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In ‘Broken Britain’, a lack of vision serves Starmer well

An abridged version of this article appeared in City A.M.

Whether it’s Liz Truss or Rishi Sunak, the Conservative’s risible record of government means it’s in Keir Starmer’s interests not to have a vision.

This should be Starmer’s moment. The Conservatives are pummelling the self-destruct button as skyrocketing inflation and crumbling public services make a mockery of the claim they are the party of stability.

And yet, there’s something missing. Starmer doesn’t have a vision, and people have cottoned on. What’s his big picture plan for where he wants to take the country? It’s impossible to say.

Many think this is a problem. People vote for ideas, symbols and visions, not gritty policy detail. How can Starmer expect to win an election if people can’t get excited about voting for him? But Starmer needn’t worry. Instead, he should recognise his lack of vision is a strength.

Not that the Conservatives will give him credit for doing so, as they point to the apparent vacuum on the opposite benches with relish. In The Daily Telegraph, Conservative campaigner Ben Obese-Jecty said Starmer’s position was “untenable” as he has “resolutely failed to define a vision for the country,” while Mail on Sunday columnist Dan Hodges agreed Starmer has “no clear vision for tackling the cost-of-living crisis.” Even neutral arbiters such as the BBC and the Financial Times have concluded Starmer’s lack of vision is an electoral weakness.

Let down by their jockey, the Left have turned on Starmer with a mercilessness only Conservatives were thought capable of. Guardian columnist and left-wing campaigner Owen Jones posted a heated video on Twitter with the caption “You, @Keir_Starmer, are a liar, a conman, and a joke.”

Feeling exposed, Starmer has made a series of unedifying attempts to articulate his vision. In his campaign to become Labour leader, he made 10 pledges with a markedly socialist flavour. Not long into the job, he wrote a bland 12,000-word essay titled ‘The Road Ahead’. This year alone, he’s given two speeches setting out his vision, one in January and the other in July. It’s hard to escape the conclusion Starmer is reaching for something that isn’t there.

But Starmer shouldn’t debase himself with half-baked visions. Rather, he should be confident that his lack of vision is a strength. The Right are only using this attack line out of the frustration they can’t pin anything meaningful on him. Jeremy Corbyn’s 1970s style socialism made it simple to cast him as a loon. Starmer should take comfort that he can’t be tarred so easily. By casting the far-Left aside, he’s made Labour electable again. The fact campaign groups such as Enough is Enough have emerged to the left of the party is further evidence to voters that Labour is ready for government.

This isn’t a risk-free strategy. By not developing a vision of his own, Starmer could allow the next Prime Minister to set the terms of debate in their favour. Truss will cast herself as a radical ‘boosterist’ believer in Britain, and Starmer as a ‘doomster’ who is content managing the country’s decline. There’s a chance Starmer gets outmanoeuvred.

But as Britons choose between heating and eating this winter, as they spend hours waiting for an ambulance in moments when every second counts, as they see crime go unpunished and strikes bring the country to a standstill, they will tire of hearing another bold vision for sunlit uplands which never arrive. From the Big Society to Northern Powerhouse and Levelling Up, the Conservatives have won election after election selling dreams that didn’t come true. In Broken Britain, people want actions — not ideas.

In 2024, the Conservatives will be seeking a fifth consecutive term after 14 years in office, a tall order in the best of times. Starmer will win the next general election if he lets the Conservative’s risible record speak for itself. He cannot let the public’s economic misery become “Putin’s cost-of-living crisis”. He must blame the Conservatives for selling off Britain’s energy storage and failing to invest in domestic supply. Likewise, he cannot let NHS breakdown become “the long effects of the global pandemic”. He must blame the Conservatives for failing to adequately invest and modernise the country’s health and social care.

At the same time, Starmer should propose moderate policy solutions to the big problems. His plan to freeze energy bills was case in point. Starmer didn’t scare voters with a plot to renationalise energy, he simply showed Labour have solutions where the Conservatives offer none.

In politics, you only have to beat what’s in front of you. So long as Starmer resists rocking the boat by magicking up a meaningless vision, he will be the first Labour leader, apart from Tony Blair, to win a general election for 50 years. In 1997, Blair won a landslide saying, “Britain deserves better”. That message would serve Starmer well today.

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How to shoot a lame duck

Keir Starmer must be licking his lips. His opposite number has been found guilty in the court of public opinion of thinking he’s above his own rules. In doing so he has shown a callous disregard for the suffering of millions during lockdown. The message is clear: we weren’t all in this together.

