Most
Labour members think Starmer cannot revive party fortunes, poll finds
Exclusive:
Mayor of Greater Manchester Andy Burnham is preferred choice of new leader for
42% of those surveyed
Jessica
Elgot Deputy political editor
Sat 9 May
2026 06.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2026/may/09/labour-members-keir-starmer-party-fortunes-poll
The
majority of Labour members say they do not believe Keir Starmer can turn around
the party’s fortunes, while 45% say the prime minister should step down.
The mayor
of Greater Manchester, Andy Burnham, was the first preference for 42% of
members, who were asked to rank their preferred successor.
Several
Labour MPs – especially those who are close to Burnham – have told the Guardian
that they would like to see a timetable for Starmer to stand down in an orderly
and dignified way, including allowing the mayor time to seek a parliamentary
seat.
The poll
was conducted just before Thursday’s elections, where Labour was fighting on
all fronts, in local elections in England and parliamentary elections in Wales
and Scotland. Nigel Farage’s Reform UK won hundreds of seats and control of
more councils in England, Labour went backwards in Scotland as the SNP claimed
a historic fifth victory and Plaid Cymru ended a century of Labour dominance in
Wales, unseating the Labour first minister Eluned Morgan.
In
London, the Greens took several councils across the capital, a sign of growing
progressive disillusionment in Keir Starmer’s party.
Among
members, the poll found Burnham has a net favourability of 72%, suggesting he
would be likely to win any leadership contest that he was allowed to contest.
Burnham cannot run while he is denied the chance to run for parliament, which
has been blocked by Labour’s governing national executive committee (NEC).
The poll
of more than 1,000 party members shows a sharp rise in the number of members
dissatisfied with Starmer’s leadership – in October just 28% said the prime
minister should resign if Labour suffered poor election results in May.
Among
members, the poll found Andy Burnham has a net favourability of 72%, suggesting
he would be likely to win any leadership contest. Photograph: Ryan
Jenkinson/Getty Images
More than
a third of members polled said they were considering resigning their
membership, according to the polling by the thinktank Compass.
The
thinktank is affiliated with Mainstream, a Labour caucus that is a prime backer
of a potential Burnham leadership bid.
The
polling found more than half of Labour members (51%) do not believe Starmer can
turn around the polls – suggesting they do not have faith he could beat Reform
at the next general election.
But
Starmer is not the only target of members’ ire – 49% said the prime minister
was jointly responsible for the party’s dire results, along with the rest of
the national government. Of those polled, 36% had considered cancelling their
membership.
Lena
Swedlow, the deputy director of Compass, said: “Voters made their displeasure
with Starmer’s leadership heard on Thursday and now Labour members have too.
Nearly half want him to stand down and over half don’t think he’s the man for
the job.
“In the
face of an incredibly serious economic situation at home and abroad, it’s
essential that the country and the party have a leader that they can trust.
There is a clear desire for change in both the politics and personnel of this
government. Making these changes in an orderly, measured, considered way will
be crucial for the stability and prosperity of the country.”
SUNDERLAND,
08 May 2026 - Reform UK candidates and supporters celebrating outside the count
centre in Sunderland where the party took overall control of the council in the
local elections.
Burnham’s
backers in parliament hope that by heaping pressure on Starmer and senior party
figures that the prime minister will set a timetable for departure and that
Burnham would not be blocked from standing for parliament again.
The mayor
attempted to stand at the Gorton and Denton byelection but was blocked by the
NEC on the grounds that the party could not afford to lose a Greater Manchester
mayoral byelection.
Members
of the NEC have told the Guardian the position will not change unless Starmer’s
mind is changed – which is highly unlikely.
At least
10 MPs have called for the prime minister to put in place a timetable for
departure, including the former transport secretary Louise Haigh, the chair of
the women and equalities select committee, Sarah Owen, and several MPs elected
in 2024 including Jonathan Brash, Simon Opher and Connor Naismith.
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