Politics in 2025 will be dominated by a single controlling thought: do things start feeling any better?
The answer to that will drive much else in the political conversation: the fortunes, mood and demeanour of the government, the revival or otherwise of the Conservatives and the prominence or otherwise of everyone else.
2024 was a year of spectacular success for Labour, but their landslide general election win already feels like it was ages ago with the new government taking on a tricky inheritance and garnishing it with some foul-ups of their own.
And we head into 2025 with quite the assembly of cocktail ingredients - a flatlining economy, an impatient electorate and a volatile world.
Within weeks, we'll see the inauguration of Donald Trump.
An already unpredictable international backdrop - from Ukraine to the Middle East - collides with the most unpredictable man ever to occupy the Oval Office.
The implications for trade, for climate change policy, for war and for peace are huge.
The prime minister, stung by the social media moniker that he is "never here Keir" because he is forever on the international circuit, will inevitably find his attention again drawn to the global stage, while making an argument that it has a direct impact on millions of lives in the UK.