Politics

Starmer has lost half of Labour’s 2024 voters

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Keir Starmer has surpassed Tony Blair. After butcher of Baghdad Blair’s landslide victory in 1997, he went on to lose voters at each subsequent election. This saw him securing the following vote shares:

  • 1997: 43.3%.
  • 2001: 40.7%.
  • 2005: 35.2%.

This slide demonstrated that Blair’s re-heated Thatcherite politics didn’t resonate with the British public. Bad as this was, however, it was nowhere near as dramatic as what Starmer has achieved:

Starmer breaking records

The two-party system of British politics has broken down. As this recent YouGov poll shows, we now have five parties within 10 percentage points of one another:

Starmer clearly bears responsibility for this, because he’s the man at the top. At the same time, Starmer didn’t introduce dishwater neoliberalism to the Labour Party; he simply ran with it.

Sooner or later, the public were going to wake up and realise there was no difference between the underlying politics of Labour and the Tories. Now that’s happened, Labour are losing voters, and they’re particularly losing them to the left:

Labour have bent over backwards to appeal to Reform voters, and this is the end result of that.

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Predictable

The Canary and others warned Labour that copying the far-right wouldn’t help, but they wouldn’t listen.

For some voters, they saw Labour agreeing with Reform, and they decided this meant Nigel Farage was right along.

For many more, they saw Labour gleefully talking about deporting human beings, and they thought ‘fuck this‘.

Starmer clearly can’t come back from this.

The question is whether the Labour Party can launch a comeback once he’s gone.

Featured image Cez the Socialist

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By Willem Moore

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