Awkward moment Starmer confronted with text from key ally on air | Politics | News
Sir Keir Starmer went on the defensive after a journalist revealed a member of his โtop teamโ held the Prime Minister responsible for Labour’s disastrous local election results. Sir Keir was left squirming after Sky News Political Editor Beth Rigby said she received a message from one of his allies saying he was โthe reason that Labour risks handing the country to Reformโ.
In response, the beleaguered PM said: โWhat I say to that is we won a landslide victory in July 2024, I led our party to that victory, that is a five-year mandate to change the country. Yes there are difficult conditions, the inheritance was terrible, the international context is very, very difficult but we need to inject that hope and convince people that things can and will get better and thatโs why in the coming days, I will set out the further steps that we will take.โ
Despite yet more pressure piling on the Labour leader, he insisted he would not be stepping down.
“I’m not going to walk away and plunge the country into chaos,โ he said in the interview.
Nigel Farageโs Reform UK made gains across the country as hundreds of Labour councillors were voted out.
Mr Farage said the results showed a โtruly historic shift in British politicsโ away from the old era of Labour and Conservative domination, vowing โthe best is yet to comeโ for his party.
Sir Keir faces further heavy losses as vote counting continues throughout Friday in both English local elections and contests for the Scottish Parliament and Welsh Senedd.
He described the results as โreally toughโ and said his party has โmade unnecessary mistakesโ.
Sir Keir earlier said “tough days like this don’t weaken my resolve to deliver the change that I promised”.
When asked whether he was feeling upset on Friday morning, he said: “I am feeling very much for the brilliant candidates, the brilliant councillors, the brilliant representatives that we have lost, because I know for them, they have put so much into their communities, so much of their life into public service.
“So I’m thinking about them and thinking about what we need to do to rebuild and to take our country forward.”
In Wales, Labour is expected to lose the national vote for the first time in more than a century while the SNP appears likely to remain the largest party in Scotland after 19 years in power.
After 41 of of 136 English councils had declared full results, Labour had lost control in eight โ losing a whopping 204 seats.
Its losses included Wandsworth and Westminster in London, and Tameside, which includes Angela Raynerโs Greater Manchester constituency
