Experts ask: ‘why vote Labour? Starmer’s running a Substitute Tory Party!’
Here’s the issue: Keir Starmer’s neoliberal, right-wing Labour Party is in pole position (or should that be “poll” position) to win the next general election by a landslide – but has the same policies as Rishi Sunak’s Tory government.
Starmer, and his shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves, have both said they will not impose any policies that change the current status quo that is making the super-rich much richer, driving working people and the poor further into poverty, and ushering privatisation into public services to make them cash cows for fat cats (as we’ve seen with energy and water).
So, what is the point of voting for their party?
When a politician is offering zero policies to make the world a better place but is in line to be the next PM you have to ask yourself why he wants the job.
The answer is very simple. Power for power’s sake.
— Tory Fibs (@ToryFibs) August 27, 2023
It’s actually worse than ‘Tory Fibs’ is suggesting. Starmer, Reeves and the rest don’t just want power for its own sake – they want it in order to ensure that power cannot be taken by anybody with plans that would actually improve the quality of life here, with public services that actually serve the public well, fair pay for everyone and a social security system that doesn’t persecute people who need help.
Influential people are now starting to accept that this is the situation. It is the reason academics have contacted Starmer, urging him to change his mind.
Academics say they are concerned Labour’s programme will not break with Tory economic policy, but will instead prolong poverty for millions.
There is no difference between the Tories and Labour any more.
It's time for a new party.https://t.co/7Eey8nhQCS
— Breakthrough Party 🟠🌤️ (@BThroughParty) August 28, 2023
The letter by 70 economists and social policy experts, states that they
are concerned that your current economic programme for government will not transform the economic orthodoxy that has made this country poorer, less cohesive and more unequal than fifteen years ago.
The maintenance or extension of cuts in the current economic climate will only serve to deepen the poverty and hardship many are already facing.
They urge Starmer to turn
from an out of date, economically and socially destructive approach towards a model which improves wellbeing, works in alignment with our environment, and achieves social justice.
Failure to table an alternative will mean not only wasting that opportunity but many lives and futures as well.
Unpack that a bit:
Starmer Labour’s current approach is out of date.
It is economically and socially destructive.
And the party’s current policies will destroy many lives.
Alternative – workable – policies are suggested all the time. Here’s one, from a former Labour leader:
With the money raised from a 1-2% wealth tax on assets over £10 million, we could afford to scrap the 2-child benefit cap 17 times over.
Politics is about choices — we should be on the side of those in need, not those with greed.
— Jeremy Corbyn (@jeremycorbyn) August 27, 2023
But it has fallen on deaf ears. Starmer isn’t interested.
His attitude represents a huge u-turn for party still known as “Labour” and its leader. Only a few years ago, he was claiming that his party would replace the current system with something completely different. But this week Justin Madders, Starmer’s shadow minister for employment rights, confirmed that this had been abandoned for a “continuity Tory” approach:
Starmer running to be leader: "We've got to have the courage to say the economic system, the free market system, is busted. It needs to be replaced"
Labour now: We can't say we'll make the rich pay a tiny bit more tax because it will create instability and uncertainty pic.twitter.com/sXeeEzJhln
— Saul Staniforth (@SaulStaniforth) August 28, 2023
Here’s Damo to explain Starmer’s – and Reeves’s – economic policy, and why it is so harmful, in a little more detail:
Apparently taxing the rich will hamper prosperity according to former BoE employee and economic graduate Rachel Reeves, so either somebody else has been doing her homework for her for years, or she's blatantly lying about how the economy works. Taxation is an essential function… pic.twitter.com/iHIbksRhrJ
— Damien Willey 🟢 🔴 (@KernowDamo) August 27, 2023
It seems clear that Starmer has undergone a major change of heart, turning away from the people Labour is supposed to serve, and towards the city fat cats who are leeching our money away from us.
Madders tried desperately to deny any such change during his media turn:
Justin Madders: "I don't think Keirs principles have changed. Whats changed is the economic circumstances"
If your principles are dependent on economic circumstances, they're not principles, are they? pic.twitter.com/goNeCco4LA
— Saul Staniforth (@SaulStaniforth) August 28, 2023
Saul Staniforth (above) is right: if a leader’s principles depend on economic circumstances, then they are not principles. If they were principles, Starmer would have the economic circumstances under constant review, with a demand out to all his advisers for them to provide him at all times with plans that would achieve the needs of those principles in any situation.
The situation now has been summed up – again by ‘Tory Fibs’ – thus:
Neither Labour or the Tories are offering solutions to the problems our society faces.
Both are failing.
— Tory Fibs (@ToryFibs) August 28, 2023
Yes. Both are failing us – the citizens of the UK.
In times like this, the electorate has a duty to look elsewhere for a government-in-waiting – not to cling to forlorn hopes that Starmer is a secret socialist who will turn back to the left as soon as he has installed himself in Downing Street. We see no evidence for this at all.
The Green Party has good economic plans. So do the Independents who used to represent Labour but have left because of the likes of Starmer and Reeves.
Have you looked at what they are offering? Or are you determined to vote for policies that will harm you terribly, simply because of some outdated tribal loyalty?
Now is the time to work out what you stand for – and to demand it from your representatives.
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Way back when Starmer was campaigning for the leadership and, as a member, I received that extravagant mailshot , I knew the party – and the country- was doomed. Its like being in the middle of a slow motion car crash
Labour is still the best bet at the election even if they are now the best of a bad bunch
NO, KEIR STARMER’S PARTY IS *NOT* THE BEST BET AT THE NEXT ELECTION.
The reason is obvious: it will make no material difference to the state of the UK.
The sooner voters like yourself can find a way to understand this and support candidates with policies that actually will help, the sooner the UK gets on a road to sanity.
I mean, what’s your favourite Keir Starmer Labour policy and how will it improve on what’s happening now?