I've got my own analysis of the election coming out in a few hours - and I don't think you're going to like it. Labour have come in because they tracked back to the centre once the Tories went hard right. They presented a hard-left option in 2019 and it was popular (but not electable). The centre ground is where politics and government needs to be formed and if we're going to disable the populist right with Farage/Johnson in 2029 then this is exactly where we need to be.
As for Starmer supporting genocide in Gaza; here is his speech to the house in October.
Hamas may not care for the safety and security of the Palestinian people, but we do. We cannot and will not close our eyes to their suffering. Gaza is now a humanitarian emergency. There is not enough food. Clean water is running out. Hospitals are going without medicine and electricity. People starving and reduced to drinking contaminated filth. Babies lying in incubators that could switch off at any moment.
I welcome the increased funding for humanitarian aid that the Prime Minister announced this afternoon. The EU has promised to treble humanitarian aid. And the US has appointed a special coordinator for international aid to Gaza. So, I ask if the Prime Minister commit to the same? Because Britain must stand ready to ensure aid gets to the right places, to deploy British experts and medical support teams and to work with international partners to give UN agencies the resources they need – for the long-term. Because Mr Speaker, there is a long-term. Even as we stand by Israel in her fight against Hamas, our eyes must also look to the future. A future where Israeli citizens live free from the fear of terrorist attack. And a future for the Palestinian people, where they and their children enjoy the freedoms and opportunities that we take for granted.
David Lammy called for an immediate ceasefire within one day of being in the job. I hope KS takes the party to the left - I have a feeling he will, but he needs to do it slowly and with popular reforms. This is the politics of grown up politicians rather than stump rhetoric from the unelectable. I suspect you'll disagree - but that's what makes the UK a vibrant place to be politically active. You have a lot of doomsayers in the comments sections, which is fine, but this is the closest they've been to the levers of power for most of their lives.