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Keir Starmer suffers huge blow as 80 Labour MPs tell him to quit.T

Keir Starmer is staring into the political abyss after 80 of his own MPs called for him to step down.

The Prime Minister is desperately trying to cling on to his job, as rivals begin to launch their own bids for power.

A host of MPs said they did not have confidence in Sir Keir.

Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood is rumoured to be among at least three Cabinet ministers who will tell the PM his position is untenable.

And the Labour leader was rocked by the resignations of at least four ministerial aides.

A veteran said: “I take a day off, and all hell kicks off. It’s all a bit of a fiasco. People are disoriented, cheesed off and fed up. There is a general view that, in time, Keir will have to go, but we don’t want blood on the walls. Let’s give it time, and give it time for Andy Burnham to come back.”

Defence Secretary John Healey want to ‘avoid chaos’

The Press Association understands Defence Secretary John Healey’s message to Sir Keir was that he wanted a chaotic process to be avoided and for the Government to focus on getting the country through the looming risk of geopolitical and economic crises rather than turning inwards.

However, on Monday evening junior health minister Stephen Kinnock said some Cabinet members “may well” call for the Prime Minister to go at Tuesday’s meeting.

Starmer’s position under threat after 22 months

Sir Keir Starmer brought a triumphant Labour Party back into Downing Street in July 2024 after more than a decade under the Conservatives.

Now, just 22 months later, his position is looking increasingly precarious after four Government aides resigned and more than 60 backbench MPs called for him to quit over Labour’s disastrous local election results.

Starmer’s speech “tone deaf”, says MP

Labour MP Jonathan Hinder says that Starmer’s speech was “tone deaf”.

He believes “the prime minister is going”, saying “no prime minister can survive this number of MPs losing confidence in him”.

Hinder told BBC‘s Newsnight that he backs a change of leadership, as he criticised Sir Keir’s speech for its reference to free movement of young people in the European Union.

The speech was “at best tone deaf” and “at its worst, downright insulting”, the MP says.

MP says ‘very worst’ time for leadership contest

Brighton Kemptown and Peacehaven MP Chris Ward said “this is not the time to divide the party or ignore the national interest”.

He added that the elections results were “bitterly disappointing” but the “very worst response would be to plunge the party into a divisive leadership contest”.

“Our country needs a new leader”

Jonathan Hinder, Labour MP for Pendle and Clitheroe, has joined the growing number of MPs calling for Sir Keir Starmer to resign, adding that the Prime Minister “has never been an electoral asset”.

Speaking on BBC’s Newsnight, Mr Hinder said: “The blunt reality is, and every single Labour MP will tell you this, he has never been an electoral asset.

“Our best electoral asset was the unpopularity of the Conservatives and the fact that Reform split their vote and that is why I’m sat here today, most of all, but I don’t underestimate the amount of work he did.

“I think he’s in it for the right reasons. I know his team worked incredibly hard, like we all did, to get us here, but we have to face the facts now.”

He added: “We need a new leader for the Labour Party and our country, most importantly, needs a new leader.”

‘It’s time to stop the excuses’

Tahir Ali, the Labour MP for Birmingham Hall Green and Moseley, said the party was “in crisis” and Sir Keir Starmer should step down as the first step towards “real change”.

A statement posted on social media said: “The recent election results show a party in crisis.

“We’ve drifted away from our core values, picking the wrong battles and targeting the wrong people.

“It is clear the current leadership needs a total change in direction. We can’t keep coasting without a real vision.

“It’s time to stop the excuses and take serious steps to get this party back on track.

“The first step is for Keir Starmer to step down. But that is only the first step, we need to make sure real change follows.”

Downing Street fights on

Number 10 has replaced the ministerial aides who quit tonight, in a sign Sir Keir could yet try to cling on.

Labour MPs David Burton-Sampson, Linsey Farnsworth, Jayne Kirkham, Michael Payne, Tim Roca and Sean Woodcock have been made parliamentary private secretaries after the resignation of Government aides calling for Sir Keir Starmer to stand down.

‘This moment demands radical ambition’

Sarah Hall, Labour MP for Warrington South, has joined the growing number of MPs calling for Sir Keir Starmer to resign, saying there is “a growing sense of distance between the Government and the people I was elected to serve”.

In a statement on X on Monday evening, she said: “A pattern of poor decisions and unforced errors has created a growing sense of distance between the government and the people I was elected to serve.

“We cannot respond to this moment with another reset, another relaunch or more rhetoric.

“This moment demands radical ambition, unapologetically rooted in the lives of working people.

“The people of Warrington South and across the country want to see a government with purpose, conviction and the courage to change course.

“That is why, for the good of my constituents and the country, I am calling on the Prime Minister to set out a clear timetable for his resignation, with an orderly transition of leadership to take place by September.”

Labour civil war could spin out of control

The faction on the left of the Labour Party could try to overthrow Wes Streeting.

A source told Bloomberg: “If Wes thinks he can pull off some kind of stitch up to avoid a fair process that he will have no legitimacy even if he briefly ends up in office. There would be no support for the government in the Commons and we would challenge him at the first opportunity. He’d be lucky to outlast a lettuce.”

Cabinet tells PM it is time to go

Two top cabinet ministers – Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooperand Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood told the PM he should seek an orderly transition of power.

One cabinet minister told the Guardian: “In the end Keir has listened to cabinet ministers – there are differences about where this will go and what is in best interests of party and country. He’ll have to make a decision about what he’s going to do before cabinet tomorrow”.

