Difference between revisions of "Keir Starmer"

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{{person
 
{{person
|name=Sir Keir Rodney Starmer
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|name=Sir Keir Starmer
|image=Starmer_DofE.png
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|image=Starmer_PM.jpg
 
|image_width=240px
 
|image_width=240px
|birth_date=1962-09-02
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|image_caption=
 +
|birth_date=2 September 1962
 
|birth_name=Keir Rodney Starmer
 
|birth_name=Keir Rodney Starmer
 
|death_date=
 
|death_date=
|constitutes=lawyer, politician
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|constitutes=lawyer, politician, deep state operative?, puppet leader
 +
|description=A suspected [[deep state operative]], who as [[Director of Public Prosecutions]] failed to prosecute [[Jimmy Savile]] but pressed on with charges against [[Julian Assange]].
 
|wikipedia=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keir_Starmer
 
|wikipedia=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keir_Starmer
 
|spouses=Victoria Alexander
 
|spouses=Victoria Alexander
 
|alma_mater=University of Leeds, St Edmund Hall (Oxford)
 
|alma_mater=University of Leeds, St Edmund Hall (Oxford)
 
|website=http://keirstarmer.com
 
|website=http://keirstarmer.com
 +
|nationality=UK
 
|twitter=https://twitter.com/Keir_Starmer
 
|twitter=https://twitter.com/Keir_Starmer
 
|birth_place=London, England
 
|birth_place=London, England
 
|political_parties=Labour
 
|political_parties=Labour
 +
|interests=Labour Friends of Israel
 
|children=2
 
|children=2
 
|powerbase=http://www.powerbase.info/index.php/Keir_Starmer
 
|powerbase=http://www.powerbase.info/index.php/Keir_Starmer
 
|employment={{job
 
|employment={{job
|title=Leader of the Labour Party
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|title=UK/Prime Minister
|start=4 April 2020
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|start=5 July 2024
 
|end=
 
|end=
 
}}{{job
 
}}{{job
 
|title=UK/Leader of the Opposition
 
|title=UK/Leader of the Opposition
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|start=4 April 2020
 +
|end=4 July 2024
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}}{{job
 +
|title=Leader of the Labour Party
 
|start=4 April 2020
 
|start=4 April 2020
 
|end=
 
|end=
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|end=4 April 2020
 
|end=4 April 2020
 
}}{{job
 
}}{{job
|title=Member of Parliament for Holborn and St Pancras
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|title=UK/Member of Parliament for Holborn and St Pancras
 
|start=7 May 2015
 
|start=7 May 2015
 
|end=
 
|end=
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}}
 
}}
 
}}
 
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'''Sir Keir Rodney Starmer''' is a [[UK]] [[politician]] and former Head of the [[Crown Prosecution Service]] and the [[Director of Public Prosecutions]], where he was central in making sure the case against [[Julian Assange]] continued. He has been a [[Labour Party]] Member of Parliament since the 2015 General Election, and on 6 October 2016 he was appointed Shadow Brexit Secretary by [[Jeremy Corbyn]]<ref>''[http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-37579687 "Appointed Shadow Brexit Secretary by Jeremy Corbyn"]''</ref>. Starmer soon became part of the effort to oust Corbyn as Labour leader.
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'''Sir Keir Starmer''' is a [[British]] [[Labour Party]] politician who succeeded [[Rishi Sunak]] as [[Prime Minister of the United Kingdom]] following the [[UK/General election/2024]].<ref>''[https://www.theguardian.com/politics/ng-interactive/2024/jul/05/eleven-charts-that-show-how-labour-won-by-a-landslide "Twelve charts that show how Labour won by a landslide"]''</ref>
  
On 4 April 2020, following the [[2020 Labour Party leadership contest]],<ref>''[https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-51055663 "Labour leadership: Phillips and Nandy secure nominations"]''</ref> Sir Keir Starmer was elected [[Leader of the Labour Party]] to succeed [[Jeremy Corbyn]].<ref>''[https://twitter.com/UKLabour/status/1246375178684239874 "Congratulations to @Keir_Starmer, the new Leader of the Labour Party!"]''</ref> On 17 April 2020, it was revealed that Starmer had received a £50,000 donation from pro-[[Israel lobby]]ist [[Trevor Chinn]] – information which was not disclosed until after polls had closed in the [[2020 Labour Party leadership contest|leadership election]].<ref>''[https://www.thecanary.co/exclusive/2020/04/17/keir-starmer-received-50000-donation-from-pro-israel-lobbyist-in-leadership-bid/ "Keir Starmer received £50,000 donation from pro-Israel lobbyist in leadership bid"]''</ref>
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On 5 July 2024, [[Craig Murray]] wrote:{{QB|
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:"Millions fewer people turned out to make Keir Starmer Prime Minister than turned out to attempt the same for [[Jeremy Corbyn]]. That is the most important fact of [[UK/General election/2024|this election]], and the one the [[mainstream media]] works hardest to hide.
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:"I don’t think any Prime Minister has ever come to power with less popular enthusiasm than Keir Starmer."<ref>''[[Document:The Rejection of Starmerism]]''</ref>}}
  
On 5 June 2020, [[Matt Kennard]] posed five questions for [[Sir Spooky Starmer]] to answer:{{QB|The public deserves answers about the UK’s new opposition leader and his relationship with the British [[national security]] [[establishment]], including the [[MI5]] and the ''[[Times]]'' newspaper, his former role in the [[Julian Assange]] case and his membership in the intelligence-linked [[Trilateral Commission]].<ref>''[https://thegrayzone.com/2020/06/05/five-questions-for-new-labour-leader-sir-keir-starmer-about-his-uk-and-us-national-security-establishment-links/ "Five questions for new Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer about his UK and US national security establishment links"]''</ref>}}
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==From law to politics==
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Keir Starmer is a former [[Director of Public Prosecutions]] and Head of the [[Crown Prosecution Service]], where he was central in making sure the case against [[Julian Assange]] continued.
  
Following Labour's crushing defeat in the [[2021 Hartlepool by-election]], [[Max Blumenthal]] tweeted on 7 May 2021:{{QB|Keir Starmer did not become leader to help [[Labour Party|Labour]] win, but to restore [[establishment]] control over the party and vanquish the heretics that dared defy its agenda. For the forces he truly represents, the project has been a smashing success.<ref>''[https://twitter.com/CraigMurrayOrg/status/1390924195790561280 "Keir Starmer did not become leader to help Labour win, but to restore establishment control over the party"]''</ref>}}
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Aged 53, Keir Starmer was elected [[Labour Party]] Member of Parliament for [[Holborn and St Pancras]] constituency at the 2015 General Election, and on 6 October 2016 he was appointed Shadow Brexit Secretary by [[Jeremy Corbyn]]<ref>''[http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-37579687 "Appointed Shadow Brexit Secretary by Jeremy Corbyn"]''</ref> whom he later helped to oust, taking over as [[Leader of the Labour Party|Labour leader]].
  
In November 2021, he told the [[BBC]] that he hadn't spoken to Corbyn in over a year.<ref>https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-59422675</ref> He said [[Tony Blair]]'s knighthood was well deserved.<ref>https://labourlist.org/2022/01/he-deserves-the-honour-keir-starmer-welcomes-knighthood-for-tony-blair/</ref>
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On 5 June 2020, [[Matt Kennard]] posed five questions for him to answer:{{QB|The public deserves answers about the UK’s new opposition leader and his relationship with the British [[national security]] [[establishment]], including the [[MI5]] and the ''[[Times]]'' newspaper, his former role in the [[Julian Assange]] case and his membership in the intelligence-linked [[Trilateral Commission]].<ref>''[https://thegrayzone.com/2020/06/05/five-questions-for-new-labour-leader-sir-keir-starmer-about-his-uk-and-us-national-security-establishment-links/ "Five questions for new Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer about his UK and US national security establishment links"]''</ref>}}
  
