
Andrew Pierce of the Scottish Daily Mail penned an article on McSweeney and I am posting it unchanged from the original since it succinctly summarises the activities of the man himself and a brief peek at the early career of his wife.
9 Jul 2024: At Home
Welcome to the home of Morgan McSweeney – a £750,000 sandstone mansion, set in glorious Lanarkshire countryside, it even comes with stable blocks. Now the second most powerful man in the country – the pictures wouldn’t look out of place in Country Life magazine. An ostentatious chandelier, a three-oven Aga in the flagstone-floor kitchen, while the stylish study features floor-to-ceiling custom bookcases.
At Work
Tony Blair employed the thuggish Alastair Campbell as his chief spin doctor, while Peter (now Lord) Mandelson revelled in his nickname ‘The Prince of Darkness’.
Yet McSweeney, Starmer’s new ‘head of political strategy’, stands to be more influential than either of his Downing Street predecessors. As one senior party figure puts it: ‘No unelected figure in postwar Labour history wields as much power as Morgan McSweeney.’
The redhead Irishman, who was the brains behind Starmer’s triumphant election victory, also helped to install Starmer as leader and purge the party of the far-Left. Ruthless and calculating, McSweeney now has significant control over messaging and policy.
Though he rarely credits him publicly, Starmer has McSweeney to thank more than anyone for making it to Downing Street. Yet even many Labour MPs have probably never met McSweeney, who at party conferences shuns the bars and spends most of his time in the leader’s hotel suite.
The anonymity suits the workaholic McSweeney, who was invariably at his desk at Labour’s South London HQ by 6.30am. He will not show any signs of slowing down now that Labour is in government. And from his new desk in No 10 he will be closely observing exactly who visits Starmer.
When key aides lined Downing Street to welcome the incoming Prime Minister, McSweeney was already inside. Starmer made a beeline for his adviser – who was suited and booted rather than casually dressed in his customary jeans – and made sure his was one of the first hands he shook.
McSweeney’s word is law. One top party figure tells me: ‘Every minister defers to him. He is Keir Starmer’s friend, confidant and enforcer. There is no higher praise at HQ than: “Morgan loves it.”’
YET perhaps not from all quarters. Relations between McSweeney and Sue Gray, the former ‘impartial’ civil servant whose excoriating Partygate report triggered the ultimate downfall of Labour’s nemesis Boris Johnson, are said to be prickly. Gray is now the Prime Minister’s chief of staff — another vital Downing Street role.
One source says: ‘Keir needs Morgan by his side. Morgan’s desk will be outside the No 10 study, and he will be in and out of Keir’s office more than Sue. But look out for the fireworks.’

Morgan the Irishman From Cork
So who is Morgan McSweeney — and what does he plan to do with the power he now wields?
The 47-year-old was brought up in Macroom in County Cork, and still speaks with a soft Irish lilt. His grandfather, Michael, won a medal from the IRA for his service during the 1916 war of independence from Britain.
His father, Tom, was an accountant and his mother, Carmel, worked in an office. Yet politics runs in the family: cousin Clare Mungovan was a special adviser to Taoiseach Leo Varadkar.
In the summer of 1994, when Tony Blair became Labour leader, McSweeney, then 17, left Cork for a new life in London.
Blair knew he had to modernise the Labour Party, which had lost four successive elections, and McSweeney watched with interest.
He was a restless spirit, dropping out of the London School of Economics and working for a time on building sites. After time in the U.S., he came back to London to study politics and marketing at Middlesex University in 1998.
He then joined the Labour Party in 2001 – the year of the second Blair landslide – and played a key role organising for marginal seats in 2005’s election, which delivered a third successive Labour victory.
He then hitched his colours to Steve Reed, a Labour councillor in Lambeth, South London, who was trying to wrest control of the authority from the hard-Left.
Under ‘Red Ted’ Knight, Lambeth was infamous, beset by mismanagement, corruption and a historical child-abuse scandal. McSweeney – who I’m told was ‘solid, not spectacular’ at the time – threw himself into the battle.

Imogen Walker
In Lambeth he met his future wife, Imogen Walker, who became deputy leader of the reformed council.
McSweeney moving on and up in the Labour Party
After Lambeth, McSweeney went to Barking and Dagenham in East London to help vanquish the hard-Right BNP, which had won a dozen seats on the local council.
Jon Cruddas, now Dagenham MP, tells me: ‘He has the psychology of an organiser, and he’s quite brilliant at it. These political skills have been chiselled out over years, so he’s no blow-in to anything.’
A Labour source says: ‘He saw himself as a modern-day Witchfinder General. Except it wasn’t witches in the ducking chair but extremists from the Left or Right.’
Within a few years, the BNP had lost every one of its council seats.

