Skip to content
CityAM
Main navigation
  • News
    • News
      • Latest Business News
      • Economics
      • Politics
      • Tech
      • Banking
      • FTSE 100 Live
      • Retail
      • Insurance
      • Legal
      • Property
      • Transport
      • Markets
    • From our partners
      • AON
      • Bayes Business School
      • Canada BIDs
      • Central London Alliance CIC
      • Destination City
      • Halkin
      • Olympia
      • Inside Saudi
      • Tottenham Hotspur Stadium
      • Santander X
      • YEAR SIX Dividend
    • Featured

      The next person to shop your store may not be a person at all

      AI shopping agents are rewriting the rules of online retail across North America

      Submit a story

      Tell us your story.

      Submit
  • Opinion
  • Sport
    • Latest Sports News
      • Sport
      • Sport Business
    • From our partners
      • The Morning Briefing: SBS x CityAM
      • Aramco Team Series
      • LIV Golf
    • Featured

      Cohere's Aidan Gomez bets the house on 'sovereign AI' with Aleph Alpha merger valuing the group at $20bn

      Cohere CEO Aidan Gomez on stage discussing the Toronto AI lab's strategy

      Submit a story

      Tell us your story.

      Submit
  • Life&Style
    • Life&Style
      • Life&Style
      • Toast the City Awards
      • The Magazine
      • Travel
      • Culture
      • Motoring
      • Wellness
      • The RED BULLETiN
      • Do it with Shared Ownership
      • Media Speak Hub
    • Featured

      Moonvalley's Naeem Talukdar is selling Hollywood the one thing rival AI video tools cannot: legal cover

      Moonvalley's Marey AI video model produces Hollywood-grade footage trained on licensed data

      Submit a story

      Tell us your story.

      Submit
  • Investec
  • Events
  • Latest Paper
Wednesday 13 May 2026 1:27 pm  |  Updated:  Wednesday 13 May 2026 1:28 pm

Westminster permadrama is sabotaging productivity

By: John Oxley

Add as a preferred source on Google
Keir Starmer stands outside 10 Downing Street amid calls for resignation, looking serious and contemplative
Keir Starmer is facing calls to resign

The constant drama of Westminster is distracting politicians, investors and the general public from getting on with what they’re meant to, writes John Oxley

On weeks like these, it feels like the political drama is unending. Leadership crises and collapses seem to be coming closer together. The pattern now feels very familiar. News alerts count who is declaring for whom, while TV pundits speculate about the way forward. Social media births a thousand memes – Thick of It GIFS, Paddington Bear escorting a troubled politician to the Great Beyond, jokes about Gazza, fishing rods and chicken. A large chunk of the nation stays glued to its phones, before rounding the evening off with its favourite emergency podcast repeating the whole thing back to them. We really shouldn’t be surprised that productivity is stagnating. 

For a decade now, our politics has been largely running on adrenaline. It feels like you turned the TV on just before the Brexit referendum; there’s not been a chance to turn it off since. The result gave way to the fights over what leaving could mean and how it would be implemented. When that was done, Covid hit, followed by the war in Ukraine and the accompanying energy spike. In that time, we’ve cycled through three general elections, half a dozen Prime Ministers and enough mini crises that the word febrile is permanently lodged in our vocabulary.  

UK productivity has ground to a halt

Through all this, political manoeuvring has gone from background noise to an almost endlessly blaring alarm. There’s more to pay attention to, it feels like it matters more and the media environment has gone from offering a few drops of headlines a day to a constant firehose of information. Keeping up has become almost a full-time job. This can’t be great for our actual full-time jobs. 

In this time, productivity in Britain has stubbornly refused to grow. There are lots of reasons behind this, but maybe we’ve overlooked one – the constant Westminster drama. It has made keeping up with events more time-consuming and has generated hours of content to distract us from our days. The whole thing has been a gift to procrastinators across the country, a permanent distraction that feels important. 

For news addicts, it’s like a potent new strain has hit the market. Maybe without it, we would have been less distractible, less consumed by politics and more prone to getting on with what we are meant to do. Instead, almost incalculable hours of value creation have been lost to briefly knowing what the Malthouse Compromise was. So much human ingenuity wasted on producing the best social media riff on some no-name minister resigning. 

The economic cost of instability in Westminster

More seriously, Britain’s turbulence is a real problem for our economy. Investment decisions and commitments are measured in years. Political cycles that go to and fro in 18 months generate instability that confounds decision-making in both public and private life. One of the real drivers of poor productivity has been a lack of investment – and that should be unsurprising when the political background is so obviously volatile. Our political system has started changing too rapidly for people to keep up and to make their decisions accordingly. 

Stability and good governance aren’t exciting. The return of ignorable politics would starve some of us for entertainment. We’d probably have to find better things to do with our time. That might make each of us incrementally more productive. But on a grander scale, it could have a real effect, too. 

Predictability and surety are good for people who make big decisions based on politics. It makes it easy to invest in Britain and know you’ll see a proper return. Reducing the adrenaline levels in our politics might be mutually beneficial, delivering the sort of growth and productivity gains that make governance easier and more stable. 

Part of Starmer’s promise was that he would make politics boring again. He’s failed. Those who aim to follow him should perhaps be thinking of how to make this the last burst of excitement for a while. 

John Oxley is a corporate strategist and political commentator

Read more

UK government at risk of grinding ‘to a halt’ amid leadership race drama

Keir Starmer

Share this article

  • Facebook
  • X
  • LinkedIn
  • WhatsApp
  • Email

Similarly tagged content:

Sections

  • Opinion
  • News

Categories

  • Opinion
  • Business

People & Organisations

  • Business confidence
  • Keir Starmer
  • Labour Party
  • productivity
  • UK business confidence
  • UK Government
  • UK politics
  • Westminster

Trending Articles

  • KPMG’s Summer Friday half-day rollback signals deeper woes for Big Four giants

  • Inflation expectations at record high in interest rates signal

  • London Tech Week sums up everything wrong with UK tech

  • KPMG report on AI found riddled with AI hallucinations

  • UK economy falters as deeper damage to growth to come

More from CityAM

  • UK government at risk of grinding ‘to a halt’ amid leadership race drama

    Politics
    Keir Starmer
  • ZayZoon, the Calgary fintech born on a fishing boat, posts 1,487% growth as earned wage access goes mainstream

    ZayZoon co-founder Tate Hackert built the Calgary fintech around earned wage access
  • This shocking West End play is like Netflix’s Adolescence but live

    Life&Style
    Equus West End theater production featuring dramatic stage setting with actors in period costumes performing a pivotal scene
  • Botpress raises $25m as Quebec's Sylvain Perron pitches his startup as the 'infrastructure layer' for AI agents

    Botpress product UI: the Quebec startup pitches itself as the infrastructure layer for enterprise AI agents
  • As it happened: Ministers resign as gilt yields at 28-year high

    Markets
    Keir Starmer
  • FluidAI wins US FDA clearance for its surgical monitor as Waterloo's Youssef Helwa targets 100,000 operations

    FluidAI's Origin surgical monitor wins FDA clearance for use in US hospitals
  • The absolute insanity of the SNP’s plan to cap the price of food

    Economics
    SNP leader John Swinney wants to cap the price of food
  • Mandelson Files add insult to injury, but the patient was already beyond saving

    Politics
    Peter Mandelson
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
  • News
  • Markets & Economics
  • Politics
  • Opinion
  • Life&Style
  • Personal Finance

Follow us for breaking news and latest updates

  • Facebook
  • X
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
Copyright 2026 CityAM Limited