
Starmer faces Labour turmoil and global volatility as he marks year in Number 10
But with a daunting in-tray of problems including a stuttering economy, creaking public services and global volatility, his political honeymoon period was short-lived.
The Prime Minister said his Cabinet should look back with a sense of 'pride' at the first year in office (Carl Court/PA)
His personal popularity is now the lowest of any British premier after their first 12 months in office, political scientist and polling guru Professor Sir John Curtice said.
'There were pretty clear potential weaknesses before they even started, and most of those weaknesses have basically just been exposed over the course of the last 12 months,' he told the PA news agency.
Sir John said part of the problem lay in what he described as a failure of narrative in setting out the Government's vision for change to the public.
'They're portraying themselves as a repair gang rather than the builders of a new Jerusalem. Pessimism doesn't necessarily go down very well,' he told PA.
'The thing with Starmer is, he's a brilliant prosecution lawyer… But prosecution lawyers present cases that have been (put together) by someone else. The problem is that as a political leader you've got to prosecute your own case.
'Maybe he needs new personnel? Either he's got to learn to do it himself or get someone in to do it for him.'
That verdict was echoed by some dissenting voices within Labour ranks, where there is lingering discontent among rebels over the Government's Welfare Bill despite Number 10 offering major concessions on the legislation.
The Government saw off the threat of a major Commons defeat over the legislation on Tuesday after shelving plans to restrict eligibility for the personal independence payment (Pip), the main disability benefit in England.
'I think he really needs to think about why he wants to be a Labour Prime Minister and what is it he actually cares about,' one long-serving Labour MP said.
They said Tuesday had marked 'the lowest point' in Sir Keir's premiership so far and raised questions about his authority, warning that backbenchers may now feel emboldened to demand further U-turns elsewhere.
Sir John said that the Government's challenges in passing legislation were unsurprising with the broad but fragile coalition of support on which Labour built its election victory, securing 412 seats on just 35% of the vote.
That means many MPs defending narrow majorities and raises the prospect of 'a large body of people who are nervous about their political futures,' he said.
The Government's original welfare proposals had been part of a package that ministers expected to save up to £5 billion a year, leaving Chancellor Rachel Reeves needing to look for the money elsewhere.
The fallout threatens to cause lasting damage to morale in Labour ranks, with some rebels calling for a reset in relations between the parliamentary party and the leadership before fractures widen.
Images of the Chancellor crying in the Commons on Wednesday have also led to questions about her future, although a Treasury spokesman cited a 'personal matter' as the cause of her distress and Number 10 said she would remain in post.
Asked whether it was time for a course correction, Downing Street has said the Prime Minister will 'plough on' with the 'very busy agenda' of Government.
But the MP quoted above said: 'The idea that they can keep carrying on as they've been carrying on is suicidal.
'They have no real sense of how the party thinks and feels.'
Others had a more optimistic view of the year ahead, with a Starmer loyalist who supported the Bill suggesting the upset could be salvaged with a 'measured but solid response' from the Government.
'The worst they can do is nothing,' the backbencher added.
The Prime Minister used a Cabinet meeting on Tuesday to defend his record in office, telling ministers the welfare Bill was 'to help those who can work into employment and ensure dignity and security for those who can't work.'
He said they could all 'rightly look back with a real sense of pride and achievement' on the last 12 months, pointing to a reduction in NHS waiting lists and a series of economic agreements struck with the US, EU and India.
Abroad, the Prime Minister faces a tricky diplomatic balancing act as he seeks to strengthen ties with both Europe and Washington amid global instability from the Ukraine war and Middle East crisis.
Sir Keir Starmer secured a trade deal with the US last month (Suzanne Plunkett/PA)h
At home, Labour is staring down a threat from Nigel Farage's Reform UK party, which turned opinion poll momentum into widespread gains at the ballot box during the local elections in May.
Sir John said that parties such as Reform and the Greens offer more choice to voters wanting to express their discontent with Labour while the Tories continue to flounder in the polls.
'The character of the challenge is different from what it has been historically,' he said.