 
==Background==
 
==Background==
Keir Starmer was born in 1962 in Southwark, London. His father, Rod Starmer, was a toolmaker, and his mother, Josephine Starmer (née Baker), was a nurse. Starmer’s parents were both staunch Labour supporters, and they named Keir – their second son – after the first leader of the Labour Party, Keir Hardie.
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Keir Starmer was born in 1962 in Southwark, London. His father, Rodney Starmer, was a toolmaker, and his mother, Josephine Starmer (née Baker), was a nurse. His parents were both staunch [[Labour]] supporters, and they named Keir – their second son – after the first leader of the Labour Party, [[Keir Hardie]]. In contrast to his three siblings who all went the the local Comprehensive school, Starmer passed his 11-plus exam and gained entry into Reigate Grammar school. Starmer then studied law at [[Leeds University]], where he graduated with a first-class Bachelor of Laws (LLB) in 1985, before winning a place at Oxford where he graduated with a Bachelor of Civic Law (BCL) in 1986.
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===Toolmaker father===
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[[File:Keir's_dad_Rodney.webp|300px|left|thumb|Keir Starmer with his parents, Rodney and Josephine, at his 2007 wedding to wife Victoria]]
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[[File:Rodney_Starmer_toolmaker.webp|400px|right|thumb|Rodney Starmer: Keir spent six months before university working "in my factory operating a production machine"]]
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In March 2018, [[Starmer]] told the [[BBC]]’s [[Nick Robinson]] that his father Rodney "was a toolmaker working in a factory and working every hour, basically." The following year, he told the [[BBC Radio 4]]'s ''Today'' programme that his father "worked in a factory" as a toolmaker. The inference that listeners might have drawn is that Rodney Starmer was employed by somebody else. For reasons best known to himself, Keir Starmer did not use any of these opportunities to explain that his father, in fact, ran his own business, the Oxted Tool Company, as a sole trader. Reflecting on his son’s knighthood in 2014, Rodney Starmer wrote in Oxted’s theatre newsletter that his son had spent six months before university working "in my factory operating a production machine." Perhaps it would be most accurate to say that Starmer’s background was neither working class nor 'posh', as some commentators have attempted to prove, but was instead closer to what sociologists would once have called ''petit bourgeois''. This French term is akin to lower-middle class.<ref>''[https://labourheartlands.com/keir-starmer-my-dad-was-a-toolmaker-and-other-little-grifts/ "Keir Starmer: ‘My Dad Was a Toolmaker’ and Other Little Grifts"]''</ref>
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===Line of gamekeepers===
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[[File:Herbert_Starmer.webp|300px|right|thumb|Gamekeeper grandfather Herbert Starmer was a [[Tory]] and lived in Marden Castle. Gamekeepers are traditionally considered obsequious minions to the lords of the manor<ref>https://www.edwardianpromenade.com/occupations/the-edwardian-gamekeeper/</ref>]]
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On 5 June 2024, [[Ricky Tomlinson]] posted on '''[[X]]''':{{QB|
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:Keir Starmer keeps on mentioning his dad (Rodney) was a toolmaker but never mentions that his grandfather (Herbert) was a [[Tory]] who lived in Marden Castle or that his great-uncle was Chairman of the Godstone Conservative Association.<ref>''[https://x.com/MyArrse/status/1798229719793746395 Keir Starmer keeps on mentioning his dad was a toolmaker"]''</ref>}}<ref>''[https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13480869/Sir-Keir-Labour-leader-rural-poverty-childhood-grandfather-Marden-Castle-great-uncle-chairman-Godstone-Conservative-Association.html "Revealed: Sir Keir's family castle! The Labour leader talked about rural poverty in his childhood. He didn't mention that his grandfather lived in Marden Castle - and his great-uncle was chairman of the Godstone Conservative Association"]''</ref>
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On 27 May 2024, ''[[The Telegraph]]'' reported that Keir Starmer comes from a line of gamekeepers, according to a 1977 pamphlet written by his grandfather Herbert for the [http://bournesoc.org.uk/ Bourne Society:]{{QB|
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:Herbert Starmer remembered his rural upbringing fondly – how their cottage would be used by the shoot to hide from the rain and his gamekeeper father left with a gun slung under his arm.
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:Some of his earliest memories, he told a local history pamphlet, were catching rabbits and of the tame fox living in the family’s shed.
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:The quintessential image of a rural life is a far cry from that of his grandson – the knighted [[human rights]] barrister who is vying to become the country’s next prime minister.
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:In the interview, a copy of which has been obtained by ''[[The Telegraph]]'', Herbert Starmer explains how his father (Gustavus), his seven uncles, and his grandfather were all gamekeepers.<ref>''[https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2024/05/27/keir-starmer-should-protect-countryside-line-gamekeeper/ "Keir Starmer should protect the countryside – he comes from a line of gamekeepers"]''</ref>}}
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===Marriage===
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Starmer met [[Victoria Alexander]], then a solicitor, in the early [[2000s]] while he was a senior barrister with [[Doughty Street Chambers]], becoming engaged in 2004 and married on 6 May 2007.<ref>https://web.archive.org/web/20240702115345/https://www.standard.co.uk/lifestyle/victoria-starmer-solicitor-keir-wife-first-lady-b1164846.html</ref> The couple have two children, a son, who was born a year after their wedding, and a daughter, born two years after that. Both are being brought up in the [[Jewish]] faith of their mother.<ref>https://web.archive.org/web/20220925100146/http://thejc.com/news/uk/starmer-our-kids-are-being-brought-up-to-know-their-jewish-backgrounds-1.508720</ref><ref>https://web.archive.org/web/20240527130423/https://graziadaily.co.uk/life/in-the-news/lady-victoria-starmer/</ref> The couple was "set to bring Shabbat to Downing Street,"<ref>https://www.jpost.com/international/article-809065</ref> Starmer suggesting he would be off the clock by 6pm on Fridays for the religious celebration - despite being an [[atheist]] himself.<ref>https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13605209/sir-keir-starmer-wife-victoria-jewish-father-downing-street.html</ref>
  
In contrast to his three siblings who all went the the local Comprehensive school, Starmer passed his 11-plus exam and gained entry into Reigate Grammar school. Starmer then studied law at [[Leeds University]], where he graduated with a first-class Bachelor of Laws (LLB) in 1985, before winning a place at Oxford where he graduated with a Bachelor of Civic Law (BCL) in 1986.
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Victoria Alexander Starmer worked for the law firm Hodge, Jones & Allen. [[Henry Hodge|Henry]] and [[Margaret Hodge]] were instrumental in the creation of New Labour, i.e. refashioning Labour as a Third Way party. Margaret and Henry Hodge had also previously operated at the epicentre of the [[Islington Council child abuse scandal]].<ref>https://aanirfan.blogspot.com/2024/06/victoria-starmer-margaret-hodge.html?m=1</ref><ref>https://nwobroadcastcorp.wordpress.com/2024/07/05/keir-and-victoria-starmer-uks-new-zionist-genocide-supporting-terrorists/</ref>
  
 
==Career==
 
==Career==
 
A year after graduating from [[St Edmund Hall (Oxford)]], Starmer became a Barrister at the Middle Temple. He was then appointed as a member of the Queen’s Counsel (QC) in 2002, and moved to Doughty Street Chambers the following year.
 
A year after graduating from [[St Edmund Hall (Oxford)]], Starmer became a Barrister at the Middle Temple. He was then appointed as a member of the Queen’s Counsel (QC) in 2002, and moved to Doughty Street Chambers the following year.
  
Starmer’s legal work primarily consisted of [[human rights]] issues, with one of his most notable successes being the so-called “[[McLibel]]” case where he assisted two environmental activists, Helen Steel and David Morris, in a highly contentious case brought against them by the US fast-food giants, [[McDonald’s]].
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Starmer's legal work primarily consisted of - noticeably unthreatening for the establishment -  [[human rights]] issues, with one of his most notable successes being the so-called “[[McLibel]]” case where he assisted two environmental activists, Helen Steel and David Morris, in a highly contentious case brought against them by the US fast-food giants, [[McDonald's]]. McDonald's had accused Steel and Morris of libel after they produced and publicised a factsheet which contained numerous claims that were highly critical of the company's ethics and practices. Both were refused legal aid in order to defend themselves, but received substantial pro-bono assistance from a number of lawyers, including Starmer.
 
 
McDonald’s had accused Steel and Morris of libel after they produced and publicised a factsheet which contained numerous claims that were highly critical of the company’s ethics and practices. Both were refused legal aid in order to defend themselves, but received substantial pro-bono assistance from a number of lawyers, including Starmer.
 
  
During the trial, McDonald’s initially argued that all the claims in Steel and Morris’s pamplet were false, but, after almost ten years of legal wranglings, a number of the claims in the document were eventually proved to be true – including the claims that McDonalds did “exploit children“, that they were “culpably responsible” for unnecessary cruelty to animals, and that the company were “antipathetic” to the unionisation of workers and helped to “depress wages in the catering trade“.
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During the trial, McDonald’s initially argued that all the claims in Steel and Morris’s pamplet were false, but, after almost ten years of legal wranglings, a number of the claims in the document were eventually proved to be true – including the claims that McDonalds did “exploit children“, that they were “culpably responsible” for unnecessary cruelty to animals, and that the company were “antipathetic” to the unionisation of workers and helped to "depress wages in the catering trade".
  
In addition to his role in the McLibel case, Starmer undertook substantial legal work challenging the death penalty in the Caribbean and Africa, and he also worked as a human rights advisor to the Policing Board in Northern Ireland.
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In addition to his role in the McLibel case, Starmer undertook substantial legal work challenging the death penalty in the Caribbean and Africa, and he also worked as a human rights advisor to the Policing Board in [[Northern Ireland]].
  
