Versuchen GOLD - Frei
Starmer chose the right time to confront intolerant Farage
The Independent
|October 02, 2025
There's a party game I've never played called Fuck, Marry, Kill. Before Labour conference, Keir Starmer will have been consulting with his closest advisers on how to play his own version of the game regarding Nigel Farage and Reform UK. This game is called “Accommodate, Confront, Ignore”.
“Ignore” had some attractions. Last week, John Curtice, that monument to psephology, advised the prime minister that to talk a lot about immigration or asylum (and, inevitably, also about Reform) was tantamount to choosing to fight battles on the enemy's ground. Far better to concentrate on the government's main tasks and many voters' main preoccupations: the economy, the cost of living and the state of public services.
At the conference, there were takers for this view. Reform may be buoyant right now, they were arguing, but it is still a party with just five MPs and led by someone who has never run anything in his life - a sort of right-wing Jeremy Corbyn. Best to spend the valuable attention that a PM's speech always gets by concentrating on your own agenda.
It was ironic to hear some journalists pushing this view, having in effect constantly pushed the Farage elephant into the political room and now demanding that the prime minister ignore it. But the polls don't allow it. Nor does the media's concentration on Reform voters and the Reform phenomenon at the expense of almost everything else. At some point, it had to be directly addressed. But how?
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der October 02, 2025-Ausgabe von The Independent.
Abonnieren Sie Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierter Premium-Geschichten und über 9.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Sie sind bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON The Independent
The Independent
More to come from Benn and Hearn's shock split
There are people in the fight business who claim that Conor Benn's defection is normal, writes Steve Bunce. However, his relationship with promoter Eddie Hearn was anything but
2 mins
February 24, 2026
The Independent
Class rage oozes through ace sewage crisis drama
Featuring a top turn from David Thewlis, 'Dirty Business' makes for powerful viewing, writes Catriona O'Sullivan
3 mins
February 24, 2026
The Independent
BBC apologises for racial slur broadcast during Baftas
Incident was result of 'involuntary tics' and 'not intentional'
4 mins
February 24, 2026
The Independent
Parents like me don’t trust these latest SEND reforms
I don’t often hear my wife listening to soft classical music on the radio at the start of the day.
3 mins
February 24, 2026
The Independent
All Russia has to show for this invasion is pain
When Vladimir Putin launched his cynically euphemistic “special military operation” against Ukraine four years ago, it was supposed to last about a week. In that time, according to the Kremlin’s plan, Volodymyr Zelensky - a supposed “Nazi” who just happens to be Jewish - was expected to flee Kyiv to some comfortable bolthole in the West.
3 mins
February 24, 2026
The Independent
Why television keeps falling in love with the Kennedys
As Ryan Murphy takes on the story of doomed couple JFK Jr and Carolyn Bessette, Katie Rosseinsky explores the quasi-mythical appeal of a family entwined with popular culture
7 mins
February 24, 2026
The Independent
Why can't MPs debate the future of the former prince?
Even the Prince of Wales has felt able to make an oblique reference to the allegations levelled at his uncle, the former Prince Andrew, remarking on his arrival at last night’s Bafta Awards that he had not yet seen the film Hamnet as he was “not in a calm state” such that he could enjoy it.
3 mins
February 24, 2026
The Independent
Ukraine can survive – but it needs our assistance to win
As the war grinds into its fifth year, Sam Kiley looks back on a conflict that has seen not just a shift in war technology, but a stubborn country standing up to its much larger neighbour
5 mins
February 24, 2026
The Independent
Is it safe to fly via Doha if the US is threatening Iran?
Q We have booked to travel to Australia next March with Qatar Airways via Doha. In light of Donald Trump's threat to strike Iran would you advise us to use a different airline, avoiding the Middle East?
1 mins
February 24, 2026
The Independent
Fresh protests erupt in Iran as students honour the dead
Iran was rocked by fresh protests across its universities over the weekend as fears rise of US military intervention against the Tehran regime.
2 mins
February 24, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size

