Keir Starmer Faces Labour Backlash Over Benefits Reform: Fallout, Concessions, and Political Unrest
“What an absolute bloody shambles!”
When we say this is the raw perspective of a Labour MP who’s now ready to support Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s benefits plans, it really highlights the level of anger this situation has stirred up—and continues to stir.
There are still many who aren’t satisfied and are either advocating for more changes or gearing up to vote against these measures..
“It is not the resolution lots of people want. They are tinkering with a broken bill,” another MP tells us.
After some backbench Labour MPs pushed back against the government’s proposed welfare reforms, the prime minister decided to make some concessions. He stated that the stricter criteria would only be applied to new claimants.
“Clearly some at least will have been pacified by the concessions but there are still very significant numbers” of opponents, a third MP texts, adding “it shouldn’t be underestimated the potential effect of a weekend of emails from constituents, constituency surgeries etc”.
Debbie Abrahams, the Labour MP who chairs the Work and Pensions Select Committee, told the BBC: “The concessions are a good start, they are very good concessions and they will protect existing claimants.
“However there are still concerns about new claimants. It would not be right for me not to do anything just to spare the prime minister an inconvenience.”
In other words, she does not appear won over yet.
Some note that Disability Labour, which describes itself as “an independent socialist society affiliated to the UK Labour Party” is still urging all MPs to oppose the plans.
After some backbench Labour MPs pushed back against the government’s proposed welfare reforms, the prime minister decided to make some concessions. He stated that the stricter criteria would only be applied to new claimants.
Downing Street “see us as an inconvenience, people to manage, not to listen to. When we are invited into No 10, and it doesn’t happen often, it is to be told what to think,” is how one MP puts it.
It’s pretty easy to come across some pretty straightforward opinions about the Prime Minister and his Chief of Staff, Morgan McSweeney.
Concerned MPs have mentioned that the whips—those responsible for maintaining party discipline—have brought up the worries of many to Downing Street.
“They either didn’t think about it or didn’t think new MPs would have the balls to stand up to them,” reflected one.
“Perhaps this is the moment they finally get it,” reflects another, “and they get better at talking to us, and listening.”
Keir Starmer has made a significant shift on benefits changes following a backlash from Labour. He claims, “We’ve got the right balance,” after reversing his stance on the benefits issue. The political landscape is heating up for Starmer as he navigates the storm surrounding welfare reforms. Some are concerned that Chancellor Rachel Reeves’ six-month cycle of trying to adhere to her self-imposed fiscal rules will lead to a continuous search for cuts.
There are those who believe that the only way forward might be to bring in a new chancellor. However, senior figures in the government argue that Starmer and Reeves represent the modern Labour Party in power. They emphasize that being viewed as responsible stewards of the nation’s finances is crucial, and Reeves’ fiscal guidelines are a step in that direction.
As the week comes to a close, those around the prime minister are probably feeling a mix of relief and optimism, believing they’ve taken the least troublesome route to tackle the unrest surrounding benefits. They might even pause for a moment to reflect on nearly a year in office.
Next Friday will mark the first anniversary of the general election, which means it’s been 12 months since Sir Keir Starmer stepped into the role of prime minister.
In light of this milestone, he has sat down for an interview with his biographer, Tom Baldwin, who is also a journalist and the former Director of Communications for the Labour Party, featured in The Observer.
In it, Sir Keir said he was too gloomy last summer and he regreted saying “the damage” done to the country by immigration in recent years “is incalculable”. He also said that his remark that immigration risked turning the UK into an “island of strangers” was a mistake and repudiates much else of the political strategy of his first year in office.
After spending the week trying to repair relationships with various members of the left and centre-left factions of the Labour Party, this interview has somehow managed to alienate his allies as well.
“Outrageous”, “weak”, “totally lacking in moral fibre” are just a few of the choice words from Starmer loyalists – yes, loyalists.
There’s a lot of frustration brewing over the idea that he’s throwing his closest aides under the bus.
A senior government source mentioned they were too upset to even talk about it.
Right now, it feels like the prime minister is a politician who just can’t seem to get anything right.
This situation raises an even bigger question about what the prime minister truly believes in.
If those comments about immigration were indeed a blunder, what are his real thoughts on the matter?
As he navigates his second year in No 10, finding clarity and steering clear of mistakes will be crucial.
Keir Starmer Faces Labour Backlash Over Benefits Reform: Fallout, Concessions, and Political Unrest












