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Keir Starmer is doomed - and for the same reason every Labour leader ends in ruin

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All political careers end in failure, but Labour prime ministers always fail in the same way. Starmer will be no different. He was doomed the moment he won the leadership, and there's nothing he can do about it.

This is not to excuse his own failings. Starmer is a wooden, uninspiring politician, who can't even lie properly. Every leader bends the truth when it suits them, but most at least try to sugar the pill.

Starmer simply churns out whatever line he thinks necessary in that flat, nasal monotone, without even bothering to dress it up.

Yet even if he were a political genius, he'd still be heading for disaster. Why? Because Labour is not built for power.

Its natural gift lies in opposition. The movement thrives on attacking capitalism, wealth, bosses, money and the Empire, even though it collapsed decades ago. They're more comfortable waving Palestinian flags than British ones.

It wants to tear the system down, not run it. Once in government, it's lost. And it stays lost until voters finally lose patience and boots Labour out.

Rest assured, disgruntled voters will boot this lot out too. Given the chance, they'd do it today.

That's why Labour spent 18 years in opposition after Margaret Thatcher's 1979 victory, and another 14 years after Gordon Brown was kicked out in 2010.

It takes them that long to persuade people they are fit to run the country again. But they're not. And they never will be.

The membership's heart isn't in governing. It would rather rant about "evil Tory scum" than make hard decisions.

No credible political party would have gone to the polls in 2015 with Ed Miliband as leader. No serious party would have given Jeremy Corbyn a shot at power. Twice.

Starmer pitched leftwards to win the Labour leadership in 2020. Once in charge, he ditched those commitments, because he knew voters wouldn't stomach them.

But by doing so, he betrayed the activists who put him there. Labour's left always ends up betrayed, because its demands are unrealistic. Every Labour leader is forced into the same cycle of lies, betrayal and electoral defeat.

Labour is built on a massive fault line. Out of power, it wants to smash the system. In power, it has to make that system work.

In the 1970s, that contradiction destroyed Harold Wilson and Jim Callaghan, when Labour's spending left Britain begging the IMF for a bailout.

Blair won three elections in a row by convincing voters he was safe, but the Labour left never forgave him. They championed Gordon Brown, who wasn't up to the job.

Starmer's not up to the job either. Nor is Rachel Reeves, Ed Miliband, David Lammy or the same horrible lot. And all for the same reason. Labour belongs in opposition, railing against capitalism and denouncing the world's unfairness.

Sadly, the country must now endure four more years of this but here's the worst. Once Labour is thrown out, it will regroup, return, and fail all over again. And in exactly the same way.

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