Labour is losing its mind
A radical new covenant must be made with the British people.
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Keir Rodney Starmer is a Labour Party politician who became Prime Minister on 5 July 2024. He has been MP for Holborn and St Pancras since 2015 and leader of Labour since April 2020. Starmer, born in 1962, studied law at the University of Leeds and Oxford, then became a barrister specialising in human rights. In 2008 he was appointed director of public prosecutions, for a five-year term. Find news, comment, and analysis about him here.
A radical new covenant must be made with the British people.
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The Prime Minister is unable to offer either outright support or criticism of the US’s strikes on Iran.
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Should Keir Starmer back these strikes, he risks splitting his entire political movement.
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From Israel and Iran to Ukraine and Russia, nations across the globe are engaged in existential battles.
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The actor on being a “white dinosaur”, his problem with humanity, and why he wouldn’t play Trump.
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Fixating on the Reform threat won’t fix our British malaise.
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Their food choices tell us more than speeches and sound bites ever could.
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The Chancellor cast herself as an authentic social democrat rather than a creature of the Treasury.
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New Statesman editor Tom McTague on his new profile of the Prime Minister.
The Prime Minister believes he will heal Britain – but can he find the words?
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Tracey Emin, Jeremy Corbyn, Piers Morgan and others on what the Prime Minister should do next.
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Rachel Reeves is fighting the good fight, but the British economy remains vulnerable to external shock.
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Also this week: The secrets of the president’s success, and a reliable diplomatic asset: my loyal Ambassa-Dog.
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The country that voted for Keir Hardie is turning against the party of Keir Starmer.
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And what it reveals about Reform’s greatest weakness.
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The government has been left arguing that things have got better, but also worse.
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Your weekly dose of gossip from around Westminster.
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Labour cannot fund the renewal of the public realm simply by relying on higher taxes on business and the wealthy.
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At the dispatch box, the opposition leader grew increasingly frustrated with the evasive and distant Keir Starmer.
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As the Prime Minister turns his focus back to Britain, he faces a restive Cabinet and an unresponsive economy.
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