Sean New
213 posts

Sean New
@SeanNew455668
Chauffeur, Property Developer, Private Number Plate Trader
London England Katılım Aralık 2023
89 Takip Edilen22 Takipçiler

In the marble halls of Westminster, where promises dissolve like mist on the Thames, Keir Starmer once strode like a man who believed his own myth. The knighted prosecutor, the self-proclaimed “man of the people,” the Labour leader who swore he would restore trust, decency, and competence to British politics. What a hollow crown he wears now.
From the moment he seized power in 2024 on a wave of anti-Tory exhaustion, the mask began to slip. He pledged no tax rises on “working people”—then hammered them with the biggest raid on pensions and employers in a generation. He vowed to fix the NHS—yet waiting lists ballooned while his government slashed winter fuel payments for millions of pensioners shivering in the cold. He promised border control—then watched small boats smash records while his ministers dithered and virtue-signalled. Every U-turn, every broken word, every lecture about “working people” from a man who spent decades in the Westminster bubble exposed the same truth: Starmer was never the steady hand he claimed. He was a shape-shifter, a careerist in a red tie, more interested in focus groups and Guardian headlines than the forgotten towns choking on his failures.
The scandals piled higher than the in-trays he ignored. Freebies, donor cash, sleaze that would have made the last lot blush—yet Starmer’s response was always the same: deflection, denial, and that sanctimonious glare. While families scraped by on stagnant wages and energy bills that still bit like winter frost, he jetted off to international summits, preening on the world stage while Britain burned at home. His approval ratings sank into the political Mariana Trench. Even his own MPs whispered that the man had lost the plot.
Then came the spring of 2026. May 7th—the local elections that became a national reckoning. Labour didn’t just lose. It was eviscerated. Over 1,400 council seats vaporised. Heartlands in Sunderland, Barnsley, Wakefield, and Gateshead turned blue and yellow as Reform UK stormed the ballot boxes. Conservative strongholds fell too, but the real story was Labour’s collapse—14 councils lost, including their first-ever London borough to Reform in Havering. The people had spoken in the clearest possible terms: enough. Enough of the lectures. Enough of the broken promises. Enough of Keir Starmer.
Any decent leader would have looked at the wreckage, heard the roar of rejection, and done the honourable thing. Resign. Step aside. Let the party regroup before the next general election became a massacre. But not this man. Not Sir Keir. In the days after the bloodbath, while Labour MPs queued up to demand his head and the country reeled from the scale of the rebuke, Starmer dug in like a limpet on a sinking ship. No leadership challenge had been formally triggered, he sniffed. He would “get on with governing.” He would not “plunge the country into chaos.” Chaos? The chaos was already here—his chaos. The arrogance was breathtaking. The contempt for the electorate, visceral. In one breath he admitted “tough results” and “unnecessary mistakes”; in the next he clung to office as though the premiership were a personal fiefdom rather than a public trust.
This is not leadership. This is hubris dressed in a suit. This is the behaviour of a man who believes the rules of accountability apply to everyone except himself. While Nigel Farage’s Reform movement surges on the back of raw public anger, Starmer sits in Downing Street like a squatter who refuses to read the eviction notice. Britain did not vote for five more years of this. The local elections were not a protest—they were a verdict.
History will not be kind. It will record Keir Starmer as the man who took a landslide victory and turned it to dust in under two years. The man who mistook silence for strength and arrogance for resolve. The man who, when the country cried “enough,” simply replied: “I’m not going anywhere.”

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UK PM Starmer battles for political survival in pivotal speech as gilt yields rise cnbc.com/2026/05/11/uk-…
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The PM is currently giving a make or break speech as he fights to save his political future following the dismal local election results.
LIVE UPDATES: trib.al/kOEQXtd

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'Chancer' Nigel Farage 'took the country for a ride' with Brexit then 'fled the scene', says Starmer in crunch speech lbc.co.uk/article/starme…
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Starmer fights to stave off leadership contest in major speech to save his premiership following Labour's disastrous local elections results - live updates trib.al/d7msTTP
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Teetering on the edge of a leadership challenge, British PM Keir Starmer has one shot at giving the speech of his career today.
But we spoke to more than a dozen ministers, MPs and advisers who reckon he could already be past the point of no return.
politico.eu/article/keir-s…
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🔴The Prime Minister also set out a jobs guarantee for young unemployed Britons in a promise to help those who had been “ignored”⤵️
telegraph.co.uk/politics/2026/…
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Sir Keir Starmer announced he would bring forward a law this week to nationalise British Steel
Saying: “Public ownership in the public interest, urgent government on the side of working people” ⤵️
telegraph.co.uk/politics/2026/…

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UK PM Keir Starmer to give major speech as he tries to see off leadership challenge after dismal election results - follow live
bbc.in/3R1nkRc
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Final call for Sir Reset: Starmer pleads with mutinous Labour MPs not to oust him and vows to unwind Brexit in crucial speech trib.al/B2FZyrQ
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Sir Keir Starmer could face a fight for survival this week as senior Labour figures are rumoured to be plotting leadership challenges, after disastrous results in last week's local elections.
The Prime Minister will deliver a speech later, promising 'sweeping changes' but around 40 MPs are already calling for him to stand down.
@LouisaJamesITV has the latest.
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Starmer to promise sweeping changes as he makes speech in fight to keep job
itv.com/news/2026-05-1…
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"That hurts. And it should hurt. I get it, I feel it, and I take responsibility."
Sir Keir Starmer opens his speech by reflecting on the "very tough" election results and warns of "very dangerous opponents."
trib.al/U0IqO1E
📺 Sky 501, Virgin 602, Freeview 233
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A plan for a stronger and fairer Britain. Watch live. x.com/i/broadcasts/1…
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