LONDON — For someone often derided as dull, Keir Starmer has delivered a sensational election result.
Starmer led Britain's Labour Party to a landslide election victory, and on Friday became the country's 58th prime minister — the first leader from the center-left party to win a U.K. national election since Tony Blair, who won three in a row starting in 1997.
It's the latest reinvention for a man who went from human rights attorney to hard-nosed prosecutor and from young radical to middle-aged pragmatist.
Like Blair, who refashioned the party as ''New Labour'' in the 1990s, 61-year-old Starmer led Labour to a landslide victory over Rishi Sunak's Conservative Party in Thursday's election after dragging the party towards the political middle ground.
He won by promising voters change, but also calm, vowing to restore stability to public life and give Britain ''the sunlight of hope'' after 14 years of turmoil under the Conservatives.
''People look at Starmer and they see this guy who is very solid, clearly very able in his professional life,'' said Douglas Beattie, author of ''How Labour Wins (and Why it Loses).''
''I think people want that caution, they want that stability.''
A former chief prosecutor for England and Wales, Starmer has often been caricatured by Conservative opponents as a ''lefty London lawyer.'' He was knighted for his role leading the Crown Prosecution Service, and opponents like to use his title, Sir Keir Starmer, to paint him as elite and out of touch. While most prime ministers are awarded knighthoods, damehoods — the female equivalent — or other royal honors after their time in office, Starmer is the first knight of the realm to become the country's leader since Sir Alec Douglas-Hume in 1963.