Sir Keir Starmer is rapidly losing his authority
As well as his hope of achieving much in office

The first birthday of Britain’s Labour government on July 4th will be a miserable, cakeless affair. The party’s polling is dreadful, trailing Reform UK, an insurgency from the right led by Nigel Farage. Promises to cut hospital waiting-lists, build more houses and stop migrant boats are off-track. And on July 1st Sir Keir Starmer was humiliated by a huge rebellion, as Labour MPs gutted a bill to cut sickness and disability benefits. In Parliament the next day his chancellor wept and yields on Britain’s debt soared. The prime minister has never looked weaker.
This article appeared in the Leaders section of the print edition under the headline “The tragedy of Labour”

From the July 5th 2025 edition
Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents
Explore the edition
America cannot dodge the consequences of rising tariffs for ever
Their economic impact has been delayed but not averted

How A-listers are shaking up the consumer-goods business
Hailey Bieber, Rihanna and Ryan Reynolds are among a new cohort of celebrity entrepreneurs

William Ruto is taking Kenya to a dangerous place
The president’s authoritarian instincts are propelling a spiral of violence
China is building an entire empire on data
It will change the online economy and the evolution of artificial intelligence
Trumponomics 2.0 will erode the foundations of America’s prosperity
The Big Beautiful Bill is symptomatic of a wider malaise
Chinese brands are sweeping the world. Good
From fast food to video games, new marques are making their mark