 
Following years of successful legal work in the field of human rights, and after being named QC of the Year in 2007, Starmer was named as the new Head of the [[Crown Prosecution Service]] (CPS) and the [[Director of Public Prosecutions]] (DPP) in 2008.<ref>''[http://www.thelawyer.com/cgi-bin/item.cgi?id=133949 Nina Goswami: "Keir Starmer QC appointed DPP"]''</ref><ref>''[http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/law/article4397189.ece Frances Gibb: "Human rights lawyer Keir Starmer named as new prosecution service chief"]''</ref>
 
Following years of successful legal work in the field of human rights, and after being named QC of the Year in 2007, Starmer was named as the new Head of the [[Crown Prosecution Service]] (CPS) and the [[Director of Public Prosecutions]] (DPP) in 2008.<ref>''[http://www.thelawyer.com/cgi-bin/item.cgi?id=133949 Nina Goswami: "Keir Starmer QC appointed DPP"]''</ref><ref>''[http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/law/article4397189.ece Frances Gibb: "Human rights lawyer Keir Starmer named as new prosecution service chief"]''</ref>
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===Jimmy Savile===
 
===Jimmy Savile===
Starmer failed to bring charges against [[Jimmy Savile]] for paedophilia. The decision was made despite the [[Crown Prosecution Service]] receiving substantial evidence of his crimes from witnesses and victims several years before Savile died in 2011.
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Starmer failed to bring charges against [[Jimmy Savile]] for paedophilia. The decision was made despite the [[Crown Prosecution Service]] receiving substantial evidence of his crimes from witnesses and victims several years before Savile died in 2011.<ref>https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/did-keir-starmer-fail-to-prosecute-jimmy-saville/</ref> All CPS files on Savile were destroyed in October 2010; it is an open question whether Starmer himself made that call, and if so, why.<ref>https://thegrayzone.com/2024/07/06/keir-starmer-scrutiny-protected-savile/</ref>
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After reviewing the Service's handling of the Savile case in [[2012]], Starmer reportedly "came very close to rubber-stamping the original decision not to prosecute," before appointing his own CPS chief legal adviser, [[Alison Levitt]], to conduct the formal inquiry.<ref>https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2023/dec/21/keir-starmer-not-told-about-dropping-of-jimmy-savile-case-say-sources-dpp-labour</ref>
  
 
===Julian Assange===
 
===Julian Assange===
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===Spycops scandal===
 
===Spycops scandal===
In 2011, [[DPP]] Keir Starmer was in court to witness the collapse of a trial of environmental activists after the involvement of undercover police officer [[Mark Kennedy]] was revealed. The case began the “[[Spycops scandal]]", which has since exposed the extensive, long-term infiltration of left-wing and environmentalist groups by police agents, who grossly abused the rights of campaigners and perverted the course of justice in countless court cases. The [[CPS]] is suspected of having been closely involved.
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In 2011, [[DPP]] Keir Starmer was in court to witness the collapse of a trial of environmental activists after the involvement of undercover police officer [[Mark Kennedy]] was revealed. The case began the “[[Spycops scandal]]", which has since exposed the extensive, long-term infiltration of left-wing and environmentalist groups by police agents, who grossly abused the rights of campaigners and perverted the course of justice in countless court cases. The [[CPS]] is suspected of having been closely involved.{{by whom}}
  
 
As [[DPP]], Starmer refused to pursue the matter. Referring to an in-house [[CPS]] investigation, he accepted the manifestly untrue:
 
As [[DPP]], Starmer refused to pursue the matter. Referring to an in-house [[CPS]] investigation, he accepted the manifestly untrue:
:“If Sir Christopher Rose had found systemic problems, then I would quite accept perhaps a retrospective look at all the cases. But he didn’t, he found individual failings.”<ref>''[https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2009/oct/20/nuclear-police-run-covert-network "Secret files reveal covert network run by nuclear police"]''</ref>
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:“If Sir [[Christopher Rose]] had found systemic problems, then I would quite accept perhaps a retrospective look at all the cases. But he didn’t, he found individual failings.”<ref>''[https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2009/oct/20/nuclear-police-run-covert-network "Secret files reveal covert network run by nuclear police"]''</ref>
  
 
===Protection of MI5 and MI6===
 
===Protection of MI5 and MI6===
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===Express trials===
 
===Express trials===
 
Following the [[London riots in 2012]] and the rubber-stamp sentencing of over 1,000 young people, Starmer praised the efforts to rush defendants through the courts: “For me it was the speed that I think may have played some small part in bringing the situation back under control.” He visited Highbury Magistrates Court in North London in the early hours of the morning to boost the morale of the prosecutors and praise their efficiency.
 
Following the [[London riots in 2012]] and the rubber-stamp sentencing of over 1,000 young people, Starmer praised the efforts to rush defendants through the courts: “For me it was the speed that I think may have played some small part in bringing the situation back under control.” He visited Highbury Magistrates Court in North London in the early hours of the morning to boost the morale of the prosecutors and praise their efficiency.
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==Mishcon de Reya job==
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In June 2014, Starmer joined the law firm [[Mishcon de Reya]]<ref>https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2023/jun/27/keir-starmer-failed-consult-watchdog-acoba-new-role-after-leaving-cps-labour-dpp</ref>. The company has received huge fines for facilitating [[money laundering]]<ref>https://www.ft.com/content/842799c6-6c7a-40e4-a9b0-951a181c58ea</ref>, and frequently helps wealthy individuals and powerful corporations abuse the British legal system to "intimidate and destroy" journalists.<ref>https://www.theguardian.com/media/2022/jan/21/oligarchs-use-london-law-firms-to-intimidate-journalists-mps-say</ref> Starmer was forced in July 2017 by then-Labour leader [[Jeremy Corbyn]] to depart his well-remunerated position there, after taking a Shadow Cabinet role. Starmer received over £6,000 for just 24 hours of work at Mishcon de Reya in 2016.<ref>https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-7484061/Keir-Starmer-pockets-6-000-15-hours-legal-work-MPs-salary.html</ref>
  
 
=="Chicken Coup"==
 
=="Chicken Coup"==
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==Labour leader==
 
==Labour leader==
 
[[image:Labour Lockdowns.png|thumb|right|400px|The [[BBC]] reports what [[Keir Starmer]] and the [[Labour Party]] said on 19 July 2021, AKA "[[Freedom Day]]", the day that restrictions in [[England]] were supposedly ended. Instead the introduction of [[vaccine passports]] were announced. This is an example of the [[Official opposition narrative]].]]
 
[[image:Labour Lockdowns.png|thumb|right|400px|The [[BBC]] reports what [[Keir Starmer]] and the [[Labour Party]] said on 19 July 2021, AKA "[[Freedom Day]]", the day that restrictions in [[England]] were supposedly ended. Instead the introduction of [[vaccine passports]] were announced. This is an example of the [[Official opposition narrative]].]]
===Keith is a disingenuous phoney===
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On 7 January 2021, [https://twitter.com/mac123_m Bevan Boy tweeted:]
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===Israel support===
:[[Keith]] will not now ever change my view of him. The damage has been done. This isn't a blip or change of direction. Starmer is a disingenuous phoney. An [[establishment]] make weight worse even than [[Tony Blair|Blair]]. I have no faith or trust in the man or his shadow cabinet. That won't change!<ref>''[https://twitter.com/mac123_m/status/1347328651533180929 "Keith is a disingenuous phoney"]''</ref>
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After the [[October 7]] attacks in [[2023]] which began a new Israel–Hamas war, Starmer expressed support for [[Israel]], condemned [[Hamas]] terrorism, and said, "This action by Hamas does nothing for [[Palestinians]]. And [[Israel]] must always have the right to defend her people."<ref>https://web.archive.org/web/20231013002814/https://www.reuters.com/world/uk/uk-labour-leader-starmer-israel-must-always-have-right-defend-itself-2023-10-10/</ref> He also said “Israel has the right” to withhold power and water from [[Palestinian]] civilians. "Obviously, everything should be done within [[international law]]."<ref>https://www.lbc.co.uk/news/sir-keir-starmer-hamas-terrorism-israel-defend-itself/</ref>  
  
 
===Former Israel spy on his social media team===
 
===Former Israel spy on his social media team===
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===COVID-19===
 
===COVID-19===
Starmer has been a weak leader in opposing government policies during [[COVID-19]]. The sole criticism of [[Boris Johnson]] throughout has been; not enough [[lockdowns]], [[vaccines]], [[mask mandates]] etc.
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Starmer has been a weak leader in opposing government policies during [[COVID-19]]. The sole criticism of [[Boris Johnson]] throughout has been; not enough [[lockdowns]], [[vaccines]], [[mask mandates]] etc. In December 2021, Sir Keir insisted that, while he is not "comfortable" with the idea of [[vaccine passports]], he believes they are necessary.<ref>https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/boris-johnson-plan-b-covid-government-prime-minister-b1974483.html</ref>
  
 
On 21 July, he self-isolated for the fourth time.<ref>https://news.sky.com/story/covid-19-sir-keir-starmer-self-isolating-after-one-of-his-children-tests-positive-for-coronavirus-12360655</ref>
 
On 21 July, he self-isolated for the fourth time.<ref>https://news.sky.com/story/covid-19-sir-keir-starmer-self-isolating-after-one-of-his-children-tests-positive-for-coronavirus-12360655</ref>
  
