
Keir Starmer's annus horribilis
A year ago a new government was elected with a small proportion of the vote and a massive majority. It calls itself a Labour government and says its programme is one of change and renewal. It is neither. Keir Starmer and his people did not like the revived Labour Party which arose from the ashes of New Labour. Instead, they built a new party which, like New Labour, was rigidly controlled from the centre, funded by the rich, disdainful of its members and voters and committed to minimal change. In the 2024 election it added a mere 1.6 percentage points to the 2019 Labour share of the vote.
Since then, the party's polling has collapsed to an unprecedented degree. Though hard to believe today, once upon a time Labour governments used to essentially maintain, and sometimes increase, their vote share between winning and losing general elections. But the support for both Starmer's party and New Labour has behaved very differently. New Labour's vote share only fell between 1997 and 2010. Starmer's party is shedding votes even faster. Polling today shows it would get an even lower share of the vote than in the even more disastrous 2010 and 2015 contests, and even worse than the post-war nadir of 1983.
The last Labour government ended in 1979. In three periods in office (though never truly in power) it changed the country. Never as radical as many hoped, it nevertheless offered an alternative and delivered change. It may not have created the welfare state, but it changed and extended it (not least in the 1970s); it may not have taken over the commanding heights of the economy, but each Labour government nationalised important industries and pursued distinctive industrial policies. The party had serious analyses, often competing ones, of what was wrong with the country and what might be done. It was a distinctly social democratic party and a nationalist party.
It is no secret that the leadership of successor parties have wanted to distinguish themselves from that historic one. Thus we have 'New Labour' and Starmer constantly reminding us, with remarkable lack of appreciation of constitutional niceties, that he leads his government. Both are right. These governments are different. For example, neither has a distinctive analysis of the British condition, and no plan to make serious changes. 'New Labour' was lucky it could pretend all was fine with the British economy, and it offered tiny pledges for change, and a change of mood. Starmer's government has swaddled itself in the Tory rhetoric of fiscal rectitude, stability, deregulation, welfare cuts, higher defence spending.
Neither sees the virtue, or the usefulness, of telling the truth, once an essential feature of social democratic politics. Political discourse was deeply corrupted by 'New Labour' and of course new depths were plumbed under Boris Johnson. Today, there is a little more honesty in government documents, but nowhere near enough. In the country at large, trust in government as well as dissent from its policies is widespread.
Some say that despite everything, Starmer's government is social democratic because it raised taxes and spending to fund the NHS and instigated some state investment. But the idea that the Tories would have kept to their spending limits is for the birds. They would have had to do same if it wanted to keep the NHS going (which is what its aged voters wanted) and to get the level of state investment to the minimum necessary levels. In any case the real issue is not the level of spending, but the level of need and how it is addressed. And it is telling that Starmer's government has chosen defence over foreign aid, welfare cuts over tax rises, prisons over school building, and the same investments supported by private lobbies as the Tories – carbon capture, nuclear, roads, airports. It celebrates minimalist, sometimes damaging trade deals just like the Tory Brexiters did. Fantasies about AI, proffered by interested lobbies, substitute for serious thinking about the NHS.
The recently released industrial strategy promises much the same as Tory industrial policies of the last 40 years – bring in foreign investment, deregulate, stimulate innovation and entrepreneurship. The government is going for growth on the basis of Tory models of the economy, and by subsiding 'affordable' housing (which just raises house prices). It is telling that Starmer's article in the Financial Times outlining the proposals contained nothing but the distilled banalities of Thatcherism and Blairism with a touch of Brexiteer fantasising. His and his government's sad, shop-worn clichés say it all – turbocharging this, kickstarting that, being 'laser focused' on something else, mainlining AI, supporting world-leading this and that, creating superpowers. It is not just passé talk, but passé policy too.
Subscribe to The New Statesman today from only £8.99 per month Subscribe
Backbenchers have rebelled in the name of 'Labour values' to force the government to reverse most of its cuts to the pension (the winter fuel allowance is really part of the universal pension) and to abandon its radical cuts for support for the disabled. But the problem was not lack of Labour values. It was the actual values of the Starmer government. The conceit that because it is 'Labour' the government does these things with regret should not wash anymore.
Even those who held out no hope for any economic transformation might have expected a government respectful of the law and of principles of decent government, and supportive of integration with the European Union, and indeed the national interest. But the government has drunk the Brexit Kool-Aid and accepted many of its underlying delusions. It crawled to Trump and played dumb when the sovereignty of Canada and Greenland was threatened. For all its talk about global responsibilities, it protects Israel from Iran and global condemnation but does not protect Palestinians from Israel.
