
It claims Morgan McSweeney, now the Downing Street chief of staff, suggested Starmer behaved “like an HR manager, not a leader”, while another senior adviser said Starmer wrongly thought he was “driving the train” because his aides had sat him at the front of a driverless one.
For Starmer, such revelations are wounding. They would matter less if Labour had not had such a wobbly start in government.
Some of the damning quotes are out of date, from the period before Starmer’s 2021 nadir and his decision to go for broke. They probably elevate the power of advisers above their real status. Indeed, some Labour figures jokingly describe Get In, by the well-connected Times journalists Patrick Maguire and Gabriel Pogrund, as “a biography of Morgan McSweeney”.
Their book shines a light on the relationship between leading politicians and their influential advisers. Although Margaret Thatcher was technically correct in saying “advisers advise, ministers decide”, some senior aides get above themselves – notably Dominic Cummings who, just weeks after helping Boris Johnson win the 2019 election to get Brexit done, discussed replacing him as PM.
Although McSweeney was the architect of last year’s remarkable election victory, I don't think he has overreached in the way Cummings did. Perhaps McSweeney allies were overzealous in briefing the book’s authors about his undoubted abilities and in doing so, inadvertently portrayed him as a puppet master. That is demeaning for the “puppet” – Starmer.
This story is from the February 08, 2025 edition of The Independent.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the February 08, 2025 edition of The Independent.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In

Cool, calm and collected
George Szirtes remembers Martin Bell whom he met as a student and his poems that glitter with laughter and desire

Baby boomers paying more income tax than Gen-Zers
More baby boomers are paying income tax than Gen-Z workers, in a significant shift since the pandemic.

For better or worse, Brown is our first Stream Queen
‘Stranger Things’ star Millie Bobby Brown has eschewed the usual A-list route, instead committing to a run of middling to poor) Netflix originals. Louis Chilton considers her rise

Is Clueless’ the musical just a cynical knock-off? As if!
Creator Amy Heckerling joins musician KT Tunstall and lyricist Glenn Slater to make something original and fun, says Alice Saville. They even find a rhyme for clueless’

Logical Tuchel pushes old values at start of his new era
If Thomas Tuchel's appointment was supposed to be about winning now, his first step has been to look back.

Truss spent taxpayer money on CV advice for ex-staffer
Liz Truss spent 285 of taxpayer cash helping one of her staffers brush up their CV after losing her seat at the general election.

How Cheltenham fought back against drunken chaos
With punters descending for race week, Alex Ross joins police officers cracking down on antisocial behaviour

The TV that aged like milk
Our culture writers choose the most problematic television of the 21st century, from Little Britain’ to Baby Reindeer’

Hamilton trails Leclerc in the Australian GP practice
New Ferrari driver must settle for fifth as British teen crashes

SO SOLID CRUISER
Sean O’Grady falls in love with the Toyota Invincible... an old-school indestructible four-wheel drive that’s a serious toy