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Never here Keir?

(253 Posts)
RosieandherMaw Fri 14-Nov-25 18:03:28

No longer “two tier Keir” is our PM now “never here Keir” ?
According to today’s Times, some Labour ministers have urged Starmer, who has been nicknamed by some colleagues “never here Keir”, to delegate more to David Lammy and Yvette Cooper, the deputy prime minister and the foreign secretary.
By the end of the month, Starmer will have spent a sixth of his premiership on foreign trips and completed six laps of the earth. Ministers have called for him to “get off the plane” and focus on the UK.
The prime minister has travelled more and further than any other British leader in official history, including almost double the distance that Sir Tony Blair covered in the same period in office .
Starmer has visited 44 countries on 37 trips out of the country to attend conferences, bilateral meetings and sports fixtures. During his first 17 months in office, Starmer has spent two and a half months abroad.
There’s enough going wrong in this country surely to warrant keeping a closer eye on things, a firmer hand on the proverbial tiller?

MaizieD Sun 16-Nov-25 18:05:30

MayBee70

But wouldn’t they then be accused of not sticking to the manifesto that they were elected on?

I.m sure that a political party could write a manifesto which says enough to be achievable but leaves room for doing more over and above what is in it.

But really the biggest problem any party has is this slavish adherence to the economic theory which is destroying countries all over the world.
The US is suffering from it, Europe is suffering, third world countries are suffering when they are driven into cutting state spending as a condition of loans from the IMF or the World bank.

Populism is gaining ground because people are poor and without hope for the future. the difference between now and 1100 years or so ago is that now they have a vote, In the past they endured what governments threw at them. They're rejecting the regimes which have done very little for them for decades and trying new alternatives. Though, sadly, the alternatives really don't follow any different economic practice. So aren't any better.

FriedGreenTomatoes2 Sun 16-Nov-25 18:09:13

Labour could’ve done so much with their majority.
Maybe …
However their own MPs on the back benchers didn’t agree with welfare cuts (for example) and voted them down.

KS is in a bit of a bind now.
The knives are definitely out and there’s very little support for him - from anywhere, really.

I can’t see him lasting past May next year (as the annihilation will be massive).

MaizieD Sun 16-Nov-25 18:09:24

ronib

Um…. Does anyone know what the election promises were by now? Clearly 1.5 million houses, 6,500 more teachers. Still not happening? Childcare has improved but that was a Sunak initiative and very welcome it is too.
I don’t remember any manifesto promises to smash the middle classes but if the rumours are true, council tax for bands F to H are set to double. Maybe hospital waiting lists have improved but the new round of strikes by doctors and consultants is not going to help. Etc

It's not the government that is smashing the middle classes, ronib, it's the wealthy who are sucking up the nation's wealth faster than the nation can increase it.

We never did establish the source of wealth, did we?

FriedGreenTomatoes2 Sun 16-Nov-25 18:11:28

Not being funny here MaizieD but if it’s so obvious to you why the economists keep getting it all so wrong, how come what you think doesn’t gain traction?

sundowngirl Sun 16-Nov-25 19:34:11

mokryna

Although kier may not be here as much as you would like, he is working, l bet he is more than Boris was in his last 6 months.

According to AI
“Keir Starmer has made significantly more foreign trips in the last six months than Boris did in his final 6 months as Prime Minister” earning him the nickname name Never Here Keir!

MaizieD Sun 16-Nov-25 20:51:04

FriedGreenTomatoes2

Not being funny here MaizieD but if it’s so obvious to you why the economists keep getting it all so wrong, how come what you think doesn’t gain traction?

I think it doesn't gain traction because it contradicts the economic theory which Reagan and Thatcher introduced in the 1980s and which has become the unquestioned 'orthodoxy'. It's partly ideology and partly a theory which, when put into practice gives tremendous advantage to the wealthy and they are the people who have the most power and influence over governments. Naturally they will fight any attempt to diminish their ability to continually increase their wealth, regardless of the consequences to 'ordinary' people.

Before the 1980s economic practice was based on the economic theory of Keynes' It was that which inspired Roosevelt in the US to invest public money in projects which created jobs for the less wealthy and helped the US to come through the 1930s period of depression after the late 1920's stock market crash in a far better state than other 'first world' countries. It was also Keynesianism that helped the UK to come through WW2 and to create the Welfare State and nationalise industries in the post war period (even when it appeared that the UK was broke).

I have posted time and time again explaining how state investment drives an economy and trying to dispel the myth, heavily promoted by Thatcher, who wasn't an economist, that the country is dependent on taxation to fund government spending. This is absolutely contrary to the reality of how money enters the economy. It has been empirically proved to be wrong, but the myth has taken such a strong hold that it is very hard to dispel, especially as it it repeated continually by commentators and , I'm sorry to say, many economists.

