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Westminster was meant to be projecting calm. Instead, this episode of Mid-Atlantic finds Labour staring into a leadership crisis, with Keir Starmer under pressure after bruising local election results and a party increasingly unsure what, or whom, it represents. The panel weighs whether Starmer can survive, how a Labour leadership contest would work, and why Andy Burnham, Angela Rayner, Wes Streeting and others are being talked up as possible successors.
The conversation then moves from palace intrigue to the larger political fracture: Reform gaining ground in working-class areas, the Greens attracting disillusioned progressives, and Labour struggling to explain what it has actually achieved in government. Palestine, energy prices, public ownership, immigration and the cost of living all surface as signs of a party caught between managerial caution and a country demanding something with a pulse.
And because despair has its limits, the panel ends where all serious political analysis eventually must: the World Cup. America is apparently excited, England is apparently good, and Arsenal fans are, as ever, treating optimism as a constitutional right.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By Roifield Brown4.8
6363 ratings
Westminster was meant to be projecting calm. Instead, this episode of Mid-Atlantic finds Labour staring into a leadership crisis, with Keir Starmer under pressure after bruising local election results and a party increasingly unsure what, or whom, it represents. The panel weighs whether Starmer can survive, how a Labour leadership contest would work, and why Andy Burnham, Angela Rayner, Wes Streeting and others are being talked up as possible successors.
The conversation then moves from palace intrigue to the larger political fracture: Reform gaining ground in working-class areas, the Greens attracting disillusioned progressives, and Labour struggling to explain what it has actually achieved in government. Palestine, energy prices, public ownership, immigration and the cost of living all surface as signs of a party caught between managerial caution and a country demanding something with a pulse.
And because despair has its limits, the panel ends where all serious political analysis eventually must: the World Cup. America is apparently excited, England is apparently good, and Arsenal fans are, as ever, treating optimism as a constitutional right.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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