
Over 100 Labour MPs have called on Keir Starmer to resign as the embattled prime minister gears up for a challenge to his authority
Published 20 Jun, 2026 17:58
FILE PHOTO. © Getty Images / Dan Kitwood
The UK’s ruling Labour Party could plunge itself and the whole country into a “disaster,” MPs and political commentators are warning, with Prime Minister Keir Starmer stubbornly defying calls from within his own party to quit.
Labour’s leadership crisis came to a head this week when former Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham won Thursday’s Makerfield by-election, securing 55% of the vote. Now the party’s MPs expect him to challenge Starmer within weeks if not days, with many Labour Party members openly treating the prime minister as a lame duck and stating they want him gone.
Lord Charles Falconer, a Labour peer and a former justice secretary in Tony Blair’s government, weighed in on the issue on Saturday, stating that Starmer has “absolutely no authority.”
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“The reason he’s got no authority is because everybody assumes that Andy Burnham is about to challenge for the leadership and everybody assumes he’s going to win,” he told BBC Radio 4, calling the present situation “completely unmaintainable for the country.” Falconer also urged the prime minister not to cling to power and enable a swift transition, arguing that any further delay would be “bad” for the country.
Labour MPs Zubir Ahmed and Peter Swallow also told BBC they wanted to see a new prime minister within weeks. According to the Telegraph, a total of 104 members of Starmer’s own party are demanding he set a timetable for his resignation.
Starmer himself and his supporters within Labour appear to be indifferent to those calls. An internal memo penned by the prime minister’s backers and obtained by the Guardian reportedly maintained Burnham would lose his support as soon as he entered the leadership contest and faced “real scrutiny.” Starmer himself also stated on Friday he would contest any leadership challenge.
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Former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn stated that the party could be missing the mark entirely with its leadership strife focused on personalities rather than policies.
“The unpopularity of the government stems from the threats to welfare benefits, stems from the continuing austerity and is deeply unpopular for a lot of other policies, particularly its rather draconian attacks on rights of assembly and freedom of speech,” he told Sky News.
His words were echoed by Charles Moore, a former editor of The Daily Telegraph, The Spectator, and The Sunday Telegraph, who is now a member of the House of Lords. In a piece for The Telegraph, Moore argued that Labour could be heading straight towards a disaster with what he called the Burnham coup, dragging the country along with it.
“For most of this century, most of our governing politicians – Labour and Conservative… have failed to analyze what is wrong. If Labour thinks it will be put right just by changing the leader in palace coups, that failure will continue,” he wrote.
