Home Secretary met with Keir Starmer to ‘urge him to stand down’ as Labour implodes
Keir Starmer tried to fend off rivals with a unifying speech earlier today (Picture: 2026 Getty Images)

Ministerial aides have been quitting left right and center, seemingly firing a starting pistol on a leadership race to find out who should take over from Sir Keir Starmer.

Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood is one of at least four ministers to have told the PM to consider setting out a timeline for his departure.

A cabinet split is forming with Mahmood thought to be in the minority demanding Starmer’s resignation.

Wes Streeting’s aide Joe Morris and Tom Rutland,

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the ministerial aide to the Environment Secretary, were the first to break ranks with the latter insisting he does not have faith in the prime minister to meet the challenge of Nigel Farage.

Around 70 labor MPs and counting have publicly called for either Sir Keir Starmer to stand down or give a timetable for his departure since the disastrous local election results.

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A growing number of backbench MPs have called for Sir Keir to resign as Prime Minister, including Richard Burgon, John McDonnell and Sally Jameson, an aide to Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood.

Naushabah Khan, the MP for Gillingham and Rainham, said she was also resigning as parliamentary private secretary to the Cabinet Office.

‘Our country faces unprecedented challenges’, she wrote in a post on X. ‘I did not enter politics to stand by while we fail.’

‘We need a clear change of direction now and no game playing. A labor Government can and will rise to meet the moment if we act now.

‘I am calling for new leadership, so that we can rebuild trust and deliver the better future that the British people voted for.’

Melanie Ward has resigned as parliamentary private secretary to David Lammy and called for Starmer to step down.

Leadership rivals have been circling the Prime Minister following the local election results (Picture: Getty / Reuters / PA/ Shutterstock)

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In his big ‘unifying’ speech on Monday, the labor leader admitted he had doubters in his own party as he pledged to put closer ties with the EU at the heart of his leadership ‘reset’.

labor lost more than 1,400 councillors and was ousted from power in Wales, triggering widespread anger within the labor ranks.

The Prime Minister said: ‘The election results last week were tough. Very tough.

‘That hurts and it should hurt. I get it. I feel it. I take responsibility.’

Turning to his own future, he vowed: ‘And I take responsibility for not walking away, not plunging our country into chaos, as the Tories did time and again. Chaos that did lasting damage to this country.

‘A labor government would never be forgiven for inflicting that on our country again.’

But he also warned party faithful: ‘For the British people, tired of a status quo that has failed them, change cannot come fast enough.

‘Truth be told, I am not sure they believe that we care. I am not sure they believe that we see their lives.’

He also accused Nigel Farage of being ‘not just a grifter but a chancer’ following Reform UK’s staggering gains in the local elections, with more than 1,400 new councillors voted in.

The do-or-die speech failed to turn the tide of backbench labor MPs turning on their leader.

Moderate backbencher David Smith said immediately after the address that he wanted the Prime Minister to lay out a timetable for leaving office.

Others backed him. David Pinto-Duschinsky, labor MP for Hendon, told Sky News that the Prime Minister was ‘rising to the occasion’.


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