He has played the first 100 days really badly. Waiting until the actual budget has been a mistake, the policy announcements this far have been reasonable enough but none have really landed with a bang. Plus the idea of cabinet members breaking cover this early and arguing against the treasury in public is not a good one.Son of Mathonwy wrote: ↑Mon Oct 14, 2024 11:51 pmHe seems to be fueled by personal ambition and nothing else. He has no ideas, not a clue what to do now he's in charge other than to manage the status quo. Unfortunately he was elected to change things, not (just) manage things. Farage will decide who wins next time.Zhivago wrote: ↑Sun Oct 13, 2024 12:59 pm Starmer is one of those people who has been promoted above his competency. It happens from time to time across all organisations. Mostly it happens due to factors outside of the control of the individual who benefits from the circumstances, but they don't recognise that their success strongly influenced by chance and instead believe in their own inimitable agency.
In the specific case of Starmer, he had benefited from predecessors who made him look good in comparison. First Corbyn and then the Tory dregs. His election result was a very low vote share that would have never granted him power in normal circumstances, yet he clearly believes that he himself has achieved a landslide victory rather than one falling into his hands.
As seen from his attitude towards the gifts, one major flaw he has is a sense of entitlement and lack of humility. Along with his sense of entitlement is an undercurrent of hypocrisy and willingness to engage in dishonesty in order to get what he wants. Essentially a belief that the ends justify the means. This was clear from the beginning when he lied his way to the Labour leadership. He spins this behaviour as ruthlessness and is evidently proud of this 'quality' of his. It is however a great moral flaw that will be his undoing.
The budget needs to sent a clear message and direction of travel. Most government departments are facing very significant cuts to their operational budgets which is causing a lot of alarm, following years of austerity, even if wages are being increased a little.