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THU · 2026-07-09 · 20:10 GMTBRIEF NSR-2026-0709-91721
News/Andy Burnham apology for Labour stance o/Burnham’s apology over Gaza marks ‘reset moment’ as Labour s…
NSR-2026-0709-91721Analysis·EN·Political Strategy

Burnham’s apology over Gaza marks ‘reset moment’ as Labour seeks to win back progressive voters

Labour leader Keir Starmer's initial comments on Israel's right to defend itself following the Hamas attack in October 2023, which appeared to suggest withholding power and water from Palestinian civilians, caused significant backlash within the party and among progressive voters. Despite clarifications, the controversy led to frontbench resignations and a deep division over the party's stance on Gaza.

Pippa Crerar Political editorThe Guardian - World NewsFiled 2026-07-09 · 20:10 GMTLean · Center-LeftRead · 3 min
Burnham’s apology over Gaza marks ‘reset moment’ as Labour seeks to win back progressive voters
The Guardian - World NewsFIG 01
Reading time
3min
Word count
743words
Sources cited
1cited
Entities identified
12entities
Quality score
100%
§ 01

Briefing Summary

AI-generated
NEWSAR · AI

Labour leader Keir Starmer's initial comments on Israel's right to defend itself following the Hamas attack in October 2023, which appeared to suggest withholding power and water from Palestinian civilians, caused significant backlash within the party and among progressive voters. Despite clarifications, the controversy led to frontbench resignations and a deep division over the party's stance on Gaza. This has been a persistent issue for Labour, complicated by its history and past leadership. Now, Andy Burnham is attempting to win back lost progressive voters with an apology for Labour's initial response and a promise to increase pressure on the Israeli government. However, it remains uncertain if this tonal shift will translate into substantive policy changes or be sufficient to regain electoral support.

Confidence 0.90Sources 1Claims 5Entities 12
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Article analysis

Model · rule-based
Framing
Political Strategy
Social Justice
Tone
Mixed Tone
AI-assessed
CalmNeutralAlarmist
Factuality
0.60 / 1.00
Mixed
LowHigh
Sources cited
1
Limited
FewMany
§ 03

Key claims

5 extracted
01

Andy Burnham is now trying to win back progressive voters for Labour.

factualarticle
Confidence
0.90
02

Eight Labour frontbenchers quit, including Jess Phillips, over a vote for a ceasefire.

factualarticle
Confidence
0.90
03

Keir Starmer's LBC interview on Israel's right to defend itself and potentially withhold power/water from Palestinian civilians caused significant backlash on the left.

factualarticle
Confidence
0.90
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Labour lost support on its progressive flank, a key part of its electoral coalition, partly due to the Gaza stance.

factualarticle
Confidence
0.80
05

Dozens of Muslim councillors threatened to quit the Labour party following Starmer's comments.

factualarticle
Confidence
0.80
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Full report

3 min read · 743 words
On the final day of Labour’s party conference in 2023, when the public was still reeling from the brutal Hamas attack on Israel just days before, Keir Starmer took to the airwaves for the traditional broadcast round – but gave one interview that would have particularly damaging fallout.Sitting down with LBC’s Nick Ferrari, the then opposition leader asserted Israel’s right to defend itself, a stance that was in line with the broad political consensus at the time. But then he also appeared to suggest it had “the right” to withhold power and water from Palestinian civilians.“Obviously, everything should be done within international law,” he added. His comments were clipped up and shared widely across social media, attracting the fury of many on the left.It took Starmer’s team a week to clarify his remarks, which they insisted had been misinterpreted. But the damage had been done.Dozens of Muslim councillors threatened to quit the party. In an attempt to heal divisions and reassure them that he understood their anxieties, the Labour leader wrote them a letter. But many felt that it wasn’t enough.The following month, party tensions over the leadership’s stance towards Gaza deepened when Starmer was hit by a major rebellion over a vote for a ceasefire, which saw eight of his frontbenchers quit, including Jess Phillips.The row highlighted a deep tension that has run through the Labour Party for years on a subject on which it has a complicated history.Since its inception, Labour had supported the creation of the state of Israel. The argument went that a party that believed in social justice had to protect a people who had been through the Holocaust.A more critical view of the Israeli government began to emerge as a result of Israel’s occupation of the West Bank and Gaza under a series of hardline rightwing leaders. The focus shifted to showing solidarity with the Palestinian people instead.Under Jeremy Corbyn’s leadership of the party, some justified criticism of Israel’s conduct spilled over into antisemitism, with the EHRC finding “unlawful harassment” of Jewish members, though the former leader denies it was ever tolerated.Some in Labour felt that Starmer – who enforced a zero-tolerance approach to antisemitism which saw swathes of leftwingers, including Corbyn himself, forced out – ended up struggling with Gaza in part because of a desire to draw a line between himself and his predecessor.As Labour won power in 2024, international condemnation of Israel over the horrors it was inflicting on Palestinian civilians grew. The government struggled to convince the British public it was doing enough. What it did do didn’t cut through.“People just got stuck on that LBC interview. Keir never recovered from it. Whatever we did – and it was a lot – people didn’t seem to notice it,” one senior Labour figure said.Labour lost – and has continued to lose – support on its progressive flank, a key part of the electoral coalition that Andy Burnham is now trying to win back with his apology for Labour’s initial response to Israel’s military action in Gaza, and a promise to put more pressure on the Israeli government.Any action will have to be calibrated with very real concerns about the potential impact on Jewish communities in the UK, already fearful amid rising antisemitism which Burnham witnessed close up in Manchester.It wasn’t just far-left voters who abandoned the party, or Muslim communities that instead turned to pro-Gaza independents at the election: it was also young people and middle-class graduates who left for the resurgent Greens.Labour activists across the country anecdotally report how the issue comes up on the doorstep all the time – at Westminster byelections, in Scotland and Wales, in the English local elections – and has shown no sign of abating as the humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza continues.The hope is that Burnham’s ascendancy gives Labour another hearing. “Andy gives us with a real reset moment. It’s a tonal shift, more than anything, and how we talk about what’s going on in Gaza. Lots of progressive voters left us. This gives us a chance to try to win them back,” one insider said.But it is unclear, thus far, how much of substance will actually change, with the prime minister-in-waiting simply saying he’ll “look at” further sanctions and measures to ban trade in goods with illegal settlements, or if the shift will be mostly a matter of tone – and whether, in either case, it will be enough to win back those who have moved on.
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Entities

12 identified
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Keywords & salience

10 terms
gaza
1.00
keir starmer
0.90
labour party
0.90
israel
0.80
hamas attack
0.70
progressive voters
0.60
ceasefire vote
0.50
international law
0.50
antisemitism
0.40
jeremy corbyn
0.40
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