Chorus of criticism continues

Maureen Burke, the Labour MP for Glasgow North East, has joined the growing number of discontented MPs calling for Sir Keir Starmer to step down, saying her party is “bigger than one person”.

In a statement posted on X on Monday evening, she said: “When I see communities like mine, in Glasgow North East, turn against the Labour Party in such numbers, we must seek to understand why and refocus our efforts to win back their trust.

“Despite two decades of SNP failure, people were reluctant to give Labour a hearing and told me that they could not, in good faith, vote Labour while Keir Starmer is Prime Minister.

“Our party owes Keir a debt of gratitude for his leadership, but we are bigger than one person.

“With a heavy heart, I am calling on the Prime Minister to set out a timetable for his departure and for our party to have a period of reflection with any and all candidates willing to have the chance to put themselves forward.”

Attacks turn personal

A Labour MP who has called for the Prime Minister to resign said Sir Keir Starmer is a “very narrowing Prime Minister who listens to very few”, and the “seed of his downfall is that he hasn’t engaged” as pressures mount from members for their leader to resign.

Speaking on the Cathy Newman Show on Sky News on Monday evening, Rachael Maskell, MP for York Central, added: “We are all having this discussion. We want Andy (Burnham), how do we do that?”

She said: “Keir Starmer has been a very narrowing Prime Minister who listens to very few and I think that has been really the seed of his downfall is that he hasn’t engaged.

“He’s got things wrong. He made the wrong choices and he still hasn’t engaged with his backbenchers.

“So, I think somebody who understands the breadth of our movement is going to be absolutely crucial to take us into this next chapter of Labour’s history.”

When asked who has those “qualities” mentioned above, Ms Maskell mention the mayor of Greater Manchester, saying: “I’ve been talking about Andy Burnham.”

She added: “I recognise he’s not in Westminster. We are all having this discussion.

“We want Andy, how do we do that? He’s not in Westminster. He needs a seat. If he needs a seat, then it causes a by-election. It is a challenging situation.”

‘It’s done, it’s over’

Sir Keir Starmer has just suffered another blow, as a 72nd MP called for him to resign.

Charlotte Nicholls, the MP for Warrington North, said the Prime Minister “doesn’t have the grip” to run the country.

She told LBC: “It’s done, it’s over, it’s time for someone else to come in.”

Ms Nicholls added: “He doesn’t have the grip to deal with the domestic agenda.”

Over a quarter of backbench MPs have urged Sir Keir to go

At least 70 Labour MPs have now publicly declared Sir Keir Starmer must step aside.

Pressure really building on the PM, with events moving very quickly.

Government resignations continue

A fourth Government aide has resigned, joining the dozens of Labour MPs calling for Sir Keir Starmer to stand down following the local elections.

Melanie Ward, MP for Cowdenbeath and Kirkcaldy, said in a statement on X that the election result in Scotland was “extremely disappointing” and that she was resigning as parliamentary private secretary to the deputy prime minister.

“The election result in Scotland last week was extremely disappointing, especially given the terrible record of the SNP,” Ms Ward said.

“So many or my constituents told me that they could not vote Labour as long as Keir Starmer remains Prime Minister. Their anger at early errors like changes to the winter fuel payment remains palpable. Mistakes on moral issues like Gaza have also not been forgotten by the wider public.

“Keir Starmer did important work to change the Labour Party, and governing in a time like this will never be easy. But the message from last week’s elections was clear; the Prime Minister has lost the confidence of the public.

“Our country faces enormous challenges and we need a Labour government that can deliver the scale of change that this requires. It is clear that the Prime Minister no longer has the trust or confidence of the public to lead this change.

“It is for this reason that I am today resigning as a PPS and calling for Keir Starmer to resign as Leader of the Labour Party and set out a rapid process for the election of a new Leader and Prime Minister.”

Allies of Andy Burnham tell the PM to go

Mainstream, which is linked to Andy Burnham, said: “On Friday, we issued a statement calling for an orderly transition and an open, democratic contest in the event of a leadership challenge after Labour’s results on 7th May.

“Tonight, we restate the need for a timetable for an orderly transition to a new leadership. This must include a meaningful debate, with all of Labour’s best players on the pitch, about our party’s future and our offer to the public.

“For the sake of the country, we must get this right.”

68 Labour MPs have now called for the PM to go

Rachel Taylor, the MP for North Warwickshire and Bedworth, joined calls for Sir Keir to go “with a genuinely heavy heart”.

In a statement, she said: “We must now find a new leader who can rebuild trust in our politics, unite the country, and confidently address the real challenges ordinary people are facing every day, as we promised.”

Party group calls for Starmer to go

Blue Labour, an internal pressure group, has called for the Prime Minister to set out a timetable for his departure.

The group said in a statement on X: “It’s time for Keir Starmer to set out a timetable for his departure.

“Nothing has convinced us that he is able to rise to the challenge confronting this country.

“As the process unfolds, no candidate should be blocked from standing; the job is too important for factional warfare and NEC machinations.

“Labour must now navigate a very difficult transition to a new prime minister. It must avoid the danger of retreating back into its comfort zone in which it can pretend there are no hard choices and trade-offs in rebuilding the country.

“There is a hard road ahead. The people of our islands are looking for the light at the end of the tunnel.

“The next leader must have a clear programme of government and story to tell the British people about how we will get there.”

Aide to Shabana Mahmood quits

A parliamentary aide to Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood has joined the more than 60 Labour MPs calling for Sir Keir Starmer to resign, saying the message from the local elections was “stark”.

