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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Politics
Sophie Zeldin-O'Neill

UK does not need a comedian as PM, says Labour leader Keir Starmer

Keir Starmer and Bridget Phillipson
Keir Starmer and shadow education secretary Bridget Phillipson on a visit to a cafe in Essex on Friday, where they talked to parents about the cost of living crisis. Photograph: Kirsty O’Connor/PA

Sir Keir Starmer has told an interviewer that the UK does not need a “comedian” as prime minister after he was asked about his image as a “dull” politician . The question came in an interview with Mumsnet founder Justine Roberts, who put questions from the site’s users to the Labour leader.

“I find this whole discussion pretty tedious, to be honest, because most people know that the job of prime minister is a pretty serious job,” Starmer said. “We actually had a comedian with Boris Johnson, and it really didn’t go very well.

“And then we had Liz Truss. I don’t think it was a real laugh to crash the economy with that kamikaze budget.”

It is more important to have a leader who understands people’s struggles to make ends meet, Starmer said, pointing to his own childhood, when his family’s phone was cut off as they could not afford to pay the bill.

“I think many people say: ‘I’d rather have someone who knows what it’s like and is serious about putting it right and taking us forward than someone who’s got brilliant one-liners,’” he said. “But I have got a few one-liners”.

Asked about Labour’s failure so far to elect a woman leader, Starmer said he would be “the first to say” the party “needs a woman prime minister”. “Happily, I’ve got really powerful, strong women in the shadow cabinet in very, very important roles,” he said.

“If you want to look at which is the party that’s bearing down on women and actually holding them back, it’s the government, because almost everything that they do, everything that they mess up – and they’ve absolutely damaged the economy – impacts women disproportionately.”

Starmer welcomed a question – one often posed to prominent women – on how he balances the demands of his job with those of having a young family.


“I should be asked that question,” he said. “I’ve got a hard stop in my diary at 6 o’clock on a Friday. Unless it’s exceptional, I will be going home.”
He said spending time with his children is a “really good leveller”. “They have no regard for the fact that I’m leader of the Labour party. I walk through that front door and I’m Dad.”

He recounted telling his daughter he was speaking at a fundraising dinner, prompting her to reply: “Why would anyone pay to hear you speak?”

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