terça-feira, 12 de maio de 2026

'It was never going to be enough': Reaction to Starmer's make or break speech

Labour In Chaos As Cabinet Splits Over Starmer's Leadership | Ollie Cole

 

Wes Streeting faces narrow road to Labour members’ favour

 


Wes Streeting faces narrow road to Labour members’ favour

Aletha Adu

Political correspondent

Health secretary’s soft-right credentials put him at a disadvantage even with reduced membership under Starmer

 

Tue 12 May 2026 06.00 BST

https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2026/may/12/wes-streeting-faces-narrow-road-to-labour-members-favour

 

“Country first, party second” is a mantra Keir Starmer and his cabinet have repeated since being in opposition, seeking to draw a dividing line between Labour and their Conservative predecessors’ inclination for self-destruction.

 

But party members do matter in politics – and a key problem for Wes Streeting, one of those with ambitions to succeed Keir Starmer, is that many of Labour’s do not like him.

 

Just before Labour’s heavy local election losses, a Compass survey of more than 1,000 members found that if they were given a free choice, 42% would pick Andy Burnham to succeed Starmer – against just 11% for Streeting. And whereas Burnham had a 44% favourability rating, only 18% felt the same towards the health secretary.

 

That result put Streeting roughly on a par with Angela Rayner and Ed Miliband – but given those potential candidates and Burnham are firmly to his left, it would appear to suggest that the majority of the party would prefer not to have a candidate in Streeting’s place on the ideological spectrum. Both Miliband and Rayner were viewed favourably by comfortably more members than Streeting was.

 

Among all the plotting and jostling for position in the leadership contest, that presents a serious challenge for Streeting. While he is thought to be the candidate most ready for a leadership contest, he is on the right of the party, formerly close to Peter Mandelson and of the Blairite Progress wing.

 

In recent months he has been seen as seeking to position himself further to the left, perhaps in an effort to secure more support from the members who will ultimately choose the victor from a list nominated by MPs.

 

Recent research by Queen Mary University of London found that about 48% of Labour member describe themselves as “fairly leftwing”. The close result of Labour’s deputy leadership election and a low turnout suggested that members are still largely on the so-called soft left.

 

And they may remain cautious of any successor trying to appear more leftwing than their record states, given Keir Starmer’s 2020 leadership pledges, which many viewed as having ultimately been betrayed after he won the job.

 

Since Starmer succeeded Jeremy Corbyn in April 2020, many members have quit: from a peak of 532,046 members at the end of 2019, Labour lost more than 200,000 members, ending 2024 with 333,235 onside.

 

“Lots of grassroots members have left the Labour since the general election, either to join the Greens (and to a lesser extent Your Party), or just to give up belonging to any party,” said Tim Bale, a professor of politics at Queen Mary University of London.

 

“Starmer, inasmuch as he has any strong values, is pretty much like your [current] average Labour member, and the fact that in some ways he seems to have betrayed them is partly responsible for their disillusionment with him,” Bale said.

 

“But anyone on the right of the Labour party hoping that this means those remaining are on their side is probably fooling themselves.”

 

Still, Bale said, there may be hope for Streeting yet. “Even those who’ve stuck around are highly likely to be leftwing and very socially liberal. But one thing we know about members – and Starmer getting himself elected in 2020 rather than Corbyn’s anointed successor, Rebecca Long-Bailey, is proof of this – is that party members also want to win elections,” he said.

 

“So if Streeting can show them he’s the guy to do that, he still has a chance, even if he’s not their ideological ideal.”

Starmer on the brink: Is Britain heading back into chaos?

 

UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer is fighting for his political survival as several key Cabinet ministers have privately urged him to set out a timetable for his resignation.

 


Starmer on the brink as cabinet ministers urge him to quit

UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer is fighting for his political survival as several key Cabinet ministers have privately urged him to set out a timetable for his resignation. The internal rebellion exploded following Labour's disastrous local and regional election results, resulting in one of the worst ballot-box defeats in the party’s 125-year history.

