Starmer says he ‘will never walk away’ as Burnham joins Labour figures backing PM – UK politics live | Politics


Starmer insists he will ‘never walk away’ from task he has to change UK, as he urges Labour to stop feuding

Keir Starmer is speaking at an event in Hertfordshire.

He starts with a reference to the events of yesterday – saying there has been a lot of politics around recently.

But he is focused on the cost of living, he says. He says he knows that it is like to struggle, because when he was growing up his family couldn’t always pay their bills.

He says he leads the most working-class cabinet in history.

He says people are still being held back by their backgrounds.

He says that the system did not work for people like his brother, who spent “his adult life wandering from job to job in virtual poverty”. And other people are in the same situtation, he says.

He says he is fighting to help “young people who don’t get the opportunities they deserve”, and the “millions of people held back because of a system that doesn’t work for them”.

He says he wants to ensure people get the “dignity, the respect, the chance that they deserve”.

He goes on:

[There are some] people in recent days who say the Labour government should have a different fight, a fight with itself, instead of a fight for the millions of people who need us to fight for them.

And I say to them – I will never walk away from the mandate I was given to change this country, I will never walk away from the people that I’m charged with fighting for, I will never walk away from the country that I love.

Britain is a compassionate country, he says. Given half the chance, we’ll help each other out,” he says.

He says the real fight is not within the Labour party. It is with rightwing politics, and the politics of grievance. And he will be in that fight “as long as I have breath in my body”.

UPDATE: Starmer said:

I will never walk away from the mandate I was given to change this country, I will never walk away from the people that I’m charged with fighting for, and I will never walk away from the country that I love.

And that is the country who I truly believe we are, a compassionate, reasonable, live and let live country, a diverse country where, given half the chance, will help each other out.

That is who we are as a country, and I want to serve every single part of that country, the country that I love.

The fight coming up in politics, the real fight is not in the Labour party. It’s with the right-wing politics that challenges that, the politics of Reform, the politics of divide, divide, divide, grievance, grievance, grievance.

That will tear our country apart. That is the fight that we are in, and I will be in that fight as long as I have breath in my body.

Keir Starmer speaking to people at a community centre in Hertfordshire.
Keir Starmer speaking to people at a community centre in Hertfordshire. Photograph: Suzanne Plunkett/Reuters
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Eluned Morgan says she won’t give ‘running commentary’ on Westminster – but Wales better off when Labour succeeds

At first minister’s questions in Cardiff, Eluned Morgan, the Welsh first minister, reaffirmed her support for Keir Starmer “in the job he was elected to do”. (See 11.18am.)

She told the Senedd:

Keir Starmer was elected with a clear mandate to be the prime minister of the United Kingdom. I support him in the job he was elected to do.

When Labour succeeds in government, the people of Wales become better off and that is my key concern.

My job as first minister is to improve the lives of people in Wales, not to provide a running commentary on Westminster politics.

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