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New year is the ideal time for Keir Starmer to drop his 'bad cop' act

The Guardian Weekly

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January 03, 2025

Who is dreading the new year more: Keir Starmer or Rachel Reeves? Most people look forward to the turn of the year as a chance that better things might be on the way, but it's hard for the UK's prime minister and chancellor to glance ahead to the next few months and expect 2025 to be any more fun than the latter half of 2024.

- Isabel Hardman

New year is the ideal time for Keir Starmer to drop his 'bad cop' act

Reeves has a spending review where she is expecting ministers to find 5% efficiencies in their departments, so is nailed on for another 12 months of being the least popular person at the cabinet table. For Starmer, though, the misery isn't inevitable. Or at least, it might not be if he changes the way he operates.

One of the reasons Labour has managed to make governing look quite so hard is that both Starmer and Reeves are playing the bad cop at the moment. It started as soon as Labour came into government: the narrative about the £22bn ($28bn) black hole and the mess left by the Tories being worse than expected was essential to making the Conservative party's route back to power much longer. But by now, the good cop should have emerged. He hasn't. Starmer is still stuck complaining about the Tories, rather than enthusing about his own vision. Prime minister's questions is often a series of exchanges about which party is not quite as bad as the other, rather than Starmer confidently steamrollering a depleted Tory party. The most positive he gets is when there is some vaguely cheering economic news: something he may not be able to do very much of in 2025 if the economy continues to flatline.

FLERE HISTORIER FRA The Guardian Weekly

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The best way to end this '6-7' obsession? Adults get on board

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time to read

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For years, countries around the world pressed the US to engage with them in addressing the climate crisis and to show it was serious about taking action.

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'Matt's too sexy for my show'

As his scandalous novel The Death of Bunny Munro lands on our screens, Nick Cave and the show's star Matt Smith discuss Kylie, bad dads and child actors

time to read

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When the president is groped in public, women know who to blame

'Machismo in Mexico is so fucked up not even the president is safe,\" said Caterina Camastra, a professor and feminist, when I talked to her in Morelia, a city west of the Mexican capital last week.

time to read

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Zohran Mamdani built the greatest field operation by any political campaign in New York's history-by getting citizens to talk to each other.Can Democrats learn from his success? 'Unstoppable force' that drove victory

A WEEK BEFORE ZOHRAN MAMDANI'S convention-shattering victory in the New York City mayoral election, members of his vast army of youthful volunteers were amply aware of what was at stake.

time to read

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