Union leaders are piling in on Sir Keir Starmer as a Labour mutiny gathers pace after this week’s local elections disaster.
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.
But the move has failed to quell the ire of union leaders who have accused Labour of being ‘disconnected from the working classes’.
Sharon Graham, the general secretary of Unite, this morning joined calls for Sir Keir to set out a timetable for his departure.
It follows a threat from backbencher Catherine West to launch a ‘stalking horse’ leadership bid – with No10 nervous anger is so great she could get the 81 nominations required to spark a vote.
Rayner: Starmer must set out the change country needs
The Prime Minister must now meet the moment and set out the change our country needs
ANOTHER union chief accuses Labour of ‘disconnecting from working class people’
There’s nobody in this room who doesn’t understand that that wasn’t down to the work of Labour councillors out on the ground.
That was down to the simple fact and truth that Labour has completely and utterly misread a lot of the situations that it faces and it has disconnected from working-class people.
Rayner: It needs to change – now
The Prime Minister must now meet the moment and set out the change our country needs.
Change our economic agenda to prioritise making people better off, change how we run our party so that all voices are listened to, and change how we do politics.
Labour exists to make working people better off. That is not happening fast enough, and it needs to change — now.
Blocking Burnham was a mistake, Rayner claims
This is bigger than personalities, but it is time to acknowledge that blocking Andy Burnham was a mistake.
We must show we understand the scale of change the moment calls for – that means bringing our best players into Parliament.
Ange’s swipe at Reform
Rayner’s manifesto – higher wages and a ‘building boom’
Rayner criticises Government U-turns and scandals
We are in danger of becoming a party of the well-off, not working people.
The Peter Mandelson scandal showed a toxic culture of cronyism.
Decisions like cutting winter fuel allowance just weren’t what people expected from a Labour government.
For too long, successive governments have allowed wealth and power to concentrate at the top without a plan to ensure the benefits of economic growth are shared fairly. The result is an economy that does not work for the majority, with wealth concentrated in too few hands.
This level of inequality, alongside squeezed living standards, is the outcome of a model built on deregulation, privatisation, and trickle-down economics.
Stand up for working people, urges Rayner
The Labour Party must now live up to our name: we must be the party of working people.
We’ve heard the same on the doorstep as we’ve seen in the polls – the cost of living is the top issue for voters of all parties. People have turned to populists and nationalists because we have not done enough to fix it.
Living standards are barely higher than they were a decade and a half ago. People feel hopeless – that the cost of living crisis will never end, and now they see oil and gas companies use global instability to post record profits.
Once again, ordinary people are paying the price for decisions they didn’t make. It’s no wonder that across the UK, working people feel the system is rigged against them.
Ange on election anguish
Our party has suffered a historic defeat.
Many good Labour colleagues have lost their seats despite working hard for those they represented. We have lost good Labour administrations and lost the chance for more.
What we are doing isn’t working, and it needs to change. This may be our last chance.
Breaking:Angela Rayner breaks silence
What we are doing isn’t working, and it needs to change. This may be our last chance.



