Why Labour wants to hang the Tory legacy around the Conservatives’ necks for years | Andrew Rawnsley

Why Labour wants to hang the Tory legacy around the Conservatives’ necks for years | Andrew Rawnsley

Labour, Keir Starmer, Politics, David Lammy, George Osborne, Conservatives, Wes Streeting, UK news, Politics past Business | The Guardian

​The positive messages from Sir Keir Starmer’s team are being accompanied by a doleful drumbeat about the direness of the situation they’ve inheritedFor a man whose first speech to the new parliament expressed disdain for “the politics of performance”, Sir Keir Starmer is putting on quite the show. His first 10 days at Number 10 have been choreographed to relentlessly convey the impression that the fresh-minted prime minister and his team have arrived in office not with a whimper, but a bang.Downing Street released footage of Sir Keir taking the customary congratulatory call from the White House: “Mr Prime Minister, congratulations! What a hell of a victory!” Hail to the chief. The cameras were also invited into the cabinet room. Grinning new ministers were told, rather superfluously, that they had “a huge amount of work to do”. Then there was the shock-and-awe photo of the supreme leader with his huge cohort of Labour MPs fanned around him like peacock feathers. Continue reading… 

The positive messages from Sir Keir Starmer’s team are being accompanied by a doleful drumbeat about the direness of the situation they’ve inherited

For a man whose first speech to the new parliament expressed disdain for “the politics of performance”, Sir Keir Starmer is putting on quite the show. His first 10 days at Number 10 have been choreographed to relentlessly convey the impression that the fresh-minted prime minister and his team have arrived in office not with a whimper, but a bang.

Downing Street released footage of Sir Keir taking the customary congratulatory call from the White House: “Mr Prime Minister, congratulations! What a hell of a victory!” Hail to the chief. The cameras were also invited into the cabinet room. Grinning new ministers were told, rather superfluously, that they had “a huge amount of work to do”. Then there was the shock-and-awe photo of the supreme leader with his huge cohort of Labour MPs fanned around him like peacock feathers.

Continue reading… 

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