Arlington Group

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Group.png Arlington Group
(Gang)Rdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
Arlington Group.jpg
Membership• Lord Adonis.jpg Andrew Adonis
• Jenny Chapman.jpg Jenny Chapman
•  Georgia Gould
•  Morgan McSweeney
• Tulip Siddiq.jpg Tulip Siddiq
• Nick Smith.jpg Nick Smith
• Prime Minister Keir Starmer Portrait (cropped).jpg Keir Starmer

With Lord Mandelson's blessing, Keir Starmer formed the secretive Arlington Group aka Arlington Road Gang as his own Labour leadership team, well in advance of their hoped-for defeat of Jeremy Corbyn at the UK/General election/2019.[1]

Membership

The Arlington Road Gang comprised (photo left to right):

Details

Keir Starmer had assembled a leadership team about six months before the December 2019 general election that led to Jeremy Corbyn’s resignation as Labour leader.

The team, codenamed the “Arlington Group”, began planning in earnest how Starmer could capture the leadership from June of that year – including a detailed breakdown of how Labour’s membership could be convinced to support him.

The revelation is made in a new biography of the Labour leader, "Keir Starmer: The Biography", by Tom Baldwin, a former journalist who served as one of Ed Miliband’s advisers during his time leading the party.

The group was formed as early as 2018 when Jenny Chapman, who was Darlington MP, asked him if he had ever thought about being the party’s leader. Starmer is said to have replied that it was something he “might want to do”. Meetings then began to take place on Monday mornings around the kitchen table at her home. Its codename was derived from the road in London where one of them lived.

Those involved said that there was never a plan to topple Corbyn – the failed coup against him in 2016 had proved that it would be almost impossible to do so. Starmer is also said to have refused to acknowledge at that stage that he would be running.

“Keir used to have this lawyerly phrase of: ‘I want to be in a position to consider standing – should a vacancy arise,’” said one of those involved.

Enter Morgan McSweeney

However, the preparations being made for a leadership attempt kicked into another gear in June 2019 with the arrival of an official that Starmer referred to as “the new guy”. It turned out to be Morgan McSweeney, now Labour’s influential campaigns director. Some were initially sceptical of McSweeney, who had also overseen Liz Kendall’s ill-fated leadership challenge in 2015, when she won less than 5% of the vote.

However, he presented detailed research into the Labour membership – who would largely decide the identity of the party’s next leader – and how a winning coalition could be formed. “He got out his slide deck,” recalled Chris Ward, a former Starmer aide. “He ran through exactly where the membership was on every question, which bits of it we could get, which bits we couldn’t. It was brilliant. Afterwards, when we’re walking back, Keir had this little grin on his face, and was like: ‘D’you see what I mean now?’”

The revelations are most likely to anger the Labour left and supporters of Corbyn, who were often suspicious of Starmer and his team before the 2019 election. But allies of the Labour leader said that Starmer had never plotted against Corbyn. They said he had simply been preparing the ground for what he regarded as an inevitable leadership race should Labour lose the election.

Starmer considered resigning

The news comes after a previous revelation from the book that Starmer considered resigning in the wake of the defeat in the 2021 Hartlepool by-election, a seat that the party had held since its creation. It was lost as so-called “red wall” seats continued to fall to the Tories under Boris Johnson’s leadership. The by-election marked the most serious threat to Starmer’s leadership to date and came before a series of Tory implosions that have since helped Labour win a string of by-elections and open a double-digit poll lead.

Starmer was apparently persuaded to stay in post by aides and his wife, Victoria. Ward said:

“Keir kept saying that he felt he would have to go, that the result showed the party was going backwards, and he saw it as a personal rejection. I told him it was far too soon for that kind of thing, but it was a rocky few hours.”[2]


 

Known members

6 of the 7 of the members already have pages here:

MemberDescription
Andrew AdonisLabour party politician and Bilderberger. Vice Chairman of the European Movement (UK)
Jenny ChapmanBaroness Chapman and her husband Nick Smith are pro-Starmer Arlington Road Gang members
Morgan McSweeneyProtégé of Lord Mandelson, Israeli asset and Starmer's former Downing Street Chief of Staff
Tulip SiddiqBritish Member of Parliament convicted by Bangladeshi court and sentenced to prison
Nick SmithMember of the Arlington Road Gang which plotted to install Keir Starmer as Labour leader
Keir StarmerA suspected deep state operative, who as Director of Public Prosecutions failed to prosecute Jimmy Savile but pressed on with charges against Julian Assange.
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References