Skip to main content
Morning Star Conference
Spycops, Starmer and the freeborn Englishman
The Labour leader’s tolerance of the new invasive measures awarded to agents of the state flies in the face of the early traditions of the working-class movement, explains KEITH FLETT
Sir Keir Starmer

SIR Keir Starmer’s decision to dictate a Labour abstention on the “spycops” Bill in the Commons saw the biggest Labour revolt yet against his abstentions policy, including front-bench resignations.

The Bill in effect legalises illegal acts by undercover government agents — or spies, as they are known historically.

Government spies have been used for undercover and often illegal purposes since the late 18th century.

They were active around Peterloo in 1819 and the Cato Street Conspiracy in 1820.

This is not just a matter of history. Infiltration into and surveillance of legal radical campaigns and trade unions continues in the modern era.

Traditionally, spies who were responsible for illegal activities would conveniently disappear — often abroad — before trials where they might have to appear.

It’s more difficult to do that now, hence the “spycops” Bill.

Neither what William Cobbett called the “freeborn Englishman” nor the forbears of the modern labour movement would be impressed that Starmer abstained on the Bill.

The historian and activist EP Thompson was spied on by the security services after 1945, certainly up to 1963 (most MI5 reports on him are available at the National Archives).

Perhaps needless to say, Thompson was not involved in anything untoward unless you view trying to democratise society and advance socialist measures in that light.

Thompson, however, was the historian who, above others, revealed the origins of government spying in the modern British state, discussing the activities of “Oliver the Spy” in the Making of the English Working Class. 

The state was concerned about the activities of the Luddites in the early years of the 19th century and sought to infiltrate them.

Thompson, by contrast, drew attention to the “freeborn Englishman,” someone who cherished liberties, albeit limited ones. (For most the vote did not come until much later in the 19th century or even 1918.) 

More particularly, he did not like being interfered with either by his own state or by the agents of other states.

Thompson summarised the perspective in this introduction he wrote to the Secret State (1978): “In area after area, the ‘common people’ insisted that the civil rights of the ‘freeborn Englishman’ were not the privileges of an elite but were the common inheritance of all: freedom of press, speech and conscience, rights of assembly, inhibitions upon the actions of military or police against crowds, freedom from arbitrary imprisonment or unwarranted arrest and entry upon private premises.”

He argued that the insurgent British working-class movement took over for its own the old Whiggish bloody-mindedness of the citizen in the face of the pretensions of power.

It would be wrong to suggest that either the Labour Party or unions haven’t had right-wing figures who are unsympathetic to civil liberties.

In 1978 the Labour home secretary Merlyn Rees deported the former CIA agent Philip Agee and US journalist Mark Hosenball who had been exposing some of the less savoury activities of the security services.

He also backed the prosecution under the Official Secrets Act of a former solider, John Berry, and two journalists, Duncan Campbell and Crispin Aubrey, who were investigating CIA links with GCHQ.

It became known as the ABC case and there was significant public backing for the three.

Starmer, before he became director of public prosecutions, was a noted human rights lawyer.

He defended the McLibel Two in a celebrated case against McDonald’s where one of the defendants, Helen Steel, had been involved with someone later revealed to be an undercover police officer — a spycop.

He used material from that campaign in his campaign to be Labour leader.

One wonders if Starmer has ever read any labour history.

Keith Flett is a socialist historian.

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
WINNING OVER THE WORKING CLASS? Margaret Thatcher (left) personally sells off a London council house in her bid to undermine the welfare state and woo Labour voters via the 1980 Housing Act and so-called ‘right to buy’ for tenants
Features / 26 May 2025
26 May 2025

Research shows Farage mainly gets rebel voters from the Tory base and Labour loses voters to the Greens and Lib Dems — but this doesn’t mean the danger from the right isn’t real, explains historian KEITH FLETT

Conservative Party leader Kemi Badenoch at their local election campaign launch at The Curzon Centre in Beaconsfield, Buckinghamshire, March 20, 2025
Features / 14 May 2025
14 May 2025

KEITH FLETT traces how the ‘world’s most successful political party’ has imploded since Thatcher’s fall, from nine leaders in 30 years to losing all 16 English councils, with Reform UK symbolically capturing Peel’s birthplace, Tamworth — but the beast is not dead yet

STILL MARCHING: A May Day demo makes its way through London, 1973
Features / 1 May 2025
1 May 2025

KEITH FLETT revisits the 1978 origins of Britain’s May Day bank holiday — from Michael Foot’s triumph to Thatcher’s reluctant acceptance — as Starmer’s government dodges calls to expand our working-class celebrations

Features / 14 April 2025
14 April 2025
From bemoaning London’s ‘cockneys’ invading seaside towns to negotiating holiday rents, the founders of scientific socialism maintained a wry detachment from Victorian Easter customs while using the break for health and politics, writes KEITH FLETT
Similar stories
A cartoon depiction of the arrest of the Cato Street Conspir
Features / 4 February 2025
4 February 2025
The legacy of an 1820 conspiracy in revenge for Peterloo resonates down the ages, argues KEITH FLETT
Demonstrators outside the Amba Hotel at Marble Arch, London,
Features / 10 September 2024
10 September 2024
TONY COLLINS looks at the evidence he has uncovered in his research on our early labour movement of deep and hostile police infiltration that ruined lives in the last century
REACTIONARY RAMPAGE:
The house of radical dissenter
Joseph P
Features / 19 August 2024
19 August 2024
Socialist historian KEITH FLETT traces the parallel evolution of violent loyalist rampages and the workers' movement's peaceful democratic crowds, highlighting the stark contrast between recent far-right thuggery and mass Gaza protests