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Let’s not deny the good work Labour has done. But Starmer is too timid for the radical remedies needed now | Polly Toynbee
Labour is in the deepest trouble. A juicy leadership drama ignites all Westminster-watchers, another spellbinding live-action theatre of rising and falling stars, duels, betrayals of trust, new alliances and old ones broken.
Some would pull back from this vortex. Is regicide absolutely necessary when “stability” is what people and markets say they want and vox pops groan, “Not another one!” After less than two years, with worse turmoil ahead from the Trump war, now, really?
Whatever comes of Wes Streeting’s attempt to trigger a contest, this sixth game of thrones for No 10 in a decade is inevitable and unavoidable. Labour has to confront what voters said deafeningly in the local elections: not Labour and, crushingly, not Keir Starmer. He is in that bourn from which no traveller returns: political death. No one ever came back from such public rejection. Ignoring it is not an option, just wishful thinking. As Mark Carney famously warned, “Hope is not a plan, nostalgia is not a strategy.” Labour needs a plan and a strategy, a chance to start again with candidates laying out their maps and their melodies.
Politics is a miserable business much of the time. Starmer doesn’t deserve this, but with a dignified timetable he must be gone by autumn. The threatening spectre of Nigel Farage means there is no room for sympathy, nor time to wait for change either in Starmer or in public opinion of him: it will never come. Though he has been an unsuccessful – and unlucky – leader, I like and respect the man, but the public doesn’t. Better by far if he doesn’t fight a contest, but when the time comes moves to the Foreign Office, where he’s best suited – a uniting gesture just as when Ed Miliband was invited back to the frontbench.
No rule says Labour will bounce back under a new leader, even though Andy Burnham (alone) has a net positive rating for popularity, and now, courtesy of Makerfield MP Josh Simons, a possible route back to parliament. Like Starmer, no contender beats Farage as “best prime minister” in polling this month. That means little. Until a leader arrives with a new agenda and new style, what does anyone know? What we do know is that more of the same is certain annihilation. Labour members realised it as they saw their councils fall.
The king’s speech was dismissed as almost irrelevant, it being unclear who “my government” will be in a few months’ time. That’s a mistake. Starmer rightly called his measures radical. Powers to fast-track EU agreements, restrictions on council house sales, the ending of new leaseholds, bans for “conversion therapies” for gay and transgender people and an overhaul of Send provision – these are small emblems of what is happening already.
To recap: in under two years Labour has ended the two-child benefit cap, projected to take 450,000 children out of poverty, provided breakfast clubs for primary schoolchildren in England, made 500,000 extra children in England eligible for free school meals. Free nurseries liberate families to work, with a crucial early years educational boost and up to 1,000 new Best Start family hubs in England. The young have come first, with arts back on the curriculum, a lost youth service restarted with 250 centres to be built or refurbished in England – and new further education colleges with extra construction courses and apprenticeships. This is Labour turf; it’s not nearly enough, but it’s a start at tackling neglected training for the half of young people in England not bound for higher education. British Steel is set to be nationalised, alongside train operators, with rail fares frozen in England and pay-per-mile road pricing for all electric cars by 2028.
Business and its press protest at a real living wage raised by 6.7%, plus a 4.1% increase for the minimum wage, shifting power towards working rights that ends zero-hours contracts and beefs up union recruiting. Rightly the national insurance increase to raise £25bn fell on employers not workers. The Renters’ Rights Act protects 11 million people in England from no-fault evictions. Net migration plummeted by 78%. Green energy surges ahead with priority investment. Today’s NHS waiting-list figures show the fastest fall in 16 years, aided by more than 2,000 extra GPs and 170 new community diagnostic centres.
No space here for everything, but Starmer’s government has done the good that only Labour governments do. Enough? No, but it’s dangerously frivolous to dismiss its advances. How unjust that only 26% feel that Starmer has brought any change compared to its Conservative predecessors; 60% feel there’s been little to no change. That’s plain wrong.
Expectations that “change” made by politicians can lower the cost of living may be impossible. After 14 years of an austerity that stripped the country bare and economic blows that left standards of living stagnant for 20 years, there will be no quick return to the days of yearly improvements and children destined for lives better than their parents. The International Monetary Fund warns the Iran war will hit Britain harder than any other industrialised nation. The UK inflation rate tops the G7 chart. Brexit has lost us a colossal 6 to 8% of GDP.
