
Sir Keir Starmer insisted that he has no plans to resign from his post as Prime Minister during a meeting with Labour MPs.
The PM has faced calls to stand down from his role in recent days after the scandal involving former peer Lord Peter Mandelson last week.
Starmer addressed his party on Monday evening as he bids to shore up his position and was greeted with a standing ovation from MPs on his arrival.
He is said to have answered some 44 questions during the hour-long meeting, where he defiantly insisted: ‘Every fight I’ve been in, I’ve won. I am not prepared to walk away.’
It came as Health Secretary Wes Streeting revealed texts between him and Mandelson in an attempt to assure the public that he has ‘nothing to hide’.
The Ilford MP discussed his election fears, criticisms of the government and his thoughts on the Palestine conflict in the messages.
Follow the latest updates on Keir Starmer’s future in Downing Street
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Davey: ‘There MUST be a general election’
Labour were elected to bring change to the country and to end the chaos we saw under the Conservatives. But Keir Starmer has failed to deliver, and we still have this daily soap opera. And it’s damaging the country.”
Labour MPs have either got to sort this out among themselves, or there is going to have to be a general election.
READ MORE: Streeting’s WhatsApps with Mandelson
Reynolds: ‘The whole Cabinet supports the PM’
We have a united front here, and the meeting of the parliamentary Labour party, which I have just come from, there was a real sense of unity in that room behind Keir Starmer because we need this Labour government to face outwards, not inwards, not having fights with ourselves, but actually focusing on delivering the change that we have a five-year mandate to do.
Starmer’s defiant speech IN FULL
I have won every fight I’ve ever been in. I fought to change the Crown Prosecution Service so it better served victims of violence against women and girls. I fought to change the Labour Party to allow us to win an election again.
People told me I couldn’t do it. And then they gradually said, you might just get over the line. We won with a landslide majority. Every fight I’ve been in, I have won.
Detractors that don’t want a Labour government at all, and certainly not one to succeed. I have had detractors every step of the way, and I’ve got them now.
But I’ll tell you this, after having fought so hard for the chance to change our country, I’m not prepared to walk away from my mandate and my responsibility to my country, or to plunge us into chaos, as others have done.
Starmer: ‘I’m not prepared to walk away’
Starmer’s meeting is over
Streeting’s exchanges with Mandelson in FULL
Streeting ‘happy’ to answer to WhatsApps with Mandelson
‘I did not know about the nature of Peter Mandelson’s relationship with Jeffrey Epstein after his conviction and had I known, I would not have wanted him anywhere near Washington, anywhere near the Labour Party or anywhere near me or my family.’
Streeting: ‘Real change needed’ after Mandelson scandal
We can’t let this scandal be another that passes by without real change. The rules we live by cannot substitute for behaviour.
There is no vetting good enough, no rules tight enough, no system of accountability strong enough if we do not understand this. We have to have the courage to speak up when silence is easier. We have to confront these moral questions. Politics is hard. Most of the choices are hard and some of them are tragic.
But we need to accept that some forms of power are not worth the moral price they extract.