Boris Johnson is squirming under the weight of his own contradictions. He tried total denial – ‘there were no parties’. Then he shifted the blame onto officials – ‘I didn’t know there were parties [sorry Allegra]’. He then claimed these events weren’t parties – ‘what you’re looking at there is a classic work gathering’. And now, we have the best of the lot – ‘I thought the party was a work event’.

Johnson’s weasel apology only stoked the fire. Twitter is ablaze with calls for the PM to resign, as flash polls indicate this issue has real cut-through. Starmer’s own tweet calling for Johnson’s resignation has received over 100k likes.

Fire and fury is all well and good, but how does Starmer actually finish him off? After all, Johnson has shown his government can survive monumental moral failures:

Covid – 150,000 dead, the highest in Western Europe.

Cost of living crisis – passed onto those with least to give.

Corruption – take your pick… £4 million for a Lordship, £31bn for a Track and Trace that doesn’t work, a whole host of crony covid contracts and No. 10 decorations.

Like a bull, Johnson shrugged off these seemingly mortal blows. The question remains: how do you remove a leader whose moral authority has dissipated?

Basics first, one must clearly and powerfully articulate their failings. Starmer’s performance in PMQs yesterday was case in point. From the dispatch box, Starmer made clear that Johnson had broken the ministerial code, as well as the nation’s trust, and should therefore resign. Bada bing bada boom, no?

‘Sorry, was that not enough?’, Starmer might be asking this morning. ‘How is he still standing?’.

Starmer is learning that the final blow can prove elusive. He cannot allow this opportunity to go to waste. He must go two steps further.

Firstly, he must implicate Conservatives in his failings. Today, Starmer should table a vote of no confidence. He should declare that Johnson has failed to do the honourable thing and resign and must therefore be forced by Parliament. For Johnson to remain, Conservative MPs would have to vote FOR Johnson. That is, say all of this is ok. If they fail to defenestrate Johnson, his failings will be theirs. They will be eyeing their re-election prospects when they make that choice.

Secondly, Starmer must show passion. His performance at PMQs was a fantastic first step. Johnson’s apology wasn’t just baseless, it was “worthless” and “contemptuous of the British public”, showing him to be “a pathetic spectacle of a man that has run out of road”. Such emotion legitimises the hurt and anger understandably felt by the public and shows Starmer ‘gets it’.

This approach may not be Starmer’s professional instincts, but he must keep it up. People want a politician that fights because they want to believe they’re worth fighting for.

“There is no hunting like the hunting of man, and those who have hunted armed men long enough and liked it, never care for anything else thereafter”.

Starmer could learn a thing or two from Hemmingway.

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Coronavirus: Communicating a Crisis

Covid-19 has provided an unprecedented challenge to everyone everywhere. Governments, East and West, businesses, big and small, and people, in their work, family and friendships, have been forced into unfamiliar territory. Most of us went home in late March and are only just starting to emerge from what Boris Johnson aptly described as a “hibernation”.  A strange period of dead time, where clocks marched onward and the news raced while we watched, locked down and locked in. In politics, however, there is no such thing as dead time. Years’ worth of change has been condensed into 100 days. So, what happened? What did the public think of it? How did the government perform? And what does all of it mean for the future?

The UK has not dealt with this crisis well. We have the highest death toll in Europe, and the second highest death toll per capita in the world.  While less developed countries are unfortunately likely to rise up the charts no one wants to top, the fact remains, the UK has not coped well, and the public understand this. Although global comparisons should be approached with caution, the public see New Zealand, who, while in a very different situation; small, sparse and insular, has fought back against Johnson’s “invisible mugger”. Keir Starmer’s critique of the government is the most penetrating lens to analyse the response to the virus in the first few months. We were slow, every step of the way.  We were slow to get stranded Brits home. At-risk Britons were trapped on floating death ships such as the Diamond Princess, which was broadcast by passengers Sally and David Abel, who both contracted the virus.  However, these events have been largely forgotten in the public memory, obscured by the domestic carnage that followed. We were also slow into lockdown. The fact that thousands of Atletico Madrid fans were allowed to travel from their city which already had an outbreak of Covid-19, to Liverpool for their Champions League fixture in late March, now seems farcical.  As do the crowds at that gathered at Cheltenham at the same time.  Neil Ferguson even claims that locking down just one week earlier could have saved 20,000 lives.  Instead, the government was still talking about herd immunity, a shockingly Darwinist knee-jerk fatalism which would have condemned 500,000 to death, given we already knew the death rate was about one percent.  We were slow to close our borders, throwing away our island advantage, which although diminished by globalisation, was not irrelevant. The fact we only introduced quarantine for people coming from overseas in June was laughable, like throwing sand bags round a flooded house.  We were slow to protect care homes. It has emerged, that potentially Covid-positive patients were discharged to care homes.  This crisis has been a journey into the unknown for the government. However, the lack of compassion in their initial response tells you something of their default mentality. Is this the same old nasty party? As of yet, Starmer has admirably risen above this jibe, but it is an easy one that the Conservatives should do better to avoid.