 

Key Developments

  • Cabinet Divisions: Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood, Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper, Energy Secretary Ed Miliband, and Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy have reportedly pressured Starmer to manage an orderly transition of power.
  • Backbench Revolt: Nearly 80 Labour MPs have publicly called for Starmer to stand down or set a firm departure date.
  • Government Resignations: Six ministerial aides (Parliamentary Private Secretaries) resigned their posts in protest to demand a change of leadership, forcing No. 10 to swiftly replace them.
  • Starmer's Stance: Despite the heavy losses and low approval ratings, Starmer insists he will not "walk away", warning that a leadership contest would plunge the country into "chaos".

Potential Successors

While Housing Secretary Steve Reed has defended Starmer to prevent repeating Conservative-style leadership churn, different party factions are positioning for a potential race:

Wes Streeting: The Health Secretary's allies are at the center of the current backbench mutiny, amid speculation he is preparing a leadership bid.


Andy Burnham: The Mayor of Greater Manchester is heavily favored by some MPs, though launching a bid would require him to return to Parliament via a by-election.


Interim Caretakers: Some factions favor appointing a temporary leader, such as John Healey or Hilary Benn, to stabilize the government until the autumn.

 

Starmer on the brink as cabinet ministers urge him to quit

 


Starmer on the brink as cabinet ministers urge him to quit

 

Exclusive: Senior cabinet ministers believed to be among those telling PM to oversee orderly departure hours after he said he would fight any challenge

 

Pippa Crerar and Jessica Elgot

Mon 11 May 2026 22.09 BST

https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2026/may/11/more-than-60-labour-mps-call-on-starmer-to-set-timetable-to-quit

 

Keir Starmer’s grip on power appeared to be slipping away on Monday as cabinet ministers urged him to set out a timetable for his departure and more than 70 Labour MPs publicly called for him to stand down.

 

The prime minister warned the country would “never forgive” Labour for plunging into the chaos of a leadership election – and that he intended to prove his doubters inside and outside the party wrong.

 

The Guardian understands that four senior cabinet ministers - Shabana Mahmood, the home secretary, Yvette Cooper, the foreign secretary, John Healey, the defence secretary and the deputy prime minister David Lammy - were among those who spoke to Starmer on Monday.

 

Some told the prime minister he should oversee an orderly transition of power after crushing election defeats risked ringing the death knell on his premiership.

 

Others discussed with Starmer how they should take a “responsible, dignified, orderly” approach to what might follow. Several others - including Richard Hermer and Steve Reed - were defiant, urging him to fight on.

 

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

 

Chief whip Jonathan Reynolds is understood to have spent the day in Downing Street, conveying the mood among backbenchers yet to go public to the No 10 operation.

 

 

 

 

Among those outside the cabinet publicly calling for Starmer to resign were close allies of Wes Streeting, who urged Starmer to set out a “swift” timetable, in what appeared to be an orchestrated move. But one close friend suggested the health secretary had “no plans to pull the house down”.

 

Supporters of Andy Burnham also published letters calling for the prime minister to go. Sources on Labour’s ruling national executive committee, which blocked the Greater Manchester mayor from standing in the Gorton and Denton byelection in January, suggested they could take a different course next time.

 

“The officers group could move if there was clearly a question mark over political authority. But there would have to be a byelection called first before we know whether that is the case,” one said. Another said “things could move” should Starmer clearly not have support to continue as PM.

 

Several sources said how angry some cabinet ministers were with Burnham and Streeting, who they believed to have precipitated the leadership crisis by sanctioning allies to call for Starmer’s departure. “They’ve got their hands all over this,” one said.

 

Angela Rayner, whose own chances of running are stalled until her tax affairs are resolved, appeared to throw her weight behind Burnham, arguing that blocking him had been a mistake and he should be allowed to return to parliament.