Tim Bale, professor of politics at Queen Mary University, said people had been expecting bold change on areas such as workers' rights and growth, and the Government's achievements so far were 'pretty small beer' by comparison.
Critics say the first year has instead been marked by a series of U-turns, including a partial reversal of cuts to the winter fuel payment and the move to launch a national inquiry into grooming gangs after months of resisting opposition pressure to do so.
The Government disputes that framing, pointing out for example that ministers had never explicitly ruled out a statutory probe into child sexual exploitation but waited for a review to be carried out before making a decision.
Prof Bale said he believed the first year had gone 'worse than most people imagined' and warned 'it's difficult for a leader who starts badly to persuade people that he or she is what they need.'
But he said the problems were not necessarily fatal, adding that setbacks early on in a premiership have an upside in allowing for more time to 'turn it round'.
'If you look back to Margaret Thatcher, she was able to do that, so it's not a foregone conclusion that all is lost, even for Keir Starmer himself,' he said.
Arguing that the Government could recover in the polls if its plans for the economy and public services pay off, he added: 'I think you can see the light at the end of the tunnel, but it's a very long tunnel.'
Sir Keir has pledged to lead a 'decade of national renewal' through a phased approach to Government, the first year of which he said would involve 'cleaning up the mess' his administration had inherited.
In a speech last week seeking to set the tone for the future, he said: 'We've wiped the state clean, we've stabilised the economy, and now we can go on to the next phase of government, building on that foundation.'
A Government spokesperson said: 'We were elected with a commitment to deliver change and security for working people – and we are getting on with the job.
'We are delivering our Plan for Change – wages are rising faster than prices, interest rates have been cut four times, immigration has come down with 30,000 people with no right to be here removed and over four million NHS appointments have been delivered.
'Progress has been made, but we know people are impatient for change – and we are too – so we will continue to govern in the national interest for British people and deliver a decade of national renewal.'
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The Herald Scotland
38 minutes ago
- The Herald Scotland
PM takes blame for welfare U-turn as he gives full backing to Chancellor
He said: 'Labour MPs are absolutely vested in this. It matters to them to get things like this right, and we didn't get that process right. We didn't engage in the way that we should have done.' Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves (right) crying as Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer speaks during Prime Minister's Questions (UK Parliament/PA) But he insisted his Government would 'come through it stronger' as he vowed to 'reflect' on what needed to be done 'to ensure we don't get into a situation like that again'. Sir Keir also gave his full support to Chancellor Rachel Reeves after she was seen crying during Prime Minister's Questions on Wednesday. Ms Reeves's visibly tearful appearance in the Commons came amid speculation that her job was at risk after the welfare U-turn put an almost £5 billion hole in her spending plans. But the Prime Minister insisted her appearance had 'nothing to do with politics, nothing to do with what's happened this week' and was 'a personal matter'. Asked if she would remain in her post, he said: 'She will be Chancellor for a very long time to come, because this project that we've been working on to change the Labour Party, to win the election, change the country, that is a project which the Chancellor and I've been working on together.' Wes Streeting said the Chancellor would bounce back (PA) On Thursday morning, Health Secretary Wes Streeting said Ms Reeves would 'bounce back' as he praised her 'leadership' on the economy. He also dismissed a suggestion that Sir Keir himself could be at risk, telling Sky News: 'Keir Starmer has been consistently underestimated. 'I wonder when people will learn. They said he couldn't win the Labour leadership, but he did. They said he couldn't change the Labour Party, but he did. They said he couldn't take the Labour Party from its worst defeat since the 1930s to election victory last year, and he did. 'And now the cynics say he can't change the country, but he will.' But Conservative shadow chancellor Sir Mel Stride said the scenes in the Commons over the past week had left bond markets 'twitchy' about the Government and 'their ability to actually grip things like spending going forward'. Appearing on BBC Breakfast, Sir Mel appeared to distance himself from Robert Jenrick, who had earlier posted a video on social media describing Ms Reeves's career as 'dead'. But he added that Mr Jenrick was making a 'valid' point that the Government had 'lost control of the economy', laying the blame with the Chancellor and Sir Keir and warning of tax rises to come.