===By-election performance===
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===Preferring globalism over national politics===
[[File:Starmer%27s_by-elections.png|400px|right|thumb|Keir Starmer's poor performance in eight by-elections]]
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In January 2023,  Starmer admitted he prefers hobnobbing with the billionaires and their select invitees in the [[World Economic Forum]] in Davos to national politics in London. Asked to choose between Davos and Westminster, he said: "Davos... Because Westminster is too constrained. And, you know, it's closed and we're not having meaning....Once you get out of Westminster, whether it's Davos or anywhere else, you actually engage with people that you can see [yourself] working with in the future." On the seat of British democracy, Sir Keir added: "Westminster is just a tribal shouting place."<ref>https://www.express.co.uk/news/politics/1811195/keir-starmer-davos</ref>
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==Venality==
 +
Keir Starmer has personally accepted just under £43,000 in personal gratuities,<ref>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wSRmyDjkNgc</ref> like football tickets, holidays, staying at luxury hotels, getting tickets to go watch the races. This is more money accepted in gratuities than any Labour leader since records began in 1997. By comparison [[Jeremy Corbyn]] during his entire time as Labour leader accepted a single corporate gratuity tickets to Glastonbury where he spoke.<ref name=open/>
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Starmer took £3,000 worth of tickets to go watch the races from the Arena Racing Company, which runs all of the horse tracks in the UK. In that role it is one of the biggest players in the entire UK [[gambling]] industry. He accepted football tickets from a the construction company Mulalley & Co, which received a large fined for installing  defective cladding on five tower blocks that put the residents of those tower blocks at a serious fire safety. Other "gifts" include a meal for himself and an aide worth £380, as a gift from [[Google]] while he was in Davos at the [[World Economic Forum]], and luxury hotel stays from billionaire [[Matthew Moulding]].<ref name=open>https://www.opendemocracy.net/en/keir-starmer-freebies-junkets-tottenham-hotspur-chelsea-coldplay-adele-google/</ref>
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In 2024, it was exposed that he accepted £16,000 for clothing and £2,485 for multiple pairs of glasses from [[Lord Alli]]. Starmer had also used Lord Alli’s Covent Garden penthouse, worth £18 million, which he stayed in with his family for a month and a half during the campaign.<ref>https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2024/09/29/starmers-team-used-lord-allis-4m-soho-townhouse/</ref>
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 +
==Plus ça change==
 +
On 7 June 2024, in a televised election debate on the [[BBC]], [[Green Party]] co-leader [[Carla Denyer]] mocked Keir Starmer, saying:{{QB|
 +
:“[[Angela Rayner]] is right. Keir Starmer has changed the [[Labour Party]]: he’s changed it into the [[Conservative Party]].”<ref>''[https://twitter.com/exRAF_Al/status/1799207281856270844 “Angela Rayner is right. Keir Starmer has changed the Labour Party: he’s changed it into the Conservative Party”]''</ref>}}
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On 4 July 2024, seeking re-election at his [[Holborn and St Pancras]] constituency in the [[UK/General election/2024]], Keir Starmer was faced with challenges from eleven candidates, including pro-[[Palestinian]] activist [[Andrew Feinstein]] who was standing as an Independent.<ref>''[https://skwawkbox.org/2024/02/11/jewish-former-s-african-mp-feinstein-will-stand-against-starmer-in-holborn-st-pancras/ "Jewish former S African MP Feinstein will stand against Starmer in Holborn St Pancras"]''</ref> Starmer retained the seat with 18,884 votes and Feinstein came in second place with 7,312 votes. Starmer’s majority is down significantly from 22,766 in 2019 to 11,572 at this election:{{QB|
 +
*Brick, Nick the Incredible Flying – The Official Monster Raving Loony Party: 162
 +
*Clinton, Charlie – Liberal Democrats: 2,236
 +
*[[Andrew Feinstein|Feinstein, Andrew Josef]] – Independent: 7,312
 +
*Islam, Wais – Independent: 636
 +
*Kumar, Senthil – Independent: 40
 +
*Malik, Mehreen – The [[Conservative Party]] Candidate: 2,776
 +
*Poynton, John Edmund – [[UK Independence Party]]: 75
 +
*Roberts, David – [[Reform UK]]: 2,371
 +
*Scripps, Tom – Socialist Equality Party: 61
 +
*Smith, Bobby Elmo – Independent: 19
 +
*Stansell, David Robert – [[Green Party of England and Wales|Green Party]]: 4,030
 +
*Starmer, Keir – [[Labour Party]]: 18,884
 +
 
 +
The constituency turnout was 54 percent.<ref>''[https://fitzrovianews.com/2024/07/05/starmer-wins-in-holborn-and-st-pancras-with-reduced-majority/ "Starmer wins in Holborn and St Pancras with reduced majority"]''</ref>}}
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==By-election performance==
 +
[[File:Starmer_by-elections.png|400px|right|thumb|Keir Starmer's poor performance in eight by-elections]]
 +
 
 +
On 4 April 2020, following the [[2020 Labour Party leadership contest]],<ref>''[https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-51055663 "Labour leadership: Phillips and Nandy secure nominations"]''</ref> Sir Keir Starmer was elected [[Leader of the Labour Party]] to succeed [[Jeremy Corbyn]].<ref>''[https://twitter.com/UKLabour/status/1246375178684239874 "Congratulations to @Keir_Starmer, the new Leader of the Labour Party!"]''</ref> On 17 April 2020, it was revealed that Starmer had received a £50,000 donation from pro-[[Israel lobby]]ist [[Trevor Chinn]] – information which was not disclosed until after polls had closed in the [[2020 Labour Party leadership contest|leadership election]].<ref>''[https://www.thecanary.co/exclusive/2020/04/17/keir-starmer-received-50000-donation-from-pro-israel-lobbyist-in-leadership-bid/ "Keir Starmer received £50,000 donation from pro-Israel lobbyist in leadership bid"]''</ref>
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Following Labour's crushing defeat in the [[2021 Hartlepool by-election]], [[Max Blumenthal]] tweeted on 7 May 2021:{{QB|Keir Starmer did not become leader to help [[Labour Party|Labour]] win, but to restore [[establishment]] control over the party and vanquish the heretics that dared defy its agenda. For the forces he truly represents, the project has been a smashing success.<ref>''[https://twitter.com/CraigMurrayOrg/status/1390924195790561280 "Keir Starmer did not become leader to help Labour win, but to restore establishment control over the party"]''</ref>}}
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In November 2021, he told the [[BBC]] that he hadn't spoken to Corbyn in over a year.<ref>https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-59422675</ref> He said [[Tony Blair]]'s knighthood was well deserved.<ref>https://labourlist.org/2022/01/he-deserves-the-honour-keir-starmer-welcomes-knighthood-for-tony-blair/</ref> In July 2023, he was nicknamed "[[Sir Kid Starver]]" over Labour plans to keep the [[Tories]]' two-child benefit cap.<ref>''[https://www.independent.co.uk/tv/news/labour-keir-starmer-benefits-nickname-b2377242.html "Keir Starmer nicknamed ‘Sir Kid Starver’ over Labour plans to keep two-child benefit cap"]''</ref>
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Of eight by-elections held in [[England]] under Keir Starmer's [[Leader of the Labour Party|leadership of the Labour Party]], two were won by [[Boris Johnson]]'s Tories, three won by the [[Lib Dems]] overturning huge [[Tory]] majorities and three unconvincing wins in traditional Labour seats with record low turnout figures/vote numbers:
 
* [[2021 Hartlepool by-election]]: It’s shameful Labour losing this seat, there is no excuse, Sir Keir Starmer’s poor choice of candidate, [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Williams_(Labour_politician) Paul Williams,] was a recipe for failure. The [[Labour Party]] parachuted in an [https://labourheartlands.com/a-recipe-for-failure-labour-party-parachuted-in-arch-remainer-to-brexit-land-by-election-who-now-apologises-after-tory-milf-tweet-emerges/ ‘Arch-Remainer’] to stand in an overwhelmingly Labour leave voting seat and lost dramatically, who would have guessed? Well actually everyone.
 
* [[2021 Hartlepool by-election]]: It’s shameful Labour losing this seat, there is no excuse, Sir Keir Starmer’s poor choice of candidate, [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Williams_(Labour_politician) Paul Williams,] was a recipe for failure. The [[Labour Party]] parachuted in an [https://labourheartlands.com/a-recipe-for-failure-labour-party-parachuted-in-arch-remainer-to-brexit-land-by-election-who-now-apologises-after-tory-milf-tweet-emerges/ ‘Arch-Remainer’] to stand in an overwhelmingly Labour leave voting seat and lost dramatically, who would have guessed? Well actually everyone.
 
* [[2021 Chesham and Amersham by-election]]: [[Sarah Green]], 39, the [[Liberal Democrats]]’ candidate, secured 21,517 votes, giving her an 8,028 majority over the second-placed Tories. Labour lost its deposit securing just 622 votes. This was the lowest Labour by-election percentage in history.
 
