Starmer ‘very confident’ he will lead Labour into next election despite party opposition to welfare plans – UK politics live | Politics


Starmer says he is ‘very confident’ he will lead Labour into next election despite party opposition to welfare plans

Q: Your plans to increase defence spending go into the next decade. How confident are you that you will be around in the next parliament to implement these plans? And are you confidend you will lead Labour into the next election?

Starmer says he is “very confident”. He says when he was elected he said there would have to be a decade of renewal. He says it is important to “lead from the front”.

Key events

Starmer suggests welfare bill revolt just ‘noises off’ as he rejects claim row shows he is bad at politics

Q: Why have you failed to read the mood of Labour MPs on welfare reform. Is that because you have no political nous, as critics claim?

Starmer says Labour MPs are “pretty united” in agreeing that welfare reform is needed.

The question is how. The bill will modernise welfare, and make it fairer and more efficient, he says. That is what the goverment was elected to do, he says.

He goes on:

If I may say so, many people predicted before the election that we couldn’t read the room, we hadn’t got the politics right, and we wouldn’t win an election after 2019 because we lost so badly.

That was the constant charge of me at press conferences like this, and we got a landslide victory.

So I’m comfortable with reading the room and delivering the change the country needs.

We’ve got a strong Labour government with a huge majority to deliver on our manifesto commitments. And that’s the work that we did over many years to win the election. Now we start the work over many years to change the country. Having changed the party, we now change the country.

And is it tough going? Are there plenty of people and noises off? Yes, of course, there always are, there always have been, there always will be.

But the important thing is to focus on the change that we want to bring about.

Starmer has always been sensitive to the charge that he has poor political instincts. It was a claim often made when he was in opposition, and it still surfaces now, despite his landslide election win. In fact, just today the New Statesman has been promoting a cover essay by Andrew Marr making this claim.

But Starmer’s answer implied the internal Labour row about welfare was little more than “noises off”. If that is what he meant, that would be a mistake, because the rebellion is much more serious about that. Perhaps he was wound up by the aggressive question (from a Mail reporter), which could have prompted him to say more than he intended.



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