Starmer’s chief of staff ‘not behind PM’s Nigel Farage racism jibe’ but ‘backs it 100 per cent’

Morgan Mcsweeney was accused of getting away from Nigel Farage against Nigel Farage, fear of Keir Starmer’s reform attacks yesterday.
The sources said that NO10’s Chief of General Staff is not responsible for the claim that Mr. Farage’s immigration policy is racist.
Someone said: ‘Morgan clearly demonstrates this – he could not find the attack line.
‘This means not Mcsweeney, but the Prime Minister’s own blunder.’
Downing Street insisted that Mr. Mcsweeney Sir Keir supports Sir Keir last night.
However, allegations arise because of unrest that trying to brand reform policies as racist among labor deputies will only angry voters who tend to participate in Mr. Farage’s stance.
In the last Sunday BBC interview, Sir Keir hit the reform’s policy to require immigrants who have the right to stay in the UK for the right to re -apply for a visa.
He said it was ‘something to remove illegal immigrants’, but it was ‘something completely different’ to legally remove them.
Sources, NO10’s Chief of General Staff Morgan Mcsweeney (in the picture), the Prime Minister’s Mr Farage’s migrant policy is not responsible for the racist, he said
The allegations arise among labor force deputies that trying to brand reform policies as racist will only be involved in the anger of voters who tend to participate in Nigel Farage’s stance.
When asked if he thought he was racist, the Prime Minister said: ‘I think this is a racist policy. I think it needs to be called for what it is. ‘
Sir Keir then used his business conference speech to accuse Mr. Farage of not believing in his own country: ‘He does not love Britain’.
However, in a significant sign of tension on the previous jibi, he stressed that he did not blame Mr. Farage or reform his voters to be racist.
However, the Prime Minister was warned that even using the term against reform policies was not a good idea.
Harriet Harman said that the labeling of a policy racist, not politicians or supporters, would not be understood by voters.
The worker said to Grandee Sky News: ‘You cannot separate a racist policy from a party and a racist party leader because it is very thin and nuance for the public.’
Dame Harriet added that Sir Keir thought that he used the racist attack without planning and he just doubled it instead of going back.
Backbencher, a Labor Party, said that they said there were wider concerns about using the racism attack.
He said: ‘The problem with Starmer’s original words … People are thinking of supporting reform with the same brush.
“ Many are old labor voters in our northern heart areas.
‘We should try to take them back, we should not push them all into Farage’s arms by saying that their real concerns about migration are racist.’
Downing Street sources rejected last night, Mr. Mcsweeney, trying to remove him from the election of the PM.
Although the attack on Sir Keir found him, the Chief of General Staff said he supported 100 percent.




