Keir Starmer’s new deputy takes huge swipe at PM after being elected | Politics | News


New deputy Labour leader Lucy Powell addressed a party in crisis and delivered a de facto slapdown to Sir Keir Starmer in her first speech since taking the reins from Angela Rayner. She said Reform UKโ€™s Nigel Farage had been able to run away with the โ€œpolitical megaphoneโ€ and said people believe the Labour Government has not been โ€œbold enoughโ€ in delivering change since winning power last year.

Though cushioned with pledges to help the PM in his โ€œfightโ€, this is a very public chastisement for a leader who has just watched the heartland seat of Caerphilly go to Welsh nationalists Plaid Cymru, with Labour pushed into a humiliating third place behind Reform.

Her message was clear โ€“ Labour is in the โ€œfight of our livesโ€ for the โ€œfuture of the country and democracyโ€ and, despite having 401 of the 650 seats in Westminster, the Government has let Mr Farageโ€™s insurgent party set the agenda. This is a clear chastisement.

If this was not hard enough for Sir Keir to hear, she delivered a warning against trying to park Labour tanks on Reformโ€™s turf.

She said: โ€œWe wonโ€™t win by trying to out-Reform Reform but by building a broad progressive consensus.โ€

This will be seen as shot across Government bows, warning ministers not to try and drag Reform down in the polls by adopting ever-tougher positions on immigration. She said Mr Farage โ€œwants to blame immigration for all the countryโ€™s problemsโ€ but โ€œwe reject thatโ€.

It is not surprising that when Sir Keir took the stage after her he made a plea for unity.

โ€œWe must unite,โ€ he said. โ€œWe must keep our focus on what is in my view the defining battle for the soul of our nation.โ€

He accused both Reform and the Conservatives of peddling โ€œa politics of division and grievance that wants to take this great country to a very dark place,โ€ adding: โ€œOur job, whoever we are in this party, is to unite every single person in this country who is opposed to that politics and defeat it once and for all.โ€

This looked like the sketching out of Labourโ€™s survival strategy: Bring together people who are tempted to vote for the Greens, the Liberal Democrats, Jeremy Corbynโ€™s new party and any other Left-wing rivals by telling them this is how you stop the country lurching to the hard Right.

It appears he has taken at least one lesson from the Caerphilly by-election for the Welsh Parliament. People will turn out to vote against Reform.

In this case they backed Plaid, which has presented itself as a Left-leaning alternative to Labour for decades. Sir Keirโ€™s challenge is to persuade people who do not want Mr Farage to be Prime Minister that a vote for Labour is the best way of holding back the teal tide.

But if Mayโ€™s Scottish, Welsh and English council elections are a catastrophe for Labour his days at the helm may come to an end. He can expect criticism which will not be as diplomatically measured as Ms Powellโ€™s inaugural rebuke.

It is the PM who is in the fight of his life.

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