David Starkey Talks

David Starkey

Every week on David Starkey Talks I talk to guests from across the spectrum of British politics and culture, all with the same goal in mind: how do we use the unique resources of talent and history that Britain has to reforge this country anew - stronger, smarter and more assured? You can also follow my YouTube channel on youtube.com/davidstarkeytalks

  1. "Reform are the only national party" | David Starkey & Mark Littlewood react to election results

    2D AGO

    "Reform are the only national party" | David Starkey & Mark Littlewood react to election results

    For all that they were unsurprising, the local results were a political revelation. Reform have continued to conquer the areas that began shifting away from Labour ever since the Brexit referendum of 2016. Reaching, as Nigel Farage said, far further into those regions than even Boris Johnson managed in 2019. If you break down the results in the Red Wall by ward level, you will see an even starker trend. The white working class is voting overwhelmingly for Reform, while the middle-class is largely sticking with Labour, the Lib Dems, or Greens. As well as capturing the traditional Conservative heartlands in the East of England, Reform also came in second in Wales and joint-second in Scotland from a standing start. Giving them a significant presence throughout the United Kingdom. If there is to be a vehicle to overturn the stifling uniparty consensus that has misruled this country for the last 30 years, and to prevent the maniac Greens from entering government, then it is increasingly clear that that vehicle is Reform. Others may wish it wasn't so, but we must deal with realities, not fantasies. All that being said, the Conservatives retain stubborn support among wealthier southern areas. And while Reform performed spectacularly, it still remains to be seen whether their projected national vote share would see them win a majority. The question of some kind of deal pre- or post-general election remains open. As ever, Mark Littlewood provides what I regard as the most acute analysis of the election results and what they mean. I hope you enjoy the episode! Thumbnail image credit: Owain Davies

    57 min
  2. "Is Starmer a truthful man?" | David Starkey clashes with Labour's Peter Edwards

    APR 26

    "Is Starmer a truthful man?" | David Starkey clashes with Labour's Peter Edwards

    Amid the ongoing collapse of Sir Keir Starmer's premiership, it occurred to me that the one person I hadn't discussed this with was somebody who actually believes the Prime Minister is doing a good job. I speak to Labour members frequently, but even they mostly concede that Starmer has been a disaster in office, and so we end up broadly agreeing with each other on the bigger points, if not the specifics. However my guest this week was bravely willing to stump up a defence of Sir Keir; and he is Labour through and through. Peter Edwards was an adviser to a former Labour Shadow Chancellor and for years edited the LabourList publication; the equivalent of ConservativeHome for the political Right, which tracks the party's people, policies and fortunes closely. His contacts inside the party are impeccable. I really wanted to pin him down on a specific point: that having ridden into office on a wave of sanctimonious outrage at Tory sleaze, Sir Keir Starmer has proven to be at least as mendacious as his Conservative rivals, but worse, cloaks his lies with piety. As you'll see, Peter was having none of it, and what struck me about the conversation is how two people, both reasonably intelligent and informed, can come to such wildly different conclusions about contemporary events. Enjoy the episode! Thumbnail credit: “Prime Minister Keir Starmer visits Northern Ireland” by Number 10, CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

    43 min
  3. "Is this the end for Keir Starmer?" | David Starkey Talks... to Benedict Spence

    APR 18

    "Is this the end for Keir Starmer?" | David Starkey Talks... to Benedict Spence

    Since he's entered office, every scandal that has lapped the ankles of Sir Keir Starmer has been responded to with a familiar refrain: "I wasn't to know!" The faintest whiff of moral reproach is frantically dispersed with a robust display of the former Director of Public Prosecution's moral rectitude. His righteous fury at being consistently kept in the dark knows no bounds. Cabinet ministers are wheeled out to repeat ad nauseam, "Keir Starmer is a good man!" The force of this claim has reduced with every use. By now, as it emerges that Starmer's pick for ambassador to the US, Petey Mandelson, actually failed security vetting, its potency has finally worn out completely. We are left with two possibilities. Either Sir Keir Starmer is lying, or he has so abdicated responsibility over his own government that his officials didn't see the point in informing him that the man whom he had installed in the most important diplomatic position of the British state, and on whom he expended huge political capital, was in fact a security risk. Either of these options reveals enormous character flaws in the Prime Minister that make him unfit for his office. He rose to power on the back of his sanctimonious denunciations of Boris Johnson, but at least Boris Johnson lied for a purpose, at least his government achieved something, at least he has a personality. As I discuss with Benedict Spence this week, Starmer is devoid of all these attributes. And so the British people are forced yet again to wait for their deliverance from the banality of the deep state, of which Starmer was the perfect expression, but with which even he cannot now co-exist.

