After months of dithering, division and damaging decisions, last weekend the Labour Government finally found something they want to act urgently on: not illegal immigration, not inflation, not standing up to Brussels — but Parliament itself. Why? To stage-manage a dramatic intervention on British Steel. The hypocrisy is galling. Let’s get one thing straight: British Steel matters. It matters to communities like Port Talbot, to our national security, and to the future of our industrial base.
It was the Conservative government that recognised this, investing £500 million to help transition to greener steel and safeguard thousands of jobs. The deal wasn’t perfect, but it was real, funded, and forward-looking. What have Labour done with that deal since taking power in Wales and in the ascendant in Westminster? Squandered time. Instead of building on it, they’ve tied themselves in knots — trying to please militant unions on one hand and eco-activists on the other. The result? Paralysis.
And now, in a desperate bid to look decisive after weeks of scandal — from the Rochdale debacle to Starmer’s increasingly shaky leadership — they made MPs come in on a Saturday. Not to pass vital laws or fix broken promises, but to put on a show. And what a song and dance they made of it, too
Let’s not be fooled. This is politics dressed up as principle. Labour has had months to act, and they’ve done nothing but bicker and posture. They inherited a plan to save steel and sat on it until the headlines turned sour.
It’s not even the first example of a third-rate performance art stunt from this clown show of a government. Remember how Starmer’s trip to the White House to pitch a peace plan and trade deal to Trump was billed as his ‘Falklands Moment,’ only for the wheels to fall off his clown car as the lack of substance was quickly revealed?
The British public deserve better than this circus. Industry needs certainty. Workers need clarity. And Parliament should not be used as a backdrop for a Labour photo-op.
As someone who sat on the green benches and fought for British manufacturing, I know it’s not easy. But it’s not hard to spot the difference between leadership and grandstanding. Labour has chosen the latter.
Steel can’t be saved by slogans — it needs serious policy, tough decisions, and a long-term plan. That’s what Conservatives were delivering. It’s time Labour stopped the theatrics and started governing.