a merely symbolic protest.
They really do think that the government has a 'moral duty' to design the welfare system such that people are encouraged to work; and they readily accept that the country can't afford the prospective increase in the social security bill.
So, while there may not be such a thing as 'Starmerism', there are many Starmerites now, a situation greatly enhanced by the last general election.
More than 250 of Labour's 400 or so MPs were elected to the Commons under Sir Keir 's leadership (either in by-elections or the general election) and they owe their seats to him.
Unlike before 1997 or other previous landslides, Labour took special care to 'vet' their candidates, even in the most improbable prospects for a Labour gain, and the results are apparent – a pragmatic bunch who are unusually well-attuned to public opinion and with little use for socialist principles (as we think they are).
Perhaps these mostly younger people are looking for their first ministerial role; but it is quite the quiet revolution from the days of Jeremy Corbyn – and a textbook example of how even the most beleaguered or deranged political parties can self-regenerate in a miraculous short time.
By way of illustrating the contrast to the Corbyn regime, 36 Labour MPs in the ' Get Britain Working Group ' recently wrote a letter to Kendall, actually urging her to get on with 'fundamental change to our welfare system to support work'. That has never happened before.
The rebellions have been confined to 'the usual suspects'; and centres of dissent outside the Commons are but part of the Labour movement. Trade unionists and figures such as the mayor of Greater Manchester, Andy Burnham and ex-minister Ed Balls are a little less under the spell of this doctrine of Starmerism, which is best described as 'extreme pragmatism'.
It is indeed remarkable how compliant the parliamentary Labour Party has been in such difficult circumstances and there seems every sign that the proposed changes – cuts – to working-age sickness and disability benefits being devised by Reeves and Kendall will go through.
According to the standard script of the life of a Labour government, what should have been happening since Rachel Reeves launched her first assaults on the welfare state shortly after the election is a series of parliamentary rebellions by disgruntled Labour backbenchers, resulting in knife-edge Commons votes, devastating speeches from ex-ministers who resigned on socialist principle, a bloody party conference and rumblings about a leadership challenge, plus a fair amount of jostling for the succession from an array of pretenders to the throne.
Every Labour government since Ramsay McDonald's a century ago has suffered from a crisis of confidence because of 'tough choices', often forced on a Labour cabinet in some economic crisis. It even happened under the supposed iron rule of Tony Blair, who had to face down an unexpectedly large revolt on cuts to child benefit in 1997 – 47 Labour MPs voted against the Government, some 100 abstained. One minister and two Private Parliamentary Secretaries resigned their posts, and a ministerial aide was sacked ahead of the crucial vote (which was still won comfortably).
The Callaghan government barely survived the IMF crisis in 1976, and laid the foundations for a generation of internal civil war. Nye Bevan quit the Attlee government over NHS charges in 1951 – and consequent divisions in the party kept it out of power for more than a decade. Europe, economic crises and trade union reform almost broke the Wilson governments. The voters rewarded such incompetence appropriately.
Starmer's Labour Party seems very different. His task has, ironically, been made easier by the crisis in the public finances, which has forced so many of these unpalatable decisions on the party.
He has increasingly found himself following – rather than leading – public opinion on 'culture war' issues, with the latest gossip suggesting some weakening of support for the European Convention on Human Rights (because of the way ' family rights ' interfere with deportations).
The rise of Reform UK has made Labour MPs sensitive to the kind of grievances Farage exploits. But fundamentally – and in contrast to every past Labour administration – there is simply no credible 'socialist alternative to what the government is doing. There is no leftist rival to Starmer – no modern-day successor to Bevan, Tony Benn, Ken Livingstone or, indeed, Corbyn, who rather proved the point at the 2019 election.
Starmer promised 'change', and nowhere is it more true than in his own party. It seems he meant it.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Senedd called to act on 'existential crisis' of abuse
Senedd called to act on 'existential crisis' of abuse

South Wales Argus

time43 minutes ago

  • South Wales Argus

Senedd called to act on 'existential crisis' of abuse

Plaid Cymru's Adam Price, the first out-gay man in his party to be elected to national office, warned prejudices based on sex, race and sexual orientation have been reinvigorated. He told the Senedd: "It is getting worse by the day, and it really represents an existential crisis for our democracy and our society." Mr Price said: "For our democracy to be effective, it has to be diverse. "Diversity trumps ability. "It's a piece of evidence in social science." The former Plaid Cymru leader called for a focus on representation of trans women and men, a community "under siege," to ensure their voices are heard in the Senedd. Mr Price highlighted harmful comments below news stories involving him in recent weeks. "That certainly won't deter me and I hope it won't deter anyone else," he said. "But we've got to do something about it collectively, haven't we?" Labour's Hannah Blythyn expressed concerns that Wales could go backwards in terms of equality of representation at the next Senedd election. Ms Blythyn told Senedd members: "I very much made an active decision when I had the opportunity to stand in this legislature because of the make-up – that there were more women here, that it was more representative." Jane Hutt, Wales' social justice secretary, acknowledged the rise of abuse, harassment and intimidation towards politicians, candidates and campaigners. She outlined voluntary diversity and inclusion guidance for political parties which aims to ensure democratic bodies are truly representative of all the people of Wales. Ms Hutt said safety costs will be exempt from spending limits for Welsh elections. Conservative Altaf Hussain warned guidance on equal representation risks crossing a dangerous line. He said: "Equality of access cannot come just by bureaucratic diktats or targets." Plaid Cymru's Sioned Williams said progress on underrepresentation of women in politics has slowed, warning the voluntary guidance was published "far too late." "Wales belongs to everyone," she said. "Everyone must have a voice in our nation's future."

