Tuesday, May 12, 2026 - UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer, came under renewed pressure on Monday when four ministerial aides stepped down, and more than 70 Labour lawmakers publicly called for his resignation after his plea for another opportunity appeared to fall on deaf ears.
During an address to party supporters in London, Keir
Starmer passionately urged both Labour members and voters to stand by him and
reject calls for a leadership contest, warning it would plunge the party into
chaos. However, the speech appeared to do little to halt the growing unrest.
The Times newspaper reported that Home Secretary Shabana
Mahmood and other cabinet ministers had told the prime minister to consider
setting out a timeline for his departure as Labour lawmakers went public to
express their dissatisfaction over one of the worst defeats for Labour in last
week’s local elections.
Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper told Starmer that he should
oversee an orderly transition of power, according to the Guardian.
ITV News reported that Starmer’s deputy, David Lammy, was
also urging his boss to set out a departure timetable.
Four ministerial aides said they were resigning, believing
that Starmer, 63, was not the man to lead Labour into the next national
election, due in 2029, and hoping to trigger a leadership contest that could
last weeks, if not months.
“It is clear to me that the prime minister has lost
authority not just within the parliamentary Labour Party but across the country
and that he will not be able to regain it,” said Tom Rutland, a ministerial
aide to the environment minister, in his resignation letter.
Catherine West, a little-known former junior minister who
broke cover at the weekend to threaten to seek a leadership contest if Starmer
failed to offer radical change, told Reuters she had received 80 responses
supporting her demand that the prime minister set out a timetable for his
departure.
She called for a leadership election to happen in September.
Starmer swiftly announced new appointments to fill a number
of vacant positions.
Angela Rayner, former deputy prime minister, seen as a
potential challenger for the leadership after criticizing Starmer’s operation
on Sunday, told a union conference the government “will be judged on actions
and not just our words.”

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