Keir Starmer is clinging on for now but here’s what will happen next | Politics | News


Wes Streeting has achieved the glorious hat-trick of blowing up Keir Starmerโ€™s premiership, scuppering his own chances of becoming Prime Minister and plunging Labour into civil war. Not a bad dayโ€™s work for a wannabe PM.

He finally detonated his resignation bomb after days of will-he-won’t-he speculation. But his kamikaze act could backfire spectacularly. Rival camps insist he doesnโ€™t have the 81 MPs required to trigger a contest against Sir Keir.

Streetingโ€™s allies claim everything is hunky-dory in that respect.

Whatever the numbers itโ€™s blatantly clear that he is in a weaker position than he was 24 hours earlier.

His thinking that by giving time for Andy Burnham to make a Westminster comeback join any leadership race is a risky one.

The Greater Manchester Mayor is likely to command more support within the party, diminishing Streetingโ€™s chances if it is a straight shootout between the two.

His Thursday lunchtime hit job also appears to have sealed Starmerโ€™s fate.

The PM may well cling on for a bit longer – possibly months – but a leadership contest is now inevitable.

Streetingโ€™s withering attack on the PMโ€™s record will also strike a chord with exasperated colleagues, fueling existing anger within the party.

Others, including Angela Rayner, Ed Miliband and Al Carns could throw their hat into the ring too, set the stage for Labour to tear itself apart.

First up thereโ€™s going to be a by-election in Makerfield after former minister Josh Simons said he would step down to make way for Burnham to run.

But heโ€™s not a shoe-in for the northwest constituency, with Nigel Farage vowing to โ€œthrow everything at itโ€.

A leadership contest – in which Starmer could also stand in – is likely to follow that.

Things look set fair for a Summer of Labour discontent.

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