A wise new leader would be honest and summon a sense of emergency for radical remedies. Ask the Institute for Fiscal Studies director, Helen Miller. She calls for a big-bang tax reform: everything all at once rather than picking off one thing at a time. A great property tax renewal, abolishing stamp duty, beginning again on council tax, ignoring southern losers when more would gain elsewhere. Others suggest bonds to pay for defence and housing would attract savers, with exemption from inheritance tax, yielding more than the Treasury would lose. A one-off wealth tax could raise £160bn, a shock-and-awe levy to set a new tone. Time to abandon the pension triple lock that will cost £15.5bn by 2029: spend that on housing young families instead.
Some essentials cost nothing: electoral reform, abolishing the House of Lords, while accelerating rejoining the EU. It’s baffling that this government has been so timid. In a stagnant time when voters reach for anything new, Starmer’s caution was the wrong message for this era. That’s the lesson for the next leader. But make sure voters know all that Labour has already done.
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Man found guilty of attempting to kill police officers
Charlie Love was also found guilty of causing an explosion likely to endanger life and possessing explosives.
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US PGA Championship, day one – live | US PGA
Key events
We’ve not heard much from Rory McIlroy of late. That’s because he’s been pootling along quietly since that bogey-birdie start. He teases a huge 60-foot left-to-right swinger on 15 to tap-in distance, and remains at level par. Meanwhile Cam Smith limits the damage on 18 to bogey, a staunch effort given that duck hook.
Cameron Smith drops on dusty ground between a generator and a skip. Throw in his mullet and fluffy moustache, and it’s quite the mise-en-scène of blue-collar heartland chic. As close as major championship golf gets to a John Cougar Mellencamp video. One for the kids there. Anyway, he chips back into the centre of the fairway, taking his medicine. But he’ll have to get up and down from 181 yards if he’s to scramble a par and avoid dropping two shots in as many holes.
Stephan Jaeger bounces back from his first dropped shot of the day with birdie at the par-five 9th. The German hits the turn in 31 strokes, regaining sole leadership of the tournament in doing so. Meanwhile a birdie for Alex Fitzpatrick, who tickles a downhill 20-footer into the cup on 13, and the in-form Sheffield star is back near the top of the standings again.
-4: Jaeger (9)
-3: Cauley (8)
-2: A Fitzpatrick (13), C Smith (8*), Greyserman (7), Schauffele (6*), Snedeker (5)
In other Fiasco News, Cam Smith sends a snap-hook dangerously close to the OB markers down the left of 18. He’s ended up behind a grandstand and a couple of buildings. He’s so far off piste he might get a favourable drop, with all sorts of man-made, tournament-specific obstacles in his way. Skips, cables, outhouses, goodness knows what else. Godspeed to the match referee as he wanders over to make his ruling.
Garrick Higgo’s best finish at the PGA came last year at Quail Hollow: a tie for 55th. Not the highest bar to clear, but the 27-year-old South African has put himself behind the eight-ball from the get-go this week, turning up late for his tee time by one minute. He was on the practice putting green at the time, an area deemed not close enough. That cost him a two-stroke penalty and so he opened with a double-bogey six. In the circumstances, he’s done extremely well to hit the turn in 35, level par, having birdied 3 and 9.
Cam Smith is the best part of 30 yards right of the 17th green. The pin’s on that side, too, so he’s not got much of a shot. He does exceptionally well to lash a vicious lob into the heart of the green, the best he could do, but it’s not enough to save his par. He can’t make the 16-foot putt coming back, and the bogey takes him out of the leading group and back to -2.
Xander Schauffele heads in the other direction, the result of dunking his tee shot at the par-three 14th into the bunker front left. And Cameron Smith is in a spot of bother on the 17th, carving his tee shot at the long par-three wide right. But for now …
-3: Jaeger (8), C Smith (7*), Cauley (7)
-2: Brennan (9), Greyserman (6), Schauffele (5*), Fox (5)
… and the leaders are now joined by Bud Cauley, who sends a 50-foot right-to-left swinger into the cup at 7 for his third birdie of the day. That was travelling. Had it not hit the hole, the 36-year-old journeyman from Florida might have been taking another couple of putts to get down. But here we are. He’s -3.
