I Deeply Regret “Island of Strangers” Speech, Says Starmer
Keir Starmer has said he “deeply” regrets saying that Britain risked becoming an “island of strangers” because of mass immigration, in the latest U-turn to appease his Left-wing MPs at the expense of aiming for a broader appeal. The Telegraph has more.
The Prime Minister said it “wasn’t right” to use that “particular phrase” in a speech last month, despite No 10 previously insisting that he stood by his words.
He said neither he nor his speechwriters had been aware that the remarks could have been interpreted as an “echo” of the language of Enoch Powell.
The comments from the Prime Minister drew a fierce backlash from Left-wing critics, who accused him of “reflecting the language” of the Right-wing politician’s infamous ‘Rivers of Blood’ speech.
Sir Keir told the Observer: “I wouldn’t have used those words if I had known they were, or even would be interpreted as an echo of Powell. I had no idea – and my speechwriters didn’t know either.
“But that particular phrase – no, it wasn’t right. I’ll give you the honest truth – I deeply regret using it.”
Earlier this month, the Prime Minister suggested that he regretted the speech, admitting that he could have been more articulate.
He insisted the message he was “trying to get across” was supposed to have been about bringing people together.
Sir Keir delivered the controversial speech last month while announcing a new programme of immigration restrictions.
He said: “Let me put it this way – nations depend on rules, fair rules. Sometimes they are written down, often they are not, but either way, they give shape to our values, guide us towards our rights, of course, but also our responsibilities, the obligations we owe to each other.
“In a diverse nation like ours… we risk becoming an island of strangers, not a nation that walks forward together.”
Sir Keir said high levels of immigration in recent years had caused “incalculable” damage to the UK.
It drew a furious backlash, with John McDonnell, the former Labour shadow chancellor, accusing the Prime Minister of “reflecting the language of Enoch Powell”. Zarah Sultana, the suspended Labour MP, called the speech “sickening”.
Powell, the former Conservative cabinet minister who died in 1998, said in his 1968 speech that the native British population had “found themselves made strangers in their own country” because of immigration.
Sir Sadiq Khan, the Labour Mayor of London, distanced himself from [Starmer’s] remarks at the time, saying they “aren’t words that I would use”.
Eluned Morgan, the First Minister of Wales, also appeared to suggest that Sir Keir had used “divisive language” in his speech.
Diane Abbott, the UK’s first black female MP, described the “island of strangers” comment as “fundamentally racist”, and accused Sir Keir of aping Reform UK in order to turn around Labour’s dire poll ratings.
The Prime Minister’s team also came under fire, with one MP reportedly calling for Sir Keir to sack whoever coined the “island of strangers” phrase.
Worth reading in full.
It’s the latest U-turn in Labour’s simmering civil war over Starmer’s chaotic running of the country, with Starmer loyalists taking aim at the rebel “pricks” who forced the Prime Minister to water down his flagship welfare reforms, leaving Rachel Reeves facing a fiscal black hole of her own. The Mail has more.
Keir Starmer is wrestling to restore his grip on Labour today as loyalists vent fury at rebel “pr**ks” who forced his latest U-turn.
Tensions are running high after a massive revolt saw the PM offer major concessions to salvage flagship legislation on health and disability benefits.
Sir Keir was left personally begging MPs to back the government after more than 120 MPs vowed to kill the plans in a crunch vote on Tuesday.
A deal announced after midnight includes guarantees that existing claimants will not lose money. It is expected to wipe out around £3 billion of the £5 billion savings the Treasury had hoped to get from the reforms – hardening fears that Rachel Reeves will have to hike taxes again in the Autumn.
There have been claims of shouting matches between whips and rebels, with much fury targeted at Sir Keir’s Chief of Staff Morgan McSweeney and “over-excitable boys” running No 10.
Some critics have even demanded “regime change”, eliciting an humiliating public denial from the PM that he might have to quit after failing to “read the room”.
A Cabinet source told MailOnline that No 10 had been wrong to sell the plans initially as a package of cuts, even though polls showed that was popular with the public. “They should have stressed to MPs it was the only way ensure the welfare state still exists in a few years,” the source added.
One Labour veteran told MailOnline that new MPs had proved harder to talk around. “There are some who think this is going to be their only term in government now, so why give up on principles,” they said.
In the Spectator, Steerpike spots further U-turns in Starmer’s Observer interview, as he also renounces his original Rose Garden “things will get worse before they get better” speech and says appointing Sue Gray as his chief of staff was the “wrong” decision.
Renouncing his Rose Garden speech
Not content with dumping on his current speechwriter, Starmer also savages his team’s initial effort in Downing Street. Turns out, he now thinks that saying that “things will get worse before they get better”, was – shock! – a mistake because it “squeezed the hope out. … We were so determined to show how bad it was that we forgot people wanted something to look forward to as well.” Does he stand by any speech he’s given in No 10…?
