
I HAVE seen the departure of a few prime ministers, starting in 1990 with Margaret Thatcher, aka Mrs Hacksaw in my old newspaper column.
Major, Blair, Brown, Cameron, May, Johnson, Truss and Sunak followed. Now Sir Keir Starmer is going too. His fall resembles one of those speeded-up films of decay, the solid flesh of majority rotting before your eyes.
That win nearly two years ago turned round Labour’s worst defeat since 1935 – an impressive achievement that soon enough impressed no-one much.
History will wonder where it all went wrong for Sir Keir, and so will I over the next few paragraphs.
Let’s start at the end. Starmer’s farewell speech, delivered with staccato grace, was heartfelt, brief, and a little odd. Then again, Starmer’s decline is itself a little odd.
Exactly why he ended up facing such hostility remains a mystery. He has done nothing wrong and leaves untouched by scandal or corruption; he didn’t crash the economy overnight, like Truss. He was diligent and hard-working, unlike Johnson. He threw himself into the job, at great cost to his family.
In the end, and in simple language, people didn’t seem to like him. Or that was the message put out so often it became its own truth. Unpopular opinion: he deserved better, but it’s too late to worry about that now.
Many on the left and the right wanted Starmer to fail from the off. As did the usual suspect newspapers, determined to swing a wrecking ball at whatever Starmer did, hoping to crack the foundations. Then the broadcasters gave that ball another push, led by the BBC’s frightful political editor, Chris Mason. And a right-wing media agenda was established as fact.
If Andy Burnham does grab the battered crown, he will face the same media hostility. He will also endure huge pressure on social media, where fake news bots zip about like malevolent ping-pong balls. He will also suffer outrageous interference from the American far right, who seem so keen on mucking up our politics.
And he will soon enough be reminded that everybody hates politicians nowadays, a troubling virus for which there is no known vaccination.
Naturally enough, the causes of Starmer’s decline also lie in the man himself. Yes, he made mistakes, from a hasty decision to axe winter fuel payments, to pushing for the poisonous Peter Mandelson to be Britain’s US ambassador.
But it was more than that, different than that. He seemed unwilling or unable to tell a story, to give his politics plot and meaning, to communicate what he stood for. Politics may be a duplicitous art, but you need a good story, a clear narrative to weave.
Once in government, Starmer opted for a steady-as-she goes style, quietly undoing the mess made by his Tory predecessors. He saw himself as a manager politician who had time, two terms were mentioned, to reshape the country.
Sadly, he never truly found a way to connect with voters, to speak in his own voice. He did not wish to play the game, but politics is a sort of game. And politicians, if you’ll permit a generalisation, are sometimes a bunch of divas and drama queens, running about in an egotistical flap, headless chickens to a man and woman.
That applies to all parties, but it certainly applies to Labour MPs at present, so easily led into a chaos that suits their opponents.
Starmer should have taken proper control. Instead he kept his head down. By the time he looked up, the scree beneath his feet was moving, and there was only one way to go.
Will Andy Burnham and his king of the north act really pep up Labour’s chances? There’s an alarming degree of faith being put in what people are calling his Manchesterism, named after his spell as Mayor of Manchester.
Some say Burnham will be better placed to see off Nigel Farage. Maybe, but don’t rest too much faith on that altar. Farage, as any fool could have predicted, is now banging on about having a general election. Risky from a man leading a party that struggles to win byelections.
Yes, Farage needs to be contained. But sometimes the best person to do that is Nigel Farage. For Nigel nearly always undoes whatever it is Nigel is trying to do. He just can’t help hitting that self-destruct button.