* [[2021 Chesham and Amersham by-election]]: [[Sarah Green]], 39, the [[Liberal Democrats]]’ candidate, secured 21,517 votes, giving her an 8,028 majority over the second-placed Tories. Labour lost its deposit securing just 622 votes. This was the lowest Labour by-election percentage in history.
Line 145: Line 219:
 
* [[2021 Old Bexley and Sidcup by-election]]: On a 33.5% turnout, the lowest ever in the constituency, the [[Conservative Party]] candidate Louie French was elected with 11,189 votes (51.5%) – a majority of 4,478 over Labour's Daniel Francis, who came second with 6,711 votes (30.9%).
 
* [[2021 Old Bexley and Sidcup by-election]]: On a 33.5% turnout, the lowest ever in the constituency, the [[Conservative Party]] candidate Louie French was elected with 11,189 votes (51.5%) – a majority of 4,478 over Labour's Daniel Francis, who came second with 6,711 votes (30.9%).
 
* [[2021 North Shropshire by-election]]: Won by [[Liberal Democrats]] [[Helen Morgan]] with 17,957 votes (47.2%), [[Conservative Party]] Neil Shastri-Hurst came second with 12,032 votes (31.6%) and [[Labour Party|Labour]]'s Ben Wood came a distant third with 3,686 votes (9.7%).
 
* [[2021 North Shropshire by-election]]: Won by [[Liberal Democrats]] [[Helen Morgan]] with 17,957 votes (47.2%), [[Conservative Party]] Neil Shastri-Hurst came second with 12,032 votes (31.6%) and [[Labour Party|Labour]]'s Ben Wood came a distant third with 3,686 votes (9.7%).
* 2022 Birmingham Erdington by-election: The winner was Paulette Hamilton, standing for Labour, who got 55.5% of the votes on a turnout of 27% of the electorate, the lowest ever in the constituency.
+
* 2022 Birmingham Erdington by-election: The winner was Paulette Hamilton, standing for [[Labour]], who got 55.5% of the votes on a turnout of 27% of the electorate, the lowest ever in the constituency.
* [[2022 Tiverton and Honiton by-election]]: The by-election was won by [[Richard Foord]] of the [[Liberal Democrats]] with 22,537 votes, a majority of 6,144 over the [[Tory]] Helen Hurford who received 16,393 votes. Labour's Liz Pole, with just 1,562 votes, lost her deposit.
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* [[2022 Tiverton and Honiton by-election]]: The by-election was won by [[Richard Foord]] of the [[Liberal Democrats]] with 22,537 votes, a majority of 6,144 over the [[Tory]] Helen Hurford who received 16,393 votes. [[Labour]]'s Liz Pole, with just 1,562 votes, lost her deposit.
 
* [[2022 Wakefield by-election]]: Won by [[Simon Lightwood]] of the [[Labour Party]] with 13,166 votes, the fewest since the 1931 General Election when Labour received 11,774 votes.
 
* [[2022 Wakefield by-election]]: Won by [[Simon Lightwood]] of the [[Labour Party]] with 13,166 votes, the fewest since the 1931 General Election when Labour received 11,774 votes.
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* [[2023 West Lancashire by-election]]: Won by [[Labour]]'s [[Ashley Dalton]]
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* [[2023 Selby and Ainsty by-election]]: Won by [[Labour]]'s [[Keir Mather]]
  
 
{{SMWDocs}}
 
{{SMWDocs}}
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==References==
 
==References==
 
{{reflist}}
 
{{reflist}}

Latest revision as of 22:36, 30 September 2024

Person.png Sir Keir Starmer   Powerbase Twitter WebsiteRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
(lawyer, politician, deep state operative?, puppet leader)
Starmer PM.jpg
BornKeir Rodney Starmer
2 September 1962
London, England
NationalityUK
Alma materUniversity of Leeds, St Edmund Hall (Oxford)
Children2
SpouseVictoria Alexander
Member ofLabour Friends of Israel, Trilateral Commission
InterestsLabour Friends of Israel
PartyLabour
A suspected deep state operative, who as Director of Public Prosecutions failed to prosecute Jimmy Savile but pressed on with charges against Julian Assange.

Employment.png UK/Prime Minister Wikipedia-icon.png

In office
5 July 2024 - Present
Preceded byRishi Sunak

Employment.png UK/Leader of the Opposition Wikipedia-icon.png

In office
4 April 2020 - 4 July 2024
Preceded byJeremy Corbyn

Employment.png Leader of the Labour Party

In office
4 April 2020 - Present
Preceded byJeremy Corbyn

Employment.png Director of Public Prosecutions Wikipedia-icon.png

In office
1 November 2008 - 1 November 2013
Preceded byKen Macdonald
Succeeded byAlison Saunders

Sir Keir Starmer is a British Labour Party politician who succeeded Rishi Sunak as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom following the UK/General election/2024.[1]

On 5 July 2024, Craig Murray wrote:

"Millions fewer people turned out to make Keir Starmer Prime Minister than turned out to attempt the same for Jeremy Corbyn. That is the most important fact of this election, and the one the mainstream media works hardest to hide.
"I don’t think any Prime Minister has ever come to power with less popular enthusiasm than Keir Starmer."[2]

From law to politics

Keir Starmer is a former Director of Public Prosecutions and Head of the Crown Prosecution Service, where he was central in making sure the case against Julian Assange continued.

Aged 53, Keir Starmer was elected Labour Party Member of Parliament for Holborn and St Pancras constituency at the 2015 General Election, and on 6 October 2016 he was appointed Shadow Brexit Secretary by Jeremy Corbyn[3] whom he later helped to oust, taking over as Labour leader.

On 5 June 2020, Matt Kennard posed five questions for him to answer:

The public deserves answers about the UK’s new opposition leader and his relationship with the British national security establishment, including the MI5 and the Times newspaper, his former role in the Julian Assange case and his membership in the intelligence-linked Trilateral Commission.[4]

Background

Keir Starmer was born in 1962 in Southwark, London. His father, Rodney Starmer, was a toolmaker, and his mother, Josephine Starmer (née Baker), was a nurse. His parents were both staunch Labour supporters, and they named Keir – their second son – after the first leader of the Labour Party, Keir Hardie. In contrast to his three siblings who all went the the local Comprehensive school, Starmer passed his 11-plus exam and gained entry into Reigate Grammar school. Starmer then studied law at Leeds University, where he graduated with a first-class Bachelor of Laws (LLB) in 1985, before winning a place at Oxford where he graduated with a Bachelor of Civic Law (BCL) in 1986.

Toolmaker father

Keir Starmer with his parents, Rodney and Josephine, at his 2007 wedding to wife Victoria
Rodney Starmer: Keir spent six months before university working "in my factory operating a production machine"

In March 2018, Starmer told the BBC’s Nick Robinson that his father Rodney "was a toolmaker working in a factory and working every hour, basically." The following year, he told the BBC Radio 4's Today programme that his father "worked in a factory" as a toolmaker. The inference that listeners might have drawn is that Rodney Starmer was employed by somebody else. For reasons best known to himself, Keir Starmer did not use any of these opportunities to explain that his father, in fact, ran his own business, the Oxted Tool Company, as a sole trader. Reflecting on his son’s knighthood in 2014, Rodney Starmer wrote in Oxted’s theatre newsletter that his son had spent six months before university working "in my factory operating a production machine." Perhaps it would be most accurate to say that Starmer’s background was neither working class nor 'posh', as some commentators have attempted to prove, but was instead closer to what sociologists would once have called petit bourgeois. This French term is akin to lower-middle class.[5]

Line of gamekeepers

Gamekeeper grandfather Herbert Starmer was a Tory and lived in Marden Castle. Gamekeepers are traditionally considered obsequious minions to the lords of the manor[6]

On 5 June 2024, Ricky Tomlinson posted on X:

Keir Starmer keeps on mentioning his dad (Rodney) was a toolmaker but never mentions that his grandfather (Herbert) was a Tory who lived in Marden Castle or that his great-uncle was Chairman of the Godstone Conservative Association.[7]

[8]

On 27 May 2024, The Telegraph reported that Keir Starmer comes from a line of gamekeepers, according to a 1977 pamphlet written by his grandfather Herbert for the Bourne Society:

Herbert Starmer remembered his rural upbringing fondly – how their cottage would be used by the shoot to hide from the rain and his gamekeeper father left with a gun slung under his arm.
Some of his earliest memories, he told a local history pamphlet, were catching rabbits and of the tame fox living in the family’s shed.
The quintessential image of a rural life is a far cry from that of his grandson – the knighted human rights barrister who is vying to become the country’s next prime minister.
In the interview, a copy of which has been obtained by The Telegraph, Herbert Starmer explains how his father (Gustavus), his seven uncles, and his grandfather were all gamekeepers.[9]

Marriage

Starmer met Victoria Alexander, then a solicitor, in the early 2000s while he was a senior barrister with Doughty Street Chambers, becoming engaged in 2004 and married on 6 May 2007.[10] The couple have two children, a son, who was born a year after their wedding, and a daughter, born two years after that. Both are being brought up in the Jewish faith of their mother.[11][12] The couple was "set to bring Shabbat to Downing Street,"[13] Starmer suggesting he would be off the clock by 6pm on Fridays for the religious celebration - despite being an atheist himself.[14]

Victoria Alexander Starmer worked for the law firm Hodge, Jones & Allen. Henry and Margaret Hodge were instrumental in the creation of New Labour, i.e. refashioning Labour as a Third Way party. Margaret and Henry Hodge had also previously operated at the epicentre of the Islington Council child abuse scandal.[15][16]

Career

A year after graduating from St Edmund Hall (Oxford), Starmer became a Barrister at the Middle Temple. He was then appointed as a member of the Queen’s Counsel (QC) in 2002, and moved to Doughty Street Chambers the following year.

