*Trouble Looming As He Prepares To Fight Dirty To Keep Office
Cabinet Ministers loyal to British Prime Minister (PM) Keir Starmer have told him he faces being forced out of office by his party if he does not set a timetable for his departure by the end of the weekend.
Andy Burnham, who won a compelling majority in the Makerfield by-election overnight, is expected to travel to London on Monday to meet MPs in the expectation of becoming PM within weeks.
One Cabinet Minister – who has not previously told the PM to go – said his departure was now inevitable.
One MP said they believed there were about 200 Labour MPs prepared, if necessary, to sign Burnham’s nomination papers for a challenge, though his supporters are hoping for a coronation.
Starmer called members of the Cabinet on Friday afternoon to set out his determination to fight on.
Transport Secretary, Heidi Alexander, is said by sources to be among those who expressed concerns in a call on Friday.
At least two Ministers, Ed Miliband and Shabana Mahmood, have previously suggested to Starmer that he should set out a timetable for his departure.
Other Ministers are expected to press Starmer on whether fighting a leadership contest would be wise.
Another Cabinet source said: “Everyone thinks it is over and everyone wants it to be a dignified, orderly exit.”
Several Cabinet Ministers expressed a desire to show loyalty, while adding the caveat that they knew the situation made it very difficult for the PM to continue.
But another said: “There comes a point where you ask: what is more important? Is it loyalty or delivering your agenda? There are big agendas at stake here and those who don’t see which way this is going are going to inevitably end up looking like they were the last ones in the bunker.”
Two Labour grandees, David Blunkett and Harriet Harman, have also said there should be a timetable for new leadership.
Senior Labour sources said they believed that if Starmer did not resign over the weekend – or indicate that he would allow a transition to a new leader – then there would be an intervention at Tuesday’s Cabinet meeting.
“The Prime Minister cannot pull the same move again where he refuses to talk to his own Cabinet about his future,” one senior source said. “He has a choice of allowing his Cabinet and Ministers to show open support for his rivals, or risk the same situation as Boris Johnson, where you have three Education Secretaries in three days.”
But some of Starmer’s closest allies said he had the most agency, despite Burnham’s momentum, because Burnham was seeking to avoid the internally damaging move of mounting a leadership challenge.
“In the aftermath of the locals, it was Keir who actually held all the cards. Burnham’s people do not want a contest, they want Keir to do what Burnham wants,” one said. “Well, that’s up to Keir if he decides he wants to do that and he actually does not have to do anything they want.”
A pro-Starmer memo circulating among loyalist MPs shows the attack arguments the PM Aand his team would be likely to make in a leadership campaign.
The memo says: “[Burnham] hasn’t faced any real scrutiny yet. A true contest would expose him to questions that he hasn’t ever before had to answer and likely see his support wane as a result.”
It argues that in polling terms “the trajectory for AB has not been positive”, with his favourability dropping, and “the membership can change their view”.
The existence of a memo drafted by allies of Starmer reveals that his preparations for a contest are under way but also underlines the risks of a wounding civil war within the party with each side trying to expose the other.
MPs who are loyal to the PM say they are determined to prevent a Burnham coronation and are prepared to rally round Darren Jones, the Chief Secretary to the PM, as an alternative.
“I expect Darren to be loyal to the last,” one said. “But if the PM were to stand down, then he’s got the numbers.”
Support for Jones has been gathering among MPs who signed a loyalist letter backing Starmer in May. “There’s a groundswell of colleagues that are looking to Darren Jones,” one said.
“Unlike all other potential candidates, Darren Jones has both the economic and national security experience we would expect from a PM and represents continuity in both those successful areas.
“But he also represents a generational break from most other candidates, has national rather than regional appeal and is a proven media performer.”
A source close to Jones said: “Darren agrees with the Prime Minister that now is not the time for a leadership election.” The letter is understood not to be coordinated with Jones.
Starmer told reporters at an event in north London: “If there is a contest, just to be clear with you, then, yes, I will run.”
He warned that such a contest would “plunge us into chaos” and said Labour needed to “pull together” to contest the by-election to replace Burnham as Mayor of Greater Manchester.
*PHOTO CAPTION: Starmer.