This government has been far more concerned to support the self-image of a foreign country and its army than British rights of free speech or commitment to international law. At a more trivial but telling level it concocted a plot to deny Parliament a vote on Palestine, which the Speaker, to his shame, endorsed. In Parliament, it peddles feeble mendacities about humanitarian concern and its support for a two-state solution; it shows its true aims when it sells arms, provides diplomatic cover and proscribes Palestine Action (a move which most Labour MPs voted for). Raison d'état, they might call it – but it is the raison d'état of foreign countries.
One would have hoped, however naively, that Starmer's government might have influenced the tone of politics. But far from shifting the centre of gravity of political discourse to the left, it has itself helped shift it to the right – not least by echoing Reform. Many government supporters have over the past year complained of a lack of vision, or even a story, and about Starmer in particular. They have yearned for the government to be true to their vision of what they want it to be; that it ought to be a social democratic, centre-left government. But the government does have a vision, which is what we see it enacting. It is what we see it doing, aping Tories and Reform, changing nothing important, dumping on the same people, at home and abroad, as the Tories did. It is true to itself; it is Starmer's government.
But it is not just Starmer's government. It is also the government of its MPs, its financial supporters and many of its members. Party members and MPs can no longer hide behind the idea that the leadership has betrayed the movement. In the days of the old Labour Party such an analysis was tenable. In the days of New Labour and Starmer's government, it is delusional. If they are anything more than a cynical rallying cry of proxies for leadership candidates, 'Labour values' now mean recreating the Labour Party as a party of working people, a party with a distinct and truthful analysis of the state we are in, and a party willing to change it.
[See also: It's time for Starmer and Reeves to embrace the soft left]
Related

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


North Wales Chronicle
24 minutes ago
- North Wales Chronicle
Minister shrugs off ex-Labour MP's announcement of new political party
Zarah Sultana, who had the Labour whip suspended last year, said on Thursday night she was quitting Sir Keir Starmer's party and would 'co-lead the founding of a new party' with the ex-Labour leader. Mr Corbyn is yet to comment on the announcement. On Friday morning, Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said Ms Sultana had 'always taken a very different view to most people in the Government' on several issues, adding: 'That's for her to do so.' But during a series of broadcast interviews, Ms Cooper declined to be drawn on whether she was concerned the new party could pose a threat to Labour. Asked whether she was concerned, the Home Secretary told LBC: 'People have always had different views, and I just disagree with the views and the approaches they're taking.' In her announcement of a new political party, Ms Sultana accused the Labour Government of failing to improve people's lives, and claimed it 'wants to make disabled people suffer' in reference to ministers' proposals to reform welfare. Ms Cooper rejected the accusation, telling Sky News: 'I just strongly disagree with her.' The Home Secretary pointed to falling waiting times in the NHS, the announcement of additional neighbourhood police officers, extending free school meals and strengthening renters' rights as areas where the Government was acting. She said: 'These are real changes (that) have a real impact on people's lives.' Ms Sultana was one of seven MPs who had the Labour whip suspended last summer when they supported an amendment to the King's Speech which related to the two-child benefit cap. Four of the seven had the whip restored earlier this year but Ms Sultana was not among them. John McDonnell, another of the suspended MPs who has not had the whip restored, posted on X that he was 'dreadfully sorry' to see Ms Sultana quit the party. 'The people running Labour at the moment need to ask themselves why a young, articulate, talented, extremely dedicated socialist feels she now has no home in the Labour Party and has to leave,' he said. Mr Corbyn led Labour from 2015 to April 2020, stepping down after the party's loss at the 2019 general election. He was suspended from Labour in 2020 after he refused to fully accept the Equality and Human Rights Commission's findings that the party broke equality law when he was in charge, and said antisemitism had been 'dramatically overstated for political reasons'. Today, after 14 years, I'm resigning from the Labour Party. Jeremy Corbyn and I will co-lead the founding of a new party, with other Independent MPs, campaigners and activists across the country. Join us. The time is now. Sign up here to stay updated: — Zarah Sultana MP (@zarahsultana) July 3, 2025 He was blocked from standing for Labour at last year's general election and expelled in the spring of 2024 after announcing he would stand as an independent candidate in his Islington North constituency, which he won with a majority of more than 7,000. Last year, Mr Corbyn formed the Independent Alliance with other independent members of the Commons. Asked on ITV's Peston programme on Wednesday whether that group could turn into an official party, Mr Corbyn said that they have 'worked very hard and very well together' over the last year in Parliament. He added: 'There is a thirst for an alternative view to be put.' 'That grouping will come together, there will be an alternative,' he later said.

