Gordon Brown handed top job by Keir Starmer as PM desperately tries to reset his premiership while chorus of Labour MPs demanding he set out resignation timetable surges


Keir Starmer is this morning desperately clinging on to power as the number of Labour MPs demanding he quit reaches nearly three dozen.

The Prime Minister surprised onlookers this morning as Gordon Brown was spotted arriving at Downing Street, amid efforts by Sir Keir to reset his floundering administration. 

No. 10 later confirmed that Mr Brown has been handed a new job of ‘Special Envoy on Global Finance’. 

It came after Sir Keir also appointed Harriet Harman, the former Labour deputy leader, as his ‘Adviser on Women and Girls’. 

The new job announcements came as the chorus of public fury from the Prime Minister’s own MPs is continuing to crescendo today after the party suffered a devastating wipe-out across England, Scotland and Wales.

While counting in some councils is still ongoing, the party has currently lost over 1,400 councillors, slipped to third in Wales, and is tied with Reform in Scotland well behind the SNP.

33 Labour MPs have now called for the Prime Minister either to resign immediately, or to set out a timetable for his departure as soon as possible.

Three MPs have emerged this morning already to condemn Sir Keir Starmer, including former minister Catherine West, who demanded ‘an orderly transition’.

The Hornsey MP said that the PM’s approach ‘is not cutting through… unless things change, we risk Nigel Farage becoming Prime Minister.’

‘That’s why, with regret and significant sadness, I firmly believe that Keir should outline his intention to resign as Prime Minister and oversee an orderly transition.’

Debbie Abrahams, the MP for Oldham East, told the Today Programme she thinks ‘it is a matter of months’ before Starmer will have to decide whether to resign if he doesn’t immediately turn things around.

Keir Starmer welcomed Gordon Brown to Downing Street this morning

Keir Starmer welcomed Gordon Brown to Downing Street this morning

Catherine West MP said Keir Starmer should outline his intention to resign

Debbie Abrahams MP said Keir Starmer has only 'a matter of months'

Catherine West (L) and Debbie Abrahams (R) were two more MPs to emerge this morning demanding the PM set out his departure plans

Clive Betts (Sheffield South East) agreed: ‘There is a responsibility on the Cabinet to recognise this can’t carry on forever’.

But Keir Starmer ally Lucy Powell, the Labour deputy leader, condemned her colleagues’ plotting and warned that a leadership coup would make the party look ‘ludicrous’.

Speaking on the BBC this morning, Ms Powell said Labour needs to change its approach, but with Keir Starmer at the helm.

She argued that Sir Keir ‘is accepting responsibility, he is saying we’ve got to change. He hears what people are saying’.

The Manchester MP said that the Prime Minister is ‘very reflective’ on yesterday’s brutal verdict by voters.

But she lashed out at Labour MPs demanding a change of leadership, arguing: ‘I don’t want to hear about that anymore. I want us to get on with the job.’

Asked whether Sir Keir will still be the party’s leader in six months’ time, she emphatically replied: ‘Yes, yes, yes!’

The Prime Minister has said in a column for the Guardian that despite the local election wipeout, he will not tack to either the right or the left in order to win back voters.

He wrote: ‘While we must respond to the message that voters have sent us, that doesn’t mean tacking right or left.

‘It means bringing together a broad political movement, being assertive about our values, bold in our vision and addressing people’s demands.

‘Unifying rather than dividing. That is the right approach for our party and, more importantly, it is the right approach for our country.’

Labour deputy leader Lucy Powell said a leadership contest would make the party look 'ludicrous'

Labour deputy leader Lucy Powell said a leadership contest would make the party look ‘ludicrous’

Keir Starmer is digging in and refusing to go, insisting he won't tack left or right to salvage votes after yesterday's local election wipeout

Keir Starmer is digging in and refusing to go, insisting he won’t tack left or right to salvage votes after yesterday’s local election wipeout 

According to the LabourList website, the 33 Labour MPs calling on the Prime Minister to either quit, or set out a timetable for his departure, includes:

Debbie Abrahams (Oldham East and Saddleworth) – ‘I think it’s a matter of months.’

David Baines (St Helens North) – ‘When you’re the leader, the buck stops with you.’

Paula Barker (Liverpool Wavertree) – ‘Need to agree a clear timetable for change’

Apsana Begum (Poplar and Limehouse) – ‘There needs to be a superspeed change, in both leadership and policy’

Clive Betts (Sheffield South East) – ‘I don’t think rebooting and refreshing is going to make any difference’

Olivia Blake (Sheffield Hallam) – ‘[Starmer] needs to think about his position’

Jonathan Brash (Hartlepool) – ‘[Starmer should] set out a timetable for his departure’

Richard Burgon (Leeds East) – ‘The party should now work towards a timetable for an orderly transition to a new leader’

Ian Byrne (Liverpool West Derby) – ‘PM must now set out a clear timetable for his departure’

Beccy Cooper (Worthing West) – Shared Louise Haigh’s call for a timetable

Neil Duncan-Jordan (Poole) – ‘All those responsible must seriously consider their positions’

Barry Gardiner (Brent West) – ‘He should stand aside’

Louise Haigh (Sheffield Heeley) – ‘The Prime Minister cannot lead us into another election’

Chris Hinchliff (North East Hertfordshire) – ‘I’m afraid I do now believe the Prime Minister should resign’

Kim Johnson (Liverpool Riverside) – ‘I personally don’t think Keir will be leading us into the next election’

Ruth Jones (Newport West and Islywn) – ‘He needs to be a bit more reticent about what he’s saying about carrying on forever’

Peter Lamb (Crawley) – ‘He should set out a timetable for his departure’

Ian Lavery (Blyth and Ashington) – ‘Keir Hardie started the Labour Party… It could be another Keir – Keir Starmer – that could end the party forever.’

Brian Leishman (Alloa and Grangemouth) – ‘Keir Starmer’s position is untenable’

Clive Lewis (Norwich South) – ‘A timetable for his departure is now necessary’

Rachael Maskell (York Central) – ‘It is inevitable that the PM is going to have to step down’

Andy McDonald (Middlesborough and Thornaby East) – ‘We need a change of leader tied to change of policy’

John McDonnell (Hayes and Harlington) – ‘[PM] will need to put party first and country first in judging whether he is risking opening the door to Farage’

Anneliese Midgley (Knowsley) – ‘It’s clear the PM can’t lead us into another election’

Abtisam Mohamed (Sheffield Central) – ‘The PM should now agree a clear transition and timeline for new leadership’

Connor Naismith (Crewe and Nantwich) – ‘It is clear to me that we need new leadership’

Simon Opher (Stroud) – ‘We need an orderly transition’

Kate Osborne (Luton North) – ‘He can’t lead us into another general election’

Sarah Owen (Jarrow and Gateshead East) – ‘Keir needs to resign’

Euan Stainbank (Falkirk) – ‘It is time for the Prime Minister to resign to allow for new leadership of the country’

Graham Stringer (Blackley and Middleton South) – ‘I don’t think he can fight the next election if the Labour Party wants to survive’

Jon Trickett (Normanton and Hemsworth) – ‘The message from my constituency is that it’s curtains for Keir’

Nadia Whittome (Nottingham East) – ‘I believe the Prime Minister should announce a timetable for his departure’

Some have caveated that the Prime Minister must set out his timetable if he doesn’t turn things around, but the growing number of those publicly speculating about his future will be met with gloom in No. 10.

So far Cabinet Ministers are holding off, with it speculated that while Wes Streeting has the numbers to spark a leadership challenge he does not want to be the first person to jump.



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