Keir Starmer has spoken for the first time about the tragedy of losing his mother before she was able to see him become an MP.
Speaking to Piers Morgan for an upcoming episode of ITV’s Life Stories programme, the Labour leader revealed the pain of watching his mother Jo’s health deteriorate as he closed in on being elected to parliament.
Jo, a life-long Labour supporter, suffered from Still’s disease – a rare form of arthritis that can destroy the joints.
She died in 2015 – just weeks before Starmer was elected MP for Holborn and St Pancras.
In quotes carried by the Mail on Sunday, Starmer said: “It was really tragic. She would have loved to have seen that. But she was so ill by then.
“She couldn’t move, she couldn’t use her hands, so she had to be fed.
“She couldn’t speak, couldn’t communicate. I would have loved her to have been there but she was in a terrible way. In a terrible, terrible place.”
When asked what he would have liked to have said to his mother if he had the opportunity, Starmer responded: “I love you.”
In the interview, to air on June 1, he also said his government would improve education and create an economy that deals with inequality a top priority.
He said: “These are the big ticket items coming out of the pandemic. They were the big ticket items before but now they are just more brutally exposed.”