Keir Starmer - A Prime Minister on the Ropes
Increasingly despised by the British people, the British Prime Minister lacks legitimacy at home and respect overseas.
Britain’s Prime Minister Keir Starmer is not a popular man. This might seem an odd statement on the face of it, given that he and his party were elected to govern just six months ago in the summer of 2024; however as all those with an interest in British politics know, this was very far from a landslide. Unlike Donald Trump’s thumping victory in the November 2024 election, in which he won a clean sweep of all swing states, the British election was one in which many voters stayed at home.
To illustrate, overall voter turnout in the US election was approximately 156.3 million, the second-largest in U.S. history. In contrast, the 2024 United Kingdom general election had a voter turnout of approximately 60%, marking the lowest participation since 2001. The reason for this low turnout in the UK election was quite simply disgust and disillusionment with the Conservative government which, despite 14 years in power, presided over record levels of immigration, breaking every promise made to reduce numbers, not to mention presiding over a culture of anti-white initiatives such as DEI spreading into institutions across the land.
Donald Trump is seen by many as a credible opposition to years of extremely destructive and insidious rule by an openly leftist administration. In Britain by contrast, conservative voters, let down by their nominally conservative government, found themselves abandoned with no credible opposition to a two-party system within which the Labour and Conservative parties are simply two sides of the same coin. Betrayed by the party which failed to fulfil its promises to them, this voting majority had nowhere to turn and so they stayed home.
Barely six months into government, Starmer has outdone himself in alienating the British people, proving even more tyrannical and anti-white than many predicted. This is probably most characterised in his handling and response to two of the vilest crimes against the White British in recent history.
In response to the terrorist murder of three little British girls by an immigrant-descended African, as well as the attempted murder of other children and parents present, Starmer’s response was to reaffirm his commitment to protecting muslims in the UK, condemn those protesting about it, and lock them up them with excessive and unwarranted prison sentences.
His words and actions in response to continuing and mounting outrage over the decades long scandal of the mass rape of British children by mostly Pakistani men, during which Starmer was Director of Public Prosecutions, have also been telling. Forced to make a public statement on his actions during this time as a result of tweets by Elon Musk, Starmer doubled down by ordering all his MPs to vote against a fresh public inquiry into the scandal. They unanimously did so.
The trial of Axel Rudakubana, the Rwandan murderer of three British children, took place on the 20th January 2025, conveniently the same day as the presidential inauguration of Donald Trump. What the trial revealed was shocking and yet to many, not unexpected. Rudakubana had been reported no less than three times to Britain’s anti-terrorism programme, Prevent. Incredibly, this repeated reporting wasn’t deemed serious enough for any action to be taken. It was also proven conclusively that his actions were terrorism; he had a copy of an Al-Quaeda terror manual and the lethal toxin ricin was found in his home. Bear in mind that at the time, people were convicted for speaking about this atrocity on social media, including saying, correctly, that it was an act of Islamic terrorism.
Starmer made another statement to address the publicising of these findings. His post of this statement on X was quickly ratioed by patriot and Homeland Party member Steve Laws.
Starmer is decidedly on the back foot. Forced into issuing public statements on both these atrocities committed by non-whites against native British children, in both cases young girls, his attempts to backtrack and justify his position appear to be fooling nobody. Indeed, as Steve Laws indicated it also seems he purposefully withheld crucial information from the British public.
Elon Musk, no doubt aggrieved at the knowledge that the ‘Centre for Countering Digital Hate’, closely aligned with the Labour government, intended to ‘kill Musk’s Twitter’, has been publicising these horrific crimes and Starmer’s inadequate response to the world on X. Starmer’s appearing to take sides against the native population has cast him in a very bad light not only domestically, but also around the world.
With Trump now sworn in as US president, Starmer’s situation is worse than ever. With the Labour party having openly and indeed unlawfully attempted to interfere in the US election by sending activists to drum up support for Kamala Harris, Starmer’s position increasingly looks untenable. His hiding behind the ‘special relationship’ between the US and the UK, a phrase he appears to be desperately using like some sort of mantra to make the bad stuff go away, will cut no ice with the new US administration, who he could not have done more to alienate.
Loathed at home by large swathes of the population who regard him as a traitor at worst and inept at best, and having made enemies of the leadership of the world’s most powerful nation even before they were sworn into office, it’s hard to see how Keir Starmer can go on. One thing is for sure - he will be missed by few.