Keir Starmer: “Britain is an island of strangers.”
Funny — it's Labour that’s looking more and more unfamiliar by the day.
Bring back the party of compassion, not condemnation.
#Labour #Starmer #Immigration #WhatHappenedToLabour #LabourClarityNeeded https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/may/14/keir-starmer-immigration-trap-of-his-own-makingKeir Starmer is caught in yet another trap of his own making
The prime minister’s immigration approach follows a now-familiar pattern: letting fear of a difficult argument get in the way of policy that might work, says Guardian columnist Rafael Behr
The GuardianStarmer faces opposition from Labour MPs and employers over immigration shift
Some backbenchers already thought PM had moved too far right on issue but aides say aim is to make system ‘fairer’
The GuardianIt’s wild that the most radical Labour policy of 2025 is... slightly harder English tests for migrants. Britain’s sinking, and this lot is rearranging vowels on the Titanic. Starmer: ‘We’ll control immigration!’ Also Starmer: ‘No targets, just vibes.’ Weak leadership dressed up as tough talk.
#AllSpinNoSubstance #LabourImmigration #PolicyShift #LabourClarityNeeded #ReformAppeal https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/may/08/the-guardian-view-on-labour-and-immigration-debate-time-to-change-the-frameThe Guardian view on Labour and immigration debate: time to change the frame
Editorial: The way to win an argument with Reform is to bring economic reality and positive stories of migrant contribution back into the picture
The GuardianLabour's communication: muddled.
Policies: contradictory.
Voter trust: eroding.
Reform UK offers clarity, and voters are taking notice.
Time for Labour to find its voice.
#LabourClarityNeeded #ReformAppeal https://www.newstatesman.com/politics/labour/2025/05/the-fight-for-labours-future
The fight for Labour’s future
In 1976, as Harold Wilson announced his surprise resignation, Labour was wracked by questions over its future direction. A vivid new play, The Gang of Three, depicts the fate of a trio of modernising
New Statesman