Starmer tells cabinet to ignore polls as YouGov puts Labour behind Reform UK and Tories – UK politics live | Politics

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  • January 6, 2026
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Starmer tells cabinet ‘governments don’t lose because polls go down’ – as YouGov puts Labour behind Reform UK and Tories

Before Christmas Keir Starmer was hoping to use this week to highlight the government’s determination to bring down the cost of living for people. As explained on the blog yesterday, Donald Trump has blown this out of the news with his raid on Venezuela.

But Starmer has not abandoned the plan and, according to a Labour readout from the political cabinet this morning, he told his colleagues that the government should “keep a relentless focus on the cost of living, show relentless delivery of change people can feel and bring relentless clarity to drawing the choice ahead”.

Referring to that choice, Starmer said:

A Labour government renewing the country or a Reform movement that feeds on grievance, decline and division.

They want a weaker state, they want to inject bile into our communities, they want to appease Putin. This is the fight of our political lives and one that we must relish.

Starmer also urged his ministers to ignore the polls

I do not underestimate the scale of the task. But I have no doubt about this team. Governments do not lose because polls go down. They lose when they lose belief or nerve. We will do neither.

(While Starmer is right to say that politicians should not be paralysed by poor poll ratings, because they can change a lot over three years [and sometimes they were wrong too], they can’t ignore polls either. Governments may not lose because polls go down, but normally they do lose when polls go down. A YouGov poll out today has Labour for the first time in third place behind Reform UK and the Tories. See 10.44am.)

Lucy Powell, the deputy Labour leader, attended politcal cabinet. According to the readout, she thanked Starmer and his team “embracing me as deputy leader” and said that she relished “helping to tell the story of whose side we are on”.

Ministers then discussed “successful recoveries of centre-left parties in Norway, Australia and Canada through focussing on delivery and cost of living issues”.

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No 10 declines to back Badenoch’s claim that Trump’s overthrow of Maduro ‘morally’ right

Downing Street has declined to back Kemi Badenoch’s claim that the American operation to depose and arrest Nicolás Maduro was “morally” right. (See 9.20am.)

At the lobby briefing this morning, asked if Keir Starmer agreed with the Tory leader’s comment, the PM’s spokesperson said:

The prime minister is world leader, not a commentator [giving] a running commentary on foreign policy decisions taken by other countries and I’m not going to get drawn into that now.

But we’ve also been very clear abour our views on the fall of the Maduro regime. It turned a functioning democracy into a hub for organised crime with corrupt ties to Iran and Hezbollah, aligned support from Russia, involvement in illicit finance, sanctions evasion, narcotics trafficking and illegal gold trading. We are on the side of the Venezuelan people as they look towards a peaceful transition to a democratic government.

The spokesperson adopted a similar line about not wanting to give a “running commentary” on global affairs when asked about Stephen Miller, Donald Trump’s deputy chief of staff, saying that Greenland should “obviously … be part of the US”. The spokesperson referred to the statement signed by Starmer and other EU leaders (see 12.57pm), but said he would not provide a commentary on every remark coming out of the US.

But, when asked about Miller’s comment about might being right (“we live in a world … that is governed by strength, that is governed by force, that is governed by power”), and whether Starmer agreed, the spokesperson did give a substantive answer – albeit one that was a bit waffly. He said:

There have always been moments that lead us to question whether the rules-based international order is working as intended. The prime minister has alluded to that by repeatedly saying the world is more volatile than ever before.

But he’s clear that he has the prosperity and security of the UK at the forefront of his mind in every international engagement that he undertakes. And defending democracy, standing up for human rights and the rule of law are obviously principles that this prime minister cares about deeply.

Whilst there are obvious threats to that world order, our strategic partnerships with our allies are as close as ever. And we remain clear-eyed about the challenges we face and the complex issues we have to navigate that.

But this prime minister is clear that by investing in our defence, and by building stronger partnerships, we can protect our interests and be strong abroad.

But the spokesperson refused to accept the argument that the US might be one of the “obvious threats to … world order”. Asked to say where the threats were coming from, he cited Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Asked if Starmer regarded Trump as a threat to European security, the spokesperson replied: “No.”

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