Much of what Blair said in essay criticising Labour was wrong, says Starmer – UK politics live | Politics

Starmer say he thinks ‘much’ of what Blair had to say about his record yesterday was wrong

Keir Starmer has said that “much” of what Tony Blair said in his 5,700-word essay yesterday criticising the record of the government was wrong.

During a visit to a train depot in west London, Starmer was asked by a reporter how he felt about being criticised by Labour’s most successful prime minister.

Starmer started with a compliment for his predecessor.

double quotation markLet me start with where I agree with Tony Blair.

I agree with him, that we should be having a discussion about policy and ideas, and that’s what generates politics. That’s where the focus should be. So Tony is right about that.

But then Starmer, who seemed to be enjoying the chance to hit back, then went on to say he thought Blair was mostly wrong. He said:

double quotation markYou won’t be surprised to know that I don’t agree with much what Tony says about what the government is doing.

We can all argue about individual policies, but the real question is, what’s the change, what’s the difference that is happening in a country we inherited two years ago in a very poor place?

We put the policy in place to stabilise the economy and make sure that it grew so wealth was created in every part of the country.

Because of our policy choices, that is happening.

Starmer then launched into a long defence of his record.

double quotation markWe took policy choices that we needed better public services. They were on their knees when we inherited them.

We took policy choices that we would invest in those public services, that we would introduce new technologies, particularly in the NHS. As a result, waiting lists are coming down with the biggest drop for 17 years actually recorded just two weeks ago. So [we took] the right policy choices there.

We also had to address the question of how do we get migration down without affecting economic growth, which is a difficult balance. Again, we took our policy choices and you see the growth figures are up and the migration figures are down, which tells you the change that we brought about in two short years.

And then on the international stage, which is obviously hugely important at such a volatile time, we have in two short years rebuilt our relationship with many countries, particularly in the EU – we’re now a trusted colleague, an ally of our EU partners – but at the same time as maintaining our relationship with the US. And so many people said that wouldn’t be possible.

So actually, my response to Tony is, yes, it’s right to talk about policy, it’s right to talk about ideas, that’s where the debate should be.

But actually, I don’t agree that the policy choices of this government weren’t the right policy choice given what we inherited – very different situation in 2024 to 1997.

And, dealing with what we had to turn around, the policy choices, we’re vindicated by them because those changes have happened.

Keir Starmer meeting apprentices during a visit to Acton Works, a training facility in Chiswick, west London, today. Photograph: Simon Jones/The Sun/PA
Share

Key events

Implementation of Brexit ‘little short of disaster’, says former cabinet secretary Simon Case

Simon Case, the former cabinet secretary, has described the implementation of Brexit as “little short of a disaster”.

That may sound like a statement of the obvious. But given that Case was cabinet secretary while that process was happening, and that ex-civil servants are normally quite reticent about expressing strong political views, it is interesting that he has chosen to speak out this bluntly.

Case delivers the assessment in an essay he has written for The Brexit Effect 2016-2026, a new book being published to mark the 10th anniversary next month of the vote to leave the EU. Edited by the political historian Anthony Seldon, it is a collection of 36 essays written by politicians, officials and academics, from all sides of the Brexit debate.

Case became cabinet secretary in September 2020, when the UK was still negotiating its post-Brexit trade deal with the EU, and stayed until December 2024. He starts his essay with a quote from Lenin saying a revolution “teaches an entire people very rich and valuable lessons”, and he concludes it saying:

double quotation markLenin was certainly right in that the UK learnt some rich and valuable lessons from its Brexit revolution. In its implementation, it has been little short of a disaster. The opportunities, as leave supporters would argue, have been left largely unexplored, and the last decade has been a repeated series of efforts focused on the mitigation of the perceived negative consequences. Elsewhere, when revolutionaries fail to take control of the seat of power, the radio station and the airfield, their revolutions are usually very short-lived. Those leading the Brexit revolution have never taken control of all of the key institutions of power in the UK – it took three years to deliver a leave prime minister, and parliament has yet to see a leave majority. Whitehall has never been given clear and consistent instructions that an alternative vision of the country’s future is to be pursued. Whilst the constitutional change has been completed, the vision has never been defined and implemented. The revolution has failed.

This is not a book that tries to come to an overall, considered verdict on Brexit, but it is full of wise and sensible contributions. It is not a light read, though, and if you want more Brexit, and are looking for something a bit more entertaining, do try No Second Chances, a recent book by Morgan Jones about the people who campaigned for a second Brexit referendum. In the Seldon book, the arch-Brexiteer Douglas Carswell says: “Sometimes those most committed to a cause are not its best advocates.” He is making a point about Eurosceptics, but Jones’s book, which is short and fun, is largely about how this was also true of the blue beret brigade obsessives and idealists who tried to get Brexit overturned. Politics books are normally about MPs or advisers. But activists matter too and this is a respectful and illuminating book about a group of players in the political ecosystem who deserve a bit more attention than they’ve had. After all, when Britons remember 2016, Steve Bray, ‘Mr Stop Brexit’ (who merits a whole chapter in the Jones book), will live in the memory long after we’ve forgotten the details of the Grieve amendment.

Share

Leave a Comment