Starmer's legal work primarily consisted of - noticeably unthreatening for the establishment - human rights issues, with one of his most notable successes being the so-called “McLibel” case where he assisted two environmental activists, Helen Steel and David Morris, in a highly contentious case brought against them by the US fast-food giants, McDonald's. McDonald's had accused Steel and Morris of libel after they produced and publicised a factsheet which contained numerous claims that were highly critical of the company's ethics and practices. Both were refused legal aid in order to defend themselves, but received substantial pro-bono assistance from a number of lawyers, including Starmer.

During the trial, McDonald’s initially argued that all the claims in Steel and Morris’s pamplet were false, but, after almost ten years of legal wranglings, a number of the claims in the document were eventually proved to be true – including the claims that McDonalds did “exploit children“, that they were “culpably responsible” for unnecessary cruelty to animals, and that the company were “antipathetic” to the unionisation of workers and helped to "depress wages in the catering trade".

In addition to his role in the McLibel case, Starmer undertook substantial legal work challenging the death penalty in the Caribbean and Africa, and he also worked as a human rights advisor to the Policing Board in Northern Ireland.

Following years of successful legal work in the field of human rights, and after being named QC of the Year in 2007, Starmer was named as the new Head of the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) and the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) in 2008.[17][18]

Director of Public Prosecutions

During his role as Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) (2008 to 2013), Keir Starmer oversaw the prosecution and conviction of a number of MPs and Lords who abused their taxpayer-funded parliamentary expenses, and the successful retrial of the killers of Stephen Lawrence.

All of Keir Starmer's predecessors as DPP received knighthoods for the role, and he was no different. He was awarded a knighthood in 2014 for "services to law and criminal justice" and is therefore entitled to be known as "Sir Keir Starmer".[19]

Jimmy Savile

Starmer failed to bring charges against Jimmy Savile for paedophilia. The decision was made despite the Crown Prosecution Service receiving substantial evidence of his crimes from witnesses and victims several years before Savile died in 2011.[20] All CPS files on Savile were destroyed in October 2010; it is an open question whether Starmer himself made that call, and if so, why.[21]

After reviewing the Service's handling of the Savile case in 2012, Starmer reportedly "came very close to rubber-stamping the original decision not to prosecute," before appointing his own CPS chief legal adviser, Alison Levitt, to conduct the formal inquiry.[22]

Julian Assange

In December 2010, as Julian Assange prepared to appear at London's High Court to hear an appeal against a lower court's decision to release him on bail, Keir Starmer was asked to comment on reports in The Guardian newspaper that Sweden has "not got a view at all on bail". Starmer told BBC radio:

"The general position and the nature of the arrangement is absolutely clear. The Crown Prosecution Service acts here as agents of the government seeking extradition, in this case the Swedish government. These proceedings are brought as agents of the Swedish government."

A spokeswoman for the Swedish prosecutor's office, Karin Rosander, told AFP the decision to oppose bail was "a decision of the British prosecutor and that is what the British prosecutor's office has confirmed to me."[23]

According to Freedom of Information searches by the Italian journalist Stefania Maurizi, Sweden tried to drop the Assange case in 2011, but a CPS official in London told the Swedish prosecutor not to treat it as “just another extradition”.

In 2012, the Swedish prosecutor received an email from the CPS: “Don’t you dare get cold feet!!!” Other CPS emails were either deleted or redacted. Why? Keir Starmer needs to say why.[24]

John Worboys

Keir Starmer has also encountered criticism over the CPS’s decision to release the prolific serial rapist, John Worboys, from prison, as well as the decision not to pursue 75 further allegations made against him. However, in 2018, the CPS issued a statement claiming the Starmer had no role in either of the decisions regarding Worboys.[25]

Ian Tomlinson

Ian Tomlinson was brutally attacked by police officer Simon Harwood in 2009. Harwood hit Tomlinson, who was walking with his hands in his pockets in the other direction, across the back of the legs with a baton. Tomlinson was unable to break his fall, causing fatal internal bleeding to his liver shortly afterwards. Fifteen months later, Starmer announced that Harwood would not be prosecuted. The CPS proceeded a few months later when an inquest jury found that Tomlinson had been unlawfully killed.[26]

Spycops scandal

In 2011, DPP Keir Starmer was in court to witness the collapse of a trial of environmental activists after the involvement of undercover police officer Mark Kennedy was revealed. The case began the “Spycops scandal", which has since exposed the extensive, long-term infiltration of left-wing and environmentalist groups by police agents, who grossly abused the rights of campaigners and perverted the course of justice in countless court cases. The CPS is suspected of having been closely involved.[By whom?]

As DPP, Starmer refused to pursue the matter. Referring to an in-house CPS investigation, he accepted the manifestly untrue:

“If Sir Christopher Rose had found systemic problems, then I would quite accept perhaps a retrospective look at all the cases. But he didn’t, he found individual failings.”[27]

Protection of MI5 and MI6

Under his direction, the CPS refused to prosecute MI5 and MI6 personnel in 2010, 2011 and 2012. The agents were suspected of participating in CIA extraordinary rendition programmes and the torture of detainees in Guantanamo Bay and Afghanistan.

Benefits campaign

In 2013, after Tory Chancellor George Osborne launched a gutter-press campaign against “benefits cheats,” Starmer issued guidelines for the CPS allowing those accused of improperly drawing social security to be charged under the Fraud Act. This allowed for sentences of up to 10 years. He also removed the financial threshold on sending cases to Crown Court, meaning even the most trivial “offences” could be punished with long-term jail time.[28]

Express trials

Following the London riots in 2012 and the rubber-stamp sentencing of over 1,000 young people, Starmer praised the efforts to rush defendants through the courts: “For me it was the speed that I think may have played some small part in bringing the situation back under control.” He visited Highbury Magistrates Court in North London in the early hours of the morning to boost the morale of the prosecutors and praise their efficiency.

Mishcon de Reya job

In June 2014, Starmer joined the law firm Mishcon de Reya[29]. The company has received huge fines for facilitating money laundering[30], and frequently helps wealthy individuals and powerful corporations abuse the British legal system to "intimidate and destroy" journalists.[31] Starmer was forced in July 2017 by then-Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn to depart his well-remunerated position there, after taking a Shadow Cabinet role. Starmer received over £6,000 for just 24 hours of work at Mishcon de Reya in 2016.[32]

"Chicken Coup"

Starmer's "Chicken Coup" resignation letter

During the infamous so-called “Chicken Coup”, less than a year after the Labour membership had handed Jeremy Corbyn a massive mandate to lead the party, numerous Labour Shadow Cabinet Ministers instigated co-ordinated resignations from the front bench in a deeply cynical attempt to remove him as leader.

In his resignation letter dated 27 June 2016, Keir Starmer – who was a Shadow Immigration Minister at the time – essentially claimed that because a lot of other Shadow Ministers had resigned, he decided to resign too. In the opening paragraph of Starmer’s letter, he claims that he initially “respected the mandate” that Labour members had given to Jeremy Corbyn to lead the party.

Starmer then uses two different excuses for his decision to disregard the democratic will of Labour members: claiming that the party needed a “louder voice” regarding Brexit, and that Mr Corbyn’s position was “untenable” because so many Shadow Ministers had resigned.

In the subsequent 2016 Labour leadership election, Starmer went on to support the astonishingly dour, former big pharma lobbyist, Owen Smith.

Upshot

During the 2016 "Chicken Coup", the right thing to do would have clearly been to trust the decision of Labour members, rather than an overwhelmingly right-wing and detached Parliamentary Labour Party (PLP), and support the democratically elected leader of the party. Had the PLP been united, Labour may well have been in a position to gain the few thousands extra votes necessary to have formed a government in the UK/2017 General Election campaign.

Unfortunately, Starmer’s willingness to disregard clear democratic decisions in favour of what he thinks is right is not an isolated incident, with the Shadow Brexit Secretary becoming the architect of Labour’s decision to change their Brexit policy from respecting the result in 2017 to supporting a second referendum in 2019 – a policy regarded as the main reason that the party lost huge numbers of seats in their pro-Leave heartlands to the Tories in December’s General Election.