Senedd called to act on 'existential crisis' of abuse
Senedd called to act on 'existential crisis' of abuse

South Wales Guardian

timean hour ago

  • South Wales Guardian

Senedd called to act on 'existential crisis' of abuse

Plaid Cymru's Adam Price, the first out-gay man in his party to be elected to national office, warned prejudices based on sex, race and sexual orientation have been reinvigorated. He told the Senedd: "It is getting worse by the day, and it really represents an existential crisis for our democracy and our society." Mr Price said: "For our democracy to be effective, it has to be diverse. "Diversity trumps ability. "It's a piece of evidence in social science." The former Plaid Cymru leader called for a focus on representation of trans women and men, a community "under siege," to ensure their voices are heard in the Senedd. Mr Price highlighted harmful comments below news stories involving him in recent weeks. "That certainly won't deter me and I hope it won't deter anyone else," he said. "But we've got to do something about it collectively, haven't we?" Labour's Hannah Blythyn expressed concerns that Wales could go backwards in terms of equality of representation at the next Senedd election. Ms Blythyn told Senedd members: "I very much made an active decision when I had the opportunity to stand in this legislature because of the make-up – that there were more women here, that it was more representative." Jane Hutt, Wales' social justice secretary, acknowledged the rise of abuse, harassment and intimidation towards politicians, candidates and campaigners. She outlined voluntary diversity and inclusion guidance for political parties which aims to ensure democratic bodies are truly representative of all the people of Wales. Ms Hutt said safety costs will be exempt from spending limits for Welsh elections. Conservative Altaf Hussain warned guidance on equal representation risks crossing a dangerous line. He said: "Equality of access cannot come just by bureaucratic diktats or targets." Plaid Cymru's Sioned Williams said progress on underrepresentation of women in politics has slowed, warning the voluntary guidance was published "far too late." "Wales belongs to everyone," she said. "Everyone must have a voice in our nation's future."

Chancellor unveils £6bn NHS funding after health-centred spending review
Chancellor unveils £6bn NHS funding after health-centred spending review

The Independent

time2 hours ago

  • The Independent

Chancellor unveils £6bn NHS funding after health-centred spending review

Some £6 billion will be spent on speeding up testing and treatment in the NHS, Rachel Reeves has announced, after she placed the health service at the heart of Government spending plans. The Chancellor unveiled the investment, which includes new scanners, ambulances and urgent treatment centres aimed at providing an extra four million appointments in England over the next five years, after Wednesday's spending review. The funding is aimed at reducing waiting lists and reaching Labour's 'milestone' of ensuring the health service carries out 92% of routine operations within 18 weeks. In the review, Ms Reeves set out day-to-day spending across Government for the next three years, as well as plans for capital investment over the next four years. The NHS and defence were seen as the winners from the settlement, as both will see higher than average rises in public spending. This comes at cost of squeezing the budgets of other Whitehall departments and experts have warned tax rises may be needed later this year. The Chancellor and Sir Keir Starmer both sought to portray the review as a 'new phase' for the Government, following the criticism Labour has faced during its first year in power, including over cuts to winter fuel allowance. Ms Reeves claimed the NHS had been 'put on its knees' as a result of under-investment by the previous government, adding: 'We are investing in Britain's renewal, and we will turn that around.' The new £6 billion investment will come from the capital settlement for the NHS and will also help to speed up diagnoses with scans and treatment available in places such as shopping centres and high streets. The scale of day-to-day spending for the NHS is akin to an extra £29 billion a year. In a broadcast interview on Wednesday evening, Ms Reeves said the Government was 'confident' it could meet its pledge to reduce waiting lists after the boost to NHS spending. But while health and defence have benefited from the review, the Home Office, Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government, Department for Culture, Media and Sport, Department for Transport and Department for the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs are all in line for real-terms cuts in day-to-day spending. The Foreign Office is also in line for real-terms cuts, mainly as a result of a reduction in the overseas aid budget, which was slashed as part of the commitment to boost defence spending to 2.6% of gross domestic product – including the intelligence agencies – from 2027. Ms Reeves acknowledged 'not everyone has been able to get exactly what they want' following Cabinet squabbling over departmental budgets. She said 'every penny' of the spending increases had been funded through the tax and borrowing changes she had announced in her first budget. The Chancellor also insisted she would not need to mount another tax raid to pay for her plans, but experts warned the money for the NHS might still not be enough and the Government is under international pressure to boost defence funding further. Paul Johnson, of the Institute for Fiscal Studies, described the hospital waiting times target as 'enormously ambitious', adding: 'And on defence, it's entirely possible that an increase in the Nato spending target will mean that maintaining defence spending at 2.6% of GDP no longer cuts the mustard.' At a summit later this month Nato members will consider calls to increase spending to 3.5% on defence, with a future 1.5% on defence-related measures. Steven Millard, interim director of the NIESR economic research institute, said the Chancellor's non-negotiable fiscal rules, coupled with the 'small amount of headroom' in her spending plans, meant 'it is now almost inevitable that if she is to keep to her fiscal rules, she will have to raise taxes in the autumn budget'. Elsewhere, policing leaders warned forces may need to make deep cuts after their settlement was announced. The spending review provides more than £2 billion for forces, but ministers have acknowledged some of that 'spending power' will come from council tax hikes.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store