The Scotsman

Starmer on form despite rumours of coup plotting

- By ALEXANDER BROWN newsdeskts@scotsman.com

Sir Keir Starmer had a strong showing at Prime Minister’s Questions amid growing talk of a coup to oust him should Labour lose today’s Batley and Spen by-election.

The Labour leader skewered the Prime Minister over the resignatio­n of Matt Hancock in a performanc­e that for once played to the gallery, rather than simply the argument.

There were even jokes, with Sir Keir pointedly looking at the SNP benches while repeating "the whole house" will wish the England team well on Saturday. Crisis? What crisis.

Speaking with the confidence of a man not facing a crucial week for his leadership, Sir Keir questioned why Mr Johnson had initially stood by the former health secretary only to then suggest he sacked him.

So often ready with a witty riposte, Mr Johnson could only point to the success of the vaccine taskforce – a stock answer now used to escape all criticism.

Sticking the boot in, Sir Keir embraced the nostalgia of a Tory affair scandal by saying it was evidence of there being "one rule for them and another rule for everybody else".

His remarks followed Sir Keir citing the case of 27-yearold Ollie Bibby, who died of leukaemia the day before the pictures of Mr Hancock were taken, with just one person at his bedside.

In response, the Prime Minster claimed “we all share the grief and the pain”, only to dismiss Sir Keir’s criticism as something only cared about in the “westminste­rbubble”.

Coming just one week after Mr Johnson’s “they jabber, we jab, they dither, we deliver” response to a question on low rape conviction­s, the Prime Minister appears to no longer be able to win the debate on puns alone.

Mr Johnson is no stranger to making gaffes and it has not held him back, but supporting Mr Hancock while Britons died alone is not a convention­aleve-ofpollmess­age.

The session was a muchneeded boost for Sir Keir, with the Tories quietly confident they will be able to swoop to victory in the Red Wall seat today.

Yesterday the Labour leader’s spokesman confirmed Sir Keir would stay regardless of the by-election result, and having recently reshuffled his advisers, the former head of the CPS is clearly in it for the long haul.

His performanc­e at PMQS showed promise, but today will show results upon which his leadership will be judged.

The left, never knowingly not engaged in factional infighting, have been preparing to try and oust him since Sir Keir was appointed.

But to what end? Polling yesterday showed Yvette Cooper would be the most popular replacemen­t, a strong MP, but one who is no friend to the left of the party.

It also showed seven in ten party members would prefer Andy Burnham as boss, which is flattering for the Manchester mayor, but also would require him to have a seat.

Ultimately the Labour leader is only going to go if there is a substantia­l appetite to oust him, and a realistic candidate to do so. That isn’t the case, regardless of what happens in Batley and Spen.

 ??  ?? 0 Keir Starmer with Labour candidate in Batley and Spen, Kim Leadbeater
0 Keir Starmer with Labour candidate in Batley and Spen, Kim Leadbeater

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