Cameron Smith has been tucked away, out of sight, mind and form on the LIV tour, for a while now. Missing the cut for six majors straight hasn’t helped matters. But he looks to have finally rediscovered the mojo that took him to the 2022 Open. He’s just added to those birdies at 10 and 13 by walking in a long putt across the par-five 16th, and he joins Stephan Jaeger and Xander Schauffele at -3.
One of the great up-and-downs from the career-slam-chasing Jordan Spieth on 13. Having sent his tee shot into deep nonsense down the left, he’s unable to reach the green, effing and jeffing as his second shot squirts almost straight right. Shortsided and behind a bunker, he whips over the flag to 15 feet, then rolls in the par saver. Scrambling is going to come at a premium this week, and there’s nobody better than the master escapologist Spieth. He’s level par.
A third birdie in four holes for Xander Schauffele. The 2024 champion now has a share of the lead, because it’s a first bogey of the day for Stephan Jaeger, at the long par-three 8th, all 245 yards of it.
-3: Jaeger (8), Schauffele (4*)
-2: Brennan (8), C Smith (6*), English (6), Cauley (6)
Rory McIlroy crashes a 352-yard drive down the middle of 12. By the looks of the graphic flashed up on the screen, that’s at least 30 yards further on than anyone else so far today. But his wedge is underhit, toppling back down a ridge running across the huge green, and his first putt isn’t all that either. In the end, after all that, he does well to tidy up for par. He remains level. Aronimink’s swales and large undulating greens are posing the world’s best players all sorts of puzzles and problems, and it’s captivating stuff. Whoever wins this week will have a short game to die for, their ball on the end of a tight leash.
Bryson DeChambeau’s travails continue apace. Having found the thick stuff with his iron off the 13th tee, he flies the green with his second, and is forced to hack out from more nonsense over the back. He can only bundle his ball to within 20 feet, and there goes another stroke. A very average start from the two-time major winner and prospective YouTube magnate: he’s +2. So much for playing it safe. Bomb and gouge, Bryson, bomb and gouge. However his playing partner Ludvig Åberg makes a fine birdie, taking advantage of a lucky break when his errant drive settled on rough trampled down by the gallery. A wedge to 12 feet and a putt later, and he’s back to level par.
These lads are spraying it around everywhere. Jon Rahm into the gallery down the left of 12. Ludvig Åberg into the trees down the right of 13. Bryson DeChambeau takes an iron for safety on 13 … and sends it into the thick rough down the right! That is absurd. You know what, this PGA is going to be a lot of fun.
Bounceback birdie for Rory McIlroy! He plays the 11th in fuss-free fashion: tee shot down the middle, wedge to three feet, putt into the centre of the cup. That’s wiped out his opening bogey, which was his first at the PGA Championship for five years. And up on 12, there’s some escapology from Ludvig Åberg, who sends his second over the back and into thick rough, down the bottom of a bank. He’s shortsided too, with the flag nearby, very little green to play with. But he whips out, ball sailing high but landing soft, rolling out to kick-in distance. That’s an outrageous par, and his wide smile tells the story. He knows that was damn good. But he’s +1 after a three-putt for bogey at 10.
Stephan Jaeger keeps on keeping on! He pours in a 25-footer on 6 to double his advantage at the top of the leaderboard.
-4: Jaeger (6)
-2: Hall (8), Brennan (6), C Smith (4*), Schauffele (2*)
No such problems – yet – for Stephan Jaeger. The 36-year-old German has made the cut on each of his previous PGA Championship appearances, though a tie for 50th is the best finish he’s managed. But he’s going very nicely this morning. Birdies at 1, 4 and 5, and he’s the first man to reach the -3 mark. Meanwhile the 2022 Open champion Cameron Smith birdies 10 and 13, while Xander Schauffele, who won this title in 2024, opens with back-to-back birdies at 10 and 11.
-3: Jaeger (5)
-2: Hall (8), Brennan (6), C Smith (4*), Schauffele (2*)
Bryson’s touch is all over the shop. He overcooks his downhill 30-foot putt from the fringe at the back of 11 … and the ball catches the slope of the green, rolling 60 feet past! So nearly off back down the fairway! That leads to an inevitable bogey. Also dropping a shot: Jon Rahm on 1. His approach disappears down a swale to the right of the green, and he can’t get his ball back up with his first chip. Rory also bogeys, the result of that errant drive and skulled wedge, and for a course supposedly there for the taking, Aronimink sure is baring its teeth.
