UK leader Keir Starmer is marking 100 days in office. It has been a
rocky ride
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[October 12, 2024]
By JILL LAWLESS
LONDON (AP) — British Prime Minister Keir Starmer marks 100 days in
office Saturday with little cause for celebration.
Starmer’s center-left Labour Party was elected by a landslide on July 4,
sweeping back to power after 14 years. But after weeks of stories about
feuding, freebies and fiscal gloom, polls suggest Starmer’s personal
approval rating has plummeted, and Labour is only slightly more popular
than a Conservative Party that was rejected by voters after years of
infighting and scandal.
“You couldn’t really have imagined a worse start,” said Tim Bale,
professor of politics at Queen Mary University of London. ”First
impressions count, and it’s going to be difficult to turn those around.”
Starmer won the election on promises to banish years of turmoil and
scandal under Conservative governments, get Britain’s sluggish economy
growing and restore frayed public services such as the state-funded
National Health Service.
His government argues it has made a strong start: It has ended
long-running strikes by doctors and railway workers, set up a publicly
owned green energy firm, scrapped the Conservatives' contentious plan to
deport asylum-seekers to Rwanda and introduced bills to strengthen
rights for workers and renters.
Starmer has traveled to Washington, the United Nations and European
capitals as he seeks to show that “ Britain is back ” after years of
inward-looking wrangling over Brexit. But the United Kingdom, like its
allies, has struggled to have much impact on spiraling conflicts in the
Middle East and the grinding war in Ukraine.
The new government also has faced crises at home, including days of
far-right-fueled anti-immigrant violence that erupted in towns and
cities across England and Northern Ireland in the summer. Starmer
condemned the rioters as “mindless thugs” and vowed to jail those
responsible. So far, more than 800 people have appeared in court and
almost 400 have gone to prison.
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Starmer’s most intractable problem is Britain’s sluggish economy,
hobbled by rising public debt and low growth of just 0.2% in August,
according to official figures.
Starmer has warned that things will be “tough in the short term” before
they get better. He says public spending will be constrained by a
22-billion-pound ($29 billion) “black hole” in the public finances left
by the Conservatives.
One of the government’s first acts was to strip millions of retirees of
a payment intended to help heat their homes in winter. It was intended
to signal determination to take tough economic decisions, but it spawned
a sharp backlash from Labour members and sections of the public.
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British Prime Minister Keir Starmer speaks to members of the media
in Rome, Monday, Sept. 16, 2024. (Phil Noble/Pool Photo via AP,
File)
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It also sat awkwardly with news that Starmer had accepted thousands
of pounds' (dollars') worth of clothes and designer eyeglasses from
a wealthy Labour donor. Starmer insisted the gifts were within the
rules, but after days of negative headlines agreed to pay back 6,000
pounds' (almost $8,000) worth of gifts and hospitality, including
tickets to see Taylor Swift.
Government officials and advisers have traded blame for the
faltering start, with the focus on Downing Street Chief of Staff Sue
Gray, and her reported tensions with Labour campaign strategist
Morgan McSweeney.
Amid intense media scrutiny — which produced the revelation that
Gray earned more than the prime minister — she resigned Sunday,
saying stories about her “risked becoming a distraction.” McSweeney
is replacing her as Starmer’s chief of staff.
Anand Menon, director of the political think tank U.K. in a Changing
Europe, wrote on its website that the government made “avoidable
mistakes” that allowed a “perception of incompetence and
dysfunction” to take hold.
The government’s focus is now on Oct. 30, when Treasury chief Rachel
Reeves will set out her first budget. The government is banking on a
mix of public and private investment to spur economic growth, but
needs to come up with billions for the task. Reeves has ruled out
increasing income tax, sales tax or corporation tax, but also says
there will be no “return to austerity” — a hard circle to square.
She is thought to be considering hiking levies on wealth such as
capital gains or inheritance tax.
The government is hoping it can take painful decisions early and
then turn things around by showing a growing economy and improving
living standards. And it has time — there does not have to be
another election until 2029.
Starmer was working from 10 Downing St. on his 100th day in office,
and insisted he would not be “knocked off course.”
“You get these days and weeks when things are choppy, there’s no
getting around that,” he told the BBC. “That is in the nature of
government.
"It’s been much tougher than anything I’ve done before, but much
better."
Bale said the government can rebuild trust with voters, if it shows
"not only that it’s had a pretty dire inheritance, but that it has a
plan to improve the country.”
“What’s been lacking in some ways is the vision thing,” he said. “I
don’t think people have that much of a sense of what Keir Starmer or
indeed Labour is about. And that’s something they need to put right
very quickly.”
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