Sally Jameson, MP for Doncaster Central, said the Prime Minister “is a man of deep integrity” but said she now feels he should “set out a clear timetable for his departure in September or shortly after”.

“The message from last week’s elections was stark,” Ms Jameson said.

“Britain faces enormous challenges and we need a Labour government that can deliver change on the scale that my constituents in Doncaster Central and the wider public want to see.

“It is clear that the Prime Minister no longer has the confidence of the public to lead that change.

“Therefore it is with regret that I now feel that the Prime Minister should set out a clear timetable for his departure in September or shortly after. In addition the NEC (National Executive Committee) should ensure that all potential candidates have the opportunity to stand and any timetable, I hope, would reflect this.

“We have three years left of this Parliament to show the British public that we can take on the significant challenges the country faces and be the vehicle for change that so many are asking for. If we squander the time we have the British people will not forget.”

Labour rebel breaks silence

Naushabah Khan told Times Radio that resigning “hasn’t been an easy decision”.

“It’s not something that I’ve taken lightly at all. I’ve been a committed Labour member for years, but I’ve got to the stage where as an MP who was elected in 2024, I’ve got deeply frustrated with how things are working at the minute.

“The reality is, Keir Starmer’s done a fantastic job in leading our party through an election and getting us to where we were in the majority we’ve got and I recognise that completely but unfortunately, these last local elections have shown us that it’s just not working any more when we speak to people out there on the doorsteps, and we hear time and time again that we don’t trust your leader, we don’t support your leader, we can’t back this.”

She said the party needed to “rethink how we do this” to restore people’s support, adding: “I don’t feel that the Prime Minister said enough this morning to be able to address that.”

Left-wing MP calls for further Brexit betrayals

Labour’s Stella Creasy urged the PM to water down Brexit even more.

She said: “The prime minister is right. We need to get back to the heart of Europe.

“That will never happen whilst the red lines remain on the single market, the customs union and freedom of movement. They need to go now and be seen to go now otherwise it’s a waste of time.”

Kemi launches fresh attack on Starmer

The Tory leader declared: “Labour had a plan to win power.

“They never had a plan to govern, and they are letting the country down.

“This week, the Conservatives are laying out another stage in our plans for how we would get Britain working again. This is our alternative King’s Speech, a serious and fully funded legislative programme for a Stronger Economy and a Stronger Country.

“There’s more to do but if we were giving the King’s Speech my team would: Leave the ECHR and repeal the Human Rights act so we can secure our borders and stop illegal asylum claims.

“Deliver cheaper energy by scrapping green levies and ideological net zero targets. Strengthen policing with 10,000 more police, tougher stop and search, and immediate justice. Restore the two-child benefit cap, and face to face PIP assessments.

“Back our military by increasing funding to 3% of GDP and protecting our veterans. Help young people by scrapping interest on plan 2 student loans, and getting under 16s off social media.

“And so much more. The country has had enough of this drift.”

More from an influential backbencher…

Chris Curtis, an ally of Wes Streeting and the chairman of the 100-strong Labour Growth Group, said the PM must set out a timetable to quit.He told Sky: “The moment, the traumatic situation that we faced, the geopolitcal context, the fact that we had such a difficult economic inheritance does mean that we need more radical change than the government has set out so far.

“I don’t think we saw a plan from the PM this morning in order to implement the kind of change this country needs. I therefore think it’s time for us to look for new leadership.

“I think what that means is the PM setting out a timetable and an orderly process for a leadership election and one in which Labour has a discussion about a vision for the country and what changes are needed.”

Zack Polanski: ‘Starmer incapable of taking on Reform’

Sir Keir Starmer must go, Green Party leader Zack Polanski said, as he warned the Prime Minister is “incapable of taking on Reform”.

Responding to Sir Keir’s speech, he said: “Keir Starmer showed today that he still doesn’t understand why voters overwhelmingly rejected Labour on Thursday. People want real change and are fed up to the back teeth with a status quo that has failed the vast majority.

“The Greens’ message about ending the affordability crisis by bringing down bills, building council housing and introducing rent controls resonated with a public that has given up on the failing Labour Government.

“Farage is a dangerous threat to this country, and peddles fake solutions to voters who are also desperate to end this broken political consensus.

“Starmer has shown he’s incapable of taking on Reform. He must go. Only the insurgent Green Party can stop Reform.”

Khan backs Starmer

Sir Sadiq Khan has expressed qualified support for Sir Keir Starmer but said he would like to see Andy Burnham return to Westminster.

The Mayor of London told the Press Association: “I’m not somebody calling for a change in leadership, but I am calling for a change in the pace of delivery.

“The Prime Minister, the Chancellor and other members of the Government need to accelerate the pace of delivery.”

Asked whether he thought Greater Manchester Mayor Mr Burnham should be allowed to run for Labour in a potential by-election to become an MP again, he said: “Andy Burnham is an excellent politician. He’s been a great mayor. He’s somebody who wants to return to Parliament. I think he should be able to do so sooner, rather than later.”

Starmer Calls For Action On Antisemitism At Downing Street Event

Sadiq Khan (Image: Getty)

Nearly 50 MPs call on Starmer to quit

Labour MP – Luke Myer – has gone public calling for Starmer to quit, bringing the total so far to 49.

Myer says: “I listened carefully to the Prime Minister’s speech today. I think history will see him as a decent man, but we have to be honest that his leadership is not working. A change is needed.”

