>>He has made many "policy refinements" (U-turns) over the last couple of years, latest is £28bn climate investment. There is little transparency over future policy and plans - strategy is dominated by blame the Tories, tell everybody Labour will be better, don't alienate voters.
Don't fall for the confected 'flip flop' rhetoric. The bigger, and substantive rather than hypothetical, U-turn which you must have forgotten by far on climate was by Sunak. All Starmer is saying is that it is now clear than £28bn a year is now unaffordable. I don't think he had much choice, because Labour feels it must promise immovable fiscal discipline which a £28bn spending promise is now incompatible with. The mission is still clean power by 2030 (quote).
Flip flop is 3 prime ministers in a single year. Sunak is already on his second relaunch as PM. Since the last GE 4 years ago there have been 6 Education Secretaries, 5 Home Secretaries, and champion bluffer Grant Shapps has successively been "in charge" of Transport, Business, Energy, Home Office, and Defence, at which he is an embarrassment. etc. etc. Look them up.
I understand why No 10 is pushing the flip flop stuff but when interest rates have risen fourfold since Starmer's leadership campaign (remember he has never fought a GE on the 'promises' he is being attacked for) then all earlier bets are off, whoever you are.
I'm surprised you think the Tories have anything much left on strategy. For months they were obsessed by the boats, now it all seems culture war related.
I would agree that Labour seems to be keeping its powder as dry as possible.
Nothing is in the bag. The only poll that matters is on election day.
Last edited by: Manatee on Sun 11 Feb 24 at 16:11
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