If No 10
briefer is found Keir Starmer will sack them, Miliband says
Cabinet
minister says PM would not have backed attacks on Wes Streeting but briefing is
‘longstanding aspect of politics’
Jessica
Elgot Deputy political editor
Thu 13
Nov 2025 09.49 GMT
Ed
Miliband has said he was certain Keir Starmer would sack whoever had briefed
against Wes Streeting, after a chaotic 48 hours in which No 10 launched an
operation to shore up the prime minister against an anticipated leadership
challenge.
The prime
minister apologised to the health secretary in a phone call with him late on
Wednesday. Starmer is facing mounting calls to sack his chief of staff, Morgan
McSweeney, over the row.
The
Guardian reported that in private meetings with MPs on Wednesday, the prime
minister stood by his chief of staff and would not directly commit to any
consequences for those who had briefed the newspapers.
Miliband
said he believed Starmer would not have authorised any of the personal attacks,
but said briefing was a “longstanding aspect of politics”.
“I’ve
talked to Keir before about this kind of briefing that happens and as he always
says, if he finds the person, he’ll get rid of them. And I absolutely believe
he would do that,” he told Sky News.
Starmer
and Streeting spoke briefly on Wednesday, the first time the pair have been in
contact since the briefing war broke out. Starmer is said to have apologised to
the health secretary but stopped short of making any other commitments, saying
only they should speak again soon.
In
further attempts to contain the row, the Labour chair, Anna Turley, told ITV on
Wednesday night that there would be an investigation into who had specifically
briefed against Streeting and that Starmer would “take action” against the
culprit. It is not believed to be a formal leak inquiry.
Miliband
told Sky News that Starmer would “hate all this nonsense” but said it was a
common problem in politics.
“I hate
the culture of briefing. But there is a longstanding aspect of politics. As I
say, I was there between Blair and Brown … So look, these things unfortunately
happen, but what matters is staying focused on the mission.
“Turbulence
is part of the gig, is part of the DNA of being in government. What gets you
through is keeping your eyes on the prize of what you care about, what you’re
trying to do.”
Streeting
mounted a furious defence of his actions on morning shows on Wednesday, saying:
“Whoever has been briefing this has been watching too much Celebrity Traitors.
It’s the most unjustified attack against the faithfuls since Joe Marler was
banished in the final.”
However,
Labour MPs were left scratching their heads at the timing of Downing Street’s
intervention, which the Guardian revealed on Tuesday night, with the focus
switching to whether McSweeney could survive in post.
One
cabinet minister said: “If it was an orchestrated campaign to shore up the PM,
then it’s had the opposite effect; it’s spectacularly backfired. I don’t see
how Morgan can survive when Keir has ended up in a weaker position than
before.”
One
minister said they thought No 10’s paranoia was partly justified. “I will
defend them to a degree because everyone can see that Wes is in fact running a
leadership campaign and that it has been the talk of the PLP [parliamentary
Labour party]. We know that. We can see it.
“But I
don’t think they intended to personalise this about Wes, and that has been
their great mistake. They wanted to show Keir had some fight in him and it has
backfired catastrophically.”

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário