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Starmer apologises for ‘island of strangers’ comment


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Sir Keir Starmer has apologised for his remark that Britain risked turning into an “island of strangers” resulting from extreme immigration, saying he “deeply” regretted utilizing language that echoed controversial Conservative minister Enoch Powell. 

The prime minister stated it “wasn’t proper” to have used the phrase in final month’s speech, during which he promised his Labour authorities would crack down on immigration figures. 

He stated that neither he nor his speechwriters had been conscious that the phrase bore similarity to a line from Powell in his infamous “Rivers of Blood” speech in 1968, during which the Tory stated Britons risked turning into “strangers in their very own nation”.

Within the speech on Might 12 the prime minister stated that nations trusted truthful guidelines, values, rights, duties and mutual obligations: “In a various nation like ours . . . we danger turning into an island of strangers, not a nation that walks ahead collectively.”

Enoch Powell delivers his controversial ‘Rivers of Blood’ speech against immigration during in 1968
Enoch Powell delivers his controversial ‘Rivers of Blood’ speech in opposition to immigration in 1968 © Central Press/Hulton/Getty Photographs

The usage of that specific phrase attracted fury from left-wing critics, who imagine that Starmer is popping too far to the appropriate with the intention to neutralise the menace from Reform UK, Nigel Farage’s populist occasion that at present leads the polls and took council seats from Labour in its northern heartlands on this 12 months’s native election. 

“I wouldn’t have used these phrases if I had identified they have been, and even can be interpreted as an echo of Powell. I had no thought — and my speechwriters didn’t know both,” he instructed The Observer newspaper.

“However that specific phrase — no, it wasn’t proper. I’ll provide the sincere reality — I deeply remorse utilizing it.”

The change of stance — after ministers spent days defending the language — is the newest U-turn by Starmer in latest weeks. 

The prime minister has watered down plans to axe winter gasoline funds for many pensioners, bowed to strain to launch a nationwide inquiry into grooming gangs after resisting for months, and this week folded over his welfare invoice to stave off an enormous backbencher riot. 

Earlier this month, Starmer instructed the New Statesman journal that he wished he had been extra articulate in his immigration speech and that on reflection it had not sounded “progressive” sufficient. 

In Friday’s Observer interview with Tom Baldwin — a former journalist and one-time head of press for Labour who has written a biography of Starmer — the prime minister additionally accepted that there have been “issues with the language” within the foreword to the coverage doc launched by the federal government in June. 

That paper stated the file excessive numbers of immigrants getting into the UK below the final authorities had completed “incalculable harm” to the nation. 

Starmer instructed The Observer that the problem wanted addressing as a result of the occasion “grew to become too distant from working-class individuals on issues like immigration”. However he conceded that “this wasn’t the best way to do it on this present surroundings”.