Can John Healey really afford to go to war?
Keir Starmer wants to lead a security government but isn’t prepared to pay the cost.
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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.
Keir Starmer wants to lead a security government but isn’t prepared to pay the cost.
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The “hang the paedos, fund the NHS” constituency is not moving left.
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The Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse by-election is a microcosm for Britain’s swirling political crises.
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From the broadsheets to the tabloids, journalism is increasingly out of touch with public opinion.
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He is preparing a parliamentary ruse to embarrass Keir Starmer – and take dozens of MPs with him.
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Keir Starmer’s “Project Fear” offensive against Reform UK is not going to stick.
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John McDonnell has directly challenged Keir Starmer on the two-child benefit cap.
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Nigel Farage’s fiscal arithmetic is as eye-catching as it is unserious.
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Labour’s manifesto promises on child poverty are catching up with Keir Starmer.
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The numbers are still too high to satisfy the median British voter.
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The EU can’t save us from high energy costs.
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Your weekly dose of gossip from around Westminster.
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If an old patriotic progressive can’t muse on such themes here, where can he?
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Binary thinking has broken our politics. Is there a way back?
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Keir Starmer says in private that lifting the two-child cap is his personal priority.
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Despite Starmer’s reversal of a deeply unpopular policy, Badenoch struggled to take advantage.
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The Chancellor knows she needs to prove again that she owes more to Gordon Brown than George Osborne.
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The Conservatives are still haunted by their past failures on Europe.
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Insiders described Monday’s meeting of the Parliamentary Labour Party as subdued.
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The government believes its opponents are on the wrong side of voters and business.
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