Tristram Hunt To Brand Ed Miliband's Leadership 'Timid', But Still Hasn't Said If He'll Run For Labour Leadership

'Leadership Candidate' Calls Miliband's Strategy Timid
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Potential Labour leader Tristram Hunt is to condemn Ed Miliband's leadership as "timid" and too cautious in a speech outlining his vision for the party's future today.

The Shadow Education Secretary is expected to urge his party to broaden its appeal by returning to the New Labour tropes of “economic efficiency and social justice,” in a speech to think tank Demos this morning.

Hunt, who is being touted as a possible successor to Ed Miliband but has not formally declared his candidacy, will warn against turning inwards after election defeat, challenging his party to pursue a "100 per cent strategy not a 35 per cent strategy" to win back votes and stop the “haemorrhaging [of] support" in the traditional Labour heartlands.

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Tristram Hunt: 'Not since 1983 have we been so out of step with the prevailing mood of the nation'

He will say that victory "only comes when we offer a broad-based, forward-looking Labour project. A 100% strategy. Not the timid, institutionalised caution which led so many to believe we had a 35% strategy".

In a nod to New Labour project, under which the party secured three successive election victories, the MP for Stoke-on-Trent will argue that the pairing of "social justice and economic efficiency" is the best way to “make sure the freedom and opportunity enjoyed by the powerful is spread to the powerless.”

“Not since 1983 have we been so out of step with the prevailing mood of the nation,” he will say, adding: “The last thing the Labour Party needs right now is to retreat further into an abstract, echo-chamber discussion about our values.”

Hunt’s path forward is grounded in three key reforms: a universal right to free childcare for working parents of children aged 2 – 4; “devo-max” for English cities, including control over tax rates; and reform of the benefits system so that higher rates are paid to contributors with better records of employment.

In his speech, Hunt will praise Miliband for highlighting issues such as inequality, yet warn that a broader strategy is required in the face of Scottish nationalism, a lack of trust in Labour’s traditional English heartlands and loss of confidence in the party by Middle England.

“We are fighting on three fronts," he will say. "But micro-targeting policy solutions for each will not work. Instead, our plan for every front the battle ahead must be rooted in the same mission: you need to demonstrate you are on people’s side and earn the right to be trusted with their future.”

Below is a list of the biggest losers from the recent general election:

The big losers in the 2015 general election
Ed Balls, Labour(01 of14)
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Another shock casualty for the Labour party. After demanding a recount, Ed Balls narrowly lost his Morley and Outwood seat to the Conservatives' Andrea Jenkyns.

Jenkyns won with a 0.9% majority, claiming 18,776 of the votes, over Balls' 18,354.
(credit:Dan Kitwood via Getty Images)
Douglas Alexander, Labour(02 of14)
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The Labour candidate and former shadow foreign secretary Douglas Alexander lost his Paisley and Renfrewshire South seat to the SNP's 20-year-old Mhairi Black (right).

Alexander lost with 16,525 votes to Black's 25,601, equating to a 27% swing.
(credit:LESLEY MARTIN via Getty Images)
Jim Murphy, Scottish Labour(03 of14)
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Leader of the Scottish Labour Party Jim Murphy lost his seat to Kirsten Oswald of the SNP, who won 23,013 to Murphy's 19,295.

Oswald won with a 3,718 (6.6%) majority, and heralded yet another victory for the SNP.
(credit:Jeff J Mitchell via Getty Images)
Ed Davey, Lib Dems(04 of14)
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Ed Davey, former secretary of state for energy and climate change, lost his seat to the Conservative Party's James Berry by 23,249 to 20,415.

Berry won with a 4.8% majority.
(credit:Dan Kitwood via Getty Images)
Simon Hughes, Lib Dems(05 of14)
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Simon Hughes, who entered parliament in 1983 and was one of the longest-serving frontbench MPs in parliament, lost his Bermondsey and Old Southwark seat to Labour Party member Neil Coyle.

The former justice minister lost with 17,657 votes to Coyle's 22,146.
(credit:Rob Stothard via Getty Images)
Jo Swinson, Lib Dems(06 of14)
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UK business minister Jo Swinson fell victim to the SNP tide of victory, losing the East Dunbartonshire seat she had held for the Liberal Democrats since 2005.

John Nicholson of the SNP won with 22,093 of the votes compared to Swinson's 19,926.
(credit:Andrew Milligan/PA Wire)
Lynne Featherstone, Lib Dems(07 of14)
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Lynne Featherstone, former MP for Hornsey and Wood Green, lost to Catherine West of Labour, who won with a 11,058 majority.

Featherstone gained 18,359 of the votes, while West commanded 29,417.
(credit:Jan Kruger - The FA via Getty Images)
Vince Cable, Lib Dems(08 of14)
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Liberal Democrat business secretary Vince Cable lost his Twickenham seat to Conservative Tania Mathias.

Mathias won by a 3.3% majority, with 25,580 votes, compared to Cable's 23,563.
(credit:Christopher Furlong via Getty Images)
Esther McVey, Conservatives(09 of14)
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Esther McVey, minister for employment and disabilities, lost her Wirral West seat to Labour, who won with just a 417 majority.

Margaret Greenwood won with 18,898 to McVey's 18,481
(credit:Ben Birchall/PA Wire)
David Laws, Lib Dems(10 of14)
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David Laws, Minister of State for Schools and the Cabinet Office, lost his Yeovil seat to the Conservative candidate Marcus Fysh. (credit:Carl Court via Getty Images)
Charles Kennedy, Lib Dem(11 of14)
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The former Liberal Democrat leader Charles Kennedy lost his Ross, Skye and Lochaber seat to the SNP's Ian Blackford.

Blackford won with 20,119 votes to Kennedy's 14,995, giving him a 12.3% majority.
(credit:Jeff J Mitchell via Getty Images)
Danny Alexander, Lib Dem(12 of14)
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Former Liberal Democrat Chief Secretary to the Treasury Danny Alexander lost the Inverness, Nairn, Badenoch and Strathspey seat to the SNP's Drew Hendry.

Hendry gained 28,838 votes to Alexander's 18,029, giving the SNP candidate a majority of 18.8%.
(credit:Christopher Furlong via Getty Images)
George Galloway, Respect the Unity Coalition(13 of14)
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George Galloway lost his seat to Naseem Shah of Labour, who won with 19,977 votes to Galloway's 8,557. (credit:Nigel Roddis via Getty Images)
Norman Baker, Lib Dems(14 of14)
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The former home office minister lost his seat in Lewes to Maria Caulfield of the Conservative Party, who gained 19,206 votes to Baker's 18,123. (credit:Peter Macdiarmid via Getty Images)