For diplomatic purposes, the Irish government takes no public view on who it wants to win the U.K. general election.
But the undiplomatic reality, drawn from POLITICO’s recent conversations with lawmakers and senior civil servants in Dublin’s government quarter, comes across as uncompromising and unanimous: We cannot wait for Keir Starmer.
That eagerness for change is driven, in part, by the knowledge that right at the heart of Starmer’s Labour Party are senior figures with deep roots in Ireland.
It’s fair to say that, for the Irish, the last 14 years of Conservative rule on the other side of the water have been something of a drag.
“At times it’s felt like a nightmare, having this neighbor who gleefully rips up the rulebook over and over and never seems to get how destructive it all has been. We want to have sane, sensible, respectful partners across the Irish Sea again, because that good relationship is so fundamentally important to us,” said a senior government official who, given that the official position on the U.K. election is neutrality, was granted approval to remain anonymous.
A lawmaker for Fianna Fáil, one of the three coalition parties in Ireland’s government, was even more blunt about his desire to see the Conservatives crash out of power in next month’s general election: “July 4 will be our independence day from stupidity. It’ll be gobshites out and adults in, finally. Finally!”
Such views, shared by government and opposition alike across the political spectrum, reflect both a dim view of the Brexit-era Tory psychodrama, and an excitement about what a Labour government in London might mean for Ireland.
The sentiment is driven by regret over the damage done to Anglo-Irish relations since Brexit, and by what many see as a gulf in competence between Rishi Sunak’s Conservative team in Downing Street and Starmer’s inner Labour Party circle.
For the Irish, having British government counterparts who “get” the political and economic intricacies of Ireland, north and south, would be as invaluable as it has been elusive since the Brexit schism of 2016.