PM under pressure from Labour MPs and ministers to set timetable for exit
Sir Keir Starmer is facing calls to set a timetable for his departure from Downing Street after Andy Burnham won a resounding victory in the Makerfield by-election. A growing number of Labour MPs are
Sir Keir Starmer is facing calls to set a timetable for his departure from Downing Street after Andy Burnham won a resounding victory in the Makerfiel
Read Full Story at BBC Politics โThe Makerfield by-election result has escalated internal Labour Party tensions, exposing fissures over leadership durability just a year after Keir Starmerโs decisive general election victory. While Burnhamโs winโa stunning 15,000-vote majorityโreinforces Labourโs dominance in northern battlegrounds, it also emboldens critics who argue Starmerโs tenure lacks urgency or a clear electoral mandate beyond beating the Conservatives. The pressure isnโt just parliamentary; it reflects a broader unease among backbenchers and frontbenchers alike, who privately question whether Starmerโs cautious, risk-averse governance risks squandering Labourโs historic opportunity to reshape Britain. This dynamic recalls past Labour leadership crises, where mid-term discontent crystallised into open rebellion. Starmerโs challenge differs, however, in that his approval ratings remain stubbornly highโdespite policy stasis on issues like housing and public servicesโsuggesting the current unrest stems less from electoral failure and more from ideological impatience. The absence of a viable successor (with Angela Rayner sidelined and Lisa Nandyโs star dimmed) complicates any immediate challenge, but the Makerfield result underscores how quickly grassroots sentiment can shift. The partyโs left flank, emboldened by Burnhamโs success, may now push for a bolder agenda, while centrists fret over a repeat of the 1980s when infighting derailed a government. What happens next hinges on two variables: Starmerโs willingness to pivot on policy, and whether Labourโs poll lead hardens or softens. If economic headwinds worsen or a major scandal erupts, the calls for a timetable could intensify, but a resounding local election performance in May might silence critics by proving Starmerโs popularity is transferable beyond safe seats. The deeper question is whether Labourโs project risks becoming a victim of its own successโtoo focused on avoiding mistakes to deliver transformative change. For now, the Makerfield earthquake has made one thing clear: the partyโs unity is contingent, not guaranteed.
