Labour’s on the ropes and Starmer has no answers - The Conservatives now have an opportunity to recast themselves as the party of fiscal responsibility,

Link: https://www.telegraph.co.uk/opinion/2025/05/30/labours-on-the-ropes-and-starmer-has-no-answers/
Credit: Telegraph View and Benjamin Cremel
Archive: https://archive.ph/7ktMx

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This was the week in which Reform UK finally shattered the facade of indifference maintained by the British political establishment. It was only a year ago next week that Nigel Farage announced his return to frontline politics. As opinion polls show the upstarts leading all other parties by ever wider margins, a whiff of panic has permeated the Downing Street bunker. After its triumph over Labour and the Conservatives in the local elections and the Runcorn by-election at the start of this month, Reform has emerged as a threat to the SNP, which is defending its Holyrood seat in Hamilton next Thursday.

What has brought about this sudden intensity of focus on a party that still has just five MPs in Westminster? There is no longer much doubt about Reform’s ability to translate its popularity into electoral success. Labour’s legions of backbenchers know that their chances of serving more than a single term depend on seeing off this unfamiliar challenge.

Mr Farage is visibly morphing into a different kind of politician. The welfare and fiscal policies he has just espoused are to the Left of the Tories and, in some cases, of Labour too. Reform promises not only to restore benefits that Rachel Reeves has curtailed, such as the Winter Fuel Allowance, but to go further by removing the two-child benefit cap.

This unaccustomed apparition of the Father Christmas of Clacton seems to have rattled the Prime Minister – so badly, indeed, that he turned up at St Helens on Merseyside this week to devote an entire speech to attacking Mr Farage. Sir Keir Starmer achieved nothing by this excursion apart from drawing attention to the Reform leader and his policies.

Even worse, the Starmer counter-attack found itself bogged down in an unexpectedly fierce barrage of criticism from accompanying journalists, including even those who had been hitherto well-disposed. The irreverence, even hostility, of the PM’s interrogation in St Helens signals a serious loss of prestige. After only a year in office, prime ministerial power is visibly ebbing away.

Ironically, Sir Keir has identified the right problem: Nigel Farage and Reform really are an existential threat to Labour. But he has so far failed to come up with any plausible answers. The incoherence of the Government’s policies – cutting disability benefits with one hand, while handing out big public sector pay rises with the other – is patently obvious. And the intellectual vacuity of Starmerism has just been highlighted by the absurd comparison of Kemi Badenoch’s Conservatives with the Nazis by Lord Hermer, the Attorney General and Sir Keir’s right-hand man.

Next week the battle will shift further north to the Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse by-election for the Scottish Parliament. This has degenerated into a slanging match between the SNP and Reform, with the former accusing the latter of playing the race card, while the Labour vote is squeezed. Fresh from an appearance at a Bitcoin conference in Las Vegas, next week Mr Farage will be in Scotland and doubtless steal the show there too. If Reform were to capture Hamilton, it would be a bitter blow for the SNP: Winnie Ewing’s victory there in 1967 first put them on the Westminster electoral map.

Over the summer the Prime Minister hopes to regain momentum with public spending and strategic defence reviews. Yet neither of these worthy documents seems likely to deliver the relaunch that Labour sorely needs. The UK economy is struggling to generate any growth at all after the bloodletting of the Reeves Budget and the impact of Donald Trump’s tariffs. Still living in denial, ministers will resist departmental cuts, thereby thwarting the boost in military investment required by the global threat level.

Another spectre at the feast is the prospect of large-scale revolts over welfare reform. A growing number of Labour MPs are ready to risk the implosion of the Government rather than let down their favoured lobby groups. Labour and Reform could find themselves locked in an unedifying competition to bribe voters with their own money.

The Conservatives now have an opportunity to recast themselves as the party of fiscal responsibility, national security and the work ethic. With millions living on out-of-work benefits, Kemi Badenoch could regain the initiative by showing how to bring people back into the workforce. With the country longing for strong leadership, Mrs Badenoch could well do a better job of taking on Mr Farage than Sir Keir has done so far.

Related Telegraph Stories:


https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2025/05/31/miliband-plots-120-gbp-net-zero-gas-bill-rise/ - Ed Miliband plots £120 pa gas bill rise for UK households.

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2025/05/31/starmer-loss-hamilton-by-election-dominoes-falling/ - Reform UK plot Scottish by-election success in Hamilton.

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/20...-britain-like-we-lost-the-cold-war-socialist/ - UK sleepwalking into a totalitarian state.
 