Whilst Labour may still have lost the election had they continued with their 2017 Brexit policy to respect the Brexit vote, they would unquestionably have been far closer to the Conservative Party in terms of votes – with the only genuine question being whether the Lib Dems would have been able to charge through the middle on their pro-Remain platform.

Moreover, at the UK/2019 General Election, the right thing to do – electorally speaking – would have been to continue to support the democratic decision of the British people regarding the Brexit vote. Labour’s decision to support a second referendum is clearly not the only reason for their loss, but it was certainly a huge factor in the sheer scale of it – and Starmer was crucial in pushing the party towards it.[33]

Labour leader

The BBC reports what Keir Starmer and the Labour Party said on 19 July 2021, AKA "Freedom Day", the day that restrictions in England were supposedly ended. Instead the introduction of vaccine passports were announced. This is an example of the Official opposition narrative.

Israel support

After the October 7 attacks in 2023 which began a new Israel–Hamas war, Starmer expressed support for Israel, condemned Hamas terrorism, and said, "This action by Hamas does nothing for Palestinians. And Israel must always have the right to defend her people."[34] He also said “Israel has the right” to withhold power and water from Palestinian civilians. "Obviously, everything should be done within international law."[35]

Former Israel spy on his social media team

Sir Keir hired a former Israel spy to work in his social media team. Assaf Kaplan was hired as a "social media listener", and worked for the infamous 8200 cyber unit of the Israeli intelligence services. Although Israeli citizens are subject to mandatory conscription into the Israeli army, the duration of national service is only two and a half years. Kaplan served in Israeli intelligence for nearly five years, twice the normal conscription period[36]

COVID-19

Starmer has been a weak leader in opposing government policies during COVID-19. The sole criticism of Boris Johnson throughout has been; not enough lockdowns, vaccines, mask mandates etc. In December 2021, Sir Keir insisted that, while he is not "comfortable" with the idea of vaccine passports, he believes they are necessary.[37]

On 21 July, he self-isolated for the fourth time.[38]

Preferring globalism over national politics

In January 2023, Starmer admitted he prefers hobnobbing with the billionaires and their select invitees in the World Economic Forum in Davos to national politics in London. Asked to choose between Davos and Westminster, he said: "Davos... Because Westminster is too constrained. And, you know, it's closed and we're not having meaning....Once you get out of Westminster, whether it's Davos or anywhere else, you actually engage with people that you can see [yourself] working with in the future." On the seat of British democracy, Sir Keir added: "Westminster is just a tribal shouting place."[39]

Venality

Keir Starmer has personally accepted just under £43,000 in personal gratuities,[40] like football tickets, holidays, staying at luxury hotels, getting tickets to go watch the races. This is more money accepted in gratuities than any Labour leader since records began in 1997. By comparison Jeremy Corbyn during his entire time as Labour leader accepted a single corporate gratuity tickets to Glastonbury where he spoke.[41]

Starmer took £3,000 worth of tickets to go watch the races from the Arena Racing Company, which runs all of the horse tracks in the UK. In that role it is one of the biggest players in the entire UK gambling industry. He accepted football tickets from a the construction company Mulalley & Co, which received a large fined for installing defective cladding on five tower blocks that put the residents of those tower blocks at a serious fire safety. Other "gifts" include a meal for himself and an aide worth £380, as a gift from Google while he was in Davos at the World Economic Forum, and luxury hotel stays from billionaire Matthew Moulding.[41]

In 2024, it was exposed that he accepted £16,000 for clothing and £2,485 for multiple pairs of glasses from Lord Alli. Starmer had also used Lord Alli’s Covent Garden penthouse, worth £18 million, which he stayed in with his family for a month and a half during the campaign.[42]

Plus ça change

On 7 June 2024, in a televised election debate on the BBC, Green Party co-leader Carla Denyer mocked Keir Starmer, saying:

Angela Rayner is right. Keir Starmer has changed the Labour Party: he’s changed it into the Conservative Party.”[43]

On 4 July 2024, seeking re-election at his Holborn and St Pancras constituency in the UK/General election/2024, Keir Starmer was faced with challenges from eleven candidates, including pro-Palestinian activist Andrew Feinstein who was standing as an Independent.[44] Starmer retained the seat with 18,884 votes and Feinstein came in second place with 7,312 votes. Starmer’s majority is down significantly from 22,766 in 2019 to 11,572 at this election:

  • Brick, Nick the Incredible Flying – The Official Monster Raving Loony Party: 162
  • Clinton, Charlie – Liberal Democrats: 2,236
  • Feinstein, Andrew Josef – Independent: 7,312
  • Islam, Wais – Independent: 636
  • Kumar, Senthil – Independent: 40
  • Malik, Mehreen – The Conservative Party Candidate: 2,776
  • Poynton, John Edmund – UK Independence Party: 75
  • Roberts, David – Reform UK: 2,371
  • Scripps, Tom – Socialist Equality Party: 61
  • Smith, Bobby Elmo – Independent: 19
  • Stansell, David Robert – Green Party: 4,030
  • Starmer, Keir – Labour Party: 18,884

The constituency turnout was 54 percent.[45]

By-election performance

Keir Starmer's poor performance in eight by-elections

On 4 April 2020, following the 2020 Labour Party leadership contest,[46] Sir Keir Starmer was elected Leader of the Labour Party to succeed Jeremy Corbyn.[47] On 17 April 2020, it was revealed that Starmer had received a £50,000 donation from pro-Israel lobbyist Trevor Chinn – information which was not disclosed until after polls had closed in the leadership election.[48]

Following Labour's crushing defeat in the 2021 Hartlepool by-election, Max Blumenthal tweeted on 7 May 2021:

Keir Starmer did not become leader to help Labour win, but to restore establishment control over the party and vanquish the heretics that dared defy its agenda. For the forces he truly represents, the project has been a smashing success.[49]

In November 2021, he told the BBC that he hadn't spoken to Corbyn in over a year.[50] He said Tony Blair's knighthood was well deserved.[51] In July 2023, he was nicknamed "Sir Kid Starver" over Labour plans to keep the Tories' two-child benefit cap.[52]

Of eight by-elections held in England under Keir Starmer's leadership of the Labour Party, two were won by Boris Johnson's Tories, three won by the Lib Dems overturning huge Tory majorities and three unconvincing wins in traditional Labour seats with record low turnout figures/vote numbers:


 

Appointments by Keir Starmer

AppointeeJobAppointedEnd
Jon AshworthShadow Secretary of State for Health and Social Care7 October 201629 November 2021
Jon AshworthShadow Paymaster General.4 September 20235 July 2024
Jon AshworthShadow Work and Pensions Secretary29 November 20214 September 2023
Anneliese DoddsShadow Chancellor of the Exchequer5 April 20209 May 2021
Anneliese DoddsShadow Secretary of State for Women and Equalities21 September 2021
Anneliese DoddsChair of the Labour Party9 May 2021
Richard HermerAttorney General for England and Wales5 July 2024
Richard HermerAdvocate General for Northern Ireland5 July 2024
Liz KendallShadow Work and Pensions Secretary4 September 2023
David LammyShadow Foreign Secretary29 November 20215 July 2024
David LammyUK/Foreign Secretary5 July 2024
Lucy PowellShadow Secretary of State for Housing9 May 202129 November 2021
Lucy PowellShadow Secretary of State for Culture Media and Sport29 November 2021
Ellie ReevesShadow Minister for Prisons and Probation4 December 2021
Ellie ReevesShadow Solicitor General9 April 20204 December 2021
Rachel ReevesChancellor of the Exchequer5 July 2024
Rachel ReevesShadow Chancellor of the Exchequer9 May 20215 July 2024
Rachel ReevesShadow Minister for the Cabinet Office5 April 20209 May 2021
Jo StevensShadow Secretary of State for Wales29 November 2021
Jo StevensShadow Secretary of State for Culture Media and Sport6 April 202029 November 2021
Wes StreetingSecretary of State for Health5 July 2024

 

Events Participated in

EventStartEndLocation(s)Description
Munich Security Conference/202416 February 202418 February 2024Germany
Munich
Bavaria
Annual conference of mid-level functionaries from the military-industrial complex - politicians, propagandists and lobbyists - in their own bubble, far from the concerns of their subjects
UK/Parliament/Voted YES to vaccine passports in 2021UK/House of CommonsThese members of the UK Parliament voted YES to the introduction of a "vaccine" passport in 2021
WEF/Annual Meeting/202316 January 202320 January 2023World Economic Forum
Switzerland
The theme of the meeting was "Cooperation in a Fragmented World"

 

