A Government Under Pressure
The UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer has been put under pressure after loss in local elections. The Far-Right has won and Labour Party seems to be seething under immense political pressure. The left leadership in the British parliament might be challenged soon unless the British prime minister pulls his ministers together for some drudgery. The rise of far-right is a cause of grave concern as they give irreverent name to the benign activity as politics. The juggernaut of far-right ought to be stopped in Britain, and all parties concerned must get their act together to make their polity more democratic than it has been thus far. The UK politics has been under pressure since Brexit, and market confidence might ebb due to the rise of the far-right. The UK Prime Minister Starmer might face loss of confidence in the parliament and his government might be made substitutable. The loss of elections is not new for political parties but losing to far right ought to made a matter of callousness that Labour leadership has been indicted for. The British Parliament might elect a new Labour leader soon, and all voices of support might tilt in the favour of a new leadership.
Politics ought to be made responsible, and more attention should be paid to the electorate’s social and economic needs, which was not under the Starmer government. The rise of far-right must be laid on the edifice of patchwork that Labour has been unfortunately entitled to. The rise of far-right must be culled in Europe as well in the United Kingdom. The new government under a novel leadership might bring a change of heart among the electorates. The rising social problems, which Britain is often full of, must be curbed, and economy must be paid adequate attention to. Starmer government is inching towards European Union, to protect the sanctity of economic liberty in United Kingdom. The government of the day must be made more advantageous and should serve the social and economic aims that it was duly elected for. Giving political space to far-right should not be made a commonplace occurrence in British politics. The world is watching the British parliament and the role its elected representatives ought to play in these tricky times that they must come to terms with. The loss of a prime minister is a price that the Labour would pay for the rise in the number of seats of the far-right. The far-right’s sweep must be quelled and all politics must be used to garner support for its economy.
Yuvraj Saharan
Capital Report