Angela Rayner takes brutal swipe at Keir Starmer as Labour rebellion explodes

Labour former deputy leader Angela Rayner has condemned the decision to stop Andy Burnham returning to Westminster as an MP – and laid the blame on Keir Starmer.

She made the brutal statement as Sir Keir battles to stay in Number 10 following last week’s local election defeats

Labour growth group head urges Starmer to go

Chris Curtis – Lab Milton Keynes MP and influential head of the Labour growth group – joining calls for Keir Starmer to go.

He wants the PM to set out a timetable and will be signing the Catherine West letter.

Not backing a candidate – the growth group is putting out a report with their agenda tomorrow.

Rayner takes aim at Reform and Greens

Angela Rayner turns her aim to the Green Party and Reform UK.

She said nationalists and populists are “not parties for the working class”.

Angela Rayner

Angela Rayner (Image: CWU)

Labour should apologise says Rayner

Angela Rayner says Labour should “apologise for our mistakes”

“Let me be honest. We as a party have to do better than this. And we can only prove we mean our Labour values by putting the common interest ahead of factionalism. And we can start by accepting that Andy Burnham should never have been blocked.

“It was a mistake that the leadership of our party should put right.”

‘It isn’t working’

Angela Rayner said: “This has not been an easy moment. Our party has suffered historic defeats. Many good Labour colleagues have lost their seats.

… It’s clear that what we’re doing isn’t working and it needs to change.

… People feel hopeless that the cost of living crisis will never end

Angela Rayner is about to speak

Former Labour Deputy Leader Angela Rayner is about to deliver a speech at the CWU union conference.

Catherine West’s letter to MPs in full

Dear Colleague,

I have listened to the Prime Minister’s speech this morning. I welcome the renewed energy and ideas. However, I have reluctantly concluded that this morning’s speech was too little too late. The results last Thursday show that the PM has failed to inspire hope. What is best for the party and country now is for an orderly transition. I am hereby giving notice to No10 that I am collecting names of Labour MPs to call on the Prime Minister to set a timetable for the election of a new leader in September. I want to thank everyone who has been in contact over the weekend to offer good wishes. We need our best top team in place to fight the next election. We owe working people up and down the country nothing less. Please reply Yes if you think this is the right thing to do. I want to thank everyone who has been in contact over the weekend to offer good wishes. We need our best top team in place to fight the next election. We owe working people up and down the country nothing less. Please reply Yes if you think this is the right thing to do. Your name will not be made public for now.

Best wishes,

Catherine West MP

Speech was ‘too little, too late’

This morning’s speech was “too little, too late” Catherine West MP has said, as she writes to Labour MP’s to demand a September leadership race.

Suspended Labour MP said PM’s resignation would not make a difference ‘electorally’

Sir Keir Starmer’s resignation would not make a difference “electorally”, suspended Labour MP Karl Turner said.

He told Sky News: “Do I want him to go? No, I don’t, not really, what difference is it going to make? It’s not going to make any difference electorally right now.”

The Independent MP for Kingston upon Hull East criticised the Prime Minister for using an autocue during his speech on Monday, saying: “I texted the PM yesterday – we’ve not spoken much in recent weeks and months, because we’ve had a bit of a fallout, which is fairly public – but I said, look, if you go into the room tomorrow and read from autocue, it’s goodnight.

“The Prime Minister had an opportunity today to deliver a speech from the heart. I can do it. I spoke for the last seven minutes without a breath. Why can’t the Prime Minister do it?”

He also said: “There’s nothing in that speech that’s going to get people in East Hull revved up to the point where they’re saying, I wish I’d not voted Reform the other day. And there’s his problem.”

Another MP urges Starmer to set out departure timeline

Sir Keir Starmer has again been urged to outline a timetable for his departure by one of his backbenchers.

Labour MP for Nottingham East, Nadia Whittome, wrote on X: “The Prime Minister has yet again failed to learn the lessons of the local elections, doubling down on what he believes he has got right instead of reflecting on what he has got wrong.

“We need a Government that excites people about the future – and that motivates them to choose that future – through real action to tackle the cost of living crisis, rebalancing our economy in favour of working class people, standing up to Reform’s racism and division, and taking principled positions on the genocide in Gaza and other issues of international human rights. Keir Starmer has not proven himself capable of leading such a government.

“I have been calling for a change in leader since November – and for a change in direction for far longer. I am pleased that more of my colleagues are now also willing to make this case publicly.

“However, a change in the leadership of our party and the country must not be a rushed coronation. This process should not just be about choosing a new leader, but a proper reckoning with the problems in Labour’s current political direction and what we need instead going forward.

“Keir should do the responsible thing, for the country and our party, and outline a timetable for his departure with a democratic leadership contest that involves the broad swathe of our party and enables the full breadth of politics and candidates to be represented.”

Labour MP to email backbenchers urging them to set out timetable for PM to go

Labour MP Catherine West will not launch a leadership challenge against Keir Starmer She will instead email all Labour MPs seeking their support for a timetable for him to resign in the hope it triggers a leadership contest

Catherine West said on Sky News: “Yes [she will send a letter], it’s asking for support for the timetable [not for her as a candidate) which will test the temperature in parliament among Labour MPs”

Starmer’s speech was ‘sad to watch’

Sir Keir Starmer’s speech was “sad to watch”, the Conservative Party leader has said. Kemi Badenoch said that the Prime Minister has had “so many resets, even his reset button needs a reset.”