Throwing Sue Gray under the bus
Prior to this week’s welfare disaster, perhaps the most dramatic moment of Starmer’s brief premiership came after 93 days when he axed Sue Gray as his chief of staff. “Not everyone thought it was a good idea when I appointed her,” he tells Baldwin. “It was my call, my judgement, my decision, and I got that wrong. Sue wasn’t the right person for this job.” Ouch.
The Spectator‘s James Heale counts that as four major U-turns in four weeks as Starmer approaches his Government’s first anniversary in power, with ‘island of strangers’ added to the grooming gangs inquiry, the winter fuel reversal and the welfare concessions. Does the PM still agree with anything he did in his first year?
Perhaps more pertinently, does this bruising period for the PM mark the end of his chasing of Reform votes? Will he now settle instead into governing as the doomed, fiscally incontinent and out of touch Left-wing party that his MPs seem happiest to be? Morgan McSweeney will be keen still to take the fight to Reform. But how much more of it will Labour MPs stomach? How much longer will they even put up with McSweeney? Time will tell.
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Excellent
How much longer before he deeply regrets becoming prime minister?
Clue…we’re all regretting it already, and there’ll be no mercy from the history books.
If books are still allowed.
They all seem to fall on their feet
No punishment for failure
It’s because since Thatcher was kicked out by her MP’s we haven’t had a PM who’s wanted the job in order to help the country rather than just wanting to be PM. This is because people who go into politics for the right reason, because they want to serve, and become MPs are too busy doing their job standing up for their constituents to brown nose/grease their way up the party ranks. Political parties are like dish water, the scum and slime/grease rises to the top.
Indeed. Politics is a funny thing to want to get into anyway – surely deranged do-gooders and predatory maniacs are going to be over-represented to start with.
The clueless leading the useless, or is it the other way round?
As Biden/Harris discovered, it’s hard to keep the Coalition of the Fringes together.
I notice that he’s less concerned about whether what he said was true, than whether it might someone who is classed as an enemy, whether they should prove right or wrong.
It’s the same mindset that hides facts about COVID shots in case it encourages anti-vaxxers.
Politics is all about how things appear, and that is all that concerns this insipid Prime Minister.
‘Skid’ Starmer. Attempting to re-write his speeches one apology at a time; anything said more than a week ago qualifies for ‘clarification’.
He is going to give you the “Honest Truth”..lol
He deeply regrets he spoke the truth which embarrassed and upset the shitshow that is “Labour” and made him unpopular with sub-species therein.
Only true thing he’s ever said…
He’s clearly not Left Wing enough, he’ll have to go!
Doesn’t do to upset the deranged wing of the party.
Look at his stupid f***ing face.
Stupid f***ing eyes.
Stupid disingenuous f***ing expression.
Waste of f***ing air.
The only reason Kneel regrets using the phrase “an island of strangers” is because it is true and Kneel never tells the truth.
It is as clear as day that the threats to cut the Benefits Bill has been manufactured in order to cause uproar but primarily it provides the excuses required in order to introduce grotesque tax increases. Kneel of course can then shrug and declare “not me guv.”
Very predictable.
Ah ha —-Interesting theory. Does this idiot have the intelligence for such a scheme though?
No Kneel is not bright enough to work this out but then he doesn’t have to, he’s just an order taker. A sort of glorified waiter.
He saw the Polls, he saw the Local Election results, he knew millions were concerned about mass Immigration and decided to pretend to show concern for those millions who were not happy about this absurd immigration madness. ——As usual he made a Pigs Ear of it and had to do a U turn apology.
I never will ascribe cock-up theory to the Scamdemic. I will never accept that this government is genuinely as incompetent as it is behaving. Everything is carefully planned and orchestrated. I will be amazed if my budget predictions are wrong.
Either this government is very stupid or it believes the public is. My guess is most probably the latter.
That’s a shame.
Without the fit of woops – that may come back to bite me, I’d have voted for him.Honesly
So he “deeply regrets” the only truthful statement he’s ever made since becoming Prime Minister. He’s now owned, lock, stock and barrel by the Corbynistas, of which, let’s not forget, he was one …. campaigning twice to get the idiot elected.
Now they just have to decide whether to rid themselves of the liability or keep him in place, jerking him around and making him perform to their tune.
“I wonder if one day that, you’ll say that, you care
If you say you love me madly, I’ll gladly
Be there
Like a puppet on a string.”
He really is the most odious, weak, pathetic, incompetent, unprincipled cur to lead a country. A task he wholly ill-equipped to do.
We deeply regret you became our Prime Minister.
Has he or will he ever actually formulate his own original opinions and then (shock horror) stick to them for more than a week without feeling the need to apologise?
We have just received a new video of Mr Starmer apologising for his statement:
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=lwfuUyTMpVY&t=50s
Love how Abbot straight away, its racist, do these people know any other word!, its clear that he’s apalled that he told an actual truth for once!!