Realism got Starmer here. But so far he’s fighting this election with fantasy economics | Gaby Hinsliff

Realism got Starmer here. But so far he’s fighting this election with fantasy economics | Gaby Hinsliff

Labour is throwing everything at growth and running away from thorny issues such as Brexit, tax rises and our ageing population

It wasn’t quite John Major’s vision of old maids cycling through the mist to church. But the sepia-tinted memories Keir Starmer recounted in his first big campaign speech of growing up in Oxted, the Surrey town he called “about as English as you can get”, weren’t a million miles away. He talked about growing up in a house where the phone was sometimes cut off because his parents couldn’t afford to pay the bill; about how he identifies now with young couples realising they can’t afford a longed-for second child because of rocketing mortgages.

But he also talked nostalgically about the ramshackle football pitch he played on, and shared with grazing cows, and what he called the British air of “quiet uncomplaining resilience” in an era when there was sadly a lot to be resilient about. Shades of those “do you remember … ?” pages on Facebook, where the middle aged reminisce about pork scratchings and playing on a ZX Spectrum.

Gaby Hinsliff is a Guardian columnist

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