Keir Starmer to step down as prime minister two years after historic election victory

TL;DR
Keir Starmer will resign as prime minister after facing pressure from Labour MPs. His departure comes less than two years after a historic election win, amid concerns over competition from Nigel Farage's party.
Key points
- Keir Starmer announced his resignation as prime minister.
- His decision follows pressure from Labour MPs and cabinet ministers.
- Starmer's resignation could lead to a leadership contest in Labour.
- Andy Burnham is a potential successor to Starmer.
- Concerns about Nigel Farage's party influenced the calls for Starmer's departure.
Mentioned in this story
Keir Starmer has announced he will stand down as prime minister after days of intense pressure from Labour MPs, including cabinet ministers, following the return of Andy Burnham to Westminster.
Less than two years after a historic election victory, Starmer had faced calls from his MPs to set out a timeline for his departure, with many of them spooked by the threat from Nigel Farage’s party ahead of the next general election.
While Starmer insisted on Friday that he would fight any leadership contest, conversations with ministers and time with his wife Victoria at Chequers over the weekend appear to have shifted his thinking decisively.
More than half a dozen cabinet ministers are understoo to have privately told him his time is up, while Starmer and his inner circle began work on drafts of a resignation speech on Saturday.
Starmer’s decision to announce his own departure could kickstart a race among Labour MPs to become the UK’s seventh prime minister in 10 years, which Burnham - who saw off a Reform challenge to win the Makerfield byelection – is in pole position to win.
But it could also result in a coronation if no other candidates – who could include the health secretary Wes Streeting – get the 81 nominations required, or if they strike a deal with the former mayor of Greater Manchester.
Starmer will stay in post in Downing Street until any leadership contest – or handover of power – is complete, leaving his successor to take on the serious challenges of the UK economy and a precarious international backdrop.
Some Labour MPs are concerned that Burnham may be unprepared for the role, and want him to face the scrutiny of a full contest, while others fear it would further damage Labour’s ratings with the public, and they should make as swift transition as possible.
Starmer steps down after months of pressure over his leadership, which was first almost derailed in February when Anas Sarwar, the party’s leader in Scotland, called for him to quit. At that point, the cabinet rallied round.
Despite his poor personal approval ratings, he had seemed on firmer ground in recent months with his handling of the Middle East crisis and refusal to do Donald Trump’s bidding by taking the UK into war with Iran.
However, any respite was blown apart when the Guardian revealed in April that Peter Mandelson, his controversial pick for UK ambassador to Washington, had been appointed despite failing his security vetting.
Mandelson’s appointment was the latest in what many inside Labour regard as a long line of political misjudgments by Starmer, including restricting winter fuel payments and welfare cuts, which caused the party to sink in the polls.
His willingness to reverse those decisions only added to his unpopularity among the parliamentary Labour party, large parts of which increasingly came to view him as weak and ineffectual. Some MPs were also concerned about his poor communication skills.
Multiple MPs were shocked by the scale of Starmer’s unpopularity on the doorstep as they campaigned during the May elections, which many believed became a lightning rod for wider frustrations with the political system itself.
As the results rolled in, with significant losses across the country, the scale of the electoral challenge facing Labour became clear, and the trickle of voices from MPs calling for Starmer to name an exit date turned into a steady stream.
The increasingly precarious nature of Starmer’s premiership was underlined by the resignation of Streeting days later – after seemingly failing to get the numbers to launch a challenge – and then a vacancy in the seat of Makerfield which gave Burnham a route back to parliament.
Since then, he has also lost his defence secretary John Healey over military spending plans, and a view settled among Labour MPs that Starmer’s leadership was so fragile that – despite his insistence that he would fight on – his days in Downing Street were numbered.
Starmer’s exit caps a calamitous fall from grace since becoming only the fourth Labour leader to win an election, taking more seats in 2024 than anyone since Tony Blair’s 1997 landslide.
Q&A
Why is Keir Starmer stepping down as prime minister?
Keir Starmer is stepping down due to intense pressure from Labour MPs and cabinet ministers, who have urged him to set a timeline for his departure.
What impact will Starmer's resignation have on the Labour Party?
Starmer's resignation could trigger a leadership contest within the Labour Party, potentially leading to a new prime minister as the party prepares for the next general election.
Who is likely to succeed Keir Starmer as prime minister?
Andy Burnham is seen as a frontrunner to succeed Keir Starmer, especially after his recent success in the Makerfield byelection.
What were the reasons behind the pressure on Starmer to resign?
The pressure on Starmer stemmed from concerns among Labour MPs about the rising threat from Nigel Farage's party ahead of the next general election.





