Will Labour revive Britain? Keir Starmer has become only the fifth Labour leader ever to win a general election. He inherits a country in the steepest decline it has ever known.
Starmer is new PM, Farage enters parliament
Will Labour revive Britain? Keir Starmer has become only the fifth Labour leader ever to win a general election. He inherits a country in the steepest decline it has ever known.
Fourteen years. Five prime ministers. Economic crisis, wars, Brexit, pandemic. Now Britain turns the page as LabourBritain's main left-of-centre political party. wins its first election in almost two decades.
As of 10am on Friday morning, Labour's majority is the second-biggest since 1945.1 Meanwhile the ConservativesA traditionally right-wing or centre right political party in the UK. Members are sometimes called Tories. have suffered their worst result in history, with 23% of the vote and just 120 seats.
But Labour did not get it all their own way. Their 34% of the vote was only slightly higher than in their crushing 2019 defeat.3
So what will happen next?
The result is likely to fuel demands for proportional representation. Labour won a third of the vote but 63% of the seats in the House of CommonsThe democratically elected house of the UK Parliament. It consists of 650 Members of Parliament. . The Liberal DemocratsAlso known as the Lib Dems, a liberal political party in the UK. have won 71 seats on 12% of the vote, while ReformMaking big changes to how a system works. picked up just four on 14%.4
For centuries, the Conservatives have dominated Britain's political right. Now it may even disappear completely.
With his massive majority and a loyal party, Keir Starmer is now one of the most powerful prime ministers in history. Supporters are optimistic he can use that power to fix a broken country.
But the size of that majority could cause its own problems. Labour now represents voters across the political spectrum. It cannot keep them all happy.
Either way, Labour cannot afford overconfidence. Starmer enters office the least popular a new prime minister has ever been. Three in five people say they dislike him.4 It is not a good starting point for a government that will have to make unpopular choices.
If the voters are unhappy with those choices, they could take away this big majority as easily as they gifted it.
Will Labour revive Britain?
Yes: Labour has been itching for this moment for two decades. Starmer is a competent leader who gets things done. The party can get to grips with the crisis and deliver a new age.
No: Britain's crisis is deep and lasting, and will take a lot of spending to solve. Labour has put itself in a straitjacket by refusing to raise taxes or borrow money. It does not have any way of solving our problems.
Or... Labour may look powerful but with just a third of the vote, it has not yet won the legitimacyWhen a ruler or institution has the right to lead or rule. for a drastic transformation of the country. Now begins the task of persuasion.
Keywords
Labour - Britain's main left-of-centre political party.
Conservatives - A traditionally right-wing or centre right political party in the UK. Members are sometimes called Tories.
House of Commons - The democratically elected house of the UK Parliament. It consists of 650 Members of Parliament.
Liberal Democrats - Also known as the Lib Dems, a liberal political party in the UK.
Reform - Making big changes to how a system works.
Legitimacy - When a ruler or institution has the right to lead or rule.
Starmer is new PM, Farage enters parliament
Glossary
Labour - Britain's main left-of-centre political party.
Conservatives - A traditionally right-wing or centre right political party in the UK. Members are sometimes called Tories.
House of Commons - The democratically elected house of the UK Parliament. It consists of 650 Members of Parliament.
Liberal Democrats - Also known as the Lib Dems, a liberal political party in the UK.
Reform - Making big changes to how a system works.
Legitimacy - When a ruler or institution has the right to lead or rule.