Every nation possesses resources of power.
Some possess military power. Others possess economic power, or geopolitical influence. South Africa possesses comparatively little of these.
Yet there was one form of power it possessed in extraordinary abundance.
Moral Authority.
@IanCameron23@Our_DA Does not pass the smell test. Have asked Malema as your colleague what’s is response to these revelations. It walks like a duck, 🦆 qwarks like a 🦆
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@BenGrahamUK@thechefie Ben why would you resign for your with the intention to reapply for that job again when it gets advertised? Because that’s what Fromage is doing? Why is he resigning? Sure you can see there is logic in that.
@implausibleblog Its big thing when you find yourself in agreement with Kemi Badennoch. But even a broken clock is correct twice a day. So I am fine with that.
Darren, I really hope you’ll consider running to continue the important work Sir Keir started. He delivered a historic landslide and worked hard for the country in tough times.
If the party doesn’t put forward someone who builds on that legacy, many of us won’t be able to vote Labour again. We can’t let the media and internal pressure force out a decent man who won such a strong mandate.
The grassroots is behind continuity and real delivery. Please step up if you can. 👌🏾
Open letter to Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer
Dear Prime Minister,
I am writing as a Labour supporter who is deeply concerned by the growing pressure surrounding your leadership, but also as someone who has developed a genuine admiration for the way you conduct yourself.
What I respect most about you is your seriousness.
You are not a political showman. You do not rely on constant drama, easy slogans or theatrical promises. You come across as disciplined, intelligent, decent and deeply conscious of the responsibility that comes with leading the country.
In an age when politics is increasingly dominated by noise, outrage and personality cults, your calmness is a strength.
Your resilience is also admirable. You have faced relentless criticism, personal attacks and an often hostile media environment, yet you have continued to behave with dignity. You rarely lash out. You do not appear consumed by ego. You keep returning to the work.
That matters to me.
Britain has already endured years of political chaos, revolving-door prime ministers and governments more interested in internal warfare than governing. The country does not need another leadership contest. It needs stability, seriousness and delivery.
You were elected with a mandate to govern. You inherited damaged public services, weak growth, overcrowded prisons, an NHS under enormous pressure and public trust worn down by fourteen years of Conservative government. None of that can be repaired overnight.
I hope you will remain Prime Minister and continue the work until the next general election in 2029.
Labour MPs should understand that removing you now could trigger weeks of division, uncertainty and damaging promises made during a leadership contest. The press would feed on the chaos, financial markets could react, and Nigel Farage and Reform would be handed exactly the political instability they want.
This is not the time for Labour to imitate the Conservative Party.
I also believe your personality is better suited to this difficult period than many people appreciate. You are methodical rather than impulsive, measured rather than reckless, and focused on governing rather than performing.
Those qualities may not always generate exciting headlines, but they are the qualities a serious Prime Minister needs.
Leadership is not only about popularity. It is about character.
It is about remaining calm when others panic, showing discipline when others chase attention, and continuing the difficult work when the noise becomes unbearable.
Please hold the line.
Many Labour supporters still believe in your integrity, your determination and your sense of duty. Britain needs less political theatre and more delivery, and you deserve the opportunity to complete the job the country elected Labour and you to do.
Yours sincerely,
Thomas Soede