The article claims Keir Starmer's defeat in the Runcorn by-election marks a significant setback, potentially signifying the beginning of the end of his premiership. This is despite his relatively short time in office and landslide majority win just ten months prior.
The author highlights a broader, alarming decline in Labour's national vote share, comparing the situation to John Major's post-Black Wednesday downfall. The low voter turnout is also noted as a cause for concern.
The article criticizes Starmer's lack of a clear strategy for the 2024 general election, his attempts to blame predecessors for his government's shortcomings, and his perceived inability to effectively counter Nigel Farage's Reform party. His stances on trans rights and immigration are cited as potential weaknesses.
The author foresees additional challenges for Starmer, including an upcoming tax bombshell, potential economic recession, and ongoing international conflicts.
The overall conclusion is that while Starmer's career is not definitively over, his current trajectory is worrisome due to the combination of poor election results, critical leadership evaluations, and upcoming challenges.
Published: 05:20 EDT, 2 May 2025 | Updated: 06:50 EDT, 2 May 2025
It was only six votes. But when people come to write the history, Keir Starmerās defeat in the Runcorn by-election will probably come to be viewed as the beginning of the end of his premiership.
That may seem a premature conclusion, given he has been in office less than a year. But the evidence is there for anyone who wishes to see it.
Not least because it was not actually six voters who decided his fate. The ballots are still being counted in the local and mayoral elections. Yet across the nation the pattern is clear. Labourās vote is imploding on an unprecedented scale.
And these are not mid-term elections, the traditional dog days of an incumbent administration. It is only ten months since Sir Keir was returned with a landslide majority. And already the suit so generously purchased for him by Lord Alli has been branded with the yellow stripe of betrayal.
Only one prime minister in the last half a century has been so comprehensively humiliated in their first parliamentary test since securing a majority. That was the hapless John Major, in the aftermath of the Black Wednesday debacle in 1992 that sealed his own political demise.
Keir Starmer is now facing his Black Friday. There will not be any precipitous demands for his head. Members of the shadow cabinet will trot out and regurgitate the prepared lines about ālisteningā and ālearningā.
But this morning Labour MPs are waking to an uncomfortable reality. Which is that when Keir Starmer told a friend in the middle of the election that secured him the leadership of his party: āYou know, I donāt get politics. I donāt understand it. And I donāt really like it,ā he was telling the truth.
Yes, we are still in the foothills of this parliament. Although the verdict of the people was damning, turnout was low as huge swathes of the country voted ānone of the aboveā. Labourās position is still recoverable.Ā But what is worrying his backbenchers is they see precious little evidence that Sir Keir has the guile or will to initiate that recovery. With good reason.
Nigel Farage (pictured with new Reform MP Sarah Pochin) is now the true Leader of the Opposition, writes DAN HODGES
Ā Despite the hype, Starmer never actually had a strategy for winning the 2024 general election. Instead, he opted to sit back and let Rishi Sunak and the Conservatives lose it. And now he no longer has the Tories to kick around any more, he is politically adrift.
These elections were not just a verdict on Labourās first month in office. They were also a referendum on Sir Keirās attempt to blame his Governmentās errors and missteps on its predecessors.
But having been told ad infinitum that a vote for Labour represented a vote for change, the British people simply donāt want to hear it. Having constructed the Ā£20billion āblack holeā, Starmer and Reeves now find themselves stuck at the bottom of it.
Even then, if the Tories remained Labourās primary opponents, the Prime Minister might just have a chance of reshaping his party's fortunes. Especially given Kemi Badenochās replacement by Robert Jenrick is now just a matter of time.
But Nigel Farage is now the true Leader of the Opposition. And Keir Starmer does not have the faintest idea how to confront Farageās insurgent populism.
His prevarication on trans rights. His liberal squeamishness on immigration. His myopic inability to grasp the fury generated by cuts to winter-fuel payments, pensions and disability benefits. If Reformās leader could piece together an identikit Labour leader to run against, a former human-rights lawyer, Knight of the Realm resident of North London would represent the perfect fit.
And these results are by no means the nadir for Sir Keir and his party. The Rachel Reeves tax bombshell is about to detonate. Trumpās tariff vandalism is set to plunge the US, and then global, economy into recession. The menace of Putin and China will force the West to beat its ploughshares into swords and at an increasingly frantic and costly pace. And as the international turmoil spreads, more and more small boats will hove into view off Britainās coastline.
All political careers ultimately end in failure. I suspect when Keir Starmerās ends it will be with Runcorn carved into his heart.
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