Closing in on Power within the Party
McSweeney then turned his eyes to the national stage, running the 2015 leadership campaign of Liz Kendall, a moderate. Kendall came last with a paltry 4.5 per cent of the vote – as Corbyn romped home.
Aghast at the result, McSweeney established and became director of a new group, “Labour Together”, whose goal was to drag the party back into the centre. Early recruits included Rachel Reeves, now Chancellor, and Health Secretary Wes Streeting. They -unlike Starmer, who referred to Corbyn as his ‘friend’- had both refused to join Corbyn’s shadow front-bench, and were seeking an alternative leader.
As “Labour Together’s” influence grew, McSweeney was becoming the respected backroom player he had always aspired to be.
After the 2019 election, when Labour under Corbyn suffered its worst defeat since 1935, Starmer asked McSweeney to run his leadership campaign. They had at least one thing in common: they were both passionate Remainers.
Starmer ran on an extravagantly Corbynite ticket, pledging to scrap university tuition fees, defend free movement across Europe and hammer the rich with punitive taxes.
The hard-Left policy document did the trick to satisfy the Corbynistas and Starmer won decisively in the first ballot. All ten pledges were later abandoned – on the orders of McSweeney.
He has since ensured the Party’s rules were altered to make it harder for Leftwingers like Corbyn to win again.
‘He has been purging Lefties to ensure that after Starmer goes, a centrist takes over,’ said another Labour figure who is not a fan of McSweeney. ‘If he’s successful he will be trying to write himself into the succession plans.’
He’s even curbed the influence of Tony Blair, whose grandly named “Institute” provided staff and policy papers for the Labour frontbench.
A senior Labour source said: “Morgan thinks Blair has had his time. While Blair can call Starmer whenever he likes, it’s McSweeney whose advice he ultimately takes. Morgan thinks Blair’s ideas are from a different era — that he’s yesterday’s man.”
Another senior figure said: “If it goes wrong for Starmer, he will find out how ruthless McSweeney is. Just as Boris found with [ex-adviser] Dominic Cummings.”
One Labour parliamentary candidate said: “Starmer won the leadership on a lie because every single policy commitment he made has been junked by McSweeney. Will they do the same thing with the promises made in the election campaign? If they do, the voters will be much less forgiving.”

STOCKWELL LABOUR COUNCILLOR the Useless IMOGEN WALKER should have seen the STOCKWELL light by now but no chance – NO WOMEN’S PUBLIC TOILETS PROVISION in STOCKWELL exists and nor does it exist in CLAPHAM HIGH STREET. What an utter crap LOCAL COUNCILLOR – credit where its due namely that her only consistency is her total uselessness. Hope she does better in Hamilton!!!
Imogen Walker
New to Scottish politics she was parachuted into the Hamilton & Clyde constituency team by the Labour Party controllers in London and in last week’s election, she won the safe Labour seat of Hamilton and Clyde Valley, by more than 9,000 votes. She is expected to be fast-tracked for ministerial promotion.
A few day’s later
Hamilton and Clyde’s new MP has been appointed as a parliamentary private secretary (PPS) to the Chancellor.
Sharing the news of her role at Westminster on social media, she added that she had, had an “incredible” first few weeks at the House of Commons following her election earlier in the month.
With the new government now taking shape, on ” X” last week she posted: “I’m delighted to have been appointed as parliamentary private secretary to Rachel Reeves who has begun work rebuilding our economy. I’m so proud to be part of that effort and looking forward to getting started alongside the brilliant [Hitchin MP] Alistair Strathern.”
The official parliament website describes the PPS role as an appointment of a backbench MP by a minister “to be his or her assistant, selected as the “eyes and ears” of the minister in the House of Commons” and which helps “gain experience of working in government”.

The anti-Scottish colonial elite. Talk about settler colonialism. This is it in modern form. The punters in Hamilton were short of choices. Voting is now an act of self harm. All we are doing by voting is giving elite status and power to people who despise us.
LikeLiked by 1 person
And all of the Labour Party Unionists parachuted into safe seats in Scotland were vetted and approved by McSweeney. Internal politics and likely leadership challenges dictate a safety first policy hence the strengthening of his powerbase in Scotland
LikeLike
No-one from outside our clique need apply and nod like a dog when Sir Boss opens his mooth mind. Oh aye and my wife will require a seat. We could do with the extra cash having shelled out a million quid for a country mansion in North Britain.
Why in christ’s name do folk still vote for this moral trash? They are Outer party politicians. As George Orwell would call them. Democracy really is deid. It is stane deid. A contemptuous elite hath risen and at lightening speed.
Still, It is a powerbase built on Coo’s skitter.
LikeLike
A 47 year old with no appreciable employment history beyond being a back room functionary for the Labour Party purchases a £750k, sandstone mansion in Lanarkshire as a postal address in support of his wife’s carpetbagging ambitions. Why am I reminded of Peter Mandelson’s £373k, covert loan from Labour MP Geoffrey Robinson?A clear case of mortgage fraud which brought down Mandelson’s Ministerial career in 1998. Mandelson was forced back behind the curtain, which is a lesson McSweeney appears to have absorbed.
The fact that McSweeney won out in a power struggle between himself and Senior MI5 Officer Sue Gray is telling*.
Someone is backing McSweeney. I wouldn’t overplay the alleged animus between McSweeney and Blair. If it ain’t the Tony Blair Institute for Global Change that’s bankrolling McSweeney, then who is?
As for politics, I can’t detect any. It’s all Corporatism and Managerialism. Power for power’s sake.
* Sue Gray took a “sabbatical from the Civil Service” in the 1980’s to run a Republican bar in Newry, South Armagh.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Aye there’s much more to meet the eye My follow up effort will add fat to the fire but there is even more to come. Remember who the first visitor to No10 was? A supposedly long retired American politician!!! Obama!!! and he wasn’t there to meet with Starmer!!!!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Had McSweeney been alive in his grandfathers time he would have been deemed a QUISLING and dealt with accordingly. Scotland’s people need to wake up to the fact we are a colonised state and there are dark, DARK forces abroad who are acting to DENY Scotland her Independence.
McSweeney, unwittingly or otherwise, is collaborating in this exercise and the SNP does not possess the wit or the will to combat this challenge!!
LikeLike