Labour needs to ‘pick things up’ after a ‘tough’ first year, says Sadiq Khan – UK politics live | Politics


Labour needs to ‘pick things up’ after ‘tough’ first year in power, Sadiq Khan warns

Good morning and welcome to our live coverage of UK politics. Despite winning a huge majority at last year’s general election, Labour knew it had a lot of work to do to regain voters trust and show government could work for ordinary people.

The task was made more difficult as the party inherited a weak economy and crumbling public services underinvested in by previous Conservative administrations.

So far, the prime minister, Keir Starmer, has failed to win popularity with voters, according to many polls, with a seeming lack of political direction and constant moves to appease Reform voters while Labour’s base quietly slips away.

Starmer’s proposed cuts to winter fuel payments, his sluggishness over adopting a firmer stance on Israel’s war on Gaza and his controversial welfare reforms were out of line with much of the public’s attitudes.

London’s mayor, Sadiq Khan, told an audience at the Edinburgh festival fringe yesterday that Labour needs to “really pick things up” after a “tough” first year in government.

Sadiq Khan said that after over a decade out of power the Labour party had “lost the memory of running things”.
Sadiq Khan said that after over a decade out of power the Labour party had “lost the memory of running things”. Photograph: Lucy North/PA

Khan, who has been critical over the government before, notably over disability benefit cuts and ministers’ plans for a third runway at Heathrow, said there was a feeling that people “lent” Labour their vote last summer (in a bid to get the Conservatives out).

The London mayor said Labour supporters would be “delusional” if they did not recognise the difficulties the party had had since winning power in July 2024.

He said:

Those people that say it has been a great first year … I think they are letting the party down.

It hasn’t been a great first year. There have been great things that have happened in this first year, around the rights for renters, around the rights for workers, around energy security, and I could go on. But as first years go, it has not been a great first year.

Khan said Labour could still turn things around before its term is up and are equipped with a “great team” in No 10 led by Starmer, who he insisted he was not being critical of, although he conceded that the prime minister and those around him could be performing better.

Khan – who is a Liverpool FC supporter – said if Labour was in a football match, they would be “two-nil down”. But continuing his analogy, he said that only 15 or 20 minutes of the match had gone, with minutes still to play and to “win this game”.

After over a decade out of power at Westminster, Khan also said that the party had “lost the memory of running things”.

“It has taken some time for the Labour party, the Labour government, to understand how the machinery of government works,” he said.

Much of today’s news agenda will be dominated by Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s crunch talks with Donald Trump at the White House. He will be joined by various European leaders, including Keir Starmer, who hope to coax the US president out of the pro-Russian positions he took after the Alaska summit on Friday. You can keep up with the latest developments in our Ukraine live blog helmed by the brilliant Jakub Krupa.

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Alex Salmond’s niece criticises Nicola Sturgeon over claims in memoir

Libby Brooks

Libby Brooks

Alex Salmond’s niece has accused Nicola Sturgeon of tarnishing her uncle’s reputation when he is no longer able to defend himself in order to promote her memoir.

Christina Hendry told BBC Radio Scotland on Monday: “If my uncle was here today, these things would not be being said. I believe they’re being said because he’s not here to defend himself, as he would have done with every fibre of his being.”

Sturgeon’s political partnership with her predecessor as first minister, who died suddenly of a heart attack last October at the age of 69, dominates her memoir, Frankly, which was published last week.

She describes tensions that existed between them long before their catastrophic falling out over her government’s handling of sexual harassment complaints against him, claiming that he opposed equal marriage, overrode her concerns about releasing the Lockerbie bomber and had several extramarital affairs.

The former Scottish National party leader stood trial in 2020 on 13 counts of sexual assault and was cleared of all charges, although a pattern of bullying and inappropriate behaviour towards younger female staff emerged in court.

Asked what she believed was motivating Sturgeon, Hendry said: “There’s been a number of years that these things could have been said, and the timing of it now where she’s released a book and is looking to publicise that, I think many people have thought that could be the case.”

Sturgeon writes in Frankly that she “agonised” about “stirring up pain for [Salmond’s] wife and family” but concluded “I cannot let what he said stand unchallenged”.





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