Keir Starmer will tell Labour to rediscover patriotism and ‘pride in Britain’ to win back voters
Keir Starmer will tell Labour to rediscover its patriotism and ‘pride in Britain’ to reconnect with voters lost under Jeremy Corbyn’s hard Left leadership
- Sir Keir will address online conference on Tuesday in bid to woo back voters
- He will warn that the party must do more to engage with traditional voters
- He wants to distance the party from Jeremy Corbyn’s disastrous leadership
Sir Keir Starmer will tell Labour members that the party must rediscover its patriotism and ‘pride in Britain’ this week as he seeks to draw a line under the Jeremy Corbyn era.
The Opposition Leader will use an online address to the virtual conference, which starts today, to warn that the party must do more to engage with traditional voters who were alienated by his hard Left predecessor.
The party has already unveiled a new slogan ‘A new leadership’ which also tries to distance Sir Keir from the Cobyn movement, which led the party to one of its largest ever election defeats in December.
The party leader told Times Radio this morning: ‘I think in the Labour party we’ve been very shy about patriotism for too many years.
‘I love my country, I think we’re a great country, I think we could be even better, and I think the Labour party, the Labour movement, actually wants the very best for the country.
‘That’s why we go out knocking on doors, campaigning, trying to form the next government, because we want better for our country.
So I think we should not be so shy, we should be proud of being patriotic, and in many senses that reflects the values of the Labour party. And I’m very clear about that.’
The Opposition Leader told Sky’s Ridge on Sunday today (left): ‘We are making it clear we’re a new leadership and that means absolutely clear about recognising the scale of the defeat last December. He later attended a service for the 80th anniversary of the Battle of Britain (right) with his wife Victoria
The Opposition leader will use an online address to the virtual conference, which starts today, to warn that the party must do more to engage with traditional voters who were alienated by his hard Left predecessor
The party has already unveiled a new slogan ‘A new leadership’ which also tries to distance Sir Keir from the Cobyn movement, which led the party to one of its largest ever election defeats in December
Mr Corbyn was widely criticised as leaders for failing to criticise Russia after it was foudn to have been behind the novichok nerve agent attack in Salisbury.
The attempted assassination of Sergei and Yulia Skripal left a local woman dead.
The former leader is a long-standing senior member of the Stop the War Coalition, which campaigns against western military intervention, and wants the UK to abandon its nuclear deterrent.
In June It was revealed that documents used by Mr Corbyn in his election campaign was ‘almost certainly’ spread by ‘Russian actors’ in the run-up to the December poll.
The then-Labour leader brandished a 451-page dossier at press conferences saying they proved the NHS was ‘for sale’ in a post-Brexit trade deal.
Sir Keir is expected to use his keynote speech on Tuesday to set out his vision for Britain after Covid-19 and to explain how he intends to lead Labour back to power.
Sir Keir, formerly a leader of Labour Remainers, told Ridge today: ‘We are making it clear we’re a new leadership and that means absolutely clear about recognising the scale of the defeat last December: that was devastating for the Labour party, devastating for the Labour movement and for the millions of people who desperately needed a Labour government.
‘So, recognising that, listening to those who no longer vote Labour – and I spent the last six months listening, asking for conversations with people to be difficult rather than easy – and changing and focusing on the future, and that means difficult decisions like tackling anti-Semitism. So, a new leadership, focused on 2024 but absolutely recognising the scale of the task that we face.’
He also attempted to put clear water between labour and the Leave/Remain Brexit row that almost made it collapse into civil war last year.
‘We have left the EU, we’re out, so the Leave/Remain argument is over,’ he said.
‘Whichever position people held in the past; we have left so Leave/Remain is over.
‘On the second question, do I want to win? Of course, I want to win, I absolutely want to win. We have lost four elections in a row; I didn’t come into politics to be in opposition.’
In a stinging rebuke to Mr Corbyn he also said: ‘Leadership was necessary on anti-Semitism and that’s what we’re showing in the Labour Party now.’
Asked if the party had been lacking leadership on anti-Semitism, he said: ‘I think that the leadership issue is tied up with anti-Semitism.
‘What I’ve tried to do as leader of the Labour Party is make it very clear in my acceptance speech (in becoming leader) that we would tear out anti-Semitism and then get on and do it, and make sure that we’re taking action as well as words.
‘In all my discussions with Jewish communities they’ve said to me, ‘Keir, in the end we’ll judge you on what you do, not what you say’, and I’m happy with that.’
Last night Sir Keir’s bid to reaffirm his control over his party was met with claims from the hard-Left that he could betray Mr Corbyn’s legacy.
MPs loyal to the former leader warned Sir Keir not to abandon Mr Corbyn’s ‘overwhelmingly popular’ Left-wing agenda.
But Labour Party officials hit back by condemning Mr Corbyn for holding high-profile events at this week’s ‘virtual’ party conference.
The conference – relegated to an online virtual rally owing to Covid-19 – begins today with the party unveiling the slogan ‘A New Leadership’.
The phrase replaces ‘Under New Management’ which Sir Keir, who replaced Mr Corbyn in May, has been using during the summer.
But at an online rally for the Socialist Campaign Group on Monday, party figures loyal to the Left-wing agenda charted by the former leader will warn Sir Keir not to ‘lurch to the Right’ by burying Mr Corbyn’s policy platform.
Former Shadow Cabinet Office Minister Jon Trickett is set to use the event to launch a thinly veiled rebuke of the new leader for failing to set out a vision that will take Labour back to power.
In an article to coincide with the rally, he will warn: ‘We can’t cross our fingers and expect to win the next Election by default.’
He will acknowledge Sir Keir’s success in holding Boris Johnson to account over the Covid crisis but will add: ‘It’s not enough to chip away at Boris’s blundering and the Tories’ incompetence. We have to make people feel they’re voting for something – not just against something.
‘It would be folly to ditch all the policy platform built up over the last five years. Build on it, yes! But don’t jettison the core principles.’
Insisting Mr Corbyn’s policies were popular with both the party membership and the electorate, Mr Trickett writes: ‘The last thing we need in the age of Covid, when even the Tories see the sense of massive state intervention, is for Labour to lurch to the Right.’
Sources loyal to Sir Keir hit back last night by pointing out that only this weekend a YouGov poll showed Labour had now drawn level with the Tories on 40 per cent each.
One said: ‘It’s pretty ridiculous for the hard-Left to start whingeing about Keir, given how much progress he’s made in restoring the party’s reputation since our disastrous Election result under Corbyn.’
Separately, Labour officials also protested at Mr Corbyn’s decision to take part in virtual pre-conference meetings yesterday, saying he should be keeping a low profile.
One said: ‘At the same time Labour women’s conference hears from black female MPs and members, Jeremy Corbyn is hosting a rival event that matters most to him – his ego.’
But last night, allies of the former leader insisted he had every right to take part in conference meetings and branded the criticisms ‘absurd’.