May 13 2026

Starmer defiant as calls for his resignation grow and ministers quit

Updated 13 hours ago 3 min read

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LONDON (AP):

UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer insisted yesterday that he has no intention of resigning as calls grew louder within his Labour Party for him to step down and some junior members of his government quit in protest.

Starmer tried to shore up support within his Cabinet following a feverish few days in the wake of hefty losses for the Labour Party in local elections last week, which, if repeated in a national election that has to be held by 2029 would see it overwhelmingly ejected from power.

Though no cabinet member has quit or publicly stated the prime minister should step aside for a change in leader, the resignations of several junior ministers stoked speculation Starmer could suffer the fate of Boris Johnson in 2022 when dozens of ministers quit en masse and forced his departure.

While more than 100 members of Parliament signed a letter saying it was “no time for a leadership contest”, about 90 others said Starmer should stand down or at least set out a timetable for his departure.

That’s not enough to trigger a leadership contest, though, as no candidate has issued a challenge to the prime minister. Under Labour party rules, a fifth of its lawmakers in the House of Commons, or 81 members, must publicly give their backing to a single candidate for a leadership election to take place.

Yesterday, several junior ministers, some of whom were elected for the first time in Labour’s landslide election victory in July 2024, resigned and urged Starmer to do the same.

Miatta Fahnbulleh, minister of housing, communities and local government, was the first to quit, urging Starmer “to do the right thing for the country”.

She was followed by Jess Phillips, the safeguarding minister and a prominent member of the Labour Party. In her resignation letter, she described Starmer as a “good man fundamentally” but unable to make bold changes.

“I know you care deeply, but deeds, not words, are what matter,” Phillips said. “I’m not sure we are grasping this rare opportunity with the gusto that’s needed and I cannot keep waiting around for a crisis to push for faster progress.”

Despite the party’s dominant win driving out the Conservatives after 14 years in power, Labour’s popularity has plunged and Starmer is getting much of the blame.

The reasons include a series of policy missteps, a perceived lack of vision on the prime minister’s part, a struggling British economy and questions over his judgement. Starmer’s choice of Peter Mandelson as UK ambassador to Washington despite ties to the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein has continued to haunt him.

At the start of the weekly cabinet meeting on yesterday, Starmer said he took responsibility for the losses in last week’s elections but would fight on.

Labour was squeezed from the right and the left, losing votes to both anti-immigrant Reform UK and the Green Party, as well as nationalist parties in Scotland and Wales. The result reflects the increasing fragmentation of UK politics, long dominated by Labour and the Conservatives.

Starmer told his Cabinet that there’s a process to oust a leader and it hadn’t been triggered.

“The country expects us to get on with governing,” Starmer said. “The past 48 hours have been destabilising for government and that has a real economic cost for our country and for families.”

That cost was evident in financial markets yesterday, with the interest rate charged on British government bonds up by more than those of comparable nations. That shows investors think it’s increasingly risky to hold British government debt.

As cabinet members left 10 Downing Street, some voiced their support for the embattled prime minister.

Works and Pensions Secretary Pat McFadden said nobody publicly challenged Starmer at the meeting, while Business Secretary Peter Kyle said the prime minister was showing “really steadfast leadership”.

Later, Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy warned Labour lawmakers that the only beneficiary of the party’s “navel-gazing” over Starmer’s position is the populist right.

“He has my full support, and what I say to colleagues is, look, let’s just step back,” he said. “Take a breath.”

Starmer’s efforts to save his position as prime minister came a day ahead of the state opening of Parliament, when the government will present its legislative programme for the coming year.