British politics sees surge in new ideas and party realignments
According to a Guardian opinion column by Polly Toynbee, British politics is experiencing a period of fractured but idea-rich debate, with Labour leadership contests and new political movements reshaping the landscape. The column reports that Wes Streeting’s resignation and Andy Burnham’s candidacy for Makerfield have opened Labour to more open discussion, while Tony Blair’s recent pamphlet has sparked further debate beyond the party. Thinktanks and Labour MP caucuses are producing dossiers of ideas on issues like growth, energy prices, a national care service, NHS funding, defence spending, social housing, tech regulation, AI, relations with Europe, and climate change. The column notes that Prosper UK, a new movement co-chaired by Ruth Davidson and Andy Street, has signed up 20,000 supporters in less than six months and aims to recapture one-nation conservatism, filling a centre-right gap. It also states that a majority of Tory supporters are now remainers, according to More in Common, and that Kemi Badenoch has warned the EU ambassador she would reverse any advance toward better EU trade. The column concludes that the first step toward change depends on voters in Makerfield.
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Sources: The Guardian
