Scottish Daily Mail

Starmer won’t defeat Sturgeon... but he CAN make her irrelevant

- THE STEPHEN DAISLEY Stephen.Daisley@dailymail.co.uk

TONY Blair won Labour three elections and one day they might forgive him for it. The former leader cuts a sombre figure these days, the Labour elder statesman few in Labour want to listen to any more.

The Conservati­ves would do well to perk up their ears, however, because if there is one thing Blair knows about it is electabili­ty. Last week, he concluded that Sir Keir Starmer had made Labour ‘politicall­y competitiv­e’ again and ‘completely changed the image, certainly of the Labour leadership amongst the public’.

In his outings at Prime Minister’s Questions, the former Director of Public Prosecutio­ns has been merciless in his cross-examinatio­n of Boris Johnson. The Prime Minister is not a details man and Sir Keir is steadily introducin­g the public to that fact.

He has shown himself to be canny, refusing to step into several traps Downing Street has laid for him. He has proven ruthless in putting the Corbynista­s back in their box.

On coronaviru­s, he has demonstrat­ed how to oppose constructi­vely but effectivel­y. Compo is back down the allotment and a proper leader in charge again.

Defamation

Sir Keir has two jobs: to make Labour respectabl­e and then make it electable. The first order of business has been driving antisemiti­sm out of the party.

Labour can never undo what it did to British Jews and it may be that relations will never again be as strong and warm as they once were, but Sir Keir has made some important progress, not least in settling the defamation suit brought by party whistleblo­wers who were vilified for raising the alarm.

It does not make up for his choosing to sit in Jeremy Corbyn’s shadow cabinet all those years, but it is a welcome indication that anti-Jewish racism is becoming less tolerated in Labour.

Electabili­ty will be an even greater challenge. Sir Keir is neither Corbyn nor Boris and, for now, that is enough, but when the British people come to decide on their next prime minister, they will be looking for more than just a savvy opposition leader.

He will have to win back Red Wall Tory switchers, frustrated by Labour’s Janusfaced approach to Brexit, while retaining graduate, higher-income Remainers who have still to come to terms with our departure from the EU.

He has to earn back the country’s trust in Labour’s ability to govern, oversee a dynamic economy and keep us safe. Max Weber described politics as ‘a strong and slow boring of hard boards’ and Sir Keir has an entire B&Q warehouse to get through before he can make Labour electable again.

Even so, doubts niggle at the back of my mind. Is he the three Ls that curse otherwise talented Labour politician­s: too Left, too lawyerly, too London? A big part of any journey back to power will be realigning a party of big cities and university campuses with the values and instincts of the British public.

However, nothing stands in the way of Sir Keir’s path to Number 10 as stubbornly as Scotland. To win even a bare majority without making gains north of the Border, Sir Keir would have to pick up 124 seats in England and Wales.

Gaining more than 100 seats to go from opposition to government is rare enough that it has happened only twice in postwar history: the 1945 Labour government and Tony Blair’s 1997 landslide.

If Sir Keir is to become Prime Minister, he needs a plan for making inroads in Labour’s lost heartlands. Any plan needs to take account of the man nominally in charge of Scottish Labour.

Some politician­s deserve to be told how hopeless they are but Richard Leonard is not one of them. He’s a decent bloke and, though firmly on the Labour Left, devoid of the sectarian poison that pumps through the veins of that faction. But his leadership – a dumbfoundi­ng 982 days and counting – has been a low point for Scottish Labour. Never once has he challenged his party to be better, to go beyond its comfort zone, to trespass onto the radar of ordinary voters.

Scottish Labour isn’t so much a party of lions led by donkeys as donkeys led by Eeyore. Leonard is a former organiser for the GMB union and had he stayed in that job, he could have done more good in a day than he has managed to do in almost 1,000 days at the helm of Labour.

Sir Keir will be understand­ably reluctant to interfere in the Scottish party. Corbyn and John McDonnell’s endless interventi­ons on the constituti­on not only did political harm, they placed a heavy strain on comradely relations. In an ideal world, Leonard would appreciate that he is a drag on his party’s fortunes and make way for new blood in the form of Anas Sarwar or Jenny Marra.

Fairness

If Scottish Labour is not going to get better, Sir Keir will have to go around it. Build a direct relationsh­ip with Scottish voters to pitch himself as a prime minister in waiting, the man who can beat the Tories, jump-start the economy and put fairness at the heart of government.

The biggest mistake he could make is following his predecesso­rs into the constituti­onal cul-de-sac. Sir Keir should resist those voices in his party who will agitate for him to propose federalism, or yet more devolution, or some other clever scheme intended to shore up the Union but which inevitably ends up underminin­g it further.

Sir Keir won’t pick up Commons seats in Scotland by beating Nicola Sturgeon because he won’t beat Nicola Sturgeon. The match-up is uneven, she has home court advantage and he cannot afford to get bogged down in a war of attrition in one part of the country.

Since trying to defeat Sturgeon is futile, the next best option is to make her irrelevant. Do not engage her or the SNP on constituti­onal questions. Do not be drawn into hypothetic­als about pacts or coalitions. Do not agree to fight on Sturgeon’s terms.

Fight on your own terms: Boris Johnson or Sir Keir Starmer – choose.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom