People keep talking about replacing Keir Starmer as though Britain is a football club trapped in a disappointing mid-table season and all we need is a fresh face in the dugout shouting a bit more enthusiastically from the touchline.
That rather assumes the problem is motivational. That Britain is basically sound underneath, but lacking vibes.
Wes Streeting and Andy Burnham have both been making leadership noises, although in the modern Labour Party this takes the form of saying things like, "I fully support the Prime Minister," while standing next to a petrol can and a box of matches. Streeting has at least started edging towards saying aloud what much of business quietly concluded some time ago: Brexit was economically catastrophic.
Burnham's line is more emotional. Labour must reconnect. Labour must feel more like the party of working people. Labour must show visible change.
All true, in a sense.
The trouble is that visible change generally requires actual change underneath it. Politics eventually collides with arithmetic. You can only emotionally engage people with empty wallets for so long before they notice the emotional engagement appears to have cost £9.80 for a loaf of bread and a packet of ham.
This is the trap.
Starmer, for all his faults, may actually understand the trap better than his critics. Britain is not recovering from a normal cyclical downturn. It is trying to recover from Brexit friction, underinvestment, collapsing infrastructure, local authority exhaustion, NHS backlogs, housing shortages, productivity stagnation and the Liz Truss experiment in discovering whether pension funds could be set on fire remotely.
None of this repairs quickly.
Streeting and Burnham seem to think Labour's problem is substantially communicative. Starmer thinks the problem is structural. I increasingly suspect Starmer is closer to reality, however emotionally unsatisfying that may be.
And there is another possibility. Some of the things Streeting and Burnham are hinting at may materialise anyway over the next few weeks and months, not because they are leadership challengers, but because Labour itself may gradually pivot in that direction. Closer European cooperation, more visible regional investment, a more emotionally literate presentation, perhaps even a slightly less frightened tone about Brexit itself. The argument may ultimately turn out to be less about destination than tempo and political packaging.
Because what exactly is the alternative?
They cannot borrow recklessly. The bond markets already demonstrated, during the Truss period, that they are perfectly capable of introducing Britain to gravity at speed. The era of pretending interest rates do not matter has ended rather abruptly.
They can tax the wealthy more heavily, which is probably the most Labour-ish option available, and in moderation there is a perfectly respectable argument for it. Britain taxes work heavily while often treating accumulated wealth with the sort of tender respect usually reserved for Faberge eggs.
But there are risks there too. Capital is mobile. Wealthy people become astonishingly international the moment someone mentions capital gains tax. Men who have not knowingly eaten foreign food since 1987 suddenly start discussing residency options in Monaco with surprising urgency.
The other option is raiding the vulnerable, which is politically poisonous for Labour and economically marginal anyway.
So that leaves growth.
And Starmer appears to have concluded, correctly in my view, that the only realistic medium-term growth route is gradual re-alignment with Europe while trying not to restart the Brexit psychodrama. Hence the oddly cautious approach. Veterinary agreements. Regulatory cooperation. Security partnerships. Quiet friction reduction.
It infuriates committed Remainers because it feels timid.
But Starmer probably understands something many activists still do not. Britain has a remarkable tendency to avoid admitting error cleanly. We do not reverse course dramatically. We shuffle backwards while insisting we are boldly moving forwards. We are a nation that will drive thirty miles in the wrong direction rather than admit we missed the turning.
More importantly, he probably understands that openly campaigning for EU re-entry now would unleash a right wing press torrent capable of dominating the national conversation for years. And unlike many people on the centre left like to pretend, that torrent matters. Not because newspapers hypnotise the public like a 1950s science fiction film, but because repetition shapes atmosphere. It shapes what feels patriotic, suspect, normal or taboo.
Britain spent years marinating in headlines equating Europe with surrender, humiliation and foreign control. That leaves a residue.
So Starmer's strategy appears to be to get Britain quietly into a position where much closer European integration becomes economically obvious and emotionally less explosive before anyone openly uses the word "rejoin". Even getting to that position is dangerous. Declaring it openly now would probably be political suicide.
Which means Labour is trying to edge Britain back towards Europe without saying, "You remember that thing everyone screamed about for a decade? It turned out to be economically idiotic."
The deeper problem is that much of the electorate still wants emotionally satisfying politics. Reform offers exactly that. It offers catharsis. It offers blame. It offers simple answers to complex decline. What it does not offer is a workable growth model for a medium-sized trading nation sitting beside the largest market on Earth while deliberately complicating trade with it.
But emotionally satisfying politics has already brought Britain Brexit, Johnson and Truss. We have had years of national therapy sessions disguised as economic policy.
And now voters are demanding instant repair from the people clearing up the debris.
That is why I increasingly suspect Starmer's dullness is partly deliberate. He may genuinely believe Britain needs a prolonged reintroduction to boring reality. Stable finances. Slow institutional repair. Incremental growth. Reduced friction with Europe. Functional government. No giant patriotic moonshots involving exploding pension funds.
The irony is that he may be strategically right and still lose.
Because electorates rarely reward delayed competence. Especially electorates accustomed to political sugar rushes and emotionally satisfying nonsense. Structural decline accumulated over years cannot be reversed in eighteen months, particularly when many of the same voters helped create the underlying conditions in the first place.
The man quietly rebuilding the foundations is always less exciting than the man promising a rooftop infinity pool by Thursday.
Still, foundations matter. Particularly after years spent removing load-bearing walls because Nigel Farage said the damp was caused by Brussels.












