By: Andrew Wallace
Anarchists contend that the idea and
practice of government is a folly as it places individuals within a coercive
framework instead of an otherwise naturally spontaneous free association of
self-directed citizens. To govern is to betray society’s true interests as it
inevitably falls prey to corruption and the self-interest of a ruling elite.
The absence of government might also be thought problematic in giving rise to
the Hobbesian dilemma of the state of nature, a “war of all against all”. The
majoritarian view largely concedes that government functions as a necessary
evil to avoid calamitous anarchy, but it also understands that checks and
balances should place distinctive limits on the respective office holders.
Starmer’s government is yet another
classic case study of how liberal governments are prone to betray their lofty
ideals. Indeed, its malfeasance was already in operation before government in
the post Corbyn opposition years (Holden 2025). The illicit resort to dirty
tricks in order to undermine opposition from within and without the ruling
Labour clique closely follows the mid-1970s scandals from across the Atlantic
of the Nixon administration. Not for nothing is Watergate now invoked as the
template with the illegal deployment of government functionaries, slush funds,
think tanks and surveillance with a purpose to defenestrate perceived enemies
both inside and outside the ruling regime.
The Labour Together think tank founded
in 2015 became integral to the so-called Starmer project. This involved a
fundamentally hostile operation to destabilise the then current Corbyn
leadership and prepare Starmer to succeed as Labour leader under an initial
bogus platform that promised to carry over much of the left-wing policy
development. Suspicions subsequently arose over undeclared donations and Labour
Together were fined accordingly by the Electoral Commission. However it also
emerged that the rogue think tank had commissioned private investigators as
part of a concerted smear campaign against journalists researching
irregularities of the organisation (Gierson and Stacey 2026). The plot thickens
when we learn Labour Together’s director at the time (2023) was Josh Simons who
subsequently became a Labour MP the following year (Mason 2026). Simons who
initially emerged as a Corbyn adviser (whilst secretly briefing against the
left) was soon heavily entwinned with Morgan McSweeney, Starmer’s notorious
chief of staff and Simons’s predecessor as director of Labour Together (Boffey
2026).
Boffey, D (2026)
‘Starmer’s top advisers knew about ‘indefensible’ journalists probe, documents
reveal’, The Guardian, 20 May.
Available at: https://www.theguardian.com/media/2026/may/20/keir-starmer-advisers-journalists-investigation-thinktank (Accessed
21 May 2026).
Gierson, J and Stacey,
K (2026) ‘Labour thinktank close to Morgan McSweeney paid firm to investigate
journalists’, The Guardian, 6 February.
Available at: https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2026/feb/06/labour-thinktank-close-to-morgan-mcsweeney-allegedly-paid-firm-to-investigate-journalists (Accessed
21 May 2026).
Holden, P (2025), The
Fraud: Keir Starmer, Morgan McSweeney, and the Crisis of British Democracy. OR
Books
Mason, R (2026) ‘Who
is Josh Simons, the Labour MP who quit for Andy Burnham?’, The Guardian,
14 May.
Available at:https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2026/may/14/who-is-josh-simons-labour-mp-andy-burnham (Accessed
21 May 2026)






