It Can Happen To The Best Of Them dept. Rory McIlroy’s ball, having hit a tree down the right of 1, comes straight down and disappears into thick rough. He lashes at it with great force, but the ball only squirts out of the cabbage, a topper that dribbles 100 yards down the fairway. We’ve all done it, Rory on fewer occasions than most. But here he is. So much for his pre-tournament claim that “strategy off the tee is pretty non-existent”, huh. And there’s no blaming a blister on his pinky toe for that one.
It’s safe to say Bryson doesn’t have his distances dialled in yet. Having come up short with his approach into 10, he overhits his wedge into 11. Then asks his caddie: “Was that short?” Once he works out where he is, he should salvage his par with a couple of putts from the fringe at the back, but it’s an uncertain start for the two-time US Open champion.
Here comes Rory! And immediately the back-to-back Masters champion tries his best to prove the drive-it-anywhere predictions a lie, carving his opening salvo at 10 hysterically towards a tree down the right. Clack clock! His ball pings back towards the fairway but disappears into thick rough. He’s going round today with Jon Rahm and Jordan Spieth, the latter chasing a career slam of his own.
Bryson DeChambeau wastes his fine opening drive. A very average wedge into the 10th, then a severely underhit first putt, and he does well to tidy up from five feet for par. No such luck for his playing partner Ludvig Åberg, who three-putts his way to an opening bogey.
Michael Brennan is making his PGA Championship debut this week. The 24-year-old from Virginia tied for 24th at the Masters last month, and won his first title on Tour in Utah last October, and now he’s joint leader here, albeit with the usual fairly major early-Thursday caveats. He’s up there at -2 with Harry Hall, who finished in the top 20 last year at Quail Hollow. A neat start for the 28-year-old from Cornwall, with birdies at 5 and 6.
-2: Hall (6), Brennan (5)
-1: A Fitzpatrick (7), McCarthy (6*), N Hojgaard (6), McKibbin (3), Jaegar (3), C Smith (3*), Harman (3*), Cauley (2), Greyserman (1)
The course’s main defences are the many bunkers potted around the property, and the huge greens, which will take some working out. But some overnight rain has lengthened the track a wee bit. It’s a bit drizzly this morning, too, and it’s expected to stay cloudy for most of the day, with a chance of more showers and a little wind. The forecast for the rest of the week looks better, though: sunny with light winds for the most part. Should be a fun week.
Aronimink could prove a playground for the big hitters, with accuracy off the tee not a deal-breaker. There’s plenty of scope to whistle drives hither and yon: Rory McIlroy has described “strategy off the tee” as “pretty non-existent”, while Scottie Scheffler says “you can hit it pretty far offline” and still “kind of get away with it”. Good news for the likes of Bryson DeChambeau, then, though to be fair he blasts his opening tee shot, at 10, down the middle of the fairway. Gary Woodland won his US Open in similar circumstances; the popular veteran, whose win at the Houston Open a couple of months back was one of the feelgood stories of the year so far, is level par through his first two holes, 10 and 11.
Here we go, then, and let’s begin with the aforementioned “on-song Matt Alex Fitzpatrick”. He only got his PGA Tour card last month, courtesy of winning the Zurich Classic with his older brother Matt. That gave him a two-year exemption Stateside, plus secured his invite to this tournament. Since then he’s made the top ten at the Cadillac Championship and threatened to win last week at the Truist. Now he’s become the first player this week to reach the -2 mark, opening with birdies at 1 and 2. Admittedly he went out in the very first group, and he’s since dropped a stroke at 5. But he did do that, and he’s currently one of several players under par. Early days and quite a bit of golf yet to play, of course.
-1: A Fitzpatrick (5), McCarthy (5*), Hall (5), Hoge (3*), Brennan (3), Glover (2), McKibbin (1), Jaeger (1), Smith (1*), Brown (1)
Preamble
Welcome to our coverage of the 108th PGA Championship. It’s only the second time the tournament has been held at Aronimink Golf Club, about 30 minutes west of Philly; the first time was in 1962, when Gary Player won the first of his two PGA Championships. The world number one Scottie Scheffler defends, the Masters champion Rory McIlroy goes for stage two of the calendar grand slam, the in-form Cameron Young looks to make it 11 wins in a row for the USA, and the equally on-song Matt Fitzpatrick attempts to become the first English winner since 1919 (!). Many other narratives are available, and will pan out over the next four days. So let’s waste no more time, because the early starters are already out there. It’s on!
