Sir Keir Starmer is fighting to save his political future after being handed an ultimatum by his former deputy Angela Rayner, who said the Labour Party faces its “last chance” to change course after dismal local election results.
Both Ms Rayner and health secretary Wes Streeting are seen as potential leadership contenders, although both are yet to make a move against the prime minister.
Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham is also seen as candidate, although he is still not an MP after Sir Keir blocked his previous attempt earlier this year.
Over the weekend, Ms Rayner said Sir Keir must “prioritise making people better off” and called the blocking of Andy Burnham to be Labour’s candidate in February’s Gorton and Denton by-election a “mistake”.
The prime minister will say on Monday that he will “face up to the big challenges” and will vow a “bigger response” than anticipated in 2024, which includes strengthening ties with Europe.
His premiership is under immense pressure as dozens of Labour MPs publicly call for him to resign after the party was wiped out in local elections this week.
On Saturday, Labour MP Catherine West issued an ultimatum to cabinet members, telling them to challenge Sir Keir by Monday, or she will start formally gathering names to trigger a contest.
Allies of Andy Burnham ‘have a plan’ to elect him as an MP, reports say
It has been reported in Politico that Andy Burnham’s allies have formulated a plan to return him to Westminster, with a specific MP willing to stand down to trigger a by-election.
The Greater Manchester mayor was blocked from running as an MP earlier this year, and is viewed as a threat to Sir Keir Starmer’s premiership.
The report says that the identity of the MP is being kept as a “closely guarded secret”.
Holly Evans11 May 2026 08:12
Wes Streeting spent weekend in the cinema instead of plotting leadership bid, Kyle says
If Wes Streeting wanted to run for Prime Minister he would not be spending his weekend watching The Devil Wears Prada 2 in the cinema, a Cabinet minister has suggested.
Business Secretary Peter Kyle told Sky News he was campaigning with the Health Secretary in Ilford “last weekend”, adding: “After we campaigned, we went for dinner and we went and saw a movie together.
“Somebody who is planning to pull the plug and launch a leadership bid in a couple of days’ time doesn’t go to the cinema with a friend.”
Asked what film they watched, he said “Devil Wears Prada”, later describing it as “good” and “fun”.
Mr Kyle also said: “Wes and I are very good friends, but I’m not going to fall into the trap of being his spokesperson, but what I can tell you is that he, like me, is focused on the success of this Government.
“His primary mission in Government is making sure the whole Government is a success and he is there for Keir when he needs him.”

Holly Evans11 May 2026 07:56
Analysis: Starmer in the last chance saloon as Labour leader and prime minister
Analysis from our political editor David Maddox:
Keir Starmer knows what is at stake when he gets up this morning to make what will have to be the speech of his life.
Already Labour MPs are baying for him to set a timetable for his departure or just quit after the dreadful election results last week and months of a faltering premiership which has failed spectacularly to take advantage of the massive election victory in 2024.
Added to that one former minister, Catherine West, has vowed to start a leadership contest to get him out while his former deputy prime minister Angela Rayner has issued an ultimatum making it clear that this is his “last chance”.
For many it is already too late for the prime minister to save himself but he will be hoping that one last reset from many he has performed already can rescue the dire situation and provide him with a semblance of authority.
The trail for the speech was not as inspiring as he may need.
This is a man who has proven he is no great orator on many occasions before and it seems unlikely that at this stage a promise to reverse Brexit will be enough for Labour MPs who want his blood.
But as we head to the King’s speech on Wednesday this will be the start of a crucial 48 hours where Sir Keir will survive or fall depending on what he says.
Holly Evans11 May 2026 07:48
PM should set out a timetable for an ‘orderly transition’ of power, MP says
Labour MP and former parliamentary private secretary to former deputy prime minister Angela Rayner, Navendu Mishra, said the prime minister should set out a timetable for an “orderly transition” to give leadership hopefuls time to come forward.
Speaking on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme, Mr Mishra said such a move would allow the “best people” in the Labour Party time to “put forward their vision”.
Asked whether he was referring to Mayor of Greater Manchester Andy Burnham, Mr Mishra said: “I think he’s done some really good things in my constituency of Stockport, and in Greater Manchester, and he has the experience of a previous Labour government, having served in senior roles including in the cabinet.”
Asked about a potential leadership bid from Ms Rayner, he added: “Look, I think she’s from Stockport… if you look at her achievements coming from Stockport, as a trade unionist, a Stockport trade unionist, I think are phenomenal.”

