Keir Starmer 'unpopular PM across the board': Labour lacking 'clear programme, coherent government'
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Issued on: 13/05/2026 - 19:02Modified: 13/05/2026 - 19:12
10:44 min Share Play (10:44 min) From the showMark Owen is pleased to welcome Quentin Peel, Associate Fellow with the Europe Programme at Chatham House and former Foreign Editor at the Financial Times. At the centre of his analysis is the precarious position of British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, whom Peel suggests is “hanging on in there” despite initial expectations that he might “be going within 24 hours.” The paradox, Peel argues, is that Starmer governs with “a huge majority” that is structurally unstable, born not of enthusiasm but of “a disaster for the Conservative Party” under repeated crises involving Boris Johnson, Liz Truss, and Rishi Sunak.
Yet Peel’s central critique is not only structural but personal and political: Starmer, he argues, “doesn’t have charisma… he’s dull,” a leadership deficit that has contributed to Labour being “a nervous government” rather than a coherent governing force. Against this backdrop, Peel describes a political system in fragmentation, where voters are “leaving the party and voting for… Reform UK and the Greens,” producing a landscape in which the electorate appears to be saying, “a plague on all your houses.”
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