 

Her stock as a potential successor to the Labour crown has fallen in recent weeks, as Burnham’s has risen, with allies suggesting she was no longer determined to go for the top job herself, and could instead be part of a team. But she would still be expected to run if Burnham could not.

 

Starmer and his allies struggled to fight a rearguard action to shore up his leadership, unlike in February after Anas Sarwar, Labour’s leader in Scotland called for him to go, when cabinet ministers came out en masse in support.

 

Starmer survived an immediate threat after Catherine West, a potential stalking-horse candidate, changed course and said she was gathering names of MPs who supported an orderly transition instead.

 

More than 70, including several junior backbenchers, from across the party’s ranks said Starmer had failed to convince them he had what it took to lead the country into the next election. They represent 25% of the party’s backbenchers.

 

In a speech earlier on Monday, Starmer said he would not resign and would prove his doubters wrong, and he would fight any leadership challenge.

 

“I take responsibility for not walking away, not plunging our country into chaos, as the Tories did time and again, chaos that did lasting damage to this country. A Labour government would never be forgiven for inflicting that on our country again,” he said.

 

“I know that people are frustrated by the state of Britain, frustrated by politics, and some people are frustrated with me. I know I have my doubters, and I know I need to prove them wrong, and I will.”

 

Ed Miliband, the energy secretary, is understood to have urged Starmer to consider setting out a timetable for his departure a week ago.

 

One cabinet ally of Starmer urged MPs to pause. “Everybody needs to calm down and take a deep breath. If you want to be seen as a credible governing party, the idea that you come into power promising stability, and then 20 months later decapitate your leader, is just madness,” they said.

 

But Starmer’s speech did not stem the steady flow of statements from MPs which called for the prime minister to announce an orderly transition.

 

At Monday lunchtime, the co-chair of the Labour Growth Group, Chris Curtis, once considered a loyalist group, said Starmer could not deliver the change the country needed. “I therefore think it’s time for us to look for new leadership,” he said.

 

“And I think what that means is the prime minister rightly now setting out a timetable and an orderly process for a leadership election, and one in which Labour has a discussion about the vision for the country and what changes we think are needed in order to face the very real challenges that Britain currently faces.”

 

Curtis was the first MP known to be close to the health secretary, Streeting, who called for Starmer to go. Other MPs have followed, including the Scottish Labour MP Alan Gemmell and Streeting’s constituency neighbour Jas Athwal, as well as his parliamentary private secretary, Joe Morris.

 

Allies of Streeting said that he had no plans to speak on Monday and reiterated his support for the prime minister. However, some MPs believe he is on the brink of declaring he will run. Others suggested a big beast on the soft left – such as Miliband – would run just to stop him.

 

Also on Monday, four junior frontbenchers – all PPSs – resigned and called for Starmer to go: Morris from the Department of Health, Tom Rutland from the Department for Environment, Naushabah Khan in the Cabinet Office and Melanie Ward at the Ministry of Justice.

 

After the ministerial aides resigned, Downing Street moved to announce the appointment of a new raft of PPSs, including Sean Woodcock to the Cabinet Office and David Burton-Sampson to the Department of Health.

 

Others who have called for the PM to go include many of the 2024 intake, including David Smith, Luke Myer, Markus Campbell-Savours, Tony Vaughan, Fred Thomas and Sarah Smith. Others included the ex-ministers Catherine McKinnell and Justin Madders.

 

But others put out statements saying they feared a change of prime minister would play into the hands of Nigel Farage.

 

In a Labour MPs’ WhatsApp group, Natasha Irons, MP for Croydon East, wrote: “Bottom line, changing leader because Nigel Farage has forced us to is not something any of us can come back from. Anyone who thinks we can needs to wake up.”

 

Another MP said: “I think we have to face up to the fact everyone one of them is fucking useless. Andy’s strategy has been a disaster. Angela has bottled it. Ed is clearly hiding to nothing. Wes is awol. God knows what Catherine West is doing. I am not quite sure how we ended up here.”

72 Labour MPs call for Starmer to resign | The Wrap with Anna Botting