
The resignation of Keir Starmer as Prime Minister and Labour leader marks more than the end of a political career. It signals the exhaustion of an era, the collapse of a particular theory of Labour politics and the reopening of a question that has haunted the party for decades, what exactly is Labour for?
Starmer arrived at the leadership promising competence, seriousness and electability. After years of factional warfare, ideological turbulence and electoral disappointment, he presented himself not as a visionary but as a repairman. The message was simple; Labour could only change the country if it first convinced the country that it was safe. The radical edges were sanded down. The language softened. The ambitions became managerial rather than transformational.
For a time, the strategy worked. Voters weary of chaos and scandal found reassurance in moderation. Business leaders relaxed. Editorial boards nodded approvingly. Labour appeared respectable again.
Yet respectability has always been an uneasy currency for a party born from trade unions, workers’ associations and collective struggle. The deeper Starmer moved toward the political centre, the more Labour seemed to drift away from the communities that created it. The party spoke increasingly about stability and increasingly less about power, who has it, who lacks it and how it should be redistributed.
This was the paradox at the heart of the Starmer project. The closer Labour came to looking like a conventional governing party, the further it seemed from looking like Labour.
His resignation therefore feels less like a sudden political event than the final chapter of a long ideological journey. The question now is whether the party continues down that road or turns around.
There will be voices urging Labour to move even further toward the centre. Their argument is familiar. Elections are won in the middle ground. Radicalism frightens voters. Pragmatism beats passion. In many respects, these arguments have shaped Labour strategy since the days of Tony Blair.
But another interpretation is emerging. Perhaps Labour's problem was not that it remained too attached to its roots. Perhaps the problem was precisely the opposite. Perhaps years of triangulation, caution and professional political management gradually hollowed out the party’s sense of purpose. Political parties can survive policy disagreements. They struggle to survive identity crises.
The working class that once formed Labour’s unquestioned foundation has changed dramatically. Industrial communities have declined. Employment patterns have fragmented. Cultural divisions have deepened. Yet the disappearance of the old working class does not mean economic insecurity has disappeared. It has merely taken new forms. Gig workers, renters, precarious professionals, care workers and those locked out of home ownership all face pressures that Labour was historically created to address.
The challenge is not to recreate the past. Nostalgia is not a political programme. The challenge is to recover the underlying mission that made the party matter in the first place.
Starmer's departure may therefore become something larger than a leadership change. It may become a moment of reckoning. Labour can continue as a cautious vehicle of technocratic administration, forever adjusting itself to prevailing political winds. Or it can attempt the more difficult task of rediscovering a clear social purpose.
The choice is not between the future and the past. It is between drift and direction. And for the first time in years, Labour may have no choice but to decide.









