Keir Starmer’s wretched writhing and flailing is pointless โ he has no power left | Politics | News
Watching Keir Starmerโs desperate struggle to cling to office this week, I couldnโt help remembering those Greek myths about mortals set impossible tasks by the gods. You know the ones. Poor old Sisyphus, condemned to push a boulder to the top of a hill only to see it roll back down again within a few feet of the summit, over and over again. Danausโs daughters, tasked with filling an enormous bath but forced to use sieves.
Tantalus, eternally hungry and thirsty, made to stand in a pool of water that receded every time he stooped to drink; overhead, branches laden with fruit that lifted up when he reached for them. Everyday, humdrum tasks compared with todayโs hopeless challenge โ to lead Labour.
The job poses a ceaseless, unsolvable conundrum. On one side, a ruling elite that recognises it can only ever win power by eschewing or watering down the hard-left principles that form the party bedrock. On the other, a mass-membership and swarm of ideologically-driven back-benchers who insist that those principles be honored and carried out to the letter.
Itโs a vicious circle that can never be squared. Look at Starmer. Go on, pick a policy. Letโs take welfare. Starmer is as appalled and horrified by ballooning welfare spending as any self-respecting Tory or Reform voter.
He tried to slash it because he knows the country simply canโt afford to go on like this. Axing the winter fuel allowance; keeping the child benefit cap; a promise to launch a wider root-and-branch reform of benefits…
Policies and pledges all now ashes in his mouth. Every one abandoned, reversed, or kicked so far down the road as makes no difference.
Actually, Starmerโs unachievable ambition to cut welfare is to some extent his Sisyphean rock โ although the PM didnโt even get the boulder close to the summit before he was ruthlessly barged aside by the party faithful and forced to watch the thing bounce and roll all the way back down to the bottom.
But unlike Sisyphus, Starmer wonโt try again. The boulder of welfare reform will stay put at the foot of the hill for the remainder of his term in office.
Speaking of which, watching his wretched writhing and flailing around this week, I couldnโt help but wonder: whatโs the point? Why bother? Youโre not even clinging to power, because you donโt really have any. And even if you did, youโve just traded its tattered remnants in exchange for your cabinetโs โsupportโ. They own you now.
Aristotle said that democracy โis the worst form of despotismโ. It is if you want to be leader of the Labour Party, thatโs for sure.
