He beamed at me: “Doesn’t feel like we’re under a Socialist tyranny, does it?” The sense of buoyancy which followed Sir Tony Blair’s victory did not last but it was real. This time round, the feeling is simple relief rather than elation. The PM, as we must get used to calling Sir Keir Starmer, tried very hard for uplift: “Walk into the morning”, he declared at about five in the morning, “the sunlight of hope, pale at first but getting stronger through the day, shining once again, on a country with the opportunity after 14 years to get its future back.” A nation blinked sleepily, then went back to bed.
There’s a reason for the muted ecstasy at the extraordinary scale of the Labour victory. Just over a third of those who voted, 34 per cent, voted for the party. And on the back of it he’s got 412 seats, an imperial margin, enough to be immune from rebellion, indifferent to criticism.
Then there’s the other figure which should give him pause, but almost certainly won’t. Four in 10 of us didn’t vote at all, eight per cent less than last time. None of the Aboves made up the biggest bloc of the electorate. Labour’s vote share was less than Jeremy Corbyn got in 2017, less than Theresa May got.
Denne historien er fra July 05, 2024-utgaven av Evening Standard.
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