    54 min
  4. "Why is Reform playing it so safe?" | David Starkey looks ahead to local elections

    APR 5

    "Why is Reform playing it so safe?" | David Starkey looks ahead to local elections

    I've made no secret of my admiration for Robert Jenrick; the 'Great White Hope' of conservatism who, in my eyes and the eyes of many others, should have won the leadership of the Conservative Party. His move to Reform UK was a moment of genuine significance in the politics of the Right, and a major coup by Nigel Farage. However since his appointment as Reform's "Shadow Chancellor", the energetic radicalism that characterised Jenrick's rise to prominence seems to have ebbed. He has used his brief to adopt what might be called a new Ming vase strategy, one based upon the catastrophic Labour Party policy of not committing to anything in opposition, only for them to use lies and spin when in office to justify punishing tax increases. That approach was capped this week when Jenrick committed Reform to keeping the triple lock on pensions; an arguably unjustifiable expense given the financial straits Britain finds itself in. My regular political correspondent Mark Littlewood assuages my concerns, however. As he explains, Reform is facing a unique challenge, maintaining its radical proposition while persuading a broad enough coalition of voters that they can be responsible custodians of the State. This is an incredibly tricky balancing act that will require strict prioritisation and judicious picking of battles. As we count down to the local elections, the Reform high wire act will be buffeted and tested by the strongest winds yet.

    47 min
  5. "You are talking NONSENSE!" | Jeremy Hunt and David Starkey clash over state of Britain

    MAR 29

    "You are talking NONSENSE!" | Jeremy Hunt and David Starkey clash over state of Britain

    At the Oxford Literary Festival I hosted my first live edition of David Starkey Talks, in which I interviewed the former Chancellor of the Exchequer Jeremy Hunt about his new book, 'Can We Be Great Again? Why A Dangerous World Needs Britain'. I thought the discussion was highly illuminating both for the degree of intellectual competence that Jeremy Hunt clearly displays, but also the (in my view) utter inadequacy of his political analysis of what ails this country. Time and again we butted up against fundamental differences of what it is that the British state is for. For Jeremy, it seems to be the promotion of liberal democracy around the world. For me, it is to promote the welfare of the British people. While Jeremy speaks with pride about the surgery performed on Britain's finances during the Conservative governments of 2010-2014, and some perhaps justifiable frustration about commentaries which make it seem like government at that time should have been easy, I simply cannot ignore the macro-results of that period in our politics: which is that it left Britain poorer, more divided, and more defenceless. I respect any politician whose priority is to find solutions to the problems facing this country, but in order to find them, it's necessary to have a clear appreciation of what those problems are. And I worry that the scale of public disillusionment is lost on Mr Hunt. Ultimately, these differences must be aired so that voters can see clearly where public figures and, in this case, influential members of the Conservative Party, really sit and in what manner they will really approach the challenge of fixing Britain.

    47 min
  6. "Nick Timothy is right! We can't tiptoe around Islam" | David Starkey Talks... to Emma Trimble

    MAR 23

    "Nick Timothy is right! We can't tiptoe around Islam" | David Starkey Talks... to Emma Trimble

    If ever you needed proof that the Labour Party is beholden to Muslim voters, and increasingly sees itself in a battle for the sectarian Muslim vote against the Greens, then the cynical attacks they've launched against Nick Timothy this week have provided it. Nick Timothy, the Shadow Justice Secretary, pointed out that the proclaiming of the Muslim Adhan in Trafalgar Square, a public space of national symbolism, and the leading of mass Islamic prayers by Sadiq Khan, was not an innocuous display of public worship, but an intrusion of Islamic cultural domination into the public sphere. The argument also completely explodes the fiction that Labour's introduction of a definition for "anti-Muslim hatred" was a benign act of minority-protection. Clearly it is already being weaponised to stifle criticism of the religion. My guest this week, Emma Trimble, has had her own experiences of attempted cancellation for criticising Islam. She was subjected to appalling abuse after highlighting that many of the Pakistani rape gangs were motivated, to some extent at least, by a desire to dominate and humiliate the women of other religions - something which was well-attested to by witnesses and survivors at Rupert Lowe's rape gang inquiry. Emma also brings her specific perspective as a practicing Christian. As you will hear during our discussion, I disagree with her to some extent on the best way to tackle the Islamist threat to our society, but we both agree that it must be taking extremely seriously.

    47 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
2 Ratings

About

Every week on David Starkey Talks I talk to guests from across the spectrum of British politics and culture, all with the same goal in mind: how do we use the unique resources of talent and history that Britain has to reforge this country anew - stronger, smarter and more assured? You can also follow my YouTube channel on youtube.com/davidstarkeytalks

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