The Starmer Project: A Journey to the Right
By (Author) Oliver Eagleton
Verso Books
Verso Books
31st May 2022
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Public administration
Biography: historical, political and military
324.24107
Paperback
240
Width 140mm, Height 210mm, Spine 16mm
223g
The Labour Party has virtually disappeared from view under the leadership of Keir Starmer. Hailed as a human-rights champion and political outsider, what sort of politician is he really, and what mark is he making on the new politics of Labour In The Starmer Project, Oliver Eagleton provides a careful reading of Starmers record at the Crown Prosecution Service and as a member of Jeremy Corbyns Shadow Cabinet, tracing the political alliances he forged and the roots of his bid for the Party leadership. Starmer originally pledged to revitalise Corbynism with a dose of lawyerly competence. To understand what happened afterwards it is necessary to understand the man himself. So little remains known about Starmer that his actions are usually interpreted as overtures to others. On closer inspection, however, he is anything but an empty political vessel.
A beautifully written and balanced study, revealing of the man himself. -- Simon Jenkins, author of Thatcher and Sons
A cogent left-wing critique. -- Andrew Grice * Independent *
The meatiest biography of the leader of the opposition to date. -- Patrick Maguire * The Times *
The Starmer Project is the most original and insightful of the book-length studies of Starmer. -- Andrew Sparrow * Guardian *
Starmer's leadership cannot be understood without grasping the Corbyn project that flared to life in 2015, then decomposed and died in 2019. There remains, in most punditry, a lack of curiosity about that experience...Oliver Eagleton's The Starmer Project, the best account of his leadership so far, sets out to correct this. -- Richard Seymour * New Statesman *
[A] persuasive new biography. -- Andy Beckett * Guardian *
An enjoyably hostile new biography. * Economist *
Brilliant, deserves to be widely read. It may end up as an obituary for Labour. -- Donald Sassoon * Political Quarterly *
Oliver Eagleton is an Assistant Editor at New Left Review and Sidecar. He writes on culture and politics for the Guardian, TLS, Literary Review and Novara.