Sorry, what just happened? Before we hurtle on to the next instalment of Labour government drama, letβs pause for a second to recap. So Keir Starmerβs allies briefed against Wes Streeting accusing him of plotting a leadership challenge, then Streeting denied the claims, and Starmer apologised for them, before belatedly claiming the briefing had not come from Downing Street at all. A claim so implausible that a government source said journalists βmust have all been tricked by several impostors posing as No 10 staffβ.
If this sounds farcical, vaguely embarrassing for all concerned and massively irrelevant to your life, you would be right. But in between the first chapter and the last (or perhaps the penultimate, given the aftershocks still reverberating through No 10), the episode acted as a masterclass in the patterns that define the stakes of British politics and characterise the stakeholders. It is also a portent of the future.
First, crisis: a government and leader in a death spiral. Second, a high-drama episode centred on personnel, chiefs of staff and cabinet ministers.
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