Starmer has little to offer voters of either right or left in Gorton and Denton. That's why he's facing a perfect storm | Owen Jones
Briefly

Starmer has little to offer voters of either right or left in Gorton and Denton. That's why he's facing a perfect storm | Owen Jones
"Insofar as the party's masters have had a coherent political strategy, it is this: define Labour against the left, and compete with the right for votes. If the left is squealing or the Daily Mail is cheering, goes the thinking, Labour must be on the right track. Being forced to compete with the left was never part of the plan."
"Keir Starmer's chief of staff, Morgan McSweeney, doesn't have room for compromise with the hard left, as a former associate put it, believing they need to be eradicated from the party because they are so dangerous. It's as though the Starmerites assumed that once the left was vanquished inside Labour, it would simply vanish from politics altogether. They did not anticipate a leftwing insurgency in the form of Zack Polanski's Green party."
"In Gorton and Denton where Labour secured half the vote in 2024 the party is haemorrhaging support to Nigel Farage's hard-right Reform UK and to the Greens. But it is the Green candidate, the charismatic local plumber Hannah Spencer, who is now the bookies' firm favourite. The party has shared with me its latest doorstep data, based on 1,899 conversations in the constituency, that puts them on 34%, behind Reform on 39%, with Labour languishing on 21%."
Labour's leadership has pursued a strategy of defining the party against the left while competing with the right, prioritising expulsion of hard-left influence. Keir Starmer's inner team views the hard left as dangerous and seeks eradication, expecting marginalised leftists to fade away. A leftwing resurgence has emerged through the Greens, notably local candidate Hannah Spencer, attracting disaffected Labour voters. In Gorton and Denton Labour is losing ground to Reform UK and the Greens, with doorstep polling showing Greens around 34%, Reform 39% and Labour 21%, indicating significant erosion of Labour's left flank.
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