The Conservatives now have an opportunity to recast themselves as the party of fiscal responsibility, national security and the work ethic. With millions living on out-of-work benefits, Kemi Badenoch could regain the initiative

The conservatives have no opportunities left at all. They have no leadership and no agenda. Its not a question of gaining the initiative, its becoming a question of the party's survival. They have been on the wrong side of every issue for a while now. They have a bad leader and nobody of real leadership quality that could step up to replace that leader.
 
The conservatives have no opportunities left at all. They have no leadership and no agenda. Its not a question of gaining the initiative, its becoming a question of the party's survival. They have been on the wrong side of every issue for a while now. They have a bad leader and nobody of real leadership quality that could step up to replace that leader.
Yeah lol. Bets that this article is actually a Reform puff piece masquerading as a "ackshually here's how Tories still can win" thing to slip under the editor's radar.
 
"With millions living on out-of-work benefits, Kemi Badenoch could regain the initiative by showing how to bring people back into the workforce. With the country longing for strong leadership, Mrs Badenoch could well do a better job of taking on Mr Farage than Sir Keir has done so far."

And how is this going to happen? She's fucking useless.
 
The conservatives have no opportunities left at all. They have no leadership and no agenda. Its not a question of gaining the initiative, its becoming a question of the party's survival. They have been on the wrong side of every issue for a while now. They have a bad leader and nobody of real leadership quality that could step up to replace that leader.
Weird what can happen to successful political parties when they remove all white men from leadership and hand the party over to seething cat ladies and pajeets.
 
The conservatives have no opportunities left at all. They have no leadership and no agenda. Its not a question of gaining the initiative, its becoming a question of the party's survival. They have been on the wrong side of every issue for a while now. They have a bad leader and nobody of real leadership quality that could step up to replace that leader.
I'll do it. I'll put the nasty back in the nasty party and be the biggest bastard the tories have ever had. Thatcher would wince at my policies.
 
The conservatives have no opportunities left at all. They have no leadership and no agenda. Its not a question of gaining the initiative, its becoming a question of the party's survival. They have been on the wrong side of every issue for a while now. They have a bad leader and nobody of real leadership quality that could step up to replace that leader.
Same as Labour - the only the good thing about the modern era is that both of the Uniparties are being wrecked beyond saving.

It'll be Reform v Lib Dems before too long.
 
A by election win for Reform in Scotland would be delicious on a few levels, particularly in Hamilton. Final nail in the coffin of a narrative of the inevitability of independence that starts with Winnie Ewing winning there in 1967 , a panicked uniparty realising being swept away by rich amateurs nationwide is a real possibility , the Muslim leader of labour in Scotland being personally humiliated, , the touchy feely "we're all jock tamson's bairns - its those nasty English who cant handle the browns, we love em up here" pillar of "civic" nationalism being taken down a peg. Farage getting to come up north in triumph for the first time exorcising the ghost of that time he was chased into a pub, and of course the the mainstream news meltdown that will follow all this. All with Reform having pretty much no Scottish centric (and certainly no Scottish parliament centric) policies and all because the Scots are , after all, Europeans just like all those others who dont like immigrants, want to stop them coming and will vote for the party that sounds cruellest on the issue and who have been most consistent in sounding cruel.
 
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Weird how people in Britain find it difficult to embrace a party led by a Nigerian Anchor baby migrant.
Strangely enough she built up a significant degree of support opposing Lying Boris. Problem is she has consistently and repeatedly fucked up since then. Doesn't help that the Tory establishment is irredeemable but she made more than enough of her own mistakes.
It'll be Reform v Lib Dems before too long.
The Lib Dems are always ephemeral. They are the sanctuary of the fantasist who loves to virtue signal without consequences. They attract those who find that Labour/Tories (delete as appropriate) no longer meets their purity standards but fade away again whenever they get close to actual power, the reality of their actions having consequences bringing the whole thing crashing down. Getting close to power also exposes the lunacy of much of their platform - they are actively and overtly pro EU and anti UK to the extent of two consecutive party leaders saying out loud that if the British people in a second referendum voted to stay out of the EU they would take the country back in anyway. They don't seem to grasp that in a representative democracy it's the people of the UK you're supposed to represent, not the EU.

It's actually got to the point of Reform v Uniparty (inc Lib Dems) desperately trying to tell anyone that will listen that Reform is the second coming of the Third Reich. Well Reform does have another opponent beyond everyone else - itself. It has a real splitter problem showing all the signs of holding together only by virtue of detesting everyone else even more.
 
I'm too calloused to see how truly insane it is that major political parties around the Western world are collapsing due to explicit, overt hostility toward the voters and rather proudly announcing they're going to replace those voters with barbarian migrants, and even as they collapse, they cannot figure out why they're not popular any more.
 
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