Isabel Hardman Isabel Hardman

Starmer and Badenoch played a childish blame game at PMQs

Keir Starmer at PMQs (Credit: Parliamentlive.tv)

Keir Starmer had a special point to make at the very outset of Prime Minister’s Questions about the threat of tariffs from the US. He told the Commons that ‘a trade war is in nobody’s interest and the country deserves, and we will take, a calm, pragmatic approach’. He added that the government ‘will rule nothing out’. 

He is, though, largely in automated response mode at PMQs these days. This is the case not just when replying to Kemi Badenoch’s questions with the same answers he gives every week, but also when taking questions from his own side. Labour backbenchers were in loyalty mode today, asking some grotesquely sycophantic questions of their leader. Along with the traditional first answer from the Prime Minister about his meetings with ministerial colleagues and others, the session now almost invariably opens with a dreadfully loyal question from a Labour MP praising their party’s ’Plan for Change’.

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Isabel Hardman
Written by
Isabel Hardman
Isabel Hardman is assistant editor of The Spectator and author of Why We Get the Wrong Politicians. She also presents Radio 4’s Week in Westminster.

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