A Labour mutiny is gathering pace after the party’s disaster local election results – with dozens of MPs mounting pressure on Sir Keir Starmer to resign.
The Prime Minister today vowed to stay in his role for another eight years, insisting he is at the beginning of a ’10-year-project of renewal’.
In a desperate bid to save his premiership he wheeled out Labour veterans Gordon Brown and Harriet Harman back into government yesterday.
Backbencher Catherine West threatened to launch a ‘stalking horse’ leadership bid in the morning unless the Cabinet acted – with No10 nervous anger is so great she could get the 81 nominations required to spark a vote.
It follows Labour’s loss of more than 1,100 English council seats this week as Reform and the Greens seized huge chunks of the party’s heartlands.
Former Labour minister Josh Simons says he ‘does not believe PM can rise to this moment’
Putting the people I represent and the country I love first, I do not believe the prime minister can rise to this moment.
He has lost the country. He should take control of the situation by overseeing an orderly transition to a new prime minister.
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Catherine West tells Phillipson: ‘YOU should consider standing for Labour leadership’
Well, there’s nothing stopping Bridget from standing. Why are all the men better than the women?
We do need some senior women to step forward and to challenge for what is going to be a really difficult two and a half years between now and the general election, and also to take us into that second term.#
I love you dearly, Catherine, but I just disagree on this one.
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Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson insists Catherine West is ‘completely wrong’ to challenge Sir Keir
I’ve knocked on doors right across the country and in my own community, as colleagues will have done too and as party members will have done as well.
And what I heard was not a desire for a leadership contest, for of the Labour Party to spend more time talking amongst ourselves.
What I heard loud and clear from voters was their deep sense of frustration that they’d voted for change in 2024, they were hopeful that that change would be delivered and they don’t feel that we as a party or we as a Labour government have delivered what they wanted.


