
Keir Starmer’s former chief of staff has admitted Labour did not do enough preparation before they were elected into government.
Morgan McSweeney, who was forced to quit over his links to disgraced peer and ex-ambassador to the US Peter Mandelson earlier this year, told the BBC his party was not ready to deliver quickly for voters after their landslide win in 2024.
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His remarks come after Starmer announced he was stepping down as Labour leader and prime minister last Monday.
McSweeney told the Political Thinking podcast: “We didn’t prepare enough for what kind of world we were going to. We are now in a very different era than when Labour was last in government.
“I think we didn’t have enough conversations at the top of the party about what that meant, how to prepare for it, what that meant for the state.
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“You have to deliver quite quickly for people, for them to see the change quickly. And I think we didn’t come in with enough of a theory about how we would do that.”
McSweeney said Labour should have been “way more optimistic” about the state of the country when it got into office in 2024.
The former aide ran Labour’s general election campaign. He was seen as a key element of Starmer’s rise to the top of the party and into No.10.
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He added: “I take my own responsibilities for [not being prepared], rather than blaming one person.”
McSweeney sat as Starmer’s head of political strategy but after three months became his chief of staff once Sue Gray was kicked out of the role.
He added that he was still “processing” Starmer’s fall from grace and said Labour’s 14 years in opposition “went quickly”.
McSweeney also claimed that there was an expectation within the party that Labour would need at least two elections to return to power after its defeat in 2019 – which is why they were unprepared in 2024.
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Labour MP for Makerfield Andy Burnham is expected to be crowned the next prime minister by July 20.
He is currently the only Labour MP who has announced his intention to run in the contest to replace Starmer.
But there has been some contestation from his team that Starmer’s departure timetable did not give Burnham long enough to come up with a sound plan for government.
They were allegedly hoping he would stay in post as a caretaker PM until September.
Starmer pushed Labour’s executive body to block Burnham from running to be the party’s candidate in the Gorton and Denton by-election back in February.
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After Labour was thrashed in the May elections, Josh Simons stood aside as Makerfield MP so Burnham – then Greater Manchester mayor – could run as a candidate.
Only MPs can contest a Labour leader.
But, Starmer clearly saw the writing on the wall after after Burnham’s comfortable victory in Makerfield and announced he was stepping down days later.
Despite Burnham’s rivalry with Starmer, McSweeney said he feels “optimistic” about the new era for the party.
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