Keir Starmer: The Biography

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Keir Starmer: The Biography
Keir Starmer The Biography cover.jpg
Author Tom Baldwin
LanguageEnglish
Subject Keir Starmer
Genre Political science
Publication date
15 February 2024
Publication placeUnited Kingdom
Pages448

Keir Starmer: The Biography is a 2024 book by British journalist and political adviser Tom Baldwin. It is a political biography of Labour Party leader Keir Starmer, and follows his time in the Crown Prosecution Service, covering his political alliances, his victory in the 2020 Labour Party leadership election, and subsequent leadership of the Labour Party in opposition. [1] The book, released on 15 February 2024 - six months before Starmer became prime minister after Labour won a landslide victory in the 2024 general election - received positive reviews.

Contents

Background

After working as a barrister and senior civil servant, Keir Starmer became a Member of Parliament (MP) for the Labour Party, a centre-left political party in the United Kingdom that acted as the main political opposition to the centre-right Conservative government. He has represented the constituency of Holborn and St Pancras in the House of Commons since 2015. He was elected party leader in April 2020, after his predecessor Jeremy Corbyn presided over a landslide defeat in the 2019 general election. During Corbyn's leadership, Labour shifted to the left from the centre ground. For most of the life of Corbyn's shadow cabinet, Starmer served as Shadow Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union.

In the 2020 leadership election, Starmer ran on both a soft left and centrist platform, and was elected leader in April 2020. [2] [3] [4] Starmer suspended Corbyn from the Parliamentary Labour Party in January 2021, and he was later expelled from the party in May 2024. [5] Under his leadership, Starmer repositioned the party away from the left and toward the political centre, and also emphasised the elimination of antisemitism within the party. [6] [7] Prior to his general election win, Starmer had been widely compared to Tony Blair's leadership and New Labour, having taken the party closer to the centre-ground; observes also noted differences from Blair and New Labour. [8] [9] [10] Figures including Starmer's former boss, the barrister Geoffrey Robertson, [11] as well as his former advisor Simon Fletcher, [12] and the journalist and broadcaster Peter Oborne, [13] have described Starmer as exhibiting an authoritarian approach. [14] Despite the lack of any consensus about the character and even existence of Starmer's ideology, it has acquired a neologism, Starmerism, and his supporters have been called Starmerites. [15] [16] The political turmoil from the Conservative scandals and government crises led to Labour having a significant lead in polling over the Conservatives, often by very wide margins, since late 2021, coinciding with the start of the Partygate scandal. [17] [18] Labour made gains in local elections: in the 2023 local elections, Labour gained more than 500 councillors and 22 councils, becoming the largest party in local government for the first time since 2002. [19]

Tom Baldwin, the author of the book, is a former Labour Party senior adviser who has worked as a journalist for a number of national titles including The Times and The Sunday Telegraph . [20] He was also a senior political adviser to Ed Miliband, and director of communications and strategy at the Labour Party. [21] [22] Baldwin describes Starmer as “someone who is both extraordinary and very ordinary”, but argues that his "love of normality, of family life, of his weekend eight-a-side football games" is authentic and deep. [23] Baldwin interviewed Starmer, as well as his friends and family ahead of writing the book.

Reviews

The book was released six months before Starmer became prime minister after Labour won a landslide victory in the 2024 general election, he was widely expected to win this election at the time of the book's release. As such, the book received a lot of media attention.

Alastair Campbell said the book was "required reading for anyone who has an interest in who governs Britain'" while Matthew D'Anaconda of the Evening Standard said it would be "the most important political book of the year", saying "The sheer velocity with which Keir Starmer has led the Labour Party from the brink of extinction to the brink of power is unprecedented in the modern era." [23]

The Guardian gave the book a positive review, calling it "insightful and illuminating". [24] The Financial Times said the book "gets closer than most to understanding what makes the elusive politician tick". [25]

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References

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