Labour MP threatens leadership bid as early as MONDAY as Keir Starmer faces brutal election fallout

Former minister Catherine West has said she would launch an unlikely premiership bid
A Labour MP has threatened to mount a leadership challenge on Sir Keir Starmer as soon as Monday morning following a slew of brutal results for the party in local elections.
Former minister Catherine West said she would launch an unlikely premiership bid in an attempt to force the Cabinet to act to remove Sir Keir.
The Prime Minister will use an address on Monday and the Kingâs Speech on Wednesday to fight for his position after 30 Labour MPs called for his resignation.
Following 1,400 losses up and down the UK, Sir Keir said his administration needed to be better at offering hope to people, and promised to be clearer about âthe values and convictions that drive meâ.
Ms West told the BBC: âIâm putting people on notice â if I donât hear by Monday morning of some leadership hopefuls, I will be asking everybody in the Parliamentary Labour Party to put a name against my name, because we need to get this ball rolling.
âBut my preferred option is for the Cabinet to do a reshuffle within itself, where thereâs plenty of talent and for Keir to be given a different role, which he might enjoy, perhaps an international role, and then for others to come to the fore, who can communicate the message, who are very able, so we can have minimum fuss.â
She claimed to have the backing of 10 MPs for her initiative, well short of the 81 needed to meet the threshold of 20 per cent to mount a challenge.
With Sir Keir at the helm, Labour has been crushed by threats from both sides â Reform UK on the right making staggering gains, and the Green Party on the left bashing down the red wall.
Former minister Catherine West said she would launch an unlikely premiership bid
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In England, councils which had been in Labourâs grip since World War One were lost, while the partyâs steak of London was also left severely weakened.
Results filtering through today saw Reform take control in Barnsley, with Labourâs hopes of retaining Bradford also meeting a grueling end.
A Green surge saw Sir Keirâs party losing control in Lambeth for the first time in 20 years, and the keys to Essex County Council have been handed to Reform as they stole votes from both traditional parties.
In Wales, having been in government with half the seats in the Senedd at the last election, the party was reduced to just nine of the 96 seats available â with First Minister Baroness Eluned Morgan the highest-profile casualty.
Sir Keir earlier insisted he would not âwalk awayâ from his job, claiming it would âplunge the country into chaosâ if he quit.
He said: âBut that doesnât mean we donât need to respond, it doesnât mean we donât need to rebuild. It doesnât mean that we donât need to set out the path ahead. Thatâs what Iâm going to do in the coming days.â
The Prime Minister noted one of the âunnecessary mistakesâ made by his Government was setting out the financial and international challenges facing the country, but not telling people how their lives would improve.
Sir Keir said: âThe hope wasnât there enough in the first two years of this government.â
Sir Keir earlier insisted he would not âwalk awayâ from his job
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Deputy Labour leader Lucy Powell has dismissed the prospect of a leadership change being an immediate fix to the partyâs problems.
She said:âThinking that setting out some kind of timetable would put to bed the issues of leadership, I think is actually the wrong conclusion here, because all that would do is fire the starting gun of a, quite honestly, very distracting and ongoing debate about leadership.â
Clive Betts, the partyâs joint longest-serving MP, also said the Cabinet should make it clear to the Prime Minister he has to go âin the not too distant futureâ.
Health Secretary Wes Streeting, who allegedly garnered support from a sufficient number of MPâs to make a beeline for premiership, said the Prime Minister will âhave my supportâ in setting out how the Government will move forward.
However, facing questions from reporters late on Friday night as he attended the count for Redbridge Council, he declined to say whether he believed Sir Keir was the right person to lead the party into the next general election.
Former deputy leader Angela Rayner, widely viewed as a potential challenger for the leadership, has not yet commented on the results.
Nor has Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham, whose path back to Westminster has previously been blocked by Labourâs ruling national executive committee.


