Tim Shipman

Tim Shipman

Tim Shipman is political editor of The Spectator.

Twelve things we learned this week

When I started out in Westminster in 2001, the parliamentary lobby was a very hierarchical place and the press gallery still had a dining room. We young pups would gather several times a week on the lobby table and listen attentively to the war stories of lobby legends like Phil Webster, Trevor Kavanagh, Michael White,

Can Starmer escape his problems in Munich?

Can Starmer escape his problems in Munich?

11 min listen

Keir Starmer has headed to Germany for the Munich Security Conference to meet allies and discuss defence, NATO and the war in Ukraine. He is expected to meet Chancellor Merz and President Macron later, before delivering a speech in the morning. But – after his worst week as Prime Minister – can Starmer use this

Is Antonia Romeo what the civil service needs?

13 min listen

When a PM is in crisis, what do they do? Sack the head of the civil service. Having lost both his Chief of Staff and Director of Communications at the beginning of the week, Keir Starmer resolved to make it a hat-trick by dispensing with the services of his short-serving Cabinet Secretary. The favourite to

Is Antonia Romeo what the civil service needs?

The case for Antonia Romeo

A few thoughts about the Antonia Romeo furore. This will doubtless not help her at all but Starmer would be nuts to cave in on appointing her as the first female cabinet secretary. 1) Yes, she is ballsy and brassy (in a very posh way), likes a party and mixes with all sorts of interesting

Keir Starmer gets angry

15 min listen

PMQs today and – as predicted – Keir Starmer came out worst in a pretty unpleasant session. Kemi Badenoch pinned the Prime Minister on the continued Mandelson fallout and now the scandal over Matthew Doyle, the former No. 10 comms chief who – just four weeks after his ennoblement – Labour have already been forced

Keir Starmer gets angry

‘Authority is like virginity. Once it’s gone, it’s gone’: Inside Keir Starmer’s downfall

Years ago, Peter Mandelson shared a key lesson with his protégé Morgan McSweeney. Reminiscing about his involvement in Labour’s 1987 general election campaign, he called it the ‘spray-paint election’. The manifesto was a ‘beautiful technicolour’ document but the tax-and-spend shibboleths of Old Labour remained, along with the policy of unilateral nuclear disarmament. ‘I spray-painted the

McSweeney resigns – is Starmer next?

25 min listen

Morgan McSweeney resigned yesterday as Keir Starmer’s chief of staff and – while it was not a surprise, given his role in appointing Peter Mandelson – the news that the Prime Minister has now lost his closest aide and political fire blanket is a huge shock. The repercussions are numerous: Starmer loses the man widely

McSweeney resigns – is Starmer next?

Morgan McSweeney’s resignation won’t save Starmer 

Morgan McSweeney has resigned, which felt inevitable but is still a shock to the government and to SW1 in general. His closeness to Peter Mandelson and his role in promoting him for the ambassadorship in Washington has been exposed as a grave error – though not, I think, one which was as predictable as everyone

Labour has bottled it – what happens next?

Where are we then, after the most consequential week in British politics since the last one? Keir Starmer no longer commands a majority in the House of Commons on key issues he cares about, the basic requirement which gives prime ministers their constitutional legitimacy. That much became clear on Thursday when Angela Rayner and other

AI will bring down Keir Starmer – if Peter Mandelson doesn’t first

AI will bring down Keir Starmer – if Peter Mandelson doesn’t first

43 min listen

Is Britain ready for Artificial Intelligence? Well, bluntly, ‘no’; that’s the verdict if you read several pieces in this week’s Spectator – from Tim Shipman, Ross Clark and Palantir UK boss Louis Mosley – focused on how Britain is uniquely ill-placed to take advantage of the next industrial revolution. Tim Shipman’s cover piece focuses on

Could the herd move on Starmer?

11 min listen

James Heale, Tim Shipman and Oscar Edmondson discuss the continuing fallout over the Mandelson scandal. The mood amongst Labour MPs is pretty dire – following a bruising PMQs and a government climbdown over the release of Mandelson’s vetting files – but is it bad enough for Labour MPs to challenge Starmer? And could his chief

Could the herd move on Starmer?

The Mandelson scandal could spell the end for Starmer

15 min listen

Another impressive PMQs from Kemi Badenoch – but she had plenty of ammunition to deploy after the Peter Mandelson scandal took a bleaker turn this week. The Prime Minister clearly wanted to make a strong statement in his first answer to Kemi Badenoch, saying that ‘Mandelson betrayed our country, our parliament and my party’. He

The Mandelson scandal could spell the end for Starmer

Is Keir Starmer prepared for the AI-pocalypse?

Is there any area of public policy which Keir Starmer’s government has got right? ‘Where very little is working, AI is a bright spot,’ says a former adviser. ‘They’ve started well but they are now in danger of blowing it.’ When Labour came to power they consigned much of the past 14 years of Tory

What next for Peter Mandelson?

12 min listen

It is one of the staple headlines of British politics: Peter Mandelson has resigned. The so-called Prince of Darkness was sacked as US ambassador last September, yet that has done little to stem the flow of stories about the alleged nature of his relationship with disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein. This weekend saw the publication of a

What next for Peter Mandelson?

Starmer’s Chinese trip changes nothing

I just had lunch with several European ambassadors and they asked me whether Keir Starmer’s trip to China was important or significant. My answer was that it was important but not significant. Starmer has been given a respectable degree of pomp, will be able to point to multiple billions in Chinese investment in British firms

Rayner vs Streeting – and what is 'active government'?

Rayner vs Streeting – and what is 'active government'?

18 min listen

In his column this week, Tim Shipman has finally hit upon an answer to the age-old question: what is Starmerism? After a concerted effort from his team to tie the Prime Minister down to a definitive ‘-ism’, he has delivered a threefold structure: firstly, the contestable claim that Labour has achieved macroeconomic stability by clinging

Is centrism dead? | with David Gauke, vice-chair of Prosper UK

22 min listen

Is centrism back? This week a group of former Tory heavyweights – including Ruth Davidson, Andy Street, Amber Rudd and David Gauke – have launched a new group aimed at reclaiming the centre ground and dispelling the myth that politics in 2026 is a straight shooting match between increasingly diffuse left/right poles. They say that

Is centrism dead? | with David Gauke, vice-chair of Prosper UK

Breaking news: Lammy was good at PMQs

10 min listen

It is our solemn duty to inform listeners that David Lammy won deputy PMQs at a canter today. To be frank, it was a low-rent affair. Andrew Griffith was the Tory sent out to question David Lammy while Keir Starmer is in China, and the shadow business secretary didn’t do a particularly good job. Perhaps

Breaking news: Lammy was good at PMQs