By Invitation | British politics

A former adviser to Keir Starmer on what his victory can teach the global left

You don’t have to splurge to woo back working people, says Claire Ainsley

Illustration: Dan Williams

THE LABOUR PARTY’S thumping victory in Britain’s general election seems to have bucked the trend of declining support for social-democratic parties, particularly in the face of fervour for the populist right. The left and centre in France have only staved off a triumph of the far right by standing down candidates to form a united front. In Germany the main party in the ruling coalition, the SPD, finished third in the European Parliament elections in June, behind the far-right Alternative für Deutschland. Those elections saw an overall shift to the political right in Europe.

Labour’s success is all the more striking because of the speed of the party’s turnaround under Sir Keir Starmer. When he was elected leader in April 2020, Labour had been defeated by the Conservatives for a fourth consecutive time, with Boris Johnson’s Tories winning a comfortable majority that included dozens of seats the party hadn’t won for decades, or ever.

More from By Invitation

Keep the code behind AI open, say two entrepreneurs

Martin Casado and Ion Stoica argue that open-source models will power innovation without compromising security

Not all AI models should be freely available, argues a legal scholar

The more capable they are, the greater the risk of catastrophe, reckons Lawrence Lessig


Neil Kinnock on the post-war-like challenges facing Keir Starmer

A lack of social cohesion compared with 1945 makes them even more daunting, says the former Labour leader and Starmer confidant


A prominent donor on why the Democrats shouldn’t anoint Kamala Harris

A competition to replace Joe Biden would better serve the party, and the country, argues Joe Ravitch

Halt the Olympics to save the planet, pleads a sports historian

David Goldblatt thinks pausing the spectacle might jolt the world into grasping the severity of the climate challenge

Rachael “Raygun” Gunn on the new sport that will invigorate the Olympics

The Australian breaker hopes we’ll all soon be talking about B-Girls, B-Boys and double airflares