David Lammy: Voters do not want razzmatazz of Blair era
The Labour frontbencher said the party must focus on reassuring the electorate that it can run the economy.
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Your support makes all the difference.Sir Keir Starmerās message does not have the ārazzmatazzā of Sir Tony Blairās election-winning campaign, but that is not what todayās electorate wants, Labourās shadow foreign secretary has said.
David Lammy, speaking at a fringe event at Labourās annual conference, suggested that while voters in the 1990s wanted ambition from politicians, they are now eager for reassurance.
He stressed the importance of the party communicating its policies in a way that is relevant to the UK public.
He also argued Labourās offer to voters should be centred on reviving the economy and that it should not be lured into arguments on culture war issues by the Conservatives.
The shadow frontbencher told an event hosted by the Institute for Public Policy Research think tank in Liverpool: āWe must not be seduced into tangential arguments that are the arguments of division around the woke issue, that of course Iām not suggesting arenāt important, but in the end are not about where most people are in their everyday lives.ā
He said Sir Keirās five missions are āas exciting as anything weāve offered beforeā.
But, he acknowledged, āit hasnāt quite landed with the kind of razzmatazz that you would associate with the Clinton, Obama, Blair era of politics.
āIām not sure, by the way, people are going to be seduced by that kind of (thing) because theyāre just not in that place as an electorate.ā
The public are primarily focused on the economy and the state of public services, he said.
He said Labour must āmake the policies clear, make them relevant to the electorate and be absolutely clear that the centre of that is economicā.
āWeāre going nowhere if we do not reassure the British electorate that we can run the economy.ā