Yorkshire Post

We deserved to losetheele­ction, admits Starmer

Leader makes pitch to Red Wall voters

- GERALDINE SCOTT WESTMINSTE­R CORRESPOND­ENT Email: geraldine. scott@ jpimedia. co. uk Twitter: @ Geri_ E_ L_ Scott

LABOUR LEADER Sir Keir Starmer has made a pitch directly to former Red Wall voters who turned away from the party, as he made the first conference speech held in Yorkshire since 1967.

Sir Keir, speaking virtually from Doncaster for Labour’s annual conference yesterday, went to great lengths to distance himself from Jeremy Corbyn, one of the major reasons Labour is believed to have seen devastatin­g defeats in former heartlands in December.

And he positioned his party as that of family values, and patriotism, as he proclaimed: “We love this country as you do.”

“Let’s be brutally honest with ourselves, when you lose an election in a democracy, you deserve to,” Sir Keir said, as he compared the last time a Labour leader gave a conference speech in Yorkshire, with Harold Wilson in 1967 in Scarboroug­h, to modern day.

Speaking at the Danum Gallery, Library and Museum, he said: “Wilson was able to update conference about Labour’s achievemen­ts after three years in government.”

But he said when you lose elections “you don’t look at the electorate and ask them: ‘ what were you thinking?’

“You look at yourself and ask: ‘ what were we doing?’”

He said: “The Labour Party has lost four general elections in a row. We’ve granted the Tories a decade of power.”

Labour lost nine seats across Yorkshire and the Humber to the Tories in December, and Sir Keir said: “It’s a betrayal of what we believe in to let this go on.

“It’s time to get serious about winning.

“That means we have to change, and that’s what we’re doing.

“This is a party under new leadership.”

Marking him himself out as separate to the antisemiti­sm allegation­s which plagued Mr Corbyn’s leadership, Sir Keir said: “We’re making progress – and we will root it out, once and for all.”

He said the party was now “a competent, credible opposition”.

And he said: “Never again will Labour go into an election not being trusted on national security, with your job, with your community and with your money.

“That’s what being under new leadership means.”

He added: “I’m not the sort of leader who wants to turn the

clock back. Times change – and so do political priorities.”

As well as contrastin­g himself to Mr Corbyn, he hit out at Prime Minister Boris Johnson.

Sir Keir, a former director of public prosecutio­ns, said: “While Boris Johnson was writing flippant columns about bendy bananas, I was defending victims and prosecutin­g terrorists.

“While he was being sacked by a newspaper for making up

quotes, I was fighting for justice and the rule of law.”

He said: “So to those people in Doncaster and Deeside, in Glasgow and Grimsby, in Stoke and in Stevenage, to those who have turned away from Labour, I say this: we hear you.

“Never again will Labour take you or the things you care about for granted. And I ask you: Take another look at Labour.

“We’re under new leadership.”

I’m not the sort of leader who wants to turn the clock back. Sir Keir Starmer, speaking at the Danum Gallery, Library and Museum, Doncaster.

 ?? PICTURE: STEFAN ROUSSEAU/ PA ?? VALUES: Sir Keir Starmer, speaking from Doncaster for Labour’s annual conference.
PICTURE: STEFAN ROUSSEAU/ PA VALUES: Sir Keir Starmer, speaking from Doncaster for Labour’s annual conference.

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