She added:”But I do not take pleasure in watching the Prime Minister flounder. The country needs leadership, not another speech from a man who clearly knows something has gone badly wrong, but still can’t explain why.

“This is Labour’s real problem. It is not just Starmer – all the pretenders jostling for his job do not have the answers either, because they all believe the same things: more welfare, more state control, more borrowing, more regulation. They are busy arguing over who should drive the car, but the truth is they are all heading in the wrong direction. They have no vision for the future.

“What we need is to get Britain working again. That is why I have proposed an alternative King’s Speech with a clear plan to reward effort, cut the cost of government, secure our borders, rebuild industry and back families who do the right thing.

“If Labour are serious about fixing the country they could do all of this tomorrow. Whether they have the bravery or the common sense to do that is a different matter.”

Labour MP insists PM must set out timetable for exit

Clapham and Brixton Hill Labour MP Bell Ribeiro-Addy wrote on social media after the speech: “It is clear the PM does not have a credible plan. He must now set out a timetable for departure.

“But the process to replace him cannot be a coronation.

“Our next leader must be chosen in a real democratic contest. Otherwise we risk ending up right back where we started.”

Kemi Badenoch says Starmer’s speech ‘sad to watch’

Kemi Badenoch, Leader of the Conservative Party, said: “Keir Starmer’s speech was sad to watch. With so many resets, even his reset button needs a reset.

“But I do not take pleasure in watching the Prime Minister flounder. The country needs leadership, not another speech from a man who clearly knows something has gone badly wrong, but still can’t explain why.

“This is Labour’s real problem. It is not just Starmer – all the pretenders jostling for his job do not have the answers either, because they all believe the same things: more welfare, more state control, more borrowing, more regulation. They are busy arguing over who should drive the car, but the truth is they are all heading in the wrong direction. They have no vision for the future.

“What we need is to get Britain working again. That is why I have proposed an alternative King’s Speech with a a clear plan to reward effort, cut the cost of government, secure our borders, rebuild industry and back families who do the right thing.

“If Labour are serious about fixing the country they could do all of this tomorrow. Whether they have the bravery or the common sense to do that is a different matter.”

Kemi Badenoch

Kemi Badenoch (Image: PA)

Backbench MPs speak out in support of Starmer

Backbench Labour MPs have spoken out in support of Sir Keir Starmer following his speech on the Labour Party’s future, saying he has risen to the challenge.

Jack Abbott, Labour MP for Ipswich, told BBC News the Prime Minister showed “real humility and reflection”, adding: “We cannot fall back into this sort of inward looking fight, and I think he was right to look to the country … and speak to the country, as well as to the party.”

David Pinto-Duschinsky, Labour MP for Hendon, told Sky News: “I think what we saw today was a Prime Minister rising to the occasion.

“You heard and saw humility, I think you saw him take responsibility, but you also heard and saw the passion and the complete determination and not just to make incremental change, but to make real substantive, major, radical change.”

In a post on X, Labour MP for Gedling, Michael Payne, said Sir Keir “understands the scale of the challenge and the urgency to act”.

Similarly, Labour MP for Macclesfield, Tim Roca wrote on X: “Clear the PM gets the scale of the challenge, and the impatience people feel for change and bold action. Good to hear that urgency today.”

Starmer speech ‘a desperate attempt to cling onto power’

Sir Keir Starmer’s speech has been branded a “desperate attempt to cling onto power” by campaigners.

Speaking to the Daily Express, John O’Connell, chief executive of the TaxPayers’ Alliance, said: Claiming to be on the side of working people after forcing businesses, farmers and families to endure repeated tax rises to pay for increased welfare spending only highlights how out of touch the prime minister really is.

“If he truly wants to turn the fortunes of this country around, he needs to focus on bringing down the ballooning benefits bill and the crushing tax burden.”

Starmer: ‘There is some frustration with me’

“There is some frustration with me,” Sir Keir Starmer has admitted as he takes questions from the media.

He has accepted that there is wider frustration across the country, which he says is “deeply bound in the status quo that has failed us for so many years”.

Starmer: ‘We cannot win as a weaker version of Reform or the Greens’

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has described a “battle for the soul” of the UK, as he warned Labour campaigners his party “cannot win as a weaker version of Reform (UK) or the Greens”.

He said: “This is nothing less than a battle for the soul of our nation and I want to be crystal clear about how we will win it because we cannot win as a weaker version of Reform or the Greens.

“We can only win as a stronger version of Labour, a mainstream party of power, not protest.

“And I also want to be really clear on this because I will never stop fighting for the decent, respectful, diverse country that I love – I will never give up on the hope we can unlock in this country, the hope of renters for security in their home, of workers, for fairness at work, of public services free from austerity, the hope of European solidarity, of community pride, of the people who paint over the graffiti that is racist, a country taking control of its future.

“Our spirit unchanged, our resolve unbroken, the hope of a country that can and will become a stronger fairer Britain.”

Starmer claims Brexit did not work

Promises on Brexit “all proved to be false”, Sir Keir Starmer has claimed.

He added that Brexit “did not work” and what Nigel Farage had promised had turned out not to be true.

He has repeated his claim that Britain must be “at the heart of Europe”.

Starmer giving a major speech (Image: PA)

Starmer says stepping aside would plunge nation into chaos

Sir Keir Starmer has said that stepping aside as Prime Minister would plunge the country into chaos, and that the public are tired of the constant changing of leaders.

Here’s six times he demanded Boris Johnson resign when he was leader of the opposition.

Keir Starmer speaking to Labour members, MPs and the media (Image: PA)

Starmer: ‘I work well with Andy’

Sir Keir Starmer has said he works “very well” with Andy Burnham, in response to a question from journalists.

He said that the decision to allow, or deny the Mayors right to stand for parliament rests with the powerful National Executive Committee (NEC).

A view inside the room for Starmer’s speech (Image: PA)

Starmer puts EU realignment at heart of speech

Sir Keir Starmer has torn into the largest democratic vote in British history, Brexit, and said that he will set a “new direction for Britain” by putting the UK “at the heart” of the bloc it voted to leave.

The Prime Minister, who voted for and campaigned to remain, and backed a second referendum, has consistently made an EU reset a major part of his premiership.

Sir Keir told activists and journalists: “At the next EU summit, I will set a new direction for Britain. The last government was defined by breaking our relationship with Europe. This Labour Government will be defined by repairing our relationship with Europe by putting Britain at the heart of Europe.”

Keir Starmer gets standing ovation from those in the room (Image: Sky News)

Labour to ‘put Britain at the heart of Europe’

Brexit has made us poorer and sent migration “through the roof”, Sir Keir Starmer has said.

He claims that Brexit has made the United Kingdom weaker, and suggested that Nigel Farage refuses to talk about Brexit – saying he is “not just a grifter, he is a chancer”.

He has said that at the next EU summit he will set a “new direction for Britain” and that this Labour will “put Britain at the heart of Europe”.

Keir Starmer

Keir Starmer (Image: PA)

British Steel will be nationalised

Starmer has announced that new laws will be introduced to take “full national ownership of British Steel”.

He calls it “urgent government on the side of working people” which he brands a “Labour choice”.

Starmer: Labour must be better and do better

Sir Keir Starmer said Labour would “be better and do better” as he delivered a crunch speech on Monday.

He said local election results were “very tough” and “I take responsibility” for them.

“But it’s not just about taking responsibility for the results,” he added.

“It’s about taking responsibility to explain how as a political and electoral force, we will be better and do better in the months and years ahead.

“Because we are not just facing dangerous times, but dangerous opponents, very dangerous opponents.

“This hurts, not just because Labour has done badly, but because if we don’t get this right, our country will go down a very dark path.”

“So just as I take responsibility for the results, I also take responsibility for delivering the change that we promised for a stronger and fairer Britain that we must build; I take responsibility for navigating us through a world that is more dangerous than at any time in my life.”

Starmer takes aim at Brexit

Starmer blames Brexit for people being “worried sick”. He then adds that there is always a “desperate attempt to get back to the status quo” as he lays the groundwork for closer relations with the European Union.

Keir Starmer (Image: PA)

Starmer: ‘People are worried sick’

“I can see how hard life has been through these decades of crisis,” Sir Keir Starmer has said in a speech in which he railed against the failures of previous governments.

In a packed out venue in central London, the Prime Minister has said he “knows whose side he is one” before naming one of them as his sister, and other “working people”.

He goes on to say that people are “worried sick”.

Starmer: ‘Stories beat spreadsheets’

“Stories beat spreadsheets,” the Prime Minister has said.

“We will make the big arguments,” he goes on to say – calling for Labour values as the only solution to the problems of the country.

He adds that neither NIgel Farage or Zack Polanski offer the “progressive leadership that these times demand”.

Keir Starmer (Image: Sky News)

Starmer brands his opponents as ‘dangerous’

Sir Keir Starmer has branded his political opponents “dangerous” and said that if Labour does not do well the country will go down a “dark path”.

He adds that he takes responsibility for “not walking away” and plunging the country into chaos.

Sir Keir suggests that the previous Conservative Government caused chaos with the resignations of Prime Ministers, resignations Sir Keir repeatedly called for when leader of the opposition.

Losing Councillors ‘hurts’ says Starmer

Starmer up next. To more applause he has stepped up to the podium.

“Thank you,” he begins. “We lost some brilliant Labour representatives, that hurts.” he adds.

Sir Keir says he takes responsibility for the result of last week’s election, but says the party must now do better in the months and years ahead.

Keir Starmer (Image: Sky News)

MP: ‘Many places and communities are feeling left behind’

“To many places and communities are feeling left behind,” the MP has said in her warm up speech for Sir Keir Starmer.

She has said they must address these problems and help left behind towns and cities.

The Prime Minister will be up next, in what is expected to be a landmark speech in his premiership.

Labour MP Jade Botterill (Image: Sky News)

‘Come on Keir’ shout attendees as Starmer walks in

Sir Keir Starmer has entered the room to applause from the attendees. A Labour MP is at the podium and will introduce him.

Some shouts of “come on Keir” have been heard by the Daily Express, whose Political Editor Martyn Brown is at the speech.

“I’ve spent the last few months in Wakefield knocking on more doors than I can possibly count,”the MP begins saying how devastating last week’s results had been.

This is a Labour Party event, not a government event

The Prime Minister is not speaking in Downing Street. He is in a central London location decorated with Labour Party branding.

Room slowly filling up

Sir Keir is speaking in central London, to a room full of reporters and members of the press. It does not appear that the entire Cabinet is in the room as well.

Keir Starmer arriving for the speech

Keir Starmer arriving for the speech (Image: PA)

Starmer due to speak soon

Sir Keir Starmer due to speak any moment now.

Pressure is high for the PM to pull off a convincing performance, and stave off doubts from his MPs over the state of his premiership.