The National
25 minutes ago
- The National
Spectator's 'bomb Glastonbury' rant is toxic. Who will call it out?
WHEN you're a washed-up relic of British journalism, there's one way left to get some of the attention you so desperately crave: puke up some bile and hope people hear the hacking. Enter Rod Liddle, the tabloid fossil and professional outrage merchant. Due to a willingness to spit hatred – and having predictably weathered repeated storms around his racism and misogyny (they were all just jokes the rest of us were too stupid to get) – Liddle's slop is still being pumped out into the public sphere by various right-wing outlets: The Times, The Sun, The Spectator. His latest diatribe is aimed at the quarter of a million people who dare to attend Glastonbury festival. One on Glasto, one on Brighton, and the UK would soon begin its recovery. ✍️Rod Liddlehttps:// — The Spectator (@spectator) July 3, 2025 Whether Liddle has ever been to the event which has become a cultural institution is unclear. It is also irrelevant. Reality be damned. Liddle is perfectly capable of imagining exactly what it's like, thank you very much – and he wants to bomb it. Whipped into a froth by his own imagination and enamoured with his own perceived brilliance, his latest outburst – printed in The Spectator – sees the former BBC man suggest dropping a 'small yield nuclear weapon' on Glastonbury festival. That, Liddle claims, would 'immediately remove from our country almost everybody who is hugely annoying'. Spectator editor Michael Gove has admitted to taking cocaine on 'several occasions', but is not the type of 'druggie' which Rod Liddle is talking about Apparently forgetting his own editor Michael Gove's proclivity for a line or two, Liddle suggests that bombing Glastonbury would rid the UK of 'druggies', 'liberal politicians', and 'tattooed blue-haired hags', along with a much longer list of people he views as undesirables. Of course, this is actually high satire, don't you know. No doubt for legal reasons, he does offer a fig leaf, writing: 'I am not saying that we should do this … I am merely hypothesising, in a slightly wistful kinda way.' You can tell by the spelling of 'kinda' that he is being wistful. Who among us hasn't longingly day-dreamed of rounding up hundreds of thousands of people and killing them in one fell swoop? Satirically, of course. READ MORE: Glasgow locals give verdict on Keir Starmer's Labour after one year in power Yet, when you next hear the predictable lament that social media has become 'too toxic', the debate 'too polarised', the misogyny too much for young women to brave entering the political scene, it is a safe bet you won't hear anyone so much as whisper that any blame could be laid at Liddle's door, let alone the publications that print his unfiltered hatred. No. The Times, The Sun, The Spectator, Liddle himself. None of them will get so much as a mention – despite his casual description of women as 'hags', or the racially-charged suggestion that a BBC staffer without the 'merest vestige of sentience' would be someone with a name like 'Ayesha'. As long as Liddle's hatred is directed at the right people – his suggestion that Brighton should also be bombed hints at exactly who that is – the British media will continue happily plodding along, pointing fingers at everyone but themselves for the world's wrongs.


Spectator
26 minutes ago
- Spectator
Reform catches Vance's eye
Support for Nigel Farage's Reform party is surging in the UK, and it appears the group is making waves across the pond too. As reported by the Telegraph, US Vice-President JD Vance is getting interested in Farage's outfit, even quizzing UK ambassador to the US Peter Mandelson about the rise of Reform. It's one sign your campaign is cutting through, eh? During a recent chat, it transpires that Vance questioned Mandelson: 'So what's going on with Reform? I see that they're doing very well.' Certainly Reform is continuing to top polls, while YouGov's recent MRP suggests, just a year on from Sir Keir Starmer's landslide victory, that if an election were called now, Farage's lot would come out on top. The data projects Reform UK to pick up 271 seats, while Labour would lose more than 230 to become the second largest party on 178 – while the Tories would slump to a meagre 46. Good heavens… Vance is known to have a keen interest in British politics and the Vice-President hasn't been shy about his thoughts on the UK. He took a swipe at Britain during a speech at the Munich Security Conference over his concerns about the country's erosion of free speech, warning attendees: 'What I worry about is the threat from within. The retreat of Europe from some of its most fundamental values, values shared with the United States of America.' As Labour continues to shed voters disappointed at U-turns and 'broken promises', it may be wise for the US administration to keep tabs on the party of government's top rivals ahead of the next election…