David49 Sun 16-Nov-25 21:27:03

FriedGreenTomatoes2

Not being funny here MaizieD but if it’s so obvious to you why the economists keep getting it all so wrong, how come what you think doesn’t gain traction?

The Keynes theories are good, if you use state investment expand the productive capacity of the economy. Rosevelt did this in the 1930s, China, Korea, Japan, and Germany have done that more recently.
The UK along with many other western nations chose to pursue a service economy, thinking that internal investment would fund expansion. It hasn’t, pressure to increase social spending has meant ever more borrowing the cost of which is a problem in itself at £100 billion a year. Our borrowing has made the rich richer, not just state borrowing the interest we pay on mortgages car loans and credit cards is making someone somewhere richer.

MaizieD Sun 16-Nov-25 23:35:53

State spending doesn’t need ‘borrowing’ to fund it, David. As the state issues our money why should it need to borrow it?

Especially as domestic purchasers of government bonds (which are the majority of UK bond holders) are using state issued money to purchase them..

nanna8 Sun 16-Nov-25 23:38:45

MaizieD thank you for your explanation. Clearly put and understandable to me at least and I am not an economist.

Allsorts Mon 17-Nov-25 06:09:43

The wealthy employ people, spend the money, what a nice problem to have, that is the reality. Maisie have you looked at our debts? No government has the answers, Labour always borrowed out of trouble. I no longer support any political party so disgusted at them all.. There are good decent people in all parties but overall others very lacking

ronib Mon 17-Nov-25 06:23:06

I am left wondering what an economy looks like when a population spends more of its own money. Very low tax, low government expenditure but with excellent funded healthcare and a safe public environment. It’s no wonder that the UK’s middle classes are settling in Abu Dhabi.
Any high earning individual currently on Advance Tax, and paying 60 percent tax already must wonder why bother staying here.

MaizieD Mon 17-Nov-25 08:20:50

Allsorts

The wealthy employ people, spend the money, what a nice problem to have, that is the reality. Maisie have you looked at our debts? No government has the answers, Labour always borrowed out of trouble. I no longer support any political party so disgusted at them all.. There are good decent people in all parties but overall others very lacking

I’m afraid that the very opposite of this is true, It is a common belief that the rich and powerful perpetrate because it makes their greed look virtuous. I’m afraid that once you start looking at economic research you will find it is untrue.

GrannyGravy13 Mon 17-Nov-25 08:22:14

MaizieD I admire your tenacity on this, and thank you for sharing again and again this useful and important information.

I was a handbag economy believer, until I read your posts and swotted Keynes, thank you 👏👏👏

MaizieD Mon 17-Nov-25 08:27:03

ronib

I am left wondering what an economy looks like when a population spends more of its own money. Very low tax, low government expenditure but with excellent funded healthcare and a safe public environment. It’s no wonder that the UK’s middle classes are settling in Abu Dhabi.
Any high earning individual currently on Advance Tax, and paying 60 percent tax already must wonder why bother staying here.

I’m afraid I can’t make head or tail of your post, ronib.

I do think, from the drift of it, that you read too much of the wealthy’s propaganda.

.

David49 Mon 17-Nov-25 08:27:14

MaizieD

State spending doesn’t need ‘borrowing’ to fund it, David. As the state issues our money why should it need to borrow it?

Especially as domestic purchasers of government bonds (which are the majority of UK bond holders) are using state issued money to purchase them..

The State could print more money or use QE but that would be a negative step in the eyes of financial markets we have already borrowed 100% of GDP that’s £2.4 Trillion. The UK does not exist in a vacuum what others think matters.

That does not mean we cannot borrow more, but, it needs to be to increase productivity not to increase social spending. Successive previous governments have spent almost the entire borrowing on social enhancement to win votes at elections, very little on productivity.

This is probably the last chance for Labour to get the finances right, if they get it wrong the economy will sink

MaizieD Mon 17-Nov-25 08:38:14

I don’t think you understood what I was saying, David.
Try again

WHY SHOULD THE GOVERNMENT ‘BORROW’ MONEY THAT IT ISSUED IN THE FIRST PLACE?

Chocolatelovinggran Mon 17-Nov-25 08:49:02

ronib, I'm intrigued by your post about the "middle classes ..settling in Abu Dhabi". What's the data on this?
My experience ( limited, of course) is that people who work in the Middle East return home at the end of the contract.
I understand that some aspects of the judiciary in this country are governed by Sharia law, which has not had a good press in our country.

petra Mon 17-Nov-25 08:51:03

GrannyGravy13

MaizieD I admire your tenacity on this, and thank you for sharing again and again this useful and important information.

I was a handbag economy believer, until I read your posts and swotted Keynes, thank you 👏👏👏

The same here.
MaizieD has educated me in how it all works against the average working man.

fancythat Mon 17-Nov-25 09:02:34

^
We never did establish the source of wealth, did we?^

God plays a part.

