Who is Keir Starmer, the ‘sober, serious, boring person’ who could be Britain’s next prime minister?

Who is Keir Starmer, the ‘sober, serious, boring person’ who could be Britain’s next prime minister?

Oct 7, 2023 - 14:30
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Who is Keir Starmer, the ‘sober, serious, boring person’ who could be Britain’s next prime minister?

The next general election in Britain is a while away. And it’s sure to be an interesting one. Will Rishi Sunak be able to reverse the fortunes of the Conservative Party or will the Labour Party deliver the beleaguered Tories a chastening defeat?

At the wheel of the Labour Party is Keir Starmer, a former human rights lawyer, who took charge three years ago after the disastrous reign of socialist Jeremy Corbyn. He vowed to unite it and get it back on a path to power. And he’s been able to do so – the 61-year-old has moved the main opposition back to the centre ground, quietened dissent among the left, and rooted out anti-Semitism within its ranks, making Labour an electable proposition.

“He has absolutely put Labour in a place where it could win the next general election, and a lot of people thought that was really, really ambitious and quite unlikely,” political scientist Karl Pike told AFP.

The Labour heads into its annual conference in Liverpool, northwest England, this weekend enjoying double-digit leads in opinion polls ahead of a general election expected next year.

However, it’s not clear sailing for Starmer himself; he has negative approval ratings.

“He’s not an inspirational speaker. I mean, he’s not Tony Blair,” Steven Fielding, a politics expert at the University of Nottingham and Labour party member, told AFP. “(But) I think Starmer has calculated that if he just presents himself as a sober, serious, boring person after all of the nonsense that’s gone on before… that will just be about enough to get through.”

Early life

Born in London, he’s one of the four siblings to a toolmaker father and a nurse mother, both of whom were animal lovers who rescued donkeys. “Whenever one of us left home, they replaced us with a donkey,” he has joked.

His unusual first name was his socialist parents’ tribute to Labour’s founding father, Keir Hardie.

At school he had violin lessons with Norman Cook, who became DJ Fatboy Slim.

British Labour Party leader Keir Starmer and wife Victoria have two children. He is one of the four siblings to a toolmaker father and a nurse mother. He’s also known to be an avid football fan with Arsenal being his favourite. File image/Reuters

Starmer completed his legal studies at the universities of Leeds and Oxford and then turned his attention to causes, including defending trade unions and anti-McDonald’s activists.

He’s also known to be a keen footballer and an Arsenal fan. He is also at the liberty to call human rights lawyer Amal Clooney a friend, as they practised law at the same firm.

From lawyer to politician

In 2003, he began his move to the establishment with a job ensuring police in Northern Ireland complied with human rights legislation.

Five years later, he was appointed director of public prosecutions for England and Wales by the then Labour government.

Between 2008 and 2013, he oversaw the prosecution of MPs for abusing their expenses, journalists for phone-hacking, and young rioters involved in 2011 unrest across England.

He was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II and in 2015, was elected as a member of parliament, representing a seat in left-leaning north London.

Just weeks before he was elected, his mother died of a rare disease of the joints.

In 2021 he broke down in tears in a TV interview as he described how her agonising death “broke” his father.

Many still ponder if Labour Party leader Keir Starmer could win against British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak. Currently, Starmer has negative approval ratings. File image/Reuters

In 2016, Starmer joined a rebellion by Labour MPs over Corbyn’s perceived lack of leadership during the EU referendum campaign.

It failed, and later that year he rejoined the top team as Labour’s Brexit spokesman, where he remained until succeeding Corbyn in April 2020.

Starmer has endured attacks from the Tories for dropping a number of pledges he made during his successful leadership campaign, including scrapping university tuition fees.

Critics say he is indecisive and accuse him of failing to spell out a clear vision for the country.

Supporters, though, say he is right to keep his cards close to his chest until an election date is announced.

“He probably is right to be cautious but I think his egg is about to hatch now and we’ll see more from him in the coming months,” Dave Mullaney, a 54-year-old Labour party activist in the southwestern city of Bristol, told AFP.

With inputs from AFP

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