Weslsh MP warns colleagues away from challenging Starmer

A senior Labour MP has warned his party against triggering a leadership contest to remove Sir Keir Starmer.

In a statement, Nick Smith, the MP for Blaenau Gwent and Rhymney, told his colleagues: “Be careful what you ask for.”

In a rare public intervention, the influential backbencher added: “In their Government years the Conservative Party tore itself apart with leadership battles and our country suffered. Do we want to copy that?

“The world is going through a crisis with the Iranian blockade and war in Ukraine. This has knocked our domestic economy sideways. We need calm heads to get us through this.

“The Prime Minister has the right credentials to get us through these extraordinary times.

“We do need to reflect on the terrible results of last week, but we also need to unite.”

Labour peer says getting closer to Europe would be a mistake

Lord Glasman, founder of Blue Labour, has told Times Radio the rise of support for Reform among the working class is “the mortal threat” to Labour, and there is no way their “estrangement” will be resolved by a speech from Keir Starmer.

He said Starmer’s plan for closer ties with the EU couldn’t be a worse attempt to realign with working class voters:

“This is a decimation in our very heartland. And it’s the estrangement of working class voters from Labour that is absolutely not going to be resolved by a speech realigning with the EU. I can’t imagine anything worse.”

‘Keir must go’ says Diane Abbott

Diane Abbott, who was elected as a Labour MP and is currently an independent MP, said: “In all my time in parliament, I’ve never seen such a crushing defeat for the Labour Party. And the message is clear that Keir must go or at the very least set a timetable.”

Diane Abbott (Image: Getty)

Another Labour MP calls for Keir Starmer to resign

A Scottish Labour MP has called for the party’s leadership to stand down after losing seats at the Holyrood election.

Labour sunk to 17 seats last week, but managed to claim joint second with Reform UK.

Speaking on Monday, Alloa and Grangemouth MP Brian Leishman – a frequent critic of the party’s leadership at a UK level – said it was time for leader Anas Sarwar and his deputy Dame Jackie Baillie to quit.

Asked if they should stand down, he told BBC Radio Scotland: “Absolutely.

“There’s talk of a national wave, now don’t get me wrong, Keir Starmer came up very, very regularly on the doorsteps, there has been a national wave against Keir Starmer.”

Pro-EU campaigners spot their chance

Campaigners European Movement UK are urging Keir Starmer to announce the UK will rejoin the EU.

Molly Scott Cato, senior vice-chair of European Movement UK and former MEP, said: “Finally, the penny has dropped: Labour has realized that achieving their growth ambition is only possible by restoring our close economic relationship with the EU. For the sake of British industry, British creatives, and especially British young people, we need the Prime Minister to be truly bold and set out a pathway back to EU membership.”

The Prime Minister will today announce plans for closer links with Brussels, but will not say the UK should rejoin.

Keir Starmer ‘won’t survive the week’

The Prime Minister will be gone within seven days, Ministers are saying

Would Andy Burnham make a better Prime Minister?

Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham is one of the favourites to replace Keir Starmer – if Sir Keir quits or can be forced out,

But would he actually be any better? Express readers are voting in our poll, which you can find here.

(Image: )

Rayner makes another intervention

Angela Rayner has issued another stunning intervention. Taking to social media the former deputy Prime Minister has said: “The Prime Minister must now meet the moment and set out the change our country needs.”

Is your MP one of those calling for Keir Starmer to go?

Is your MP one of those calling for Keir Starmer to go?

You can check if they are here.

Labour backbencher Catherine West is one of those calling for a new leader (Image: )

It’s been ‘a slow car crash’ under Keir Starmer

Steve Wright, general secretary of the Fire Brigades Union, has just spoken to BBC Breakfast.

“It’s been like a slow car crash over the last few months,” he says. “That’s why I called for Starmer to stand down in February, because I think what we’ve seen in the last few days was inevitable.”

Wright says there needs to be a change of leadership – but he doesn’t want it to be rushed.

“There needs to be an evaluation over what has happened over the last few years… we want to make sure there is a process for someone who can take the party forward and deliver on the promises that were made two years ago.”

Labour Party was ‘convulsed’ by election

A Labour minister has said his party was “convulsed” by the recent local election results and has admitted that Sir Keir Starmer’s latest reset speech is a “big moment” for the Prime Minister.

Peter Kyle, the Business Secretary, said: “Today is a big moment, I’m not saying it’s not… We are convulsed as a party as to what just happened.”

The frontbencher said that Sir Keir was planning closer ties with the EU as part of the reset.

Here’s what Keir Starmer will say today

This is what Number 10 has told us about the Prime Minister’s speech in advance:

Keir Starmer today (Monday 11 May) will say that “incremental change won’t cut it” as he vows that “we will face up to the big challenges” the country faces, according to Downing Street.

The Prime Minister has said that he will set out the next steps in his plan to build a stronger and fairer Britain in the coming days and weeks, Number 10 says.

As part of this, he will deliver a speech on Monday where he will say: “To meet the challenges that our country faces incremental change won’t cut it.

“On growth, defence, Europe, energy – we need a bigger response than we anticipated in 2024 because these are not ordinary times.

“Strength through fairness. It’s a core Labour argument. And you will see those values writ large in the King’s Speech. And you will see hope, urgency and exactly whose side we are on.”

He will add: “People need hope. We will face up to the big challenges and we will make the big arguments.

“The Labour case that only Labour values and Labour policies can ensure our country not only weathers these storms but emerges stronger and fairer.”

He will go on to say that Nigel Farage and the Conservatives are “defined by breaking our relationship with Europe”.

He will add: “This Labour Government will be defined by rebuilding our relationship and by putting Britain at the heart of Europe. So that we are stronger on the economy, on trade, on defence, you name it.

“Because standing shoulder to shoulder with the countries that most share our interests, our values and our enemies that is the right choice for Britain, that is the Labour choice.”

Labour: ‘Starmer was right to block Burnham’

Sir Keir Starmer was right to block Andy Burnham’s return to Parliament, a Labour Cabinet minister has said.

It comes as pressure grows on the Prime Minister to step aside following a disastrous set of local elections.

Earlier this year Sir Keir and his allies on Labour’s ruling body stopped Mr Burnham from resigning as Mayor of Greater Manchester to stand in the Gorton and Denton by-election.

When asked if that was the right call, Mr Kyle told LBC’s Nick Ferrari: “That was a decision for the NEC and I think the NEC made the right decision.”

Cabinet Minister wants eight more years of Starner

Business Secretary Peter Kyle told Times Radio: “I want eight years of delivering for the people of this country, led by the prime minister that we have now that is actually delivering.

“I think he has faced so many challenges in office. He has met the moment so many times when it comes to the challenges we face on the international scene, fixing our public services, leading a cabinet that is delivering.

“But we recognise that people want more urgency. They want more boldness. And yes, Keir will be setting out how he intends to lead a pathway to that boldness and that delivery.”

Burnham told to stay in Manchester

Andy Burnham has been told to stay in Manchester, by a senior Cabinet member. Peter Kyle, the business secretary, said that “Andy is not in Parliament because he chose to leave his seat in Parliament and chose to serve the people of Manchester.”

 

He added: “After the last election he promised to serve a full term in Manchester. I think these sorts of commitments are really important and I urge Andy to really focus on the promises he made. Let’s just see if an opening does open up at any moment in time.”

Wes Streeting won’t run for PM because he was at the movies, says Minister

If Wes Streeting wanted to run for Prime Minister he would not be spending his weekend watching The Devil Wears Prada 2 in the cinema, a Cabinet minister has suggested.

Business Secretary Peter Kyle told Sky News he was campaigning with the Health Secretary in Ilford “last weekend”, adding: “After we campaigned, we went for dinner and we went and saw a movie together.

“Somebody who is planning to pull the plug and launch a leadership bid in a couple of days’ time doesn’t go to the cinema with a friend.”

Asked what film they watched, he said “Devil Wears Prada”, later describing it as “good” and “fun”.

Starmer ‘the right person that needs to lead us through this’

Sir Keir Starmer is “the right person that needs to lead us through this” a Labour Cabinet minister has said.

Peter Kyle, the Business Secretary, issued the defiant rallying cry after the bloodbath last week which saw 1,500 councillors deprived of their seats.

He said that people are “fed-up” following last week’s elections, adding: “Our party is convulsed by the results.”

He told Times Radio: “He is the right person that needs to lead us through this. He needs to really meet the moment that we’re in. We all need to support him in that, because he can’t do it alone.”

Another MP demands Keir go

Another Labour MP has demanded the Prime Minister resign, with Navendu Mishra telling reporters Sir Keir should set out a timetable for an “orderly transition” to give leadership hopefuls time to come forward.

Speaking on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme, Mr Mishra said such a move would allow the “best people” in the Labour Party time to “put forward their vision”.

Asked whether he was referring to Mayor of Greater Manchester Andy Burnham, Mr Mishra said: “I think he’s done some really good things in my constituency of Stockport, and in Greater Manchester, and he has the experience of a previous Labour government, having served in senior roles including in the cabinet.”

Asked about a potential leadership bid from Ms Rayner, he added: “Look, I think she’s from Stockport… if you look at her achievements coming from Stockport, as a trade unionist, a Stockport trade unionist, I think are phenomenal.”

Starmer to push for closer EU ties

Sir Keir Starmer will lay out today plans for a closer relationship with the European Union as he makes a major speech to try and save his premiership.

The embattled Prime Minister will speak this morning as calls mount for him to step aside after a disastrous set of local elections.

Wes Streeting poised to strike

Health Secretary Wes Streeting is reported to be preparing a leadership challenge after weeks of speculation that the MP will try to depose Sir Keir Starmer.

A powerful member of the Cabinet, reports that he wanted the top job have been circulating for months. Years ago, a young Wes Streeting even told the media he saw himself as Prime Minister within the next decade, in a now widely circulated clip.

The Telegraph reported that he was ready to mount the challenge this week, as calls grow for Sir Keir to leave No10.

Starmer Calls For Action On Antisemitism At Downing Street Event

(Image: Getty)

List of grumpy MPs grows

The list of MPs demanding Sir Keir Starmer step aside is growing, with one MP, Catherine West, directly threatening a challenge.

Over the weekend, the backbench Labour MP made waves for demanding the PM go as pressure mounts on Sir Keir from his own side.

She has said she would challenge if no Cabinet member steps up to the plate.

Rayner throws down the gauntlet

Yesterday the former Deputy Prime Minister, Angela Rayner, demanded the Prime Minister allow the Mayor of Manchester, Andy Burnham, to return to the commons.

The call came in the wake of Labour’s local elections meltdown, as she accused her former boss of allowing a “toxic culture of cronyism” and accused the PM of failing to help “working people” enough.

Her bombshell statement, released on the eve of Sir Keir giving a make-or-break speech, laid out proposals for an extraordinary Labour shift to the Left.

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