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Starmer to face split cabinet as demands for his resignation mount

The UK prime minister is so far defiant in the face of calls for him to step down.

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Prime Minister Keir Starmer gives a speech at Coin Street Neighbourhood Centre on May 11, 2026 in London, UK [Carl Court/Getty Images]

By Christine Maguire and Reuters

Published On 12 May 202612 May 2026

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer is set to face his cabinet as more than 80 Labour MPs have called for him to resign, following the party’s devastating local elections losses last week.

The cabinet is said to be divided on whether he should remain on and will meet on Tuesday. Starmer’s chief secretary, MP Darren Jones, told Sky News the prime minister was talking to colleagues but “was very clear yesterday that he will not be walking away”.

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Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood is understood to have told the prime minister to oversee the transition of power, according to reporting in UK news outlets, amid a deluge of similar statements from parliamentarians, and six ministerial aides quitting on Monday. Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper and Defence Secretary John Healey also met with Starmer yesterday.

In a speech on Monday, Starmer took responsibility for the “very tough” election results, but said Labour would “never be forgiven for inflicting” the “chaos of constantly changing leaders”, as seen under the Conservatives, on the country again.

The local elections last Thursday resulted in Labour losing more than 1,400 seats and losing power in Wales, with Reform and the Greens making gains.

A leadership contest requires the endorsement of 81 Labour MPs, 20 percent of the party in the Commons.

Potential challengers to Starmer include Health Secretary Wes Streeting, former Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner, and Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham.

However, Rayner’s ability to run is hampered until an investigation into her tax affairs is resolved. She resigned in 2025 after admitting she had underpaid stamp duty on a flat, which she said was the result of improper legal advice.

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Burnham, who polls most favourably of the three, would need to become an MP again. He was prevented from becoming a candidate in the February Gorton and Denton by-election by Labour’s National Executive Committee, which included Starmer. In a statement calling for change on Monday, Rayner noted that it was a “mistake” to block him.

Starmer’s argument for staying

In his speech on Monday, Starmer described Labour as “a mainstream party of power, not protest”.

He took aim at far-right Reform UK and the Greens, claiming both prey on “despair that they exploit and amplify” and saying neither “offer the serious, progressive leadership that these times demand”.

Starmer’s government has been in power since 2024, when it ended 14 years of Conservative rule in a landslide victory. His popularity has since fallen, with the decision to cut the winter fuel allowance amid a cost-of-living crisis, Labour’s policy on Gaza and the scandal over United States Ambassador Peter Mandelson’s links to sex offender Jeffrey Epstein contributing to the decline.

During this time, support has grown for both Reform UK and the Green Party under progressive Polanski, who has been vocal in his criticism of Israel’s genocidal war on Gaza.