Dear Colleagues,

The result in Gorton and Denton is deeply disappointing.

Instead of a Labour MP who can be a local champion delivering for Gorton and Denton alongside a Labour Government and a Labour mayor, the people of Gorton and Denton now have a representative who is more interested in dividing people than uniting them. We have to learn lessons from that, and we will.

I know this is a tough result for our movement but I still want to thank you for everything you did to support our brilliant candidate Angeliki Stogia. She did a fantastic job and Gorton and Denton deserved to have her as their MP.

We’ve seen the true colours of Zack Polanski’s Greens in this campaign. The Greens were able to capitalise on an endorsement from George Galloway to win over enough voters to push them over the line. Their willingness to welcome Galloway’s divisive, sectarian politics is a sign that the Greens are not the harmless environmentalists they pretend to be, and their position on legalising all drugs shows how unstable this electoral coalition is. It cannot survive a general election campaign.

It hurts, but this is the kind of result that we have often seen parties of government face. In by-elections people can make their voice heard without risking a change of government. I get it: people are rightly impatient to see the change they voted for.

It’s my job to make sure that happens. And I’m working day in, day out to see it through.

Over the coming months, people will feel the benefit of the long-term decisions this government is taking. Look at the good economic news we’ve had in the past week: inflation and borrowing coming down, retail sales and business confidence rising, energy bills falling. And look at the policies that are going to make a difference in people’s lives in the coming months: the landmark Employment Rights Act, money off energy bills, the cruel two-child limit scrapped, more free breakfast clubs opening, Pride in Place funding coming through, NHS waiting lists continuing to fall. It will show what we’ve been saying from the outset of this year: the country is turning a corner. These are all Labour policies, putting Labour values into action - policies no other party would or could deliver.

The Greens may have won here, but they simply do not have the resources, the activist base or the local knowledge to replicate this victory across the country. We’ve seen that before. We’ve seen it with the Lib Dems, who have often won mid-term by-elections against both the Conservatives and Labour, but never been able to come close to winning nationally. We’ve seen it with George Galloway, who won two mid-term by elections but held neither of those seats in a general election.

We will continue to warn of the risk the Greens pose: the risk of extreme policies like legalising all drugs and pulling out of NATO that most voters strongly reject, and the risk of splitting the progressive vote so that Reform come through the middle.

The next election is too important to let that happen. It’s a fight we can win, and we’re going to win it.

Best, Keir

Keir Starmer, Prime Minister and Leader of the Labour Party

  • ModCen@feddit.uk
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    2 hours ago

    You all might hate me for this, but I think Keir is right about the NATO point. I think the UK should remain in NATO for now, and the UK should keep its nuclear weapons for now. Russia, a country with nuclear weapons, poses a big threat to the security of Europe and the UK. I think Britain’s nukes will help to keep the UK safe for the time being. Also China could pose a major military threat in the future. Even the US could potentially pose some form of threat to the UK; look at Trump’s strong dislike of European nations and the independence of those nations.

  • Blackmist@feddit.uk
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    7 hours ago

    TLDR:

    Have we really strayed so far from our working class roots?

    No, it’s the people who are wrong!

  • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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    11 hours ago

    That’s about what I thought. Take absolutely no responsibility whatsoever for the truly awful decisions that have actually made people’s lives objectively worse, ignore your own MPs that are telling you that your hardline policies on immigration are putting your traditional voters off, focus only on the few positive things they’ve done and completely ignore the fact that most people don’t know about any of them, because labour are the absolute worst at public engagement, as in they don’t do any at all.

    I’m so sick of this amateur hour politics, it’s been going on since Cameron and no one seems interested in actually doing the job anymore they just want to play at the culture wars.

    The Greens won in part because they promised to be actual politicians and to actually attempt to fix things rather than rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic. The ship is sinking and the politicians are blaming each other for sailing us into the iceberg.

  • kip@piefed.zip
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    20 hours ago

    if i’d still never heard of gorton & denton i’d guess it was some terrible odd couple cartoon cop partnership, gorton a stickler for the rules and denton the fiery young maverick

    in any case a decent result and predictable cope from starmer with [citation needed] applying all over. if only gorgeous george had done the decent thing we mightn’t be in such a pickle

    • rmuk@feddit.uk
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      4 hours ago

      Even when I was in the area I kept calling it Grolton & Hovris and no-one seemed to notice.

  • bearboiblake@pawb.socialOP
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    1 day ago

    the people of Gorton and Denton now have a representative who is more interested in dividing people than uniting them.

    It’s very helpful of him to announce, right out of the gate, that he is going to learn all the wrong lessons from this.

    • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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      11 hours ago

      If he were the competent politician that he claims to be, he would eat his humble pie and admit that a lot of this is his fault; and work with the Greens to fight reform rather than suggesting that it’s the Greens responsibility to just give up.

  • wewbull@feddit.uk
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    24 hours ago

    Got to love the policies he picks on.

    legalising all drugs and pulling out of NATO

    Drug legalisation just makes sense. It kills the black market which funds global criminal organisations, let’s the government set regulations on safety of supply and allows for people to be treated for their addictions properly.

    Pulling out of NATO is in reference to Trump and how the US isn’t a reliable ally. It is not about breaking relationships with Europe or CANZUK.

    There are certainly things you could argue against the Greens on, but these are stupid.

    • luisgutz@feddit.uk
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      23 hours ago

      Also, it’s a lie: the greens position is not to legalize all drugs, but to have an evidence based approach.

      • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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        6 hours ago

        Maybe they could hire the guy who originally did the drug classifications for the government and then they fired because they didn’t like the answers.

  • Denjin@feddit.uk
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    24 hours ago

    The idea of saying “those lefties are trying to divide us!” is the most Kier Starmerish thing Kier Starmer has ever Kier Starmered.

    YOU are not the party of inclusive and progressive politics any longer. Gorton and Denton have shown that, in the old heartland of industrial Britain and former labour stronghold, people would rather vote for the Greens because they no longer see Labour as the political force it once was.

  • Bassman27@lemmy.world
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    22 hours ago

    Good economic news we’ve had this week? You mean youth unemployment at a 5 year high? Stagnating wages? Rough sleeping at a record levels?

    My man is living on a different planet

    • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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      11 hours ago

      I think he means that the economy has grown by a tiny percentage point. Which yes it has but that has more to do with the EU striking trades deals and opening up the market to UK businesses than it does Labour.

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    1 day ago

    Their willingness to welcome Galloway’s divisive, sectarian politics is a sign that the Greens are not the harmless environmentalists they pretend to be

    I didn’t realise the greens were this based.

    • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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      11 hours ago

      I haven’t really been paying attention to the greens until recently and I didn’t even know that George Galloway was associated with them. So if his arguement is people are only interested in them because of Galloway that’s incorrect.

      People are interested in them because they’re an actually progressive party. Ever since your party collapsed they were the obvious vote for people who felt unrepresented by labour. But labour themselves seem to be utterly shocked by this

      • RobotToaster@mander.xyz
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        7 hours ago

        He’s not really associated with them, the workers party (that he leads) withdrew and endorsed her so they didn’t split the vote.