The tee times (BST). Starting on the 1st …
1145 Braden Shattuck, Alex Fitzpatrick, Ben Griffin
1156 Francisco Bide, Harry Hall, Ryan Gerard
1207 John Keefer, Rico Hoey, Nicolai Hojgaard
1218 Shaun Micheel, Michael Brennan, Garrick Higgo
1229 YE Yang, Jhonattan Vegas, Matt McCarty
1240 Lucas Glover, Tom McKibbin, Stephan Jaeger
1251 Daniel Brown, Adrien Saddier, Harris English
1302 Jacob Bridgeman, Bud Cauley, Alex Noren
1313 Chris Kirk, Max Greyserman, Kristoffer Reitan
1324 Maverick McNealy, Thomas Detry, Padraig Harrington
1335 Ryan Lenahan, Ryan Fox, Kazuki Higa
1346 Jared Jones, Michael Kim, Ryo Hisatsune
1357 Tyler Collet, Kota Kaneko, Brandt Snedeker
—
1715 Andrew Novak, John Parry, Jordan Gumberg
1726 Ben Polland, Kurt Kitayama, Nico Echavarria
1737 Akshay Bhatia, Ricky Castillo, Michael Thorbjornsen
1748 Luke Donald, Jesse Droemer, Stewart Cink
1759 Hideki Matsuyama, JJ Spaun, Max Homa
1810 Ben Kern, JT Poston, Russell Henley
1821 Adam Scott, Corey Conners, Daniel Berger
1832 Viktor Hovland, Collin Morikawa, Shane Lowry
1843 Chris Gotterup, Robert MacIntyre, Tommy Fleetwood
1854 Cameron Young, Keegan Bradley, Justin Thomas
1905 Scottie Scheffler, Matt Fitzpatrick, Justin Rose
1916 Zach Haynes, Alex Smalley, Chandler Blanchet
1927 Bernd Wiesberger, Sudarshan Yellamaraju, Andy Sullivan
… and starting on the 10th …
1150 Aldrich Potgieter, David Puig, Denny McCarthy
1201 William Mouw, Chris Gabriele, Taylor Pendrith
1212 Tom Hoge, Bryce Fisher, Joaquin Niemann
1223 Keith Mitchell, Billy Horschel, Ian Holt
1234 Gary Woodland, Jason Day, Sam Burns
1245 Wyndham Clark, Cameron Smith, Brian Harman
1256 Patrick Cantlay, Min Woo Lee, Sahith Theegala
1307 Si Woo Kim, Derek Berg, Joe Highsmith
1318 Bryson DeChambeau, Ludvig Aberg, Rickie Fowler
1329 Xander Schauffele, Brooks Koepka, Tyrrell Hatton
1340 Rory McIlroy, Jordan Spieth, Jon Rahm
1351 Daniel Hillier, Ryan Vermeer, Max McGreevy
1402 Paul McClure, Mikael Lindberg, Angel Ayora
—
1710 Michael Block, Rasmus Hojgaard, Dustin Johnson
1721 Mark Geddes, Steven Fisk, David Lipsky
1732 Sungjae Im, Austin Hurt, Casey Jarvis
1743 Andrew Putnam, Michael Kartrude, Matt Wallace
1754 Martin Kaymer, Elvis Smylie, Davis Riley
1805 Jason Dufner, Haotong Li, Jimmy Walker
1816 Nick Taylor, Rasmus Neergaard-Petersen, Jordan Smith
1827 Emiliano Grillo, Patrick Reed, Pierceson Coody
1838 Brian Campbell, Adam Schenk, Christiaan Bezuidenhout
1849 Marco Penge, Sepp Straka, Patrick Rodgers
1900 Aaron Rai, Travis Smyth, Sami Valimaki
1911 Sam Stevens, Jayden Schaper, Garrett Sapp
1922 Timothy Wiseman, Matti Schmid, Austin Smotherman
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