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Why I’ll never regret backing Boris over Corbyn

Starmer has made good progress but there is much to be done to rid Labour of the hard left

March 3, 2022 13:27
GettyImages-1236681362
LONDON, ENGLAND - NOVEMBER 20: Former Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn stands in front of a Stop the War Coalition banner during a Stand Up To Racism protest outside the Embassy of the Republic of Poland on November 20, 2021 in London, England. Human rights and other activists campaigned against walls and refugee pushbacks on the Polish-Belarus border as well across the English Channel in the ongoing migrant crisis along Europe and UK borders. (Photo by Hollie Adams/Getty Images)
3 min read

I have lost count of the number of times Labour supporters have asked me whether I now regret backing Boris Johnson at the last election.

Whenever the government or its ministers attract criticism, particularly after the “partygate” revelations, they demand I recant for my “treachery” or “betrayal”.

People who obeyed the rules during the pandemic, unable to see relatives or even bury loved ones, are furious about events in Downing Street. But you only need to look at the hard left’s reaction to the invasion of Ukraine to see how important it was to make sure they were beaten as heavily as possible.

The so-called Stop the War Coalition took a break from campaigning against Israel to issue a statement before Putin invaded Ukraine demanding that NATO “call a halt to its eastwards expansion”.