Holly Evans11 May 2026 07:43
Starmer ‘is the right person to lead us’, cabinet minister says
Cabinet minister Peter Kyle said Sir Keir Starmer is “the right person that needs to lead us through this” as he defended the Prime Minister remaining in place.
The business secretary said he accepts people are “fed-up” following last week’s elections, adding: “Our party is convulsed by the results.”
He told Times Radio: “He is the right person that needs to lead us through this. He needs to really meet the moment that we’re in. We all need to support him in that, because he can’t do it alone.
“And I’ve said this consistently since opposition, that too often people look to him as one person that can fix every problem.”
Pressed on whether he wants eight more years of Sir Keir at the helm, Mr Kyle said: “I want eight years of delivering for the people of this country, led by the prime minister that we have now, that is actually delivering.
“He has faced so many challenges in office, he has met the moment so many times when it comes to the challenges we face on the international scene, fixing our public services, leading a Cabinet that is delivering, but we recognise that people want more urgency.”
Holly Evans11 May 2026 07:33
Reform ‘did not do as well as I feared’ in Holyrood election, Sturgeon says
More politicians need to “say it like it is” to try to combat the rise of Nigel Farage and Reform, Nicola Sturgeon has said.
The former SNP leader said that Reform – who are now the joint second largest party in the Scottish Parliament with 17 MSPs – had not done as well in the Holyrood election as she had “feared” they might.
Speaking about the party, led in Scotland by Lord Malcolm Offord, Ms Sturgeon said: “They did not perform as strongly as many people, including me, feared they would on Thursday.”
However she added her “fear” is that the new group of Reform MSPs could be will “try to undermine” the Scottish Parliament and “try to be disruptive and just drag politics down”.
The former SNP leader also criticised the “inability of many politicians” on what is “broadly the left of politics” to answer “straightforward questions in a straightforward way”.
Ms Sturgeon, who was Scotland’s longest serving first minister, added: “They sound as if they are trying to speak without saying anything.”
Speaking after stepping down as an MSP, she urged politicians to “stand up and make the positive case for the things you believe in”.

Holly Evans11 May 2026 07:16
What will happen today as Starmer fights for his job
Keir Starmer is set to defy his critics in the Labour Party and claim he is the one best placed to “face up to the big challenges for this country” as he delivers a career defining speech to save his premiership on Monday morning.
The prime minister’s speech comes after a dramatic ultimatum by former deputy prime minister Angela Rayner who warned his government takes a hard turn to the left if he wants to stay in Downing Street.
With speculation mounting that she is ready to launch a leadership challenge, the former deputy prime minister warned Sir Keir: “What we are doing isn’t working, and it needs to change. This may be our last chance.”
It comes as Labour MPs believe that former junior minister Catherine West is closing in on the 81 parliamentarians she would need to launch a stalking horse leadership challenge.
But in a defiant speech in central London, Sir Keir will use undoing Brexit as the centrepiece of a last desperate reset to save his premiership.
The speech comes against a backdrop of historically bad election results last week with more than 40 Labour MPs now publicly calling for him to quit and many more privately saying he cannot lead them into the next election.
The besieged prime minister will concede that “incremental change won’t cut it” as he vows that “we will face up to the big challenges” the country faces.
He will admit: “On growth, defence, Europe, energy – we need a bigger response than we anticipated in 2024 because these are not ordinary times.
“Strength through fairness. It’s a core Labour argument. And you will see those values writ large in the King’s Speech. And you will see hope, urgency and exactly whose side we are on.”
He will add: “People need hope. We will face up to the big challenges and we will make the big arguments.
“The Labour case that only Labour values and Labour policies can ensure our country not only weathers these storms but emerges stronger and fairer.”
Addressing fears about Nigel Farage becoming prime minister if he stays on as Labour leader, he will go on to say that Mr Farage and the Conservatives are “defined by breaking our relationship with Europe”.
Dan Haygarth11 May 2026 06:30
Rayner calls for PM to ‘meet the moment’ as Labour looks to recover from election disaster
Former deputy prime minister Angela Rayner on Sunday said Sir Keir Starmer had to “meet the moment and set out the change our country needs” as she called for Mr Burnham’s return to Parliament.
Ms Rayner and Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham are seen as potential leadership contenders.
Ms Rayner, the former deputy Labour leader, called for a shift to the left in a lengthy statement which set out her vision for the party.
“What we are doing isn’t working, and it needs to change. This may be our last chance,” she said.
The Mandelson scandal showed a “toxic culture of cronyism”, Labour is “in danger of becoming a party of the well-off, not working people” and “it is time to acknowledge that blocking Andy Burnham was a mistake”, she said.
While Ms Rayner stopped short of calling for Sir Keir to go, dozens of MPs from across the party – not just the Prime Minister’s usual critics on the left – have demanded change at the top.
Former minister Josh Simons, who previously led the Labour Together think tank on the party’s right, said: “We Labour MPs must square up to the truth. These elections were not a normal mid-term drubbing, they were an unequivocal judgement that our actions do not meet the moment.
“To put the country first, the PM should lead an orderly transition. Senior figures across the party should urgently come together to agree a path forward.”
Dan Haygarth11 May 2026 05:30
Rayner, Streeting or Burnham? Who could replace Starmer as PM if he’s forced to resign
Dan Haygarth11 May 2026 04:30
Sean O’Grady: Keir Starmer has 72 hours to save himself – here’s how he can do it
Amy-Clare Martin11 May 2026 03:30




