As the election results came in, the Parliamentary by-election in Hartlepool most prominent among them, some in the Labour Party, and not just on the left, began to look towards their party leader. Keir Starmer had thus far failed to set out what Labour was for. He had gone after the Tories on rather fewer occasions, it seemed, than he had agreed with them. But one thing all could agree on was that there would not yet be a leadership challenge.
Until yesterday evening.
Starmer had told that he took full responsibility for the election results. But after the BBC
reported “
Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer is to carry out a reshuffle of his frontbench team later following the party's poor performance in English local elections … He is facing criticism following defeat in the Hartlepool by-election and losing control of several councils” it added “
[he] has already sacked his deputy Angela Rayner as Labour's chair and campaigns co-ordinator”. Took full responsibility by dumping on Ms Rayner.
Reconnecting with the North and working class people by sacking, er, a working class woman from the North. A woman who, it seems, played no part in the apparently arbitrary candidate selection for Hartlepool, which, it has been claimed, was down mainly to Jenny Chapman, who lost Darlington in 2019, but is a close aide to Starmer.
It soon became clear that this was a move which would unite all wings of the party, but not necessarily in the way Starmer may have wanted - because they would unify against him. Interestingly, Tom Harwood, formerly replacement teaboy to the perpetually thirsty Paul Staines at the Guido Fawkes blog, made the killer comment, but maybe without realising what it meant: “
an overly hasty night of the long knives”.
In UK politics, that
describes the cabinet reshuffle by Harold Macmillan in July 1962 in which seven cabinet ministers, including then Chancellor Selwyn Lloyd, were sacked. The extent of the reshuffle was probably unnecessary, and just over a year later, Macmillan, who had won a majority of 100 in 1959, was out. A year after that, so were the Tories.
A Night Of The Long Knives refers to a reshuffle that is ultimately proved counterproductive and, indeed, pointless. So reaction to Starmer’s action was predictable.
Lewis Goodall of BBC
Newsnight claimed “
Labour MPs are completely gobsmacked tonight”. And not just MPs: Andy Burnham, re-elected in a landslide as Mayor of Greater Manchester, said simply “
I can’t support this”. Labour List editor Sienna Rogers quoted an NEC source telling “
Well looks like LOTO may be dicing with their NEC majority then”.
Jessica Elgot of the
Guardian added “
One Labour source says grid meeting at the start of the campaign didn’t include anything for Angela Rayner to do. No media, no announcements” and Adam Bienkov of Business Insider noted “
asked yesterday what his response would be to these election results, Keir Starmer said that his top priority was ‘stopping as a party quarrelling among ourselves’”. Or maybe not.
And with Anneliese Dodds, Cat Smith, Andy McDonald and Lisa Nandy quoted as being next for the chop - the news possibly leaked before they were told - it will only get worse.
The time of Keir Starmer’s leadership was for a time, but not for all time.
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If the Quiff Quisling really is thinking of sacking Nandy we can assume he's finally lost whatever marbles he may have had.
ReplyDeleteShe's as big a right wing gobshite as he is.
Not that any of it is more than a comical redistribution of right wing mediocrity and treachery.
Sooner or later, Britain - or what remains of it - is going to pay a fearful price for turning away from common sense decency. It's just a matter of time. Long term, the Starmer Quiff Quislings are only the latest righty farts-in-a-bottle.
The final invoice is going to be tragic, Starmer or no Starmer. Might as well brace yourself to pay it.
It's not all bad news. Fox lost his deposit in the London Mayoral race.
ReplyDeleteWhingin' Dan Hodges says it was all Rayner's fault, though, and he wouldn’t lie to us.
ReplyDeleteNB: Above may contain traces of Lie.
@Anon
ReplyDeletePerhaps there are two right wing factions? Now they believe they have defeated the Corbynistas (anyone to the left of Genghis) they are at liberty to fight for what remains?
Anyone with a half a brain cell knew Quiif Quisling was a fraud and a Tory plant.
ReplyDeletePolicies that were universally popular, just needed the right delivery, but no the Quisling decided to go down the neoliberal line and back the Tories at every turn channelling his inner Kinnock.
Just what we need in these trying times; a Shadow Cabinet of interchangeable Blairite muppets.
ReplyDeleteI don't think he IS unravelling, Tim.
ReplyDeleteHe's doing what he was hired to do.
We've been here before: Gaitskell, Callaghan (who even made Kissinger (!) a Freeman of Cardiff), Kinnock, Blair, Brown, Starmer.... different arseholes, same right wing shit.