Then there were the set piece events of the crisis. Johnson nearly died, and Dominic Cummings went on a road trip. The potential death of a Prime Minister in office is always going to be a traumatic event for a nation, but during a pandemic, especially when we understood that Johnson, in his mid-fifties, was not high-risk, was anxiety inducing. Thankfully, he recovered, but it posed several questions. Firstly, where is the talent in the cabinet? Dominic Raab stepped up during this period, but when the big-man was laid low, we struggled to see where the leadership was. It did, however, win the Prime Minister an odd sort of respect. He was fighting the pandemic with us, and this would presumably alert him to the severity of the situation. However, it also begs the question, has he properly recovered? It takes only an amateur eye to see that he does not look in the best of health. Then, onto Cummings. People don’t like him. If asked why, most would struggle to give a respectable reason, but the fact remains. They were therefore predictably outraged by his blatant flouncing of the lockdown rules. While the initial trip to Durham was debatable given the exceptionalism of his circumstances, the 30 mile trip to a beauty spot to test his eyesight was ludicrous. Incredibly, the aide was made to answer questions by the nation’s journalists live on television. He performed reasonably well given how tenuous his argument was. However, this event, and more broadly Johnson’s failure to sack Cummings was a key decision in this government. Broadly, it marks the increasing power of unelected aides and special advisors, despite their unpopularity with the public. Specifically, for this government, it showed how dependent Johnson is on one unelected individual as it represented a conscious decision to forgo significant political capital on him. It also showed one of the oddities of Cummings’ ideology, his hate of centralised power, versus his personal centralisation of it. We can also bring a new term into the already bloated pandemic lexicon – the Cummings effect – meaning the drop in the public’s adherence to the lockdown and social distancing rules following the Durham debacle.

Moving onto the future of the pandemic. A vaccine is clearly the way out of this crisis, something which is out of politicians control. However, politicians love of quantifiable targets and deadlines has slightly hampered the communication of this aspect of the crisis. While there are sporadic stories providing hope, much like there is across scientific news (e.g. this drug in early development could be the cure for cancer… never to be heard of again), politicians should have emphasised the unknowability of a timescale rather than providing arbitrary dates which change every few weeks. Something which politicians have slightly more control over, is antibody testing. It first came out months ago but is yet to significantly alter the fight against the virus. Whether it was false hope, or ill-management, it is disappointing to the public. Lastly, Matt Hancock has had a bad pandemic. He is almost universally disliked by the public, and the self-inflicted fiasco over testing was embarrassing. He presumably will be removed from his post in the predicted Cabinet reshuffle in September.

What role has the government’s communication played in this crisis? It is vital to point out, that when news is as ‘hard’ as in a pandemic, the role of communication takes a backseat. However, there are important points of discussion. The first message was confused. The deadly virus was in China, then in Italy and then France, but what were we doing about it? While it was a period of trepidation and toilet paper shortages, in hindsight it looks like naively squandered time. Then, things got serious. In late March we were spoken to by Johnson, and the lockdown began. He performed well, the “Stay At Home, Protect the NHS, Save Lives” message was clear, and we were finally told, yes, this is serious. Then came the new religion. The NHS was sacrosanct, and the lives of dying pensioners was invaluable compared to the economic and emotional misery of millions. Thursday’s clapping for the NHS was community building in a time of unease, but it helped reinforce the dogma. So did the media. While the government’s daily briefings gave reasonably clear statistics about what was known, (excluding, perhaps, figures on care homes and testing), the media, particularly the BBC, flagrantly used misleading statistics to make the virus seem more deadly than it was. They headlined stories about young people dying of the virus, which, although justifiable in the sense that it was newsworthy, was probably irresponsible. Moreover, they showed their colours every day on the 10 o’clock news, in the daily in memoriam graphic which featured those who had sadly died from the virus. It was grossly unrepresentative – nearly half those shown were under 50, when we knew that around three quarters of those dying were over 70. This was not just about remembering the dead, but also about cultivating an ‘it could have been you’ mentality. The government went along with this and did not combat media bias as a visibly ill Johnson clapped from his doorstep. Clearly, the lockdown was necessary and efforts to rally the nation were admirable, however, people needed the truth. Instead, we were all told we were at risk and this informed our reaction.

This oversight hampered the second stage, the partial lifting of the lockdown. Once again Johnson appeared on our screens to deliver the verdict – what next? For eight minutes he spoke. He performed well, was engaging, but apparently unclear. The reaction to his announcement on Gogglebox confirms this. However, while at times he eloquently meandered where he should have been clear and to the point, the message was relatively unambiguous, just more nuanced. But people did not like it. The problem lay, however, not in the second message, but in how the first message, which was broadly popular, was carried out. Obviously, telling someone to stay at home, is an easier message than, telling them to stay at home if possible, but there are some exceptions. However, the vigour which the first message was carried with meant that the public were hesitant to move on. The Labour Party and several unions acted irresponsibly here. They muddied the waters over what the message was for political gain. Several Labour MPs and union leaders spoke on the Sunday evening the announcement was made over the confusion over whether workers should be going back to work on Monday, even though the announcement clearly said the changes were only to be enacted from the Wednesday. On Monday we saw pictures of crowded undergrounds – they shoulder some of the blame for this. Since then, however, the government’s communication has been fairly straightforward. They have given people longer to understand the sort of timeline to expect, which has calmed some of the hysteria we saw in the reaction to the first partial lifting of lockdown. Lastly, a quick note on the Daily Briefings. While it is doubtful how many people not involved in politics or media watched them towards the end, at the beginning of the crisis they provided a clear platform for scrutiny and for people to understand what was going on. It was a novel idea, done well.

In the immediate future, there are several pressing concerns. Schools are high on the agenda, as is the faltering economy. Most of the public is aware that, here, there are no easy decisions. Politicians’ job of weighing up trade-offs and opportunity costs is as clear as it is difficult. Public opinion has shifted dramatically towards a cautious reopening of both schools and the economy. People recognise how missed time in school has a significant impact on education, particularly for disadvantaged pupils. A recent report stated that one in five pupils were doing under one hour of work a day. Similarly, the first job losses brought home that the furlough scheme could not save every job as the economy fell over 20% in one quarter. While the second wave of Covid-19 in America is unsurprising given that their lockdown never got the virus under control, the second waves in countries who had much more successful lockdowns such as Germany and Israel are more alarming. The take away is that we are likely to be living with the virus for a long time. Children cannot afford to miss a whole year of school, and we literally cannot afford to not reopen the economy. A pulse system seems necessary.

Covid-19 has transformed the political landscape. Brexit has slipped further still down people’s list of priorities. If Brexit-weariness won the Conservatives the 2019 election, now even mentioning it is taboo. Both parties already recognise this. Starmer, by all accounts, has had a good pandemic. He has largely restored trust in Labour as a credible opposition, and his titles alone block many of the charges levelled at Jeremy Corbyn. It remains to be seen, however, if Starmer has a vision. What does Starmer’s Britain look like? It is early days, however, at present it is doubtful whether Starmer has the imagination to get Labour out of the ideological rut they have been mired in since the 1970s. Likewise, the Conservative’s vision needs to be brought forward. A plan for a better Britain lurked at the periphery of their 2019 election campaign, but we need it now. People need hope beyond Covid-19. Dreaming up this vision will likely expose dormant fault lines between the internationalism of Rishi Sunak and the populist nationalism of Johnson. China will likely be the focus point of these debates.

How has this virus changed our culture? Working cultures are likely to change as working from home has become a viable alternative. More broadly, I am hopeful for a more compassionate culture. The reaction to the black lives matter movement has generally shown that people are more willing to be kind, even if it is a different issue. My hope is that this kindness can be afforded to all. A particular concern of mine is the economically disadvantaged. This virus will only push them further behind. We heard them in the 2016 referendum, we cannot forget them now. Difficult times bring people together and make them stronger. Maybe we will be better people to face the challenges of tomorrow.