
"After the downfall of Morgan McSweeney our de-facto prime minister this is the phase Britain's government has now entered. Those who have worked closely with Keir Starmer emphasise his lack of politics, while his own aides privately boast that he is merely their frontman. McSweeney was the head, and the head has gone. There will be some flapping about in every direction."
"Starmer instantly looks comfortable as prime minister, cooed Philip Collins, his former speechwriter and now editor of Prospect magazine, after Labour's election victory. I always thought he would and this hard-to-define sense is part of the reason he is PM in the first place. Instead, the Starmer premiership turned out to be the Fyre festival of British politics: lavishly hyped in advance, buoyed up by elite enthusiasm, and collapsing into fiasco almost as soon as it began."
"Before his collision with real power, Starmer was sold as competence incarnate: a figure committed to public service, presiding over a team of adults in the room who would spare us from the psychodramas of the Tory era. They had, we were told, discovered an electoral elixir. Ruling out significant tax rises on wealthy elites, attacking the welfare state and bashing migrants placed them in the fabled centre ground and would appeal to mainstream public opinion. In short, Starmerism was destined to thrive in office."
After Morgan McSweeney's downfall, Britain's government entered a chaotic phase with resignations and calls for Keir Starmer's resignation. Allies describe Starmer as politically thin and as a frontman for others, leaving a leaderless project that flails without its central strategist. Prior to holding power, Starmerism was presented as competent centrism: promising restraint on tax rises, welfare attacks, and migration controls to win mainstream support. That strategy relied on elite enthusiasm and avoided major redistributive policies. Once in office, the approach rapidly unraveled, producing a hyped administration that collapsed into fiasco upon encountering real political power.
Read at www.theguardian.com
Unable to calculate read time
Collection
[
|
...
]