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Snap to it: Labour gears up for an early election

Party says it will be ready but insiders admit they would prefer to wait. By Hugo Gye, Arj Singh and Richard Vaughan

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Labour is poised to launch a snap general election campaign as soon as next week as Rishi Sunak weighs up when to go to the polls, party insiders say – but some remain worried about whether Sir Keir Starmer is ready for the final fight over who gets the keys to 10 Downing Street.

With the Conservati­ves trailing the Opposition in opinion polls by as much as 20 percentage points, the convention­al wisdom in Westminste­r is that Labour is overwhelmi­ngly likely to win the election. But the Prime Minister’s ability to choose the timing of the general election is seen as one of the few trump cards he has yet to play.

This week he repeated his mantra that the election is likely to be in “the second half of the year”. But one rumour doing the rounds within Labour is that Mr Sunak could shock the nation by setting the election date early next week – before the local elections on Thursday 2 May. That would put an end to speculatio­n over his own leadership, which is likely to reignite if the Tories take heavy losses in the locals.

A shadow cabinet minister asked: “Why would they wait around to lose hundreds of seats and have all their leadership drama start up again?” On that timeline, the general election would probably take place some time in June.

Senior party figures dispute any suggestion that Labour would be caught off guard by an early election. There are about 40 seats out of Labour’s top 250 targets yet to have a selected candidate, according to the journalist Michael Crick, who has been monitoring selections by all parties. But a top strategist told i that fewer than 10 of those were in the seats needed to take a Commons majority.

“If there are vacancies when the election campaign starts, we’ll just impose some candidates,” a member of the Shadow Cabinet suggested.

Sir Keir is understood to believe that his party has been ready to go to the polls for some weeks, after he told it to be prepared for the general election to happen on the same day as the locals.

A senior Labour insider said: “For months we’ve been telling everyone to be ready for 2 May. So we are now ready to start our campaign whenever it comes.”

A shadow minister said: “Everything has become so much more profession­al since Sue Gray came in. We’ve been in campaign mode since the last election but we’ve now sorted out volunteers, organisers, things like that.”

A source involved with the campaign admitted the party will never be “100 per cent” ready but that it will be able to select candidates in every seat, and complete a manifesto by week two of the official campaign – when it traditiona­lly publishes. The source said the party has freepost leaflets designed and ready to go.

Key figures in the Shadow Cabinet have been seconded to party HQ for most of the week, and the Opposition is currently running three concurrent planning “grids” – one for 2 May local elections, one for an autumn general election, and one for a six-week short campaign in case there is a snap election.

The source said: “We’d always want more time. But when you sit your A-levels, are you 100 per cent ready? You do the work and that’s as ready as you’ll ever be.”

But even as they insist they are ready to face voters immediatel­y, many in Labour confess they would prefer to wait for later in the year. A Shadow Cabinet minister said: “Every month that goes by our data gets better and better. The main metric of whether you win a marginal seat is number of voter contacts, so the longer we wait the more we get.”

There are policies – including on childcare – that have not been fully fleshed out. A frontbench­er said: “The problem we have is that unlike the Government, we don’t have thousands of civil servants ready to back up all the work we’re doing. So people accuse us of not having fully detailed policies – we can’t access the Whitehall machine!”

There are also questions over whether Labour has enough on-theground volunteers to knock on doors in swing seats and win over floating voters.

In the 2017 and 2019 votes, the pro-Corbyn pressure group Momentum mobilised tens of thousands of mostly young activists – many of whom have quit the party in protest over what they see as Sir Keir’s lack of ambition.

A source from the Labour left said: “There is a lot of frustratio­n and disillusio­nment. The more progressiv­e base is reluctant to pound the streets with some of the material the leadership want them to put out.”

And some MPs remain worried that Labour’s lead, though large, has not grown as the party has set out more details of its policy programme – laying the ground for a nasty surprise such as a Commons majority which is too small to push through any radical plans.

One told i: “I’m worried we’re not doing enough to shift that last block of voters that we may need. Yes, we have enough support to win, but do we have enough to do the things we really want to do in power?”

 ?? STEFAN ROUSSEAU/PA ?? Shadow Cabinet members (from left) Yvette Cooper, Rachel Reeves and Angela Rayner; some Labour MPs may prefer to wait for an election later in the year, as the party seeks to flesh out the detail of its policies
STEFAN ROUSSEAU/PA Shadow Cabinet members (from left) Yvette Cooper, Rachel Reeves and Angela Rayner; some Labour MPs may prefer to wait for an election later in the year, as the party seeks to flesh out the detail of its policies
 ?? GETTY ?? Chancellor Jeremy Hunt; the Conservati­ves are trailing Labour in the polls but have the advantage of being able to select the general election date
GETTY Chancellor Jeremy Hunt; the Conservati­ves are trailing Labour in the polls but have the advantage of being able to select the general election date

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