Christian countries used to be wealthy.
Nowadays, those same Countries are not so Christian.

Luckygirl3 Mon 17-Nov-25 09:03:38

I am glad that Starmer is retrieving some of our recognition on the world stage after our reputation plummeted during the buffoon years. I admire him for this. A good reputation internationally has an influence on trade deals.
He has secretaries of state on the case at home and I am delighted that under his watch the whole equivalent of Sure Start is back on the map.
I am tired of people casually dissing the UK.

Luckygirl3 Mon 17-Nov-25 09:06:36

Ref economy discussion in this thread .... roll on the day when economics becomes a basic curriculum subject and we have an electorate that can vote from a position of understanding how national budgets work.

fancythat Mon 17-Nov-25 09:06:58

MaizieD

State spending doesn’t need ‘borrowing’ to fund it, David. As the state issues our money why should it need to borrow it?

Especially as domestic purchasers of government bonds (which are the majority of UK bond holders) are using state issued money to purchase them..

Yes it can print money.

Which, if that is all it did, would cause massive inflation.
It would bring down the Uk.

The Uk borrowing is not just domestic.

fancythat Mon 17-Nov-25 09:09:15

Luckygirl3

Ref economy discussion in this thread .... roll on the day when economics becomes a basic curriculum subject and we have an electorate that can vote from a position of understanding how national budgets work.

I did some economics even in the 70s.

One theory was Keynes.
There was another main one, which I have forgottn the name of.

They were at odds with each other.

I think economics went out of fashion a bit for two reason.

One was, it became quite a matter of opinions rather than much else.

The other reason was, the government, even back then, interfered so much with the it[as was their right of course], that theories could never properly be proved, one way or another.

fancythat Mon 17-Nov-25 09:16:25

From AI

Economic theories in the 1970s were dominated by the challenges of stagflation (high inflation and high unemployment), which led to the decline of Keynesian economics and the rise of monetarism and supply-side economics. The stagflation, driven by factors like the 1973 oil crisis, contradicted the prevailing Phillips curve model, which suggested an inverse relationship between inflation and unemployment. This prompted a major reevaluation of economic policy, leading to a new focus on controlling the money supply to combat inflation, as championed by monetarists like Milton Friedman.

MaizieD Mon 17-Nov-25 09:22:01

petra

GrannyGravy13

MaizieD I admire your tenacity on this, and thank you for sharing again and again this useful and important information.

I was a handbag economy believer, until I read your posts and swotted Keynes, thank you 👏👏👏

The same here.
MaizieD has educated me in how it all works against the average working man.

Adam Smith, regarded as one of the 'fathers' of economic research and theory, writing in the late 18th century, recognised that business men had their own agenda when it came to accumulating wealth and the interests of those they employed and of the country had little to do with them.

This is a long quote from his massive work, The Wealth of Nations. written in 18th C language but hopefully still understandable

The interest of this third order (merchants and manufacturers) therefore, has not the same connexion with the general interest of the society, as that of the other two. Merchants and master manufacturers are, in this order, the two classes of people who commonly employ the largest capitals, and who by their wealth draw to themselves the greatest share of the public consideration. As during their whole lives they are engaged in plans and projects, they have frequently more acuteness of understanding than the greater part of country gentlemen. As their thoughts, however, are commonly exercised rather about the interest of their own particular branch of business. than about that of the society, their judgment, even when given with the greatest candour (which it has not been upon every occasion), is much more to be depended upon with regard to the former of those two objects, than with regard to the latter. Their superiority over the country gentleman is, not so much in their knowledge of the public interest, as in their having a better knowledge of their own interest than he has of his. It is by this superior knowledge of their own interest that they have frequently imposed upon his generosity, and persuaded him to give up both his own interest and that of the public, from a very simple but honest conviction, that their interest, and not his, was the interest of the public. The interest of the dealers, however, in any particular branch of trade or manufactures,is always in some respects different from, and even opposite to, that of the public. To widen the market, and to narrow the competition, is always the interest of the dealers. To widen the market may frequently be agreeable enough to the interest of the public; but to narrow the competition must always be against it, and can only serve to enable the dealers, by raising their profits above what they naturally would be, to levy, for their own benefit, an absurd tax upon the rest of their fellow-citizens. The proposal of any new law or regulation of commerce which comes from this order, ought always to be listened to with great precaution, and ought never to be adopted till after having been long and carefully examined, not only with the most scrupulous, but with the most suspicious attention. It comes from an order of men, whose interest is never exactly the same with that of the public, who have generally an interest to deceive and even to oppress the public, and who accordingly have, upon many occasions, both deceived and oppressed it.

He also has this to say and it is still relevant today:

No society can surely be happy and flourishing of which the far greater part of its members are poor and miserable. It is but equity, besides, that they who feed, clothe and lodge the whole body of the people, should have such a share of the produce of their own labour as to be themselves tolerably well fed, clothed and lodged