I was born in the UK in the 1950s and I can say with total confidence that over my lifetime my country has never been in as dark a place as it is today. Its society, economy, culture, credibility, spirit, sensibility and freedoms have been totally wrecked by agenda-driven idiots.
🚨 Michael Jackson in 2002: “They manipulate our history books. The history books are not true, it’s a lie. The history books are lying. You need to know that.”
🚨WOW: Mum breaks down in tears on live radio call
“I have to wait until bailiffs evict me and my 3 children, but if I came to the country illegally I might get £40K… it’s not fair”
Britain is at breaking point.
The problem is not really what Starmer said about or to Muslims. It's what the framing implies about everyone else.
When a Prime Minister singles out one community as being "at the forefront" of the national story, several questions immediately arise:
Why that community specifically? Would he say the same about Sikhs, Hindus, Jews, the Welsh, or working-class white communities in former industrial towns who feel profoundly left behind and invisible?
Does language like this — particularly from a leader seen as having made huge concessions to Muslim political pressure over Gaza, - including turning a blind eye to antisemitic violence and death threats, - reinforce the perception that organised “communal" lobbying gets results for some groups, incentivising further identity-based political fragmentation?
The deeper tension is this: pluralism and preferentialism are not the same thing.
A Prime Minister can celebrate the diversity of British communities without ranking them or suggesting any one sits at the vanguard of the national story.
When that line is crossed — even rhetorically — it tends to produce exactly the resentment it's presumably trying to dissolve. The problem is, Starmer and his politically correct cronies are too cloth-eared and stubborn to realise it.
Starmer lost significant support among Muslim voters over Gaza in 2024, with several independent pro-Gaza candidates defeating Labour MPs. There is an obvious political incentive to rebuild that relationship. Visibly courting Muslim communities with this kind of language, while simultaneously being seen to neglect the concerns of working-class white voters on issues like immigration, small boat crossings, and cultural change, is a strategically and ethically incoherent position that fuels the Reform vote.
In the current climate — with communal tensions still raw after 2024's riots, with parts of the electorate feeling that mainstream politicians speak the language of recognition only to certain groups — it is exactly the kind of remark that lands differently depending on who hears it. That gap between intention and reception is where a lot of British political damage is currently being done.
If Starmer read this, he’d immediately dismiss it as ‘far right’, which is exactly what I’d expect from the obdurate, weak, flip-flopping middle manager that he is.