I am writing this from Dublin, a city that seems to understand something Britain too often forgets. Stand near Grafton Street and you can feel the confidence of a place that knows how to bring energy together. Behind the bustle are the headquarters, the advisers, the big American businesses and the sense that enterprise is not treated as a nuisance, but as part of the national fabric.
Over the past six weeks I have been fortunate enough to travel through Japan, the United States, the Caribbean and Spain. Wherever I have been, I have found myself looking less at the scenery and more at how entrepreneurship works. The lesson is not complicated. Countries, companies and people improve when they are pushed. They become sharper when somebody is on their shoulder.
That is why the latest political shock at home matters, whether you support Reform, Labour or anyone else. The point is not party politics. The point is competition.
Competition is what stops people drifting. It is what makes a business improve its products, invest in machinery, rethink its service and find a better way of doing things. It is what happens when a rival launches a new idea and everyone else has to respond. Without it, complacency sets in. With it, standards rise.
The same applies in personal life and in work. If somebody else is ready to do your job better, you have to raise your game. If there is a better person to take the penalty, the team should want that person on the pitch. Pride should never matter more than performance.
For too long, British politics has lacked that sort of pressure. Labour had a relatively easy route to power because, in simple terms, it only had to avoid being the Conservatives. That is the danger of a two-party system when one side becomes exhausted and the other has only to wait. It does not necessarily create excellence. It can create entitlement.
Now there is a challenger applying real pressure. Reform has given Labour the sort of jolt that every leader, every business and every organisation occasionally needs. It has changed the atmosphere. It has reminded those in power that voters are not obliged to wait patiently while promises turn into process and urgency turns into management language.
This should be good news for the country. I am British and proud of the country. I believe we have a fantastic future, but only if the people in charge understand the scale of their responsibility. They are not there for themselves. They are there for 60 million people and for the generations that come next.
Keir Starmer and his team now have a chance. In the next six to twelve months, they can show that they have the energy, courage and ability to make things work. If they do, the country benefits. If they do not, the public will look elsewhere, and they may do so for a long time.
That is the discipline of competition. It is not always comfortable, and it is rarely polite, but it is necessary. Business owners know this instinctively. You can complain about the rival down the road, or you can learn from the fact that they are forcing you to become better.
My message to Labour is simple. Step up or step out. Someone is now chasing the pack, and that is exactly how it should be. Competition makes us sharper. It makes us accountable. It makes us great.
And before anyone leaves Downing Street, the sash windows at Number Ten still need sorting.
Author:
Adrian Barraclough – Chairman of Quickslide – manufacturer of PVC-U vertical sliding windows and fenestration products.