Daily Mirror
43 minutes ago
- Daily Mirror
Keir Starmer to give major speech after Rachel Reeves seen crying
Keir Starmer will give a speech this morning on his 10 year NHS plan - but is likely to face questions about Rachel Reeves after the Chancellor was seen crying in the Commons yesterday. The Prime Minister last night said he and Ms Reeves are in "lockstep" and insisted she would be in post for "many years to come". He said her tears were "nothing to do with politics". He has endured a torrid week after being forced to water down his controversial benefit shake-up following a backbench rebellion. Mr Starmer had hoped to slash £5billion from the welfare bill, but in an 11th-hour U-turn the Government tore up plans to limit access to personal independence payments (PIP). In an interview with the BBC, he said: "I'm not going to pretend the last few days have been easy, they've been tough. I'm the sort of person that then wants to reflect on that, to ask myself what do we need to ensure we don't get into a situation like that again, and we will go through that process. But I also know what we will do and that's we will come through it stronger." Keir Starmer said he had a long chat with Rachel Reeves last night and said she is "fine". Asked by Chris Evans how the Chancellor is, he said: "She's fine. She's very resilient and strong is Rachel. "She's driven through lots of change in the Labour Party. We had to change the Labour Party, we fought an election together and I've seen her resilience." He went on: "She's a really powerful woman, and she's also very widely respected. And I think the sort of messages of concern that have come in over the last 24 hours or so show the great affection and respect in which she is held." The PM has revealed he has built a gym in Downing Street with his son. Asked about his daily routine, he said: "So my son is 17, and he and I have built a little gym in the flat because it's quite hard to get out to gyms for reasons that are obvious. "So he's got a big punchbag because he does kickboxing. We've got weights and I've got a rowing machine. So I go in there, listen to the radio, and then my job is to buy tea for my wife, make tea for my daughter." Keir Starmer has admitted his plan to keep Friday nights free "hasn't worked very well". In an interview with Chris Evans on Virgin Radio, the Prime Minister looked back at his pre-election pledge to try to spend the evening with his family. It sparked an outcry at the time. He said: "I can report back a year on in my attempt to keep the Friday night clear. Hasn't worked very well." But he said there are advantages with working at No10. Mr Starmer said: "We live just upstairs. So you've got the office in Downing Street. "And you go up two floors, we've got our flat, and it takes 22 seconds to get from my office to my flat. So if the kids are in, I can pop up there, even if it's only for 10 or 15 minutes." He described his family as his "pride and joy" and wife Victoria as his "rock". Health Secretary Wes Streeting says the 10-year health plan means people will "begin to see and feel those changes" to the NHS. He said new neighbourhood health services were in place in some regions but the Government "will be rolling health centres starting off in areas with the highest levels of need, the communities that are also the most poorly served". He said people will get increasing amounts of care in their home, adding: "This is the game changer for the 21st century."Mr Streeting told BBC Breakfast: "Often we've been sent from village to town, to city. So now we're going to design care around you. "You're going to have much more personal, personalised care, more ease, more convenience, more choice and control." Mr Starmer said he is "proud" of how his Government has tackled NHS waiting lists, but added that "if the health service is to survive, it's got to reform". Speaking to BBC Radio 4's Today programme, the PM said the health service was "left in a terrible state" by the previous government. He said: "But even if that had not been the case the nature of illness and the presentation of the public in terms of: we all live longer, but with more conditions - what the health service has to deal with is so different to what it was 70 years ago when the NHS was set up that we have to change. "And I know that simply putting more money into the old system isn't going to produce what we need." He added: "We've been driving down those waiting lists. "I'm really pleased about that. I'm proud of what we've done. But I know that if the health service is to survive, it's got to change, it's got to reform." The last few days have been "tough" for the Government, Mr Starmer has admitted. But he insisted his party would "come through it stronger". In an interview with the BBC, the PM said: "I'm not going to pretend the last few days have been easy, they've been tough. "I'm the sort