Keir Starmer faces discontent as Labour MPs
reject union jack election flyers
Exclusive: Members say flag may alienate ethnic
minority voters as some associate it with far right
Ben Quinn
Political correspondent
Sat 30 Mar
2024 06.00 GMT
Keir
Starmer is facing discontent from Labour MPs over the dominant use of the union
flag in election campaign material amid concern it may alienate ethnic minority
voters and others.
Concerns
were raised at recent meetings of the party’s black, Asian and minority ethnic
(BAME) group at Westminster and also by London members of the parliamentary
Labour party. There is also unhappiness among some activists who are reluctant
to handle the material.
There was
criticism from those at a meeting of MPs from ethnic minority backgrounds,
including Starmer’s chief of staff, Sue Gray, and the chief whip, Alan
Campbell, of freepost leaflets that were – as one MP put it – “plastered with
union jacks”.
There is
also increasing unhappiness about the lengthy delay to the investigation into
Diane Abbott, who had the Labour whip removed almost a year ago, as well as
discontent over the party’s progress on BAME representation.
Unease
about the party’s use of the flag also came up at a meeting of London MPs that
was attended by Morgan McSweeney, Labour’s director of campaigns, and Ellie
Reeves, its deputy national campaign coordinator.
The union
flag has taken on an increasingly prominent role under Starmer as he seeks to
emphasise Labour’s “patriotic” credentials to assert that the party has changed
from the Jeremy Corbyn era.
However,
some Labour MPs have suggested that the prominence of red, white and blue still
has negative connotations among ethnic minority communities targeted by the far
right. They asked why material provided could not be more tailored to specific
constituencies.
One MP
said: “We are all really proud of our country but this can be a complex issue
for some communities and we have to navigate that more carefully.”
“For a lot
of communities we are talking about colours that are associated with the
National Front or another far-right group. Using the flag might be great for
trying to reach those ‘hero voters’ but why can’t we have segmented branding,”
they added, using a phrase Labour strategists coined for the slice of the
electorate who swing directly from Tory to Labour and who tend to be more
socially conservative and pro-Brexit.
“I can see
how it would work in some places but it’s definitely detrimental in university
towns, and in heavily BAME seats,” said another MP who attended one of the
meetings and who added that “multiple colleagues” had told him of activists
refusing to give out the leaflets.
“They just
look like union jacks really, with a bit of red on the side. There’s not even a
Labour rose. You don’t need to prove your patriotism by wrapping yourself in
the union jack,” they added.
A
councillor on the south coast told the Guardian that the flag-branded material
was also sometimes a problem and not only among BAME voters.
“I’ve seen
boxes of the leaflets being piled up because activists don’t want to give them
out. We’re also finding that in some cases people on the doorsteps have
mistaken them for leaflets put out by the Conservative,” they said.
A video
sent out by Labour to its activists and organisers outlines its general
election branding. “The flag dominates, and of course Labour red,” states the
video, which also recommends the use of a “poppins” font and says that MPs and
organisers should use the template to ensure “brand consistency”.
Other
Labour guidance to members on branding states that a “primary palette” of
colours including “Labour red”, “flag blue” as well as white and black should
predominate colour when producing “content or positive messaging”.
A
“secondary palette” has been composed to match messaging relating to Labour’s
“missions”. They are “growth pink”, “green energy green”, “NHS blue”, “policing
yellow” and “opportunity purple”.
Abdi Duale,
a member of Labour’s NEC (National Executive Committee), said: “Britain’s
strength is in its diversity and our communities are hugely proud of our nation
and its flag. Labour is running a proudly progressive and patriotic campaign
that celebrates all our communities and that includes using our flag.”
A
spokesperson for Momentum, the Labour-supporting group, said: “Members are the
lifeblood of our party, the activists who put the hard graft in on the doors.
They must be listened to and the message is clear: Labour’s campaign materials
should reflect the concerns of the communities they serve. A one-size-fits all
model is not just ineffective, but has the potential to repel parts of Labour’s
core voter base.”
The
concerns about the union flag emerge as Starmer intervened in a row over
England’s new football kit for the Euros, calling for it to be scrapped after
the decision to replace the traditional red and white St George’s Cross for a
multicoloured cross on the shirt.
A leaked
strategy document seen by the Guardian in 2021 advised Labour to make “use of
the [union] flag, veterans [and] dressing smartly” as part of a rebranding.
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