Connect with us

Politics

Lies, betrayal, scandal and civil war – but can the Conservatives benefit now it’s not them going through it

Published

on

Lies, betrayal, scandal and civil war - but can the Conservatives benefit now it's not them going through it

It has everything the media could want and the country could do without.

A paedophile sex trafficker, a big beast politician who has held high office and been sacked three times, possibly the Russians, countless victims of the first with horrific stories of abuse, a Prime Minister, Advisers, spooks and two former Princes: one once of the House of Windsor the other of ‘Darkness’

Political hacks, and I’ve been one, will occasionally play, for their own amusement, a game of who can come up with a scandal that has it all. This one, had anyone dared suggest it, fits the bill.

Many outside the media bubble are describing it as the biggest ever scandal in British politics, edging Profumo and Kelly out to allow the name Mandelson to overtake it. His former Lordship clearly felt his last two falls from grace were not sufficiently spectacular enough and he’s decided third time unlucky.

Advertisement

Only luck has nothing to do with it.

Despite his lucrative dismissal from the highest diplomatic position Britain has to offer, the choice to appoint in the first place was made in Downing Street, against warnings – and even David Lammy, the then Foreign Secretary who actually did the appointing, has let it be known he warned about it – as the PM’s rivals, sorry, colleagues, dive for cover.

Last Wednesday Kemi Badenoch fired the potential kill shot.

She simultaneously proved that whilst strong performances at PMQs are not enough to make someone Prime Minister, on occasion they matter enormously, and that when you disprove naysayers who complain you weren’t good enough at it, being consistently better and better is seemingly never enough.

Advertisement

The impact of forcing this Prime Minister to damn himself at the dispatch box in one word was nothing short of seismic.

Part of Badenoch’s personal revival has been built on an impressive collection of scalps. Hitherto it’s contained a gaggle of Ministers, a deputy leader and deputy Prime Minister, the infamous Mandelson himself, and now she’s going for the big  two. The Prime Minister’s chief of staff and the PM himself.

Downing Street this weekend is seething with anger and resentment. Starmer has been swinging between enough foul-mouthed fury to fuel a power plant, and a sense of bitter betrayal that is souring dealings with a cabinet that have concluded Labour would be better off following the Tories past example and swapping horses mid race.

That there is ‘no way back’ for Sir Keir is now old news. He may still cling on, his own fall is not a done deal, but he can’t ‘turn it around’ now. When he answered Badenoch’s question whether security vetting had mentioned Mandelson’s ongoing relationship with paedophile Jeffrey Epstein, post-conviction with a hesitant ‘Yes’ he confirmed what everyone felt they knew. And so did he, but appointed him anyway.

Advertisement

As someone who has gone through that vetting process, it is hard to see how Mandelson ‘lied and lied again’ with much success. Starmer habitually looks for others to blame, and has called for an immediate tightening of vetting procedures. Well without going into detail, they seemed pretty ‘tight’ to me!

Four hours with a quietly persistent inquisitor who ran through practically every aspect of this story but applied to me. Questions, however intrusive and unexpected on sex, money, substances, abuse, nothing is off limits where they are not judging, but seeking, as I suspect Epstein did, for anything that could make you susceptible to blackmail or ‘Kompromat’. There’s only two bits of advice you get whispered to you beforehand by those who’ve endured it already: ‘don’t lie, and if they ask a question they probably already know the answer’ they just want to see if yours matches the ones they have.

I can see why there are questions about how someone like Mandelson could possibly have got through, but we now know there were warnings in there that the PM was informed of, and decided to take the risk anyway.

It’s that, more than anything, that’s blown this up in Starmer’s face. As one shadow Cabinet member told me:

Advertisement

Think of all the people, like Gove, Marr and Finkelstein, and some of your colleagues in the lobby who wrote the risk was worth taking, a ‘bold and clever move’. That’s the point with risk – if it pays off you look a genius, if it doesn’t you look a fool. Starmer was urged to, and took, a massive risk, ignoring other people who were up to the job, and it didn’t pay off. The consequences however are all of his own making. If Mandelson was right that Epstein is ‘like dog mess’, Starmer’s just rolled and rolled in it”

That the story has moved to ‘who replaces Starmer’ not just in the media but the Labour party shows he too can’t get rid of the smell. Beaten and bruised in the way he most despises, his ‘integrity’ called into question. The immediate outlook for Labour is bleak.

So the Conservatives must be feeling pretty good, right?

Reform have not made the running on this. As the Telegraph’s front page interview with Badenoch this weekend is subtitled – and remember the months where the Tories struggled to get a hearing at the bottom paragraph of a page 5 filler:

Advertisement

Both in the Commons and out on the road, the self-assured Tory leader shows that she is no longer finding her feet – but setting the pace

After a year of wondering where the promise of Renewal 2030 had got to, Badenoch has shown herself, particularly dealing with big betrayals in her own Tory ranks, to be tough enough not only to shore up her own position but wreak havoc on the Government in the process.

So champers all round then? Any Conservative tempted should cork it.

If the narrative today is that Starmer is at serious risk post May local elections which are now, if they weren’t already, a referendum on his premiership – and he hasn’t gone already – make no mistake the risk of brutal results for the Conservatives has not gone away.

Advertisement

Badenoch may have seen off any post-May Jenrick challenge, and will now survive a battering, it will make something stark. A personal win and improved public standing is great for a leader to have, but it doesn’t mean the brand is back. And Reform if they do as expected will be there screaming that from the roof tops.

She can push as hard as possible for renewal of Tory fortunes, but it is not a given that they will match her own. She can be seen like some doggedly determined fighter pilot of yore, an impressive tally of scalps painted on her plane, and still face watching the party fail to take off.

Sticking with the economy, where Reform is still weak – as the Shadow Chancellor will explain for readers tomorrow – stick to opposing Government relentlessly as the official opposition should, is all good strategy, but the Conservatives – not Badenoch – are still struggling for a hearing.

Too many of the public have moved from anger and rejection to indifference towards the Party. Liking the ‘cut of Badenoch’s jib’ doesn’t mean they’ll vote Conservative, yet. Or again.

Advertisement

We still need more policy to chew on from the promised ‘red meat’ restaurant, more fighting contribution from the ‘team’ the leader is always keen to promote, more sense that ‘business as usual’ has been firmly discarded and that the ‘as usual’ bit has been confined to the past, with genuine contrition for what was bad.

Mandelson may end up dragging Starmer down with him, and I for one won’t cry for his loss, but on the ground, on the doorstep and in the streets of places far from the drama of Westminster, no committed Conservative must think this alone will put them back in play.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Politics

Starmer thrown under the Mandelson bus by Lammy

Published

on

Starmer thrown under the Mandelson bus by Lammy

Things are looking worse and worse for Keir Starmer. This is especially bad, because things were already about as terrible as it’s possible to get for a sitting PM.

Lammy told Starmer

In the latest instance of the badness intensifying, the deputy PM David Lammy has apparently said he told Starmer not to appoint Mandelson. And of course, what we actually mean is “friends of the Deputy Prime Minister” told the Telegraph.

There’s just one problem with all this:

Whispers

Here’s what the Telegraph reported:

David Lammy turned on the Prime Minister as allies revealed he had warned against appointing Lord Mandelson as the ambassador to the US.

In a blow to Sir Keir Starmer, friends of the Deputy Prime Minister confirmed on Saturday night that he had not been in favour of bringing the “Prince of Darkness? back into government over his links to Jeffrey Epstein.

Mr Lammy is the first Cabinet minister to break openly with the embattled Prime Minister, whose future hangs in the balance over the Mandelson scandal.

Advertisement

If it was us, we wouldn’t simply have ‘warned’ Starmer; we would have refused to serve in the same government as the ‘Prince of Darkness’. They don’t call him that for nothing, and finally the media is past pretending.

This is what slippery Lammy said in the video above (emphasis added):

Peter Mandelson is a man of considerable expertise. He’s the right man for this moment to be out ambassador. He’s been a business secretary, a Northern Ireland secretary, of course he’s worked in the European Commission, and he brings all of that to bear working as our ambassador, and of course he’s looking forwards to presenting his credentials to Donald Trump.

If Lammy is telling the truth, and he did warn Starmer, then he was lying when he said Mandelson was the “right man for this moment”.

Either way, he’s a liar.

Advertisement

And you can’t trust a liar.

Starmfall

The Telegraph article also reports that Starmer is “devastated” and considering an exit. It further suggests Wes Streeting may have scuppered his own chances of replacing Starmer because of his links to Mandelson (links we’ve reported on). The problem for Labour is that most of the big players in the current government are connected to Mandelson, because he’s been the puppet master behind Starmer’s operation.

In other words, there’s no obvious way out of this mess for Labour.

Featured image via BERR

Advertisement

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Politics

Labour War Erupts As Starmer Faces Mandelson Scandal

Published

on

Labour War Erupts As Starmer Faces Mandelson Scandal

A Labour grandee has accused senior party figures of “acting like ferrets in a sack” as Keir Starmer faces his biggest crisis as prime minister over the Peter Mandelson scandal.

Lord Blunkett pleaded with his colleagues to “get our act together” on another grim day for the PM.

The former home secretary even hinted that Starmer could decide to resign as the fallout continues over his decision to appoint Mandelson the UK’s ambassador to Washington.

Mandelson was sacked after just seven months over his links to convicted paedophile Jeffrey Epstein, and now faces a criminal investigation into allegations he passed government information to the financier when he was business secretary.

Advertisement

Blunkett told Radio 4′s Broadcasting House programme: “Only Keir Starmer and his wife Victoria can decide on their future. No one else this weekend or in the days ahead are going to determine that.”

The Labour peer repeated his call for the PM to sack his chief of staff, Morgan McSweeney, who urged him to give Mandelson the ambassador’s job.

He said: “If people continue to give you the wrong advice, or you’re listening to the wrong people, you can do something about it.”

Making a desperate plea for party unity, Blunkett added: “I appreciate that things are dire, but they’re made more difficult by briefings and counter briefings.

Advertisement

“When see a party acting like ferrets in a sack, they draw the conclusion. Let’s try and get our act together. Let’s speak with a common voice about what we’re about.”

His comments came as a cabinet minister slapped down Angela Rayner and David Lammy over their response to the Mandelson affair.

Allies of the pair have insisted they warned Starmer not to give Mandelson the ambassador’s job a year ago.

Asked about their interventions on Sunday, work and pensions secretary Pat McFadden said: “It’s up to them. They’re over 21, you know, they’ll have to answer for themselves on what they’re saying.”

Advertisement

Meanwhile, Starmer ally McFadden also appeared to acknowledge the possibility that the PM could be removed from office by saying McSweeney should stay in his job “if” Starmer remains PM.

Asked if he should sack McSweeney, he said: “I see no point in that whatsoever. I think if the prime minister stays … I don’t think that would make any difference at all.

“I think the prime minister should continue with what he’s doing. He is focused on the cost of living. He wants to deliver for the British people.”

However, the head of a Labour-supporting union said it was time for Starmer to go.

Advertisement

Steve Wright, general secretary of the Fire Brigades Union, which is affiliated to Labour, said: “I think we need to see change. I think 18 months ago the general public wanted to see that change – and we’re not seeing it, we’re just seeing a continuation of what happened before – and I think that needs to be a leadership change. I think MPs need to be calling for that.”

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Politics

Starmer leadership crisis will test the Labour herd

Published

on

MDU logo

Keir Starmer has entered the stay of execution phase of his premiership. 

On Wednesday, the prime minister instructed Labour MPs to support a government amendment to a humble address tabled by Kemi Badenoch’s Conservative Party. The official opposition called for the release of documents relating to Peter Mandelson’s appointment as Britain’s ambassador to the US; Starmer sought to include exemptions for those papers that might prejudice national security and international relations. 

The Parliamentary Labour Party (PLP) mutinied. 

Having been marched up and down hills for months by a meandering Downing Street operation, Labour MPs looked elsewhere for guidance. It was left to Angela Rayner to locate a politically sustainable solution and dictate terms to the government Whips’ Office. Ministers agreed, under the threat of greater humiliation, to refer the documents to the cross-party intelligence and security committee.

Advertisement

The former deputy prime minister filled the PLP power vacuum on Wednesday. 

The episode exposes just how thin Starmer’s grip on his parliamentary party has become. 

Any prime minister’s fate rests with their parliamentary party. A finer appreciation of this fact might have spared Starmer some of his more spectacular misjudgments – the “noises off” on the backbenches matter. But a prime minister’s dependence on their party is never more apparent than at the end of the road. 

On the steps of Downing Street in July 2022, Boris Johnson memorably described the irresistible synchronisation of regicidal MPs. When the herd moves, the outgoing prime minister observed, it moves. Johnson’s obstinate determination to cling to power was no match for the collective might of Conservative MPs. 

Advertisement

Johnson attributed the “powerful” herd instinct to Westminster as a whole. But there is an argument to say that, when it comes to ejecting and electing leaders, this instinct is a uniquely Conservative asset.

Over 14 years of government, spanning five prime ministers, the Conservative Party’s leadership election rules were treated as an extension of the British constitution. The key distinction between the Tory rules, formalised in 1998, and those governing any challenge to Starmer lies in the former’s no-confidence procedure.

The Conservative no-confidence ballot is a ruthless, and highly sophisticated, mechanism.

In total, the 1922 committee of Conservative backbenchers has overseen three ‘votes of confidence’: Iain Duncan Smith in 2003, Theresa May in 2018 and Boris Johnson in 2022. Of these votes, only the first has been successful. A total of 90 Conservative MPs voted against Duncan Smith in the standard secret ballot; the outgoing Tory leader could only muster 75 to his defence. 

Advertisement

The 2018 and 2022 ballots technically secured the position of May and Johnson respectively. When a leader survives a confidence vote, they are rewarded with a 12-month clemency period. In practice, both May and Johnson were defenestrated mere months later. (Johnson, at least, was warned that the 1922 executive committee would pass a rule change to force a second confidence vote.)

The power of the no-confidence mechanism is that it creates a leadership vacancy. This means that Conservative MPs, who see the incumbent leader as a liability, do not need to resolve on a common path forward – only that the incumbent should go. The defenestrated leader, to round off the ruthless process, is then barred from standing in the subsequent leadership election. 

The mechanism has its drawbacks, of course. Creating a vacancy without charting a clear course can produce some unforeseen and unfortunate outcomes – including but not limited to sending Liz Truss to Downing Street. But the Conservative no-confidence ballot remains a precise, and mostly orderly, way of translating mass disaffection into a leadership challenge. 

Labour’s system is significantly less precise. 

Advertisement

In the event of a vacancy, as we saw with the mostly smooth competition to replace Angela Rayner as deputy leader, the rules are simple enough. But Labour lacks its own in-house assassination bureau; there is no reliable production line of “men in grey suits” who can coordinate a lethal visitation while an incumbent remains in place.

Critically, there is no procedural means of creating a Labour leadership vacancy. In 2016, a PLP motion expressing no confidence in Jeremy Corbyn, tabled by Margaret Hodge, was passed by 171 votes to 40. But there was no obligation for Corbyn to stand down. Instead, both Owen Smith and Angela Eagle declared their leadership candidacies and easily surpassed the 20% threshold (then 50 MPs) to trigger a contest. Corbyn was given a place on the ballot following an 18-14 National Executive Committee (NEC) ruling. And the membership vote restored Corbyn as leader with a refreshed mandate. 

According to the Labour rule book, it remains the case that a vacancy can only be created by a resignation. Pretenders cannot exploit a vacuum; they must wrestle the crown from the king’s head while he remains on the throne. 

Conservative leaders are felled by a politically amorphous, technically anonymous herd of critics. Keir Starmer’s usurper will have a name, a faction and a wider group of allies – all of whom must make themselves known under party rules. Labour MPs cannot cower in smoke-filled rooms or behind secret letters to a senior backbencher. In this regard, the Labour rule book is plain: “Valid nominations shall be published by the party”.

Advertisement

The rule book, however, is sufficiently ambiguous to allow a challenger to choose the sequencing of their insurrection. The rules suggest that a challenger should surreptitiously sign up a fifth of the PLP (81 MPs) to a coup, before providing the proof of their nominations to the general secretary of the Labour Party, Hollie Ridley. But on a reasonable reading of the rules, an MP could declare their intention to run, and then begin canvassing the parliamentary party.

And yet, whatever approach a would-be challenger takes, they will be forced to place their head above the parapet. 

A potential parallel is found in the Conservative Party rules as they existed from 1975 to 1998. Then, as now in the Labour Party, the removal of an incumbent leader required a full frontal assault from a prospective challenger. Margaret Thatcher avoided a challenge under these rules for much of her tenure as Tory leader and prime minister. But she faced two contests successively in 1989 and 1990. 

In 1989, Sir Anthony Meyer stepped forward as a “stalking horse” candidate. Thatcher secured a mostly decisive victory over “Sir Anthony Whats’isname” or the “stalking donkey”, as Meyer was dubbed by some in the press, by 314 votes to 33. On that occasion, a serious challenger to Thatcher, such as the former defence secretary, Michael Heseltine, chose not to stand. Meyer stood to test the party’s confidence in the prime minister. 

Advertisement

One year later in 1990, in the wake of Geoffrey Howe’s searing resignation statement, Heseltine announced his candidacy for the leadership. Under the party’s then leadership rules, a candidate required a majority of 15% of the total electorate to win outright on the first ballot. Thatcher’s majority was four short of this threshold; she responded by announcing her resignation as prime minister. 

But Heseltine’s candidacy famously established the dictum that knife-wielders do not go on to collect the crown. Both John Major and Douglas Hurd put themselves forward for the second ballot, and the former prevailed. 

Those considering a challenge to Starmer’s leadership will be acutely aware of this precedent. There are countervailing case studies, of course – examples of would-be candidates missing their moment of maximum opportunity to wait for a cleaner opening that never arrived. Michael Portillo installed telephone lines in 1995, but did not challenge Major; David Miliband chose not to lead an insurrection against Gordon Brown. Both pretenders lost subsequent leadership elections. 

Another option for those dissatisfied with Starmer’s leadership would be a symbolic stand, signalling to the prime minister that his time is up. Historically, this is the route the Labour Party has taken when a leader is perceived to be a liability.

Advertisement

An ideal model is supplied by the Blair-Brown leadership transition. On 5 September 2006, 17 Labour MPs issued a letter asking Blair to resign – reports indicated that dozens more were willing to support the call. A coordinated move by Brown’s allies followed, including the resignation of several junior government ministers. Tom Watson, the future Labour deputy leader, was among those to step down. Blair was forced to announce that the party’s upcoming conference would be his last. On 25 September, at the scene of Blair’s final conference, Brown declared his candidacy for the leadership.

Crucially, the relative precision of Blair’s defenestration owed to Brown’s status as his obvious successor (notwithstanding an ill-fated challenge by John McDonnell). 

Recent coups have not been so successful. In June 2009, just minutes after the polls had closed in the European and local elections, James Purnell resigned as work and pensions secretary and called on Gordon Brown to step down as prime minister. Purnell, who insisted that he would not seek Brown’s post were it to become vacant, was joined by backbench MPs Barry ­Sheerman and Graham Allen in calling on Brown to resign. But Miliband, the foreign secretary, and Alan Johnson, the health secretary – Brown’s most likely heirs – rowed in behind the Downing Street incumbent. Purnell’s putsch failed. 

In January 2010, two former cabinet ministers, Patricia Hewitt and Geoff Hoon, called for a leadership contest to resolve Brown’s future. The prime minister dismissed the challenge as a “form of silliness” – and the Parliamentary Labour Party agreed. Interestingly, the Hewitt-Hoon coup called for a secret ballot vote in Brown’s leadership, replicating the Conservative no-confidence procedure. Both Johnson and Miliband (eventually) signalled their support for the prime minister. 

Advertisement

The 2016 Labour leadership election was the ill-fated consequence of a failed coup, triggered by the dismissal of Hilary Benn as shadow foreign secretary for plotting. Benn’s sacking in the early hours of the morning opened the floodgates to a wave of resignations from the shadow frontbench, precipitating the symbolic no-confidence vote in Corbyn’s leadership. The incumbent stayed put. 

At this moment, Starmer is likely more vulnerable than either Brown or Corbyn. In the former case, discontent was more diffuse with a general election nearing; in the latter instance, Starmer does not command the confidence of the grassroots in the way Corbyn did. A symbolic intervention could well be enough to depose Starmer. 

But such a stand would have to be fronted by a politician with sufficient political clout – a party grandee or shadow cabinet minister – to signal decisively that Starmer’s time is up. Moreover, if the prime minister refuses to resign, this strategy would still depend on his prospective successors stepping forward to announce their candidacies. They would need to have full faith that their parliamentary colleagues would go over the top with them.

It is likely, therefore, that in the absence of a resignation, the Labour herd will be forced to get creative in order to drive Starmer from office.

Advertisement

The prime minister is also protected, for the time being, by the absence of an agreed successor. Andy Burnham was only recently barred from marching on Westminster by the Labour National Executive Committee (NEC). In September 2025, Angela Rayner resigned from the government over her tax affairs. Wes Streeting is seen as a plotter by Starmer’s allies and with scepticism from the Labour “soft left”. Ed Miliband, the Labour leader from 2010 to 2015, has previously been rejected by the electorate. Shabana Mahmood, the most Blue Labour-coded of the likely contenders, would surely struggle among the party membership. 

The Conservative herd moved against Theresa May, Boris Johnson and Liz Truss, in part, because the parliamentary party could conceive of a line of succession. (The choice of Conservative MPs to succeed Johnson was, of course, Rishi Sunak, not Truss.)

The bottom line is that Starmer’s position is terminally vulnerable, but protected by a combination of process and political circumstance. 

In July 2022, Johnson referred to his party’s “brilliant Darwinian system”. Labour simply lacks a reliable apparatus for regicide. And so the relative ease with which the Conservatives ditched leaders will not be repeated under Labour. The process will not be precise, and it will almost certainly not be orderly. When Starmer is finally felled, the fallout will be fraught. 

Advertisement

The length of Starmer’s stay of execution lies with the Labour herd. The prime minister is only in a position to endure. In the meantime, the destabilising phoney war and the leadership brinkmanship will continue until a future flashpoint. This could be provided by the Gorton and Denton by-election and/or the elections in May.

If Starmer is to go, then at some point, in some way, someone – be they a leadership contender or disgruntled grandee – will have to step forward.

Josh Self is editor of Politics.co.uk, follow him on Bluesky here and X here.

Politics.co.uk is the UK’s leading digital-only political website. Subscribe to our daily newsletter for all the latest news and analysis.

Advertisement

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Politics

McFadden: “No point whatsoever” in removing McSweeney

Published

on

McFadden: "No point whatsoever" in removing McSweeney

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Politics

“It’s not working at the moment, is it?” – Allin-Khan

Published

on

“It’s not working at the moment, is it?” - Allin-Khan

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Politics

“You are getting ahead of yourself” – Tice refuses to confirm Reform UK shadow cabinet plans

Published

on

"You are getting ahead of yourself" - Tice refuses to confirm Reform UK shadow cabinet plans

Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading

Politics

Whistleblower says intel chief hid call with foreign power

Published

on

Whistleblower says intel chief hid call with foreign power

A whistleblower’s allegations against Trump’s Director of National Intelligence (DNI) Tulsi Gabbard have finally been revealed. After a Washington process hid the details for a week following an unnamed whistleblower said he would publish them if they continued to be hidden, the allegations have finally been made public — and they are dynamite.

In spring 2025, the US National Security Agency (NSA) detected a call between a party identified as a foreign intelligence figure and a person described as very close to Trump. The NSA informed Gabbard, but instead of following normal distribution process, Gabbard blocked it. She then printed a copy and took it to Trump’s chief of staff Susie Wiles — all according to Andrew Bakaj, the whistleblower’s lawyer.

After meeting Wiles, Gabbard told the NSA to kill the report’s publication and told it to send all information only to her office.

A spokesperson for Gabbard’s office denied the accusation as “baseless” and claimed it was politically motivated. However, the communications between Gabbard and the NSA — and Wiles’s receipt for the intelligence report — were sent directly to the Guardian. Gabbard was once a Trump critic, but changed her tune after Trump appointed her as DNI.

Advertisement

Joining the dots, many are publicly linking the ‘foreign intelligence’ service to confirmations in the latest Epstein file release that Donald Trump is “compromised by Israel”, including former political candidate Melanie D’Arrigo:

Featured image via the Canary

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Politics

McFadden: It’s Not Good to Change PM Every 18 Months

Published

on

McFadden: It’s Not Good to Change PM Every 18 Months

McFadden: It’s Not Good to Change PM Every 18 Months

Source link

Continue Reading

Politics

McFadden: No Point in Sacking McSweeney “If the Prime Minister Stays”

Published

on

McFadden: No Point in Sacking McSweeney “If the Prime Minister Stays”

McFadden: No Point in Sacking McSweeney “If the Prime Minister Stays”

Source link

Continue Reading

Politics

How To Recover From Burnout If You Can’t Quit Your Job

Published

on

How To Recover From Burnout If You Can't Quit Your Job

About a quarter of UK workers say they feel unable to handle work stress, while 63% of us seem to show signs of burnout.

But sometimes, it feels like the advice for those going through it ― especially considering some think burnout can take years to recover from ― is incompatible with the realities of people’s lives.

Speaking to HuffPost UK, NHS GP Dr Helen Wall said: “I do get a little bit irritated when people talk about self-care and, you know, just relax and do some exercise and do some mindfulness and all of this carry on because actually there’s more to it with burnout than that.”

Though she does think there’s a case to be made for taking time off when work stress becomes exhausting, she added, “burnout doesn’t resolve just through rest”.

Advertisement

Here, she explained why burnout can feel like such a trap, and shared her tips for handling it if leaving your role doesn’t feel like an immediately viable option.

Work burnout can create a vicious cycle

Dr Wall said that taking time off “doesn’t fix the causes of burnout, which are often linked to the amount of workload, lack of control around the workload, or… feeling that their values are conflicted” at work, she told us.

In fact, a phenomenon called “moral injury” is common in healthcare, “where you feel like what you should be doing for a patient is not what you’re able to do. That can happen in all kinds of work.”

Advertisement

Chronic understaffing is yet another issue contributing to burnout, she added. And she doesn’t think time off alone will solve that.

That’s why “if I’m signing somebody off work because of… burnout, I like to encourage them to share that with work, whether that’s on the sick note or whether that’s them asking for an occupational health review or speaking to a line manager.”

Without these structural changes, she added, burnout will return. And if people feel they have no choice but to stay put due to mortgages, childcare costs, and/or housing expenses, “they become shamed and fearful and isolated,” may worry about redundancy, “and all of those things can worsen that burnout”.

Unhelpfully, burnout can leave people “in a really dark place [where they] can’t think outside of what they need to do or what will help them” to leave.

Advertisement

How can I handle burnout without quitting?

Dr Hall referred to something called the Maslach model, which says that at least one of the following six levers needs to be moving for a person to begin to recover from burnout:

1) Workload

“It might not just be about reducing your hours, but the cognitive load of what you’re doing when you’re actually working or the emotional load of what you’re being asked to do while you’re working,” said Dr Hall.

Advertisement

2) Control

“Having that autonomy over how and when work is done and feeling that you’ve got some control over that, things are not being done to you.

“Everybody likes a pay rise, what with the cost of living crisis etc, but actually there’s a lot of studies being done to show that reward in your job and feeling personal satisfaction and value actually lasts longer in terms of how you feel.”

3) Community

Advertisement

This, the GP said, involves “feeling psychologically safe within the workplace, feeling that you’ve got a good team and the people you work with can have your back and support you”.

4) Fairness

Percieved injustices can fuel burnout, the doctor explained. “Feeling that things are not fair and not equitable and people are not playing by the rules or handling situations right, that can really chip away at somebody’s happiness at work.”

5) Values

Advertisement

This is a little like Dr Hall’s former point about moral injury. It happens, she said, “when people feel like they can’t work in line with their values”.

Luckily, she added, “There’s some evidence to show that even just moving one of these in the right direction can ease burnout and improve burnout.

“I always encourage people to try to have a chat with their line manager… or whoever they can trust at work to try and look at changing some of these things.”

If this feels completely impossible, however, unfortunately “it’s about thinking, what else can you do? Is there another option? Is there another job you can apply for? Is there another route of career or something that you can work towards?”

Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2025