of person that then wants to reflect on that, to ask myself what do we need to ensure we don't get into a situation like that again, and we will go through that process. "But I also know what we will do and that's we will come through it stronger." Keir Starmer has said he and Rachel Reeves are in "lockstep" as he praised the "excellent job" she is doing as Chancellor after she was tearful during PMQs. The Prime Minister said she will be Chancellor for "many years to come" after earlier swerving a question on her future in the Commons. In his first words since Ms Reeves's tearful appearance this afternoon, Mr Starmer told the BBC: "She's done an excellent job as Chancellor and we have delivered inward investment to this country in record numbers. "She and I work together, we think together. In the past there have been examples - I won't give any specifics - of chancellors and prime ministers who weren't in lockstep. We're in lockstep." The PM said Ms Reeves's tears were to do with a personal matter, on which he would not elaborate. He said it had "nothing to do with politics" or this week's dramatic welfare U-turns. Pressed on whether it was, Mr Starmer said: "That's absolutely wrong. Nothing to do with what's happened this week. It was a personal matter for her, I'm not going to intrude on her privacy by talking to you." This afternoon, Ms Reeves wiped away tears during a tense PMQs, where Mr Starmer came under attack from Tory Kemi Badenoch over his disability cuts U-turn. The Prime Minister did not properly answer a question on his Chancellor's future during the clash as Ms Badenoch crowed "she looks absolutely miserable". No10 moved swiftly to insist she was "going nowhere" and had the PM's full confidence for the rest of the Parliament after PMQs. And a spokesman for the Chancellor added: 'It's a personal matter, which - as you would expect - we are not going to get into. The Chancellor will be working out of Downing Street this afternoon.' Click here for the full story


Glasgow Times
43 minutes ago
- Glasgow Times
PM takes blame for welfare U-turn as he gives full backing to Chancellor
Speaking to the BBC in his first interview since a threatened backbench revolt forced him to strip out a major part of his welfare reform plan, he acknowledged the past few days had been 'tough'. He said: 'Labour MPs are absolutely vested in this. It matters to them to get things like this right, and we didn't get that process right. We didn't engage in the way that we should have done.' Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves (right) crying as Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer speaks during Prime Minister's Questions (UK Parliament/PA) But he insisted his Government would 'come through it stronger' as he vowed to 'reflect' on what needed to be done 'to ensure we don't get into a situation like that again'. Sir Keir also gave his full support to Chancellor Rachel Reeves after she was seen crying during Prime Minister's Questions on Wednesday. Ms Reeves's visibly tearful appearance in the Commons came amid speculation that her job was at risk after the welfare U-turn put an almost £5 billion hole in her spending plans. But the Prime Minister insisted her appearance had 'nothing to do with politics, nothing to do with what's happened this week' and was 'a personal matter'. Asked if she would remain in her post, he said: 'She will be Chancellor for a very long time to come, because this project that we've been working on to change the Labour Party, to win the election, change the country, that is a project which the Chancellor and I've been working on together.' Wes Streeting said the Chancellor would bounce back (PA) On Thursday morning, Health Secretary Wes Streeting said Ms Reeves would 'bounce back' as he praised her 'leadership' on the economy. He also dismissed a suggestion that Sir Keir himself could be at risk, telling Sky News: 'Keir Starmer has been consistently underestimated. 'I wonder when people will learn. They said he couldn't win the Labour leadership, but he did. They said he couldn't change the Labour Party, but he did. They said he couldn't take the Labour Party from its worst defeat since the 1930s to election victory last year, and he did. 'And now the cynics say he can't change the country, but he will.' But Conservative shadow chancellor Sir Mel Stride said the scenes in the Commons over the past week had left bond markets 'twitchy' about the Government and 'their ability to actually grip things like spending going forward'. Appearing on BBC Breakfast, Sir Mel appeared to distance himself from Robert Jenrick, who had earlier posted a video on social media describing Ms Reeves's career as 'dead'. But he added that Mr Jenrick was making a 'valid' point that the Government had 'lost control of the economy', laying the blame with the Chancellor and Sir Keir and warning of tax rises to come.