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Document:Batley and Spen by-election: Palestine becomes potential dealbreakerArticle18 June 2021Alex MacDonaldAccording to Coral, Galloway is currently on 50/1 odds to win, compared to 2/1 for Leadbeater and 2/5 for Conservative candidate Ryan Stephenson. William Hill has the Conservatives on 1/3, Labour at 5/2 and the WPGB at 33/1.
Document:Being anti-war does not make us apologists for 'the enemy' or anyone elseArticle28 February 2022Lindsey GermanI am proud to be an anti-war campaigner and I know there are many like me. I note that anti-war protesters in Russia are being lauded in the British media. I also support them and send them my full solidarity. The irony is that Putin will see them as the enemy within — just as our government (and loyal opposition) treats us.
Document:Brexit is the villain in accidental death of the economyArticle6 August 2023William KeeganThe Brexit miscreants who conned the nation just carry on shamelessly, while their replacements, Rishi Sunak and co, take up the banner and Keir Starmer, once a noble remainer, offends his natural followers by ruling out rejoining the EU or even the single market.
Document:Bristol West CLP condemns suspension of CorbynArticle10 November 2020SKWAWKBOXLabour’s hierarchy has banned CLPs from debating or voting on Corbyn’s suspension or the EHRC report and some Regional Directors have blocked attempts to do so. It seems Bristol West members hold their democracy and their former party leader in too high a regard to toe the line.
Document:Dear Mr Starmer, we fact-checked your 7 Oct statement. You’re welcomeblog post7 October 2024Editor"Appalling mix of regurgitated and already-discredited lies with grotesque one-sidedness"
Document:Existence vs Expansionblog post21 July 2024Craig MurrayThe International Court of Justice Advisory Opinion is extremely lucid and decisive. The ball is now back in the court of the UN General Assembly, which requested the Opinion. The General Assembly now should move to suspend Israel’s membership of the United Nations. That is the next project on which I shall be working.
Document:Faiza Shaheen dropped by Labour for liking pro-BDS, Corbyn and Green Party postsArticle30 May 2024Peter OborneLeft-wing Labour candidate Faiza Shaheen is deselected for 15 social media posts between 2014 and 2024 on issues from Islamophobia to Israeli lobbying, MEE has been informed.
Document:Five questions for new Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer about his UK and US national security establishment linksArticle5 June 2020Matt KennardKeir Starmer did not become leader to help Labour win, but to restore establishment control over the party and vanquish the heretics that dared defy its agenda. For the forces he truly represents, the project has been a smashing success.
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Document:Here’s What Really Happened When Labour Suspended CorbynArticle27 July 2021Oliver EagletonIf Keir Starmer was always unlikely to stand by his ten pledges and retain the bulk of the 2017 manifesto, some hoped he would at least bring a slickness and efficiency to LOTO that was missing under Jeremy Corbyn. After the suspension debacle, this is a hope that few can cling to.
Document:How Keir Starmer Sabotaged Rebecca Long-BaileyArticle26 June 2020Ronan BurtenshawRebecca Long-Bailey’s approach to schools reopening had been entirely vindicated: she backed teachers and their unions as they changed the political terrain and forced the Tory government into a concession. This was politics in the best traditions of the labour movement but was anathema to Sir Keir Starmer.
Document:How top Labour officials plotted to bring down Jeremy CorbynArticle16 April 2020Jonathan CookThe stench of cover-up is already in the air. Keir Starmer's Labour needs to come clean and admit that its most senior officials defrauded hundreds of thousands of party members, and millions more supporters, who voted for a fairer, kinder Britain.
Document:I Stand in Blackburnblog post16 April 2024Craig MurrayI am going to need help – leafleting, canvassing, manning offices and the many myriad tasks of an election campaign. I am buoyed by the solid start we have in support across all communities in Blackburn. We are going to give Starmer a roasting, we are going to take on the zionist monopoly of power, and it is going to be great fun!
Document:Jeremy Corbyn says “I Condemn Violence Against All Civilians, Why Can’t Keir Starmer?”Article12 October 2023Jeremy CorbynIn an interview with LBC, Keir Starmer was asked whether “cutting off power and water” to 2 million people, half of whom are children, was appropriate. He agreed that Israel “has that right”. Where is the empathy for Palestinians who have lost their loved ones, their homes and their futures? What happened to the universal application of international law?
Document:Jeremy Corbyn’s Opponents Burned the House Down to Stop Him - Now Keir Starmer Is King of the AshesArticle25 July 2020Daniel FinnBy sacking Rebecca Long-Bailey on a trumped-up pretext, Sir Keir Rodney Starmer has set the seal on a drastic shift to the right for the Labour Party. That shift comes just as the key arguments by Jeremy Corbyn’s opponents to justify a break with his left leadership have been falling apart in the face of overwhelming evidence.
Document:Julian Assange Must be Freed, Not BetrayedArticle18 February 2020John PilgerSarah Ferguson's interview made no mention of a leaked document, revealed by WikiLeaks, called 'Libya Tick Tock', prepared for Hillary Clinton, which described her as the central figure driving the destruction of the Libyan state in 2011. This resulted in 40,000 deaths, the arrival of ISIS in North Africa and the European refugee and migrant crisis.
Document:Keir Starmer is a Long-Time Servant of the British Security StateArticle2 March 2021Oliver EagletonKeir Starmer is sometimes praised for being an outsider in the world of politics (or mocked as too lawyerly and insufficiently political). But in reality, much of his work as Director of Public Prosecutions blurred the boundaries between prosecutor and politician – following the dictates of the Cameron coalition, negotiating with foreign officials on its behalf, and dropping or pursuing cases according to its interests.
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Document:Sunak likes the single market. So why doesn't Labour?Article5 March 2023William Keegan"I had many criticisms of Thatcherism and its impact on unemployment and social harmony, but one thing Margaret Thatcher got right was the importance of the EU single market and attracting Japanese, German and other firms to the UK. All this is now up for grabs by Starmer and his team."
Document:That Leaked Labour Party Reportblog post20 April 2020Craig MurrayThat Leaked Labour Party Report proves conclusively that Sam Matthews’ allegations of unwarranted interference from Corbyn’s office to block anti-semitism action are malicious lies.
Document:The EHRC’s report into Labour antisemitism is the real ‘political interference’blog post7 November 2020Jonathan CookIt is instructive to compare the certainty with which the EHRC treats Councillor Pam Bromley’s ambiguous remarks as irrefutable proof of antisemitism in Labour with its complete disregard for unmistakably antisemitic comments from Boris Johnson, the man actually running the country. That lack of concern is shared, of course, by the establishment media and Jewish leadership organisations.
Document:The Forde Report and the Labour Rightblog post24 July 2022Craig MurrayAbout a third of the mass membership that Corbyn brought into the Labour Party has now left. Starmer, having lied his way through his leadership election, has now positioned the party very squarely back as Blairite and Tory Lite. There is therefore a very real argument that the Forde Report simply does not matter.
Document:The Notional Health ServiceWikispooks Page17 October 2024Craig Murray"Today is my 66th birthday, so I am hoping that you will forgive an article that is at core the anecdotal ramblings of an old man. Sixty years ago or so, when my siblings or I were sick enough to be in bed, my mother would phone the surgery and the GP would come to our home to see us. This was perfectly normal. It is probably difficult for Generation Z to believe this really used to happen."
Document:The Rejection of Starmerismblog post5 July 2024Craig Murray"I don’t think any Prime Minister has ever come to power with less popular enthusiasm than Keir Starmer."
Document:The Zombie ApocalypseArticle4 December 2021Gordon LiddleAnd then to look at the election of Sir Rodney Woodentop and one has to ask oneself:
"Do I want him as a PM, who panders to the status quo to be elected, in order to allow the status quo to continue?"
Document:The arrest of journalist Richard Medhurst and the fight to defend democratic rightsArticle27 August 2024Robert StevensNow, in a move that would have been agreed to by PM Keir Starmer and Home Secretary Yvette Cooper, Labour has pioneered the use of an amendment to the Terrorism Act passed by the Tories to once again attempt to silence and criminalise a journalist and political activist. The same course is being pursued by governments throughout the world.
Document:The attack on Jeremy Corbyn is baseless – there is nothing to support it in the EHRC reportArticle29 October 2020Chris NinehamJeremy Corbyn has a record of opposing antisemitism and all forms of racism that are second to none. It was in fact precisely his campaigning and principled approach to politics that got him elected as leader of the party in the first place.
Document:The conspiracy of lies about Corbyn that unites Sunak and StarmerArticle8 November 2022Peter ObornePrime Minister Rishi Sunak's abuse of his high office to smear Corbyn proves that he means to employ the same deceitful methods as his disgraced predecessor, Boris Johnson.
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Document:UK Labour party teeters on brink of civil war over antisemitismArticle27 July 2020Jonathan CookLabour Party member Mark Howell is suing former General Secretary Iain McNicol for “breach of contract” and is demanding that those named in the leaked report be expelled from the party (see "Mark Howell for Justice": https://www.crowdjustice.com/case/mark-howell-for-justice/).
Document:What could go wrong for Keir Starmer? A lot actually, Laura Kuenssberg writesArticle11 May 2024Laura KuenssbergFollowing the May 2024 local elections Keir Starmer looks highly likely to be the next Prime Minister, but his future it is in doubt.
Document:Whatever happened to ‘due process’?Article21 November 2020Hilary WiseStarmer’s reaction suggests he will continue to pursue a course which he somehow sees as politically expedient. History tells us it risks leading the party into the most dangerous kind of authoritarianism.
... further results
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References

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