Starmer’s whip cracks and his MPs start walking away from legalisation of crimes like rape by government agents

Bungler: perhaps Keir Starmer thought his decision to support a law that allows government agents to murder, torture and rape people with no fear of prosecution was a show of power. All it will do is turn more people away from the hollow shell he has made of the Labour Party.

Keir Starmer has gone too far and Labour MPs know it.

That’s how This Writer reads the groundbreaking resignation from the party’s frontbench team of rising star Dan Carden.

The now-former shadow chief secretary to the Treasury has only just distinguished himself in Parliament with this speech attacking Tory corruption and cronyism, taking advantage of the Covid-19 crisis to award themselves and their businesses huge wodges of public money in return for – well, nothing:

Now, after being told that Starmer is whipping Labour to abstain on the heinous Covert Human Intelligence Sources (Criminal Conduct) Bill, he has announced that he will vote with his conscience – and resigned his post as a shadow minister.

He is quite right to do so. Starmer has lied repeatedly about this – or he has been wildly mistaken about what he could achieve.

First he told Labour MPs to abstain on the second reading of the Bill – allowing it to progress through Parliament when a concerted effort by all Labour MPs could have stopped it on the spot.

He told his MPs that there would be a chance to change the Bill, tightening up controls on the kind of crimes that could be committed and the circumstances in which they would be allowed. That has not happened.

And he told his MPs that they would be able to vote against the Bill if attempts to amend it failed. We see now that he is not going to allow this after all.

So Mr Carden did the honourable thing:

Take note of the words in his letter. He states that Starmer has “settled” on his position on “legislation that sets dangerous new precedents on the rule of law and civil liberties in this country”.

He’s saying that, in effect, Starmer is supporting a law that will harm our freedom.

The letter also states that in supporting the harm that will be done to us, Starmer’s position is at odds with the vast majority of his party: “I share the deep concerns about this legislation from across the Labour Movement, human rights organisations, and so many who have suffered the abuse of state power, from blacklisted workers to the Hillsborough families and survivors.”

Mention of the Hillsborough tragedy is particularly telling: in supporting this Bill, then, Starmer is setting himself against the Hillsborough families and survivors – and everybody who supports them and their struggle for justice.

That is not a good look for a lawyer!

The Third Reading vote on the CHIS Bill is this evening (October 15).

Labour-voting members of the public will judge their MPs by whether they support Starmer, or if they choose to support justice instead.

Have YOU donated to my crowdfunding appeal, raising funds to fight false libel claims by TV celebrities who should know better? These court cases cost a lot of money so every penny will help ensure that wealth doesn’t beat justice.

https://www.crowdjustice.com/case/mike-sivier-libel-fight/


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6 Comments

  1. G Millward October 15, 2020 at 3:38 pm - Reply

    Good to see Richard Burgon stating he will vote against the bill

    https://twitter.com/RichardBurgon/status/1316746375300866049?s=19

  2. G Millward October 15, 2020 at 4:32 pm - Reply

    And another Labour MP resigns over this … Margaret Greenwood

    https://twitter.com/MGreenwoodWW/status/1316776122462474240?s=19

  3. Martin Odoni October 15, 2020 at 5:19 pm - Reply

    Sadly, Starmer will not be entirely saddened about Carden resigning. Carden is in the left half of the PLP, and those are the MPs Starmer wants an excuse to get shot of.

  4. pixthie October 15, 2020 at 6:59 pm - Reply

    I am really disappointed, I had hoped that Keith Starmer was going to be our knight in shinning armour fighting the good fight for us. Perhaps he should do the right thing and resign his post to allow someone who will stand up to the Conservatives

  5. Jeffrey Davies October 15, 2020 at 7:12 pm - Reply

    If only the front benchers do whot happened to Corbyn that would be justice but alas they won’t

    • R Mitchell October 16, 2020 at 6:57 am - Reply

      I also am very disappointed and consider Starmer using the “whip” in politics is just another form of dictatorship.

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