One Year In, UK Prime Minister Starmer Struggles to Convince His Labour Party and the Public

Sep 28, 2025 | Yeshiva World

Keir Starmer never had much of a political honeymoon. Now some members of his political party are considering divorce. Little more than a year after winning power in a landslide, Britain’s prime minister is fighting to keep the support of his party, and to fend off Nigel Farage, whose hard-right Reform UK has a consistent lead in opinion polls. The next election is as much as four years away, but as thousands of Labour Party members gather Sunday for their annual conference beside the River Mersey in Liverpool, lawmakers are growing anxious. A potential leadership rival has emerged in Andy Burhnam, the ambitious mayor of Manchester. Starmer shrugged off the discontent, telling the BBC on Sunday that “in politics, there are always going to be comments about leaders and leadership” and insisting the government had “achieved great things in the first year.” “I just need the space to get on and do what we need to do,” he said. But Tim Bale, professor of politics at Queen Mary University of London, said the party’s mood is “febrile.” “They’ve only been in government a year and they’ve got a big majority, but most voters seem to be quite disappointed and disillusioned with the government,” he said. “And they also have a very low opinion of Keir Starmer.” Government rocked by setbacks Since ending 14 years of Conservative rule with his July 2024 election victory, Starmer has struggled to deliver the economic growth he promised. Inflation remains stubbornly high and the economic outlook subdued, frustrating efforts to repair tattered public services and ease the cost of living. A global backdrop of Russia’s war in Ukraine and U.S. President Donald Trump’s tariffs hasn’t helped. Even though Britain managed to secure a trade deal easing import duties on some U.K. goods, the autumn budget statement in November looks set to be a grim choice between tax increases and spending cuts — maybe both. In his big conference speech on Tuesday, Starmer will try to set out a sweeping vision to energize Labour’s grassroots, something critics say has been lacking under his managerial command. He’ll also seek to persuade party members, and voters, that he has learned from his mistakes and stabilized a sometimes wobbly government. In the last few weeks Starmer has lost his deputy prime minister, Angela Rayner, who quit over a tax error on a home purchase, and fired Britain’s ambassador to Washington, Peter Mandelson, after revelations about his past friendship with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. There have also been several exits from his backroom team, adding to a sense of disarray. Now Burnham, a former Labour lawmaker turned big-city mayor, is emerging as a nascent rival. He told the New Statesman magazine that Labour needs to offer “wholesale change” to fend off a threat from the right. “Business as usual … ain’t gonna do it. The plan has to change quite radically,” Burnham said. He added that “it’s the plan that matters most, rather than me,” but acknowledged some lawmakers had approached him about a potential leadership bid. That could be some way off, as he is not currently a member of Parliament. Immigration is a flashpoint The government has also struggled to ease growing divisions over immigration, fueled in part by the arrival of thousands of migrants in small boats across the English Channel. More than 30,000 people have made the dangerous crossing from France […]  | Read More The Yeshiva World 

0 Comments

FREE ISRAEL DAILY EMAIL!

BREAKING NEWS

JNS