Just Stop Oil protesters ‘wrong and arrogant’, says Keir Starmer

Activists causing disruption think ‘they’re the only people who’ve got the answer’, says Labour leader

Adam Forrest
Monday 24 October 2022 12:09 EDT
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Just Stop Oil protesters are ‘wrong and arrogant’, says Keir Starmer

Sir Keir Starmer has said the Just Stop Oil climate activists who have stopped traffic and thrown food at valuable paintings are “wrong and arrogant”.

The Labour leader criticised the protesters who have blocked traffic by gluing themselves to roads in recent days – after one protest saw emergency vehicles temporarily blocked.

“I think they’re wrong, I think their action is wrong, Sir Keir told LBC Radio. “My mum was very ill all of her life – she was in those ambulances when she was alive, and there will other families listening to this who will be in the same situation. It’s arrogant.”

He added: “I think it’s absolutely arrogant of those gluing themselves to the road to think they’re the only people who have got the answer – they haven’t got that answer.”

He was speaking before climate and energy crisis activists occupied the main lobby ofthe Houses of Parliament after Rishi Sunak was named the new prime minister. Activists from Greenpeace and Fuel Poverty Action unfurled a banner reading: “Chaos costs lives”.

Separately, four Just Stop Oil protesters were arrested after cake was thrown over King Charles III’s waxwork statue at Madame Tussauds.

Sir Keir said he did not know how activists blocking roads “can look in eye the families who have got someone in the back of an ambulance”, adding: “They certainly wouldn’t be able to look me in the eye, if it was my mum, late mum now sadly, who was in that ambulance.”

The Labour leader insisted he was fully behind a move away from fossil fuels as part of a push towards renewable energy – saying he believed Britain can have clean power by 2030.

Mr Starmer also promised there would be no new oil and gas licences granted under a Labour government. “We accept there’s got to be a transition, so where there is oil and gas already being yielded that needs to continue as part of the transition, but no new sites, no new fields to be opened,” he said.

“We need to transition to renewables. We can do it.” he added. “We can double our onshore wind, we can triple our solar energy and we can quadruple our offshore wind –and the sooner we do that, the better. I do think that new nuclear, as well, and hydrogen are part of the equation.”

Videos shared online show both a fire engine and an ambulance on blue lights unable to get through traffic after dozens of Just Stop Oil protesters blocked three roads in London last week.

Activists from the group threw mashed potatoes over a Claude Monet painting in a museum in Potsdam on Sunday. It followed a similar stunt at the National Gallery in London – where protesters chucked tomato soup over Vincent van Gogh’s Sunflowers.

Since their campaign began on 1 April, Just Stop Oil supporters have been arrested over 1,800 times, with seven supporters currently in prison and 13 in police custody.

The tactics used by Just Stop Oil have resembled those used by the Extinction Rebellion (XR) group, who have glued themselves to roads and locked themselves onto the railings of key buildings.

Sir Keir also told LBC that he wanted to see longer sentences for any protesters gluing themselves to roads or key infrastructure.

He said Labour would push for harsher sentences for those “gluing themselves roads and motorways – because that’s where you are putting lives at risk”.

The former home secretary Suella Braverman – forced out during last’s week’s Tory turmoil – had unveiled plans for another crackdown on disruptive protests.

The new Public Order Bill is aimed at creating a new offence of interfering with infrastructure, airports, railways or oil refineries, with potential sentences of up to 12 months in prison.

Sir Keir Starmer also used his LBC interview to say he will not attend the World Cup in Qatar, and neither will any of his senior colleagues, over human rights concerns – even if England reach the final.

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