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Who is holding Labour’s moral compass?

As Labour continues to politically shoot itself in the foot, JULIAN VAUGHAN sees its electorate deserting it en masse

MORAL FORTITUDE: Former Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn at the People's Assembly Against Austerity protest in central London on June 7 2025

SOLIDARITY with the 100-plus Labour MPs who took a stand against the government to support the most vulnerable people in our communities.

If I were in their position, I would have also put my name to their amendment to the universal credit and Personal Independence Payment (PIP) Bill, which is due to have its second reading on Tuesday.

Perhaps it is with this knowledge that I was offered the candidacy (politely declined) for the seventh safest Tory seat in the UK at the last general election.

However, it is not just those on the left of the party who signed the amendment, but a cross-section of the Parliamentary Labour Party (PLP).

The decision to cut Winter Fuel Payments was not just morally wrong, but also a complete disaster politically. That those advisers in Labour’s inner circle could not see how this decision was going to play out is very concerning.

While the decision has been reversed, the die has been cast and the tone of this Labour government has been set, perhaps irrevocably.

More than ever, we need people in politics who genuinely understand the lives of ordinary people, not those more comfortable in the company of corporate lobbyists.

There comes a point in any government that, no matter what good or even brilliant things they do and the Labour government has done some good things, people stop listening.

This point has come to this government very early in their term, not helped by an electorate radicalised by apathy, distrust in the political system and the crystal-clear messaging of the hard right.

Labour’s mantra about “growth” has failed to offer hope to the public, besides which its reliance on trickle-down economics is dubious at best.

I do not believe it is at all clear to the public what Labour now stands for, especially when it appears to have abandoned the values of equality and social justice it once held so dear. Its attempt to outflank the hard right on immigration is as misguided as it is ugly – people will always choose the genuine article.

Even if people disagreed with Labour, there would be a grudging respect for their principles. The seeming absence of principles is being clocked by the public and resulting in a deep lack of trust.

We need a government that has the backs of ordinary people and particularly the most vulnerable in our society.

As a Labour supporter all my life, who has dedicated a fair bit of time standing up for Labour and Labour values, it is gut-wrenching that we now seek to punch down on disabled people.

Labour’s current approach is a gift to Reform UK. The public won’t give two hoots about the railways being nationalised if it doesn’t lead to cheaper fares and decent services. 
 

After lending their vote to Labour, many will never do so again if their local councils continue to cut services to the bone and the government continues to support water companies more than people.

The hubris of Starmer’s shadowy inner circle of advisers, seemingly now devoid of any political antennae, is bad news for Labour and bad news for the Britain.

It’s not too late to change direction, starting with a reversal in the cuts to the benefits of disabled people - it’s time to be bold – I’ll back that 100 per cent.

Julian Vaughan is a Labour Party and trade union activist, train driver, Aslef member and former Labour parliamentary candidate 2017-2019.

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