The Starmer Symptom
Editat de Mark Perrymanen Limba Engleză Paperback – 20 aug 2025
‘Packed with insightful commentary The Starmer Symptom pinpoints the reasons why Labour is failing to reverse the rise of the Far Right agenda’ Cat Arnold, member of the Labour Party NEC
‘Labour needs to break out of Labourism and remake itself as part of a broader pluralist bloc. Here is the book that brilliantly explains why’ Alan Finlayson, Chair of the Editorial Board, Renewal
On 4th July, 2024, fourteen years of Tory gross mismanagement of government, economy and society came to a crashing end. Keir Starmer’s Labour government was elected with a landslide.
However, this was more about the Tories losing than Labour winning. The old assumptions have been torn up, and as Starmer’s Labour continues to disappoint, the end of the two-party system heralds a new era of political volatility unseen for generations.
The Starmer Symptom navigates the complex terrain of this seismic shift in British politics. How can Labour effect the kind of change our society and climate requires? Has Starmer created the basis for the rise of Reform UK? What alternative is there to the neoliberal present, and future? Why is Labour pursuing austerity economics?
Mark Perryman previously edited the collections The Blair Agenda, The Moderniser’s Dilemma and The Corbyn Effect. He is a pioneer of a left culture rooted in the convivial and participative rather than command and control.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780745351094
ISBN-10: 0745351093
Pagini: 304
Dimensiuni: 144 x 216 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.3 kg
Editura: Pluto Press (UK)
ISBN-10: 0745351093
Pagini: 304
Dimensiuni: 144 x 216 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.3 kg
Editura: Pluto Press (UK)
Recenzii
'A vital kickback against national decline, ranging over the aimless, joyless landscape of Britain under Grey Labour. Mark Perryman has persuaded some of the fiercest, most eloquent polemicists in the land to examine, expose and ultimately eviscerate one of the lamest leaders in Labour history'
Alex Niven, Editor, Tribune Magazine
'The core of the argument is that Labour needs to break out of Labourism and remake itself a part of a broader pluralist bloc. Labour absolutely should be like this, here is a book that brilliantly explains why it has never been'
Alan Finlayson, Chair of Editorial Board Renewal: A Journal of Social Democracy
'Had me cheering on the writers and their arguments as they interrogated the symptoms of a Labour Party that has undermined its own potential for change. Left me asking, what is this bloody huge parliamentary majority for?!'
Laura Parker
'A book that provides a theoretical critique of Starmerism which is both extremely accessible and entirely non-intimidating, no mean feat when drawing on thinkers such as Gramsci and Stuart Hall'
Pat Stack, 'Stack on the Back'
'A very stimulating, accessible, and engaging read. By drawing on a wide range of theoretical and historical sources, Mark Perryman advances our understanding of Starmer's project, its prospects, and its implications'
Colm Murphy author of Futures of Socialism: 'Modernisation', the Labour Party, and the British Left, 1973-1997
'Keir Starmer decries the existence of Starmerism. Yet his actions as Prime Minister tell a different story - he has a discernible political project. Mark Perryman and the authors tease out the underlying shape of what this 'Starmerism' is and could still be. An invaluable contribution to thinking about Labour politics today'
John McTernan, formerly Tony Blair’s Director of Political Operations
Alex Niven, Editor, Tribune Magazine
'The core of the argument is that Labour needs to break out of Labourism and remake itself a part of a broader pluralist bloc. Labour absolutely should be like this, here is a book that brilliantly explains why it has never been'
Alan Finlayson, Chair of Editorial Board Renewal: A Journal of Social Democracy
'Had me cheering on the writers and their arguments as they interrogated the symptoms of a Labour Party that has undermined its own potential for change. Left me asking, what is this bloody huge parliamentary majority for?!'
Laura Parker
'A book that provides a theoretical critique of Starmerism which is both extremely accessible and entirely non-intimidating, no mean feat when drawing on thinkers such as Gramsci and Stuart Hall'
Pat Stack, 'Stack on the Back'
'A very stimulating, accessible, and engaging read. By drawing on a wide range of theoretical and historical sources, Mark Perryman advances our understanding of Starmer's project, its prospects, and its implications'
Colm Murphy author of Futures of Socialism: 'Modernisation', the Labour Party, and the British Left, 1973-1997
'Keir Starmer decries the existence of Starmerism. Yet his actions as Prime Minister tell a different story - he has a discernible political project. Mark Perryman and the authors tease out the underlying shape of what this 'Starmerism' is and could still be. An invaluable contribution to thinking about Labour politics today'
John McTernan, formerly Tony Blair’s Director of Political Operations
Notă biografică
Mark Perryman's previous books include The Corbyn Effect, The Moderniser's Dilemma and The Blair Agenda. A pioneer of a left culture rooted in the convivial and participative rather than command and control, Mark mixes politics and culture as the co-founder of the self-styled 'sporting outfitters of intellectual distinction', Philosophy Football.
Cuprins
Foreword - Clive Lewis
Introduction - Mark Perryman
Part One - Mapping the Hope
The Forward March of Labour Unhalted - Jeremy Gilbert
How Labour Turned Defeat Into Victory - Paula Surridge
Shooting the Messenger - Emma Burnell
Much Ado About the Son of a Toolmaker - Joe Kennedy
Part Two - The Fallout
The Perils of Monopoly Labourism - Neal Lawson
The Conservative Meltdown - Phil Burton-Cartledge
The Resistible Rise of the Populist Right - Joe Mullhall
Back to the Fragments - Hilary Wainwright
Part Three - Stability, Change, a Circle Squared
It's the Economy, Not Stupid - James Meadway
Climate Emergency Incoming - Andrew Simms
No Democratic Reform, No Change - Jess Garland
Putting Britain Back Together Again - Brendan McGeever
Part Four - The Outcomes
Whatever Happened to Left Populism? - Marina Prentoulis
Unions Make Us Strong - Gregor Gall
Biting the Hand that Doesn't Feed Us - Yasmin Alibhai-Brown
Pragmatic, Social Democratic, Radical - Eunice Goes
Introduction - Mark Perryman
Part One - Mapping the Hope
The Forward March of Labour Unhalted - Jeremy Gilbert
How Labour Turned Defeat Into Victory - Paula Surridge
Shooting the Messenger - Emma Burnell
Much Ado About the Son of a Toolmaker - Joe Kennedy
Part Two - The Fallout
The Perils of Monopoly Labourism - Neal Lawson
The Conservative Meltdown - Phil Burton-Cartledge
The Resistible Rise of the Populist Right - Joe Mullhall
Back to the Fragments - Hilary Wainwright
Part Three - Stability, Change, a Circle Squared
It's the Economy, Not Stupid - James Meadway
Climate Emergency Incoming - Andrew Simms
No Democratic Reform, No Change - Jess Garland
Putting Britain Back Together Again - Brendan McGeever
Part Four - The Outcomes
Whatever Happened to Left Populism? - Marina Prentoulis
Unions Make Us Strong - Gregor Gall
Biting the Hand that Doesn't Feed Us - Yasmin Alibhai-Brown
Pragmatic, Social Democratic, Radical - Eunice Goes
Descriere
Major political commentators examine how Britain has changed under a Labour government