The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Starmer under fire after humiliatio­n

- DAVID HUGHES

Sir Keir Starmer’s leadership of Labour has come in for heavy criticism from prominent figures across the party following the Hartlepool by-election humiliatio­n.

From the left, former shadow cabinet minister Richard Burgon said Labour needed to “urgently change direction”.

But while Sir Keir may have expected hostile fire from allies of former leader Jeremy Corbyn, some of the most stinging criticism came from Blairite grandees who had previously supported him.

Former cabinet minister Lord Adonis hit out at the “waffle” from the present leadership and said that while he had backed Sir Keir, he now viewed him as a “transition­al” figure.

“Labour’s problem is that it has had weak or terrible leaders since Tony Blair stood down 14 years ago, and until it gets an electable leader it will keep losing elections,” Lord Adonis wrote in The Times.

He said he had hoped Sir Keir would have the ability to reshape Labour but “unfortunat­ely, he turns out to be a transition­al figure – a nice man and a good human rights lawyer, but without political skills or antennae at the highest level”.

Giving a bleak assessment of Labour’s future, he warned that if it suffered a fifth successive general election defeat “there may not be much of a Labour Party left, and some other political vehicle – maybe a populist one – could seize the anti-conservati­ve cause in England”.

Former Hartlepool MP Lord Mandelson, a key figure in the New Labour era, sought to blame the legacy of Mr Corbyn’s leadership and the Covid-19 pandemic for the by-election defeat.

“We have not won a general election in 16 years,” he told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme. “We have lost the last four, with 2019 a catastroph­e – the last 11 general elections read: lose, lose, lose, lose, Blair, Blair, Blair, lose, lose, lose, lose.

“We need for once in this party to learn the lessons of those victories as well as those defeats, and I hope very much that when Keir and his colleagues in the shadow cabinet say this means that we have got to change direction that they actually mean it.”

Khalid Mahmood, a former shadow defence minister, lashed out at the “London-based bourgeoisi­e, with the support of brigades of woke social media warriors” that has “effectivel­y captured the party”.

The Birmingham Perry Barr MP said voters in former heartlands viewed Labour as “a party that has lost its way”.

The scale of the loss in Hartlepool – Conservati­ve candidate Jill Mortimer gained 15,529 votes, more than half the total cast, with Labour’s Paul Williams trailing on 8,589 – and setbacks in English council elections underlined the challenge facing Sir Keir.

The Labour leader promised to do “whatever it takes” to rebuild trust in the party.

A shake-up of his shadow cabinet is widely expected in Westminste­r, but Sir Keir acknowledg­ed: “This goes way beyond a reshuffle or personalit­ies.”

He said Labour needs to “stop quarrellin­g among ourselves”.

But Mr Burgon, who served in Mr Corbyn’s shadow cabinet, said: “We are going backwards in areas we need to be winning. Labour’s leadership needs to urgently change direction.

“It should start by championin­g the popular policies in our recent manifestos – backed by a large majority of voters.”

 ??  ?? HEAVY CRITICISM: Sir Keir Starmer outside his London home after yesterday’s Hartlepool by-election news.
HEAVY CRITICISM: Sir Keir Starmer outside his London home after yesterday’s Hartlepool by-election news.

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