Keir Starmer sparks Labour backlash after praising Thatcher in Tory voter bid
A Labour MP said Margaret Thatcher left Britain with poverty and deprivation not seen since the Dickensian era
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Your support makes all the difference.Sir Keir Starmer is facing a growing backlash after piling praise on Margaret Thatcher in a bid to win over disillusioned Tory voters.
The Labour leader has been attacked by critics on the right who accused him of trying to āride on the coattails of Thatcherās successā. But he has also angered MPs on the left, with one saying the former PM ācaused poverty and deprivation not seen since the Dickensian eraā.
Sir Keir heaped praise on Thatcher, claiming the former prime minister effected āmeaningful changeā and āset loose Britainās natural entrepreneurialismā.
Writing in The Sunday Telegraph, Sir Keir said: āEvery moment of meaningful change in modern British politics begins with the realisation that politics must act in service of the British people, rather than dictating to them.
āMargaret Thatcher sought to drag Britain out of its stupor by setting loose our natural entrepreneurialism. Tony Blair reimagined a stale, outdated Labour Party into one that could seize the optimism of the late Nineties.ā
He followed in the footsteps of his predecessor Sir Tony, who also praised the so-called Iron Lady in the run-up to his 1997 general election landslide.
But left-wing Labour MP Beth Winter said the Thatcher government, which ran from 1979 to 1990, ādevastated communities with the deliberate destruction of the mining industryā.
She added: āPolicies like the grossly iniquitous poll tax and the great privatisation rip-off offs were the hallmarks of Thatcherism.
āMost of those forced to rely on food banks today are from communities that have never recovered from the Thatcher governmentās assault on working-class communities.
āHer governmentās attacks on the working class and trade unions is well remembered in my [Cynon Valley] constituency.ā
Asked what the strategy behind Sir Keirās praise for Mrs Thatcher was, one Labour MP told The Independent there were āno runes to readā.
āYou would be better off reading the entrails of a chicken than trying to understand the strategy in Keirās office, itās just madness,ā the MP said.
The MP said Sir Keir would not win over Thatcherite voters and āall it does is cause division in our own partyā.
Another Labour MP Ian Byrne said Thatcherās legacy was āinequality, hunger, destitution and miseryā. And Kim Johnson, Labour MP for Liverpool Riverside, said Mrs Thatcher ādid nothing for working class communities in Liverpool and across the countryā. Ms Johnson added that she is ānot someone Labour supporters should look up toā.
āThose who do not learn from history are doomed to repeat it,ā she warned.
North of Tyne metro mayor Jamie Driscoll, who was blocked from standing for re-election as a Labour candidate, said Sir Keir had now āabandoned the red wallā.
The left-wing mayor said: āThe northeast lost 100,000 manufacturing jobs under Margaret Thatcher, my Dadās job included. This is adding insult to injury.ā
Pro-Jeremy Corbyn campaign group Momentum said Sir Keirās praise of Thatcher was āa failure of Labour valuesā. A spokesperson said: āMargaret Thatcher laid waste to working-class communities, privatised our public services, and set in train the destruction of the post-war settlement founded by Labour.
āStarmerās praise of her isnāt smart politics. Itās a shift to the right, and a failure of Labour values.ā
Scottish first minister Humza Yousaf attacked Sir Keir for the comments ā arguing that āwhat Thatcher did to mining and industrial communities was not āentrepreneurialismā, it was vandalismā.
In a post on X, he said: āStarmer praising Thatcher is an insult to those communities in Scotland, and across the UK, who still bear the scars of her disastrous policies.ā
Sir Keir hit back at critics, saying the point of his article was to ādistinguish political leaders ... between those that had a plan and those that drifted essentiallyā.
In an interview with the BBC, he said: āAnd thatās why I referenced: Attlee, who obviously had a strong plan, New Jerusalem; Tony Blair, who captured the optimism of the 1990s having changed the Labour Party; and Thatcher, who did have a plan for entrepreneurialism, had a mission, it doesnāt mean I agree with what she did but I donāt think anybody could suggest that she didnāt have a driving sense of purpose.ā
Shadow business secretary Jonathan Reynolds was asked on Sky News whether he was a āThatcher fanā. āNo, Iām not but I can recognise that she was a formidable opponent,ā he said.
Meanwhile, Tory health secretary Victoria Atkins accused Sir Keir of trying to āride on the coattails of her successā. Ms Atkins said Thatcher would not appreciate Sir Keirās praise, touting a famous quote from the former PM saying: āNo. No. No.ā
She told Sky News: āI think the public will see this for what it isā¦ donāt forget he wasnāt appealing to Margaret Thatcherās entrepreneurial spirit when he was courting votes from the hard left, and I suspect the great lady herself would view a man who is trying to ride on the coattails of her success with the following words: No. No. No.ā
Tory party chair Richard Holden piled in, accusing Sir Keir of āsaying what he thinks people want to hear, despite having a track record of doing exactly the oppositeā.
Sir Keirās article in the Tory-supporting paper also said Labour has undergone āshock therapyā since he took over the party from Mr Corbyn in 2020, adding that it has āchanged dramaticallyā.
And, in a sign of his growing confidence as Labour leader, Sir Keir sought to outflank Rishi Sunak by appealing to Tory voters on Brexit and migration.
In a shift from his staunch opposition to Britain leaving the EU, he said the Tories have āfailed to realise the possibilities of Brexitā.
He added that he āprofoundly disagreesā with the idea Labour should duck topics such as small boat crossings and immigration.
He added: āThis is a government that was elected on a promise that immigration would ācome downā and the British people would āalways [be] in controlā. For immigration to then triple is more than just yet another failure ā it is a betrayal of their promises.ā
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