Why Keir Starmer is craving for Tony Blair’s blessing
Why was Keir Starmer so keen to win Tony Blair’s endorsement in a video message praising the Labour leader’s “strength, determination and intelligence”? Officially, allies say Starmer saw the 25th anniversary of Blair’s 1997 landslide as a reminder, ahead of tomorrow’s local elections, of what Labour could achieve in power. Although Blair’s reappearance grated with let-wingers, it was yet another reminder that Starmer is “not Jeremy Corbyn”. Whether the let likes it or not, Labour needs to win back 2019’s Tory voters to have a sniff of power, and not all of them hate Blair as much as the let does.
So New Labour is back. I’ve never understood why some Labour figures have been so keen to trash their own brand since 2010; it hardly improved the party’s electoral prospects. At last, Labour is starting to celebrate the domestic policy achievements of its 13yearsinoffice(don’tmentiontheiraqwar).itsonline shop now uses New Labour branding to recall the party’s historic election victory and record in government. However, all is not quite as it seems. There was an unpublicised reason for Blair’s re-emergence in a Labour campaign. Starmer allies were very keen to lock in his support because they are nervous about his launch next month of a new centrist movement, The Britain Project. Team Blair denies it amounts to a new movement, insisting that it is working with an existing project to put on an event. Starmer will be joined by Tories including former cabinet ministers Rory Stewart and David Gauke, and the initiative will be headed by Monica Harding, a Liberal Democrat. Blair has been itching to launch a cross-party group to draw up reforms addressing three big challenges: Brexit;thetechnologyrevolution,andclimatechange. He said in January: “I don’t think it can be done unless politicians work across traditional party lines to create a plan that is sustainable over at least a decade,becausereformsasfar-reachinganddifficult as these require consistency of policy over time, even through a change of government.”
Team Starmer fears it will invite comparisons with Emmanuel Macron’s En Marche – Blairites were fans of his well before he became president – which would hardly be a ringing endorsement of Labour. Although Blair’s project is about policy rather than fielding candidates, he previously hoped that about 70 Labour MPS would walk out during Corbyn’s leadership to form a new group. In the event, only eight let to launch Change UK, and it flopped. Blair’s move will be viewed as reflecting an impatience that Labour and Starmer are not doing even beter in the opinionpollsagainstadiscreditedborisjohnsonand a Conservative Party running out of steam ater 12 years in power. In less flatering remarks, Blair has called for a “total deconstruction and reconstruction” of Labour, and described Starmer as “a work in progress”. Blairites are divided over whether to put their energies into the new movement or to reform Labourfromwithin.thesebehind-the-scenestensions put Starmer under even more pressure to show real momentum in the local elections; a strong showing would make Blair’s project less threatening. But the results may be less conclusive than people expect.
Theironyisthatstarmerisaccusedbylet-wingers of swallowing the Blair playbook. A cogent let-wing critique was set out last week by Oliver Eagleton in Thestarmerproject:ajourneytotheright(published by Verso). Eagleton lists the project’s main features as: “a ‘values-led’, non-antagonistic electoral strategy; an unsparing crackdown on the Labour let, seen as more dangerous than the Conservatives; an Atlanticist-authoritarian disposition, combining intervention abroad with repression at home and a return to neoliberal economic precepts, overseen by Blairite letovers”.
Eagletonwrites:“theblairitesmayhaveregained the party bureaucracy, but they remain starved of relevant ideas.” I suspect he is too pessimistic about Starmer’swillingnessto“confront”therentiereconomy or climate change, but he is right